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gabriel blinked. once. twice.
he had been fully prepared to tune out whatever theological nonsense was about to come out of clark’s mouth, but then—
“the god here is probably different from what we were taught, but still… that might be why the rain got really bad sometimes. i used to cuss a lot.”
gabriel stared at him, tilting his head slightly like he was waiting for a punchline that never came.
then, after a long, slow sip of his drink—dead serious—
“so what you’re telling me… is that you think god—whoever’s in charge of this place—just, what? cries every time you say ‘fuck’?” he clicked his tongue, shaking his head. “damn. real sensitive guy.”
but clark wasn’t done.
no, clark had now shifted to deeply analyzing gabriel’s entire existence, trying to piece together why he reminded him of some uncle named chris. gabriel watched the mental gymnastics unfold in real-time, expression a mix of mild horror and sheer amusement.
first, it wasn’t the face.
then, it wasn’t the voice.
then, it wasn’t the height.
and then—the eureka moment.
“wait, no, i know why! i’m pretty sure it’s the age! you seem like you’re the same age as him.”
gabriel let out a short, disbelieving laugh, shaking his head.
“man, you just went through every possible reason except the right one—maybe i just remind you of him because i’m also a guy standing in front of you saying words.”
a beat.
then, with a lazy smirk, he leaned in slightly, just to mess with him.
“or, you know. maybe i am your uncle chris. ever think about that?”
gabriel had seen a lot of things since arriving in the good place.
a bottomless frozen yogurt supply? sure. an entire neighborhood of people having existential breakdowns in real time? hilarious. but drunk karaoke on a whim? that was new.
he was nursing a drink (that he absolutely did not pay for) when the poor bastard started belting out a song in what could technically be classified as singing. generously.
gabriel watched with mild amusement, sipping his drink as clark lost his mind over the karaoke machine like a kid discovering santa was real. but then—
“wait, why the fork can’t i say fork?”
ah. now that got his attention.
gabriel’s eyebrows lifted slightly, a slow smirk creeping onto his face. oh, this was good.
“oh, yeah,” he drawled, setting his drink down and leaning back in his chair. “that’s a fun little feature they got here. can’t curse. no f-bombs, no s-bombs, not even a good old-fashioned ‘hell’ if you say it with too much enthusiasm.” he gestured vaguely. “whole place is sanitized like a daytime sitcom.”
his smirk widened as he eyed the mic clark was shoving toward him.
“but, uh—” he clicked his tongue, eyeing the karaoke machine like it might physically assault him. “as much as i respect the, uh… energy you’re bringing to this, i don’t sing.”
a beat. then, because he couldn’t help himself—
“but i’ll absolutely judge your performance.”
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gabriel let out a low, unimpressed hum, swirling the sad excuse for coffee in his cup as he listened to akihiko’s observation.
“see, that’s the real crime here.” he sighed, tipping his head back slightly. “how does a place that literally bends reality to make frozen yogurt out of thin air still manage to botch the coffee?”
he flicked a glance toward akihiko, amused at the idea of filing a formal complaint.
“yeah, sure, we could catch michael, let him know our deep moral grievances about the bean water situation.” he smirked, lifting his cup slightly. “or—and hear me out—we could take full advantage of janet’s unlimited wish fulfillment powers and just… request a damn espresso machine.”
he paused, eyes narrowing slightly in mock consideration.
“hell, i might just go big and ask for a whole coffee shop. charge these poor bastards for decent caffeine. make it an exclusive thing, real high-end. ‘rojas reserve’ or something.” he grinned. “afterlife’s first business mogul. think about it.”
he took another tentative sip of his coffee, grimaced all over again, and then—dead serious— “or, you know. we burn this place down and start over.”
who: open starter (@gpstarters)
where: neighborhood cafe
gabriel had never been a man burdened by deep philosophical questions.
he didn’t waste time wondering if he deserved to be here, didn’t sit around contemplating the cosmic significance of his existence. that was a waste of a perfectly good eternity.
so while everyone else seemed deeply concerned with why they were here, gabriel had skipped straight to acceptance—and more importantly, opportunity.
at the moment, he was loitering outside one of the quaint little cafés, sipping on a drink he’d absolutely not paid for (who was gonna stop him?) and watching people freak out over their new reality like it was a spectator sport.
