Path: senator-bedfellow.mit.edu!bloom-beacon.mit.edu!npeer.de.kpn-eurorings.net!news-out.nuthinbutnews.com!propagator2-sterling!news-in-sterling.nuthinbutnews.com!xmission!nnrp.xmission!not-for-mail From: Michael Moncur Newsgroups: alt.shenanigans,alt.answers,news.answers Subject: alt.shenanigans - FAQ and guidelines for posting Followup-To: alt.shenanigans Date: Tue, 15 Jul 2003 09:10:02 +0000 (UTC) Organization: XMission http://www.xmission.com/ Lines: 525 Sender: mgm@xmission.xmission.com Approved: news-answers-request@MIT.Edu Expires: Sat, 30 Mar 1996 00:00:00 GMT Message-ID: NNTP-Posting-Host: xmission.xmission.com X-Trace: terabinaries.xmission.com 1058260203 32197 198.60.22.20 (15 Jul 2003 09:10:03 GMT) X-Complaints-To: abuse@xmission.com NNTP-Posting-Date: Tue, 15 Jul 2003 09:10:03 +0000 (UTC) Summary: This is a brief discussion of the purpose of the alt.shenanigans newsgroup, which deals with shenanigans, practical jokes, pranks, and other silliness. Please read it before posting. Xref: senator-bedfellow.mit.edu alt.shenanigans:51559 alt.answers:68378 news.answers:254596 Archive-name: shenanigans-faq Last-modified: 1996/01/30 Version: 2.0 ---------------------------------------------------------------------- - alt.shenanigans - FAQ and guidelines for posting - ---------------------------------------------------------------------- ALT.SHENANIGANS was created for the discussion of harmless practical jokes, known herein as "shenanigans". Other practical jokes, pranks, tricks, randomness, and generally just acting silly, are also discussed. Obviously I can't control what is posted, so there are no rules - but this document should give you some idea of what the group was intended for. At the very least, please read section 0 below before posting to the newsgroup. This FAQ is maintained by michael moncur (altshen AT starlingtech.com) with help and/or suggestions from: Charles Perkins Thomas Lund Daniel Reinker Curt Siffert Also, thanks to the following for their suggestions and corrections: Scott Flanagan, John Wolter, Aaron L Dickey, Blake P. Wood, Jim J Moskowitz, Constance L. Villani, Jacob Solomon Weinstein, Russell Schulz, Jorn Barger [ and several folks whose names I've lost track of ] If you have any additions, corrections, or condiments for this FAQ, please send them to me (altshen AT starlingtech.com). This FAQ and most others are available via anonymous FTP at the site rtfm.mit.edu. This one is /pub/usenet/news.answers/shenanigans-faq. It's also available from the alt.shenanigans archive at the site ftp.xmission.com at /pub/users/m/mgm/shenanigans/shenanigans-faq. ============================= CONTENTS: 0. What's alt.shenanigans all about? 1. What exactly is a shenanigan? 2. What ISN'T a shenanigan? 3. What NOT to post in alt.shenanigans (Frequently Annoying Questions) 4. History of alt.shenanigans - Net Shenanigans and attempts 5. Shenaniganisms and their meanings (alt.shenanigans terminology) 6. Shenanigans We've All Heard Before 7. Books relating to shenanigans 8. Resources for useful materials 9. Organizations devoted to shenaniganism 10. Shenanigan info available online, related newsgroups, etc. ============================= ------------------------------------ 0. What's alt.shenanigans all about? ------------------------------------ This newsgroup is for discussing shenanigans - our word for harmless practical jokes. Generally, the following types of discussion are found here: - Descriptions of shenanigans that have been pulled off - Questions about technical details of proposed shenanigans - Requests for ideas for a particular situation - Requests for help with a planned shenanigan - Information and discussion about other shenanigan-related resources Before posting to the newsgroup, be sure to read this FAQ. Also keep the following in mind: - If you're asking for ideas, give us some specifics. Don't just ask for "ideas for a shen at school". Give us some information so that we can help. Also, be creative - come up with a few ideas. Don't just expect everyone else to come up with ideas for you. - If your posting doesn't describe a shenanigan (or an idea for one) it is traditional to include an ObShen - or Obligatory Shenanigan. This is a brief shenanigan description or idea at the end of your message. These generally make your message more enjoyable for those of us who are interested in shenanigans. - Try to avoid crossposting. Shenanigan-related messages are rarely appropriate in other groups. Also check the newsgroups when you are replying, and trim them if necessary. - Use an informative subject line, such as "What can I do with 400,000 plastic fruits?" or "Need ideas for bar mitzvah shen". This will help other readers decide whether to read your message. --------------------------------- 1. What exactly is a shenanigan? --------------------------------- A shenanigan is something that is done for no purpose other than to confuse or fool its intended victim. Shenanigans differ from the mainstream usage of "practical jokes" or "pranks" in that they are, above all, harmless. Throwing eggs at someone's car is a prank; Handing out eggs with odd sayings written on them at a mall is a shenanigan. I hate to use this example, but most of the things you see on "TV's Bloopers and Practical Jokes" are shenanigans. Although there is much