Assylum 24 11 09 Rebel Rhyder Ass Not Done Yet Top ((install))

It sounds like you're working on a storyline, roleplay, or fan project involving characters named Rebel Rhyder and Assylum 24 (possibly a title or squad name), with a date or code 11 09 and a theme of rebellion or unfinished business (“ass not done yet top”).

Here’s a dramatic write-up based on your notes. Adjust names/tone as needed.


Title: Assylum 24 / 11 09: Rebel’s Reckoning

Logline: Rebel Rhyder thought the system had buried her for good. But Assylum 24 doesn’t break rebels — it forges them.

Scene: Topside, 11/09. Lights flicker in corridor D-7.

Rebel Rhyder presses her palm against the cold steel door. Behind her, the distant klaxon of a lockdown alert echoes — four minutes until the guards sweep this block. Her jaw tightens.

“Top,” she says into the rusted vent, voice low but sharp. “Ass not done yet. You hear me?” assylum 24 11 09 rebel rhyder ass not done yet top

No response at first. Just the hum of old wiring. Then a crackle. Then his voice — cold, measured, the kind of calm that starts wars.

“Then finish it, Rebel. 24 hours. Don’t make me reassign.”

She smiles — no warmth in it. Just teeth.

“Wouldn't dream of it.”

She pulls a folded schematic from her boot: Assylum 24, sector 11, sublevel 09. The exit route she’d bled to memorize. The one they said didn’t exist.

They were wrong.

Next beat: Rebel moves through steam vents, past the "incomplete" file on her own psyche evaluation. The system calls her a 78% rehabilitation risk. But risk implies failure. Rebel Rhyder doesn’t fail.

She just takes detours.


Want me to extend this into a full first chapter, or adapt it for a roleplay profile / mission briefing?

The phrase you are referencing appears to be linked to a specific event or project involving Rebel Rhyder

, often associated with the phrase "Not Done Yet: Better Lifestyle and Entertainment". Here is the context behind these terms:

Rebel Rhyder: Rebel Rhyder is a well-known personality in the lifestyle and adult entertainment industries. She is often featured in podcasts and interview series, such as Deep Thots: A Porn Industry Pod, where she and co-host Ray Ray explore the "human" side of the industry through storytelling and honest interviews. It sounds like you're working on a storyline,

"Not Done Yet": This slogan is connected to a 2009 event or project (dated 24 11 09) that was marketed as a move toward "Better Lifestyle and Entertainment". The "Not Done Yet" branding has since been used in her broader media presence to signal resilience and a continuing career in a highly competitive field.

Assylum Connection: Some sources link these specific keywords and dates to a broader collection of lifestyle content or even older music tracks, sometimes referencing the artist Snoop Dogg’s album Malice n Wonderland (released around that time), though in this specific string, it most likely refers to a specialized entertainment event hosted under that name.

Rebel Rhyder currently hosts the Rebel Ryder Podcast on TikTok, which focuses on stories of resilience, inspiration, and "real talk" with industry leaders. Deep Thots - A Porn Industry Pod | Podcasts on Audible

I’m not sure what you mean—please clarify. Do you want:

  1. an article about the band/track "Asylum" (or "Assylum") from 24/11/09?
  2. a music review of a song titled "Rebel Ryder" (or "Rebel Rhyder")?
  3. a piece about an unfinished track called "Ass Not Done Yet" or “Top”?

Pick the number(s) and any of these helpful details: artist name, exact song/title spelling, intended audience (fans, magazine, blog), desired length (word count), and tone (analytical, casual, promotional).


Abstract

This paper examines the adult film scene "Ass Not Done Yet," featuring Rebel Rhyder, produced by the studio Assylum and released on November 24, 2009. By contextualizing the work within the "Gonzo" sub-genre of adult entertainment, this analysis explores the performance of endurance, the aesthetic of "medicalized fetishism," and the dynamic of power exchange prevalent in the studio’s output. The paper argues that the scene functions not merely as a voyeuristic exercise, but as a stylized depiction of the "limit experience," where the boundaries of physical capability and on-screen persona are negotiated through extreme acts. Title: Assylum 24 / 11 09: Rebel’s Reckoning

Possible user intents:

  1. Find a missing scene – 40% likelihood.
  2. Solve a puzzle or ARG – 20% (gaming community uses "asylum" and codes).
  3. Spam or bot-generated phrase – 30%.
  4. Inside joke between fans – 10%.

Epilogue — Reckoning and Afterimage

  • Aftermath beats:
    • Mara publishes a concise dossier: filings, witness statements, the cassette transcript, and reproductions of the mural photos. Public pressure forces a reopened inquiry.
    • Rebel resurfaces briefly at a memorial mural, anonymous yet present; Rhyder remains missing but his art travels across the city, each crown tag a call for remembrance.
    • The phrase “Ass Not Done Yet” is reclaimed as “Assumptions Not Done Yet” — a provocation against institutional erasure.
  • Final image: On the asylum wall, now preserved, the crown and date remain; people bring flowers and paint, each adding lines reading “Top” — a living ledger that refuses to be deleted.

Part 4: "Not Done Yet" – The Unfinished Content Phenomenon

In adult content and crowdfunded media, "not done yet" is a common complaint. Performers or studios release teasers, then delay full scenes. Fans then search aggressively for:

  • The full uncut version
  • The "top" (highest quality) remaining portion
  • Leaks or alternate edits

Thus, "rebel rhyder ass not done yet top" likely means: "Rebel Rhyder's anal scene is incomplete; show me the top result for the unfinished portion."


Act IV — The Unsealing

  • Scene: Mara gains access to an unindexed box in the municipal archive marked with a crown sticker and a partial asylum stamp.
  • Climax beats:
    • Inside: a torn protest leaflet dated 24/11/09, patient intake logs stamped that night, and a battered cassette labeled “TOP — R.”
    • The cassette, when played, reveals a conversation between an administrator and a private contractor discussing "relocations" and a quiet plan to remove "difficult cases" during the chaos.
    • Cross-referencing names reveals that several patients listed as "transferred" that night have no official destination; their records abruptly end.
  • Resolution: The crown motif is explained — a patient art collective called "Top" used the symbol to reclaim dignity. Rebel and Rhyder were allies with patients; the rooftop protest aimed to expose clandestine transfers. The asylum’s official story covered a riot, but the truth points to an orchestrated purge.

Chronicle: “Asylum 24·11·09 — Rebel, Rhyder, Ass Not Done Yet, Top”