“i gotta say,” he mused aloud, lifting his cup slightly, speaking to no one in particular but loud enough that someone would eventually take the bait, “for a place that’s supposed to be, y’know—perfect—the coffee’s kinda ass.”
he took another sip anyway, grimaced, and then let out a deep, exaggerated sigh, shaking his head like he was deeply disappointed in the divine beverage selection.
“i mean, really? eternity, and this is what we’re working with? no cuban coffee? no espresso that makes you question your own mortality? just this—” he swirled the liquid around, unimpressed, “beige sadness in a cup?”
he leaned back against the wall, eyes scanning the street, looking for someone who looked bored enough, curious enough, or just dumb enough to engage with him.
“tell me, do they let us file complaints up here, or is this more of a ‘take it up with management when you see them’ kind of deal?”
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when the blonde beside him arched an eyebrow and called it exactly what it was, he let out a low, amused hum, tipping his head slightly in her direction.
“yeah, real cozy, huh?” he mused, taking a slow sip of his mediocre coffee. “like a retirement home designed by someone who thinks personality is a liability.”
he gave her a once-over, grinning slightly at the barely-hidden distaste in her expression.
“not your scene, huh?”
not that he could blame her. if he’d had any say in the afterlife aesthetic, it sure as hell wouldn’t look like this.
then she asked about management.
that made him chuckle, dark eyes glinting with something sharper, more amused.
“management?” he repeated, rolling the word around like he was tasting it. “oh, i dunno. something tells me whoever’s running this place isn’t exactly taking calls.”
he lifted a hand, gesturing vaguely to the eerily perfect surroundings.
“but if i had to guess?” he clicked his tongue. “saint peter in a suit feels a little too—i dunno—efficient. nah, this place feels more like it’s being run by a customer service rep on their last nerve.”
he smirked. “or maybe it’s just janet. all-knowing, all-powerful, and definitely not getting paid enough for this bullshit.”
who: open starter (@gpstarters)
where: neighborhood cafe
gabriel had never been a man burdened by deep philosophical questions.
he didn’t waste time wondering if he deserved to be here, didn’t sit around contemplating the cosmic significance of his existence. that was a waste of a perfectly good eternity.
so while everyone else seemed deeply concerned with why they were here, gabriel had skipped straight to acceptance—and more importantly, opportunity.
at the moment, he was loitering outside one of the quaint little cafés, sipping on a drink he’d absolutely not paid for (who was gonna stop him?) and watching people freak out over their new reality like it was a spectator sport.
“i gotta say,” he mused aloud, lifting his cup slightly, speaking to no one in particular but loud enough that someone would eventually take the bait, “for a place that’s supposed to be, y’know—perfect—the coffee’s kinda ass.”
he took another sip anyway, grimaced, and then let out a deep, exaggerated sigh, shaking his head like he was deeply disappointed in the divine beverage selection.
“i mean, really? eternity, and this is what we’re working with? no cuban coffee? no espresso that makes you question your own mortality? just this—” he swirled the liquid around, unimpressed, “beige sadness in a cup?”
he leaned back against the wall, eyes scanning the street, looking for someone who looked bored enough, curious enough, or just dumb enough to engage with him.
“tell me, do they let us file complaints up here, or is this more of a ‘take it up with management when you see them’ kind of deal?”
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gabriel had met a lot of people in his life (and afterlife), and he could always tell when someone was being nice for the sake of it.
this one? yeah. they had an agenda.
he took another slow sip of his bland, offensively mediocre coffee, blinking at them over the rim of the cup.