overlap between practical jokes, pranks, and shenanigans, I would like to make this distinction: The victim responds to a prank by saying, "Damn those kids!" or "I'll get you for this." (Or by taking legal action.) A shenanigan, on the other hand, receives a response such as "Why would anyone go to the trouble?" or "I don't get it." from 'normal' citizens, or is responded to in kind by a fellow shenaniganist. In short, if you laugh at it, even if you're the victim... It's probably a shenanigan. Obviously different people laugh at very different things, so use your judgement and know your victim. It should be noted that this is strictly "my" definition of the term, and any similarity to your definition or the dictionary's is entirely coincidental. ----------------------------- 2. What ISN'T a shenanigan? ----------------------------- - Physically harmful things, such as putting Nair in a shampoo bottle, ex-lax in someone's food, or sugar in their gas tank. - VANDALISM. Putting bubble-bath in a fountain, breaking things, repainting people's mailboxes or houses. Sometimes funny, but these are pranks, and usually illegal, and not shenanigans. - THEFT. Switching price tags (if you actually BUY the things), stealing books from libraries, etc. - RUDENESS. Saran-wrapping toilets. Throwing water balloons at someone who wasn't expecting them. Anything that forces someone to change their clothes. Bear in mind that there can not be a solid list of "what is/isn't a shenanigan", since it varies depending on the victim. For example, throwing water balloons at businessmen is not a shenanigan, but throwing them at your brother may be okay; throwing water balloons at me is okay, but throwing them at Bill Clinton is a Felony in the United States. One final rule... When in doubt, post it anyway. The worst that can happen is a silly flamewar, and when a flamewar happens on alt.shenanigans, it's hard to tell if it's real or fake. Also, notice that every time a flamewar erupts someone will make the classic "So, was your posting supposed to be a shenanigan?" post. Watch for it. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 3. What NOT to post in alt.shenanigans (Frequently Annoying Questions) ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Once again, I'm not in any control - but these are some things that you may regret if you post them. See also #6 below, "Shenanigans we've all heard before", before you post any great new ideas you may have. 1. I'm really annoyed with X. Could everyone do me a favor and send really huge files to his email address? There are two major reasons not to post this: first, it's stupid, blatant, and harms everyone by overrunning the bandwidth of the net. Second, this is alt.shenanigans - if you're foolish enough to post this, expect the mail to come to YOUR address instead. However, if you see such a post, PLEASE just ignore it. You don't really know if the person who posted it was even using his own account, and everyone will suffer. 2. What can I do about the guy who always parks in my parking space? I don't know why, but these questions keep coming up. The answer is simple - ask him not to. If that doesn't work, you're on your own. A shenanigan might confuse him, annoy him, or make him mad, but I doubt it will convince him to stop parking there. 3. How can I get revenge on my noisy/messy/annoying roommate/neighbor/co-worker? Well, if you're good-natured, and the person in question is too, a shenanigan may be a good revenge. However, the people who post these sorts of questions tend to want something more severe. In that case, call your local authorities, or consult the alt.revenge newsgroup. 4. You can't even spell 'vociferousness', so why do you think you know so much about shenanigans? Well, I know that all newsgroups are plagued by spelling flames, but I can dream, can't I? ---------------------------------------------------------------- 4. History of alt.shenanigans - Net Shenanigans and attempts ---------------------------------------------------------------- Many shenanigans have been perpetrated on the Internet, USENET, and on alt.shenanigans itself. Someone has a list of them, but it isn't me. :) If anyone can dig it up, please email me - if not I'll eventually complete this section by browsing through the archives. Most recently, the most successful net.shenanigan ever was pulled on a newsgroup called alt.clearing.technology. [Insert brief description of the a.c.t. shenanigan here.] I also am attempting to compile an archive of the postings involved in this shenanigan... Let me know if you've already done such a thing. If you are planning a net shenanigan, remember two things: first, to be a shenanigan it should be harmless, and second, discussing a new net.shenanigan on alt.shenanigans is a Bad Idea, since your intended victim might be reading it. That's what mailing lists are for... ------------------------------------------------------------------- 5. Shenaniganisms and their meanings (alt.shenanigans terminology) ------------------------------------------------------------------- A brief glossary of terms you'll see in alt.shenanigans: Words meaning "shenanigan": -------------------------------- "shen" - a shortened form which has come into recent use. "jake" - a discordian term for something done to create chaos. "