Friday pudublogging: The Flippening

This both makes me laugh and kinda creeps me out at the same time:

The Flippening

What you’re looking at is long-lost footage of a 1960s ritual known as The Flippening.  A suburban legend once held that if an unmarried woman found a young mouse deer and levitated it, her hair and clothes would remain in style for as many years as the creature rotated in the air.

Unfortunately, the Flippening had one catch: you had to make the creature’s shadow rotate, too.

Thanks to Kirstin for the supremely odd graphic.

Friday pudublogging: The Flippening

This both makes me laugh and kinda creeps me out at the same time:

The Flippening

What you’re looking at is long-lost footage of a 1960s ritual known as The Flippening.  A suburban legend once held that if an unmarried woman found a young mouse deer and levitated it, her hair and clothes would remain in style for as many years as the creature rotated in the air.

Unfortunately, the Flippening had one catch: you had to make the creature’s shadow rotate, too.

Thanks to Kirstin for the supremely odd graphic.

Friday pudublogging: The Flippening

This both makes me laugh and kinda creeps me out at the same time:

The Flippening

What you’re looking at is long-lost footage of a 1960s ritual known as The Flippening.  A suburban legend once held that if an unmarried woman found a young mouse deer and levitated it, her hair and clothes would remain in style for as many years as the creature rotated in the air.

Unfortunately, the Flippening had one catch: you had to make the creature’s shadow rotate, too.

Thanks to Kirstin for the supremely odd graphic.

Email

I’ll be unable to respond to (or probably even notice) most emails for the next
ten weeks while rushing frantically toward the deadline on the next
book.

If you enjoyed Prisoner of Trebekistan, feel like saying so, and really want to help out… don’t tell me you liked it; instead, please just email this very page to your friends, family, co-workers, and any pets who enjoy a good story.  With luck, they’ll land here, check out both the book itself and Trebekistan.com, and they’ll see why you sent them.

(And if you’ve just arrived this way, welcome!  I hope you’ll enjoy the goofy videos, the various extras to the book, the cheap and exotic air travel links, and whatever else you stumble across here.  Thanks for coming.  If you dig the stuff, pass it on!)

I’ll still keep posting on the blog here as often as I can, even when it gets really nuts in a few weeks.

Thanks!