“oh, yeah?” he said, tone light, almost amused. “you got a direct line to management? impressive.”
he swirled the coffee in his cup, pretending to consider their offer.
“see, i appreciate the enthusiasm, really, but i feel like management and i aren’t exactly on great terms.” he shrugged, grinning like that was somehow a personal achievement. “something tells me i might not be their favorite resident.”
his gaze flicked over them, catching the almost-too-sweet expression.
“but hey—you seem confident. you must be pretty high up on the rankings, huh?” he tilted his head slightly. “how’s it feel to be one of the good ones?”
who: open starter (@gpstarters)
where: neighborhood cafe
gabriel had never been a man burdened by deep philosophical questions.
he didn’t waste time wondering if he deserved to be here, didn’t sit around contemplating the cosmic significance of his existence. that was a waste of a perfectly good eternity.
so while everyone else seemed deeply concerned with why they were here, gabriel had skipped straight to acceptance—and more importantly, opportunity.
at the moment, he was loitering outside one of the quaint little cafés, sipping on a drink he’d absolutely not paid for (who was gonna stop him?) and watching people freak out over their new reality like it was a spectator sport.
“i gotta say,” he mused aloud, lifting his cup slightly, speaking to no one in particular but loud enough that someone would eventually take the bait, “for a place that’s supposed to be, y’know—perfect—the coffee’s kinda ass.”
he took another sip anyway, grimaced, and then let out a deep, exaggerated sigh, shaking his head like he was deeply disappointed in the divine beverage selection.
“i mean, really? eternity, and this is what we’re working with? no cuban coffee? no espresso that makes you question your own mortality? just this—” he swirled the liquid around, unimpressed, “beige sadness in a cup?”
he leaned back against the wall, eyes scanning the street, looking for someone who looked bored enough, curious enough, or just dumb enough to engage with him.
“tell me, do they let us file complaints up here, or is this more of a ‘take it up with management when you see them’ kind of deal?”
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gabriel wasn’t eavesdropping, exactly—that would imply effort. he was just standing close enough to catch kai’s philosophical crisis about janet and the ethics of unlimited afterlife wish fulfillment.
he took a slow sip from his drink (still free, still unearned, still fantastic) before finally turning his head toward kai, expression somewhere between amused and intrigued.
“listen, man,” he said, grinning as he leaned against a lamppost, “you’re out here having a moral dilemma over whether it’s progressive to ask janet for stuff, meanwhile, i’ve requested a yacht, three different types of espresso machines, and a very specific 1962 cuban cigar i never got the chance to steal in my past life.” he shrugged. “so if this is a test of character, i already failed.”
he tilted his head slightly, eyes flicking to kai’s hands as if expecting to see something there.
“wait—what are you even asking for?” a pause. realization. “oh. vape withdrawal. tragic.”
he sighed dramatically, then, completely deadpan—
“look, man, you gotta make a call. either you fully commit to the reformed, healthier version of yourself… or you embrace the joys of exploiting an all-powerful entity for infinite nicotine.” he lifted a hand, gesturing vaguely. “either way, i fully support you. but personally? i say take the win. ask janet for the vape. feminism is about choices, after all.”
who: open ( @gpstarters )
where: town square
-- Kai checked his pocket for the hundredth time for his vape that still wasn't there. He figured being in the self-proclaimed Good Place would mean he'd never have to ask, "where's my vape?" ever again, but he was trying to accept that maybe the good thing to do was to finally attempt to quit. The other option was to just ask Janet for a new one everytime, but that was an unexpected feature of afterlife that he couldn't seem to get comfortable with. "To Janet or not to Janet, that is the question." He mused to whoever was close enough to hear. "It just feels weird to always be asking her for things. A little reductive to the feminist movement, don't you think?"
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gabriel had successfully been minding his business, which, in a place like this, meant staying just far enough from the action to enjoy the chaos without being dragged into it.
until, of course, a champagne flute was suddenly shoved into his hand.
he blinked, glancing between the drink and the person who had delivered it with all the confidence of a bartender trying to upsell him on bottle service.
“huh.” he turned the glass slightly, inspecting it like it might be booby-trapped. “y’know, i’d say it’s rude to assume i’m lost, but…” he took in his own stance—leaning against a wall, clearly evaluating the situation like a man deciding whether or not to steal the silverware. “…yeah, fair.”
with zero hesitation, he took a sip.
his eyebrows raised slightly.
“not bad,” he admitted, swirling the liquid like he had any business pretending to be a wine critic. “i mean, i’d prefer something with a little more… kick, but hey—i’ll take free alcohol when it’s offered. principle of the matter.”
his gaze flicked back to her, grinning slightly at the saccharine smile she was giving him.
“and yeah, this?” he gestured vaguely to the perfectly curated party scene around them. “this is definitely something. like a rich guy’s idea of a ‘fun casual gathering,’ except no one here is pretending to enjoy themselves for networking reasons.”
a beat. then, with a smirk—
“so, what’s your deal? professional drink distributor? neighborhood welcome committee? or just doing the lord’s work, making sure no one dies of sobriety?”
who: hadley & open @gpstarters
where: a welcome party
"figured you needed this because you look a little lost," hadley approaches someone away from the action of the party, nearly thrusting the champagne flute into their hand with an overly saccharine smile. it was an easy ice breaker of sorts, without seeming like she was prying too much into her neighbors' past life. "this is quite something, isn't it?"

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gabriel had seen a lot of things since arriving in the good place.
a bottomless frozen yogurt supply? sure. an entire neighborhood of people having existential breakdowns in real time? hilarious. but drunk karaoke on a whim? that was new.
he was nursing a drink (that he absolutely did not pay for) when the poor bastard started belting out a song in what could technically be classified as singing. generously.
gabriel watched with mild amusement, sipping his drink as clark lost his mind over the karaoke machine like a kid discovering santa was real. but then—
“wait, why the fork can’t i say fork?”
ah. now that got his attention.
gabriel’s eyebrows lifted slightly, a slow smirk creeping onto his face. oh, this was good.
“oh, yeah,” he drawled, setting his drink down and leaning back in his chair. “that’s a fun little feature they got here. can’t curse. no f-bombs, no s-bombs, not even a good old-fashioned ‘hell’ if you say it with too much enthusiasm.” he gestured vaguely. “whole place is sanitized like a daytime sitcom.”
his smirk widened as he eyed the mic clark was shoving toward him.
“but, uh—” he clicked his tongue, eyeing the karaoke machine like it might physically assault him. “as much as i respect the, uh… energy you’re bringing to this, i don’t sing.”
a beat. then, because he couldn’t help himself—
“but i’ll absolutely judge your performance.”
open to anyone (town square, beach, or gardens) 🍒 @gpstarters
clark is drunkenly singing — well, singing is a pretty generous term for it on the karaoke machine he asked from janet. "fork, this is so cool! i asked her to give me a karaoke machine and it just popped out of nowhere!" he says. "wait, why the fork can't i say fork?" ah. inability to say fuck aside, it's cool. offering his mic to the other person, he asks, "do you wanna sing too?"
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who: open starter (@gpstarters)
where: neighborhood cafe
gabriel had never been a man burdened by deep philosophical questions.
he didn’t waste time wondering if he deserved to be here, didn’t sit around contemplating the cosmic significance of his existence. that was a waste of a perfectly good eternity.
so while everyone else seemed deeply concerned with why they were here, gabriel had skipped straight to acceptance—and more importantly, opportunity.
at the moment, he was loitering outside one of the quaint little cafés, sipping on a drink he’d absolutely not paid for (who was gonna stop him?) and watching people freak out over their new reality like it was a spectator sport.
“i gotta say,” he mused aloud, lifting his cup slightly, speaking to no one in particular but loud enough that someone would eventually take the bait, “for a place that’s supposed to be, y’know—perfect—the coffee’s kinda ass.”
he took another sip anyway, grimaced, and then let out a deep, exaggerated sigh, shaking his head like he was deeply disappointed in the divine beverage selection.
“i mean, really? eternity, and this is what we’re working with? no cuban coffee? no espresso that makes you question your own mortality? just this—” he swirled the liquid around, unimpressed, “beige sadness in a cup?”
he leaned back against the wall, eyes scanning the street, looking for someone who looked bored enough, curious enough, or just dumb enough to engage with him.
“tell me, do they let us file complaints up here, or is this more of a ‘take it up with management when you see them’ kind of deal?”
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basics
• full name: gabriel alejandro miguel rojas
• age at time of death: 45
• birthday: may 2
• zodiac sign: taurus (stubborn, charming, indulgent—checks out)
• height: 5’11” (though he always rounds up to 6’0”)
• birthplace: santiago, chile → raised in los angeles, usa
• occupation (before death): con artist, professional bullshitter, self-proclaimed “entrepreneur”
• languages: fluent in spanish and english (can curse people out in both with equal finesse)
• current residence: a perfectly curated afterlife suburb filled with things he hates—ikea furniture that refuses to assemble properly, and an unholy amount of unsweetened almond milk.
early life
gabriel rojas was born in santiago, chile, but by the time he was five, his family had packed up and moved to los angeles, california in search of a better life. unfortunately, “better life” in his neighborhood meant knowing how to talk fast, move faster, and never leave an opportunity on the table.
from a young age, gabriel had a knack for getting what he wanted—whether it was convincing his teachers he’d already turned in his homework (he had not), sweet-talking the corner store owner into giving him free snacks, or organizing a very lucrative elementary school candy-smuggling operation. while other kids played sports, gabriel honed his real talent: getting people to believe whatever he told them.
he didn’t have the patience for school (or the attention span), but he had charm, hustle, and absolutely no shame, which turned out to be way more valuable.
life as a professional menace
gabriel wasn’t just a con artist—he was an artist of the con.
• he could sell anything to anyone, whether they needed it or not.
• he once convinced a ceo that he was royalty from an obscure european microstate, securing a first-class trip to monaco before disappearing just in time to avoid being outed.
• he ran an underground poker ring, where the only real gamble was whether or not anyone would leave with their wallets intact.
• he never had a “real” job, yet somehow always had money, always had a place to stay, and always had a new “business venture” on the horizon.
his biggest scam? selling a fake island to a tech billionaire—complete with doctored land deeds, staged drone footage, and a full powerpoint presentation (because nothing sells a scam like a good powerpoint). he disappeared before the lawsuits hit, but karma clearly had his number because not long after, he met his ridiculous, tequila-fueled demise.
cause of death
gabriel had cheated a lot of things in life—but apparently, physics wasn’t one of them.
• a hot tub, a bottle of mezcal, and a bet that went too far sealed his fate.
• the details are fuzzy (and honestly, kind of embarrassing), but at some point, an attempt to do a backflip into the tub ended with him hitting the deck instead.
• his last words? “watch this.” (spoiler: they should not have watched that.)
and just like that, he woke up in the afterlife, still wet, still mildly hungover, and still convinced this was some kind of mistake.
fun facts
• favorite drink (in life): a good old-fashioned whiskey… but would happily drink a $4 bottom-shelf tequila if it was free.
• favorite pastime: talking his way out of things he absolutely shouldn’t be able to talk his way out of.
• most impressive con? scamming his way into an a-list hollywood party by pretending to be a foreign film director.
• biggest fear? being forced to work a real 9-to-5 job (which, ironically, might be his version of hell).
• has never: paid full price for anything in his life.
• personal philosophy? “it’s not lying if they want to believe it.”
• still thinks he can: con his way into another afterlife.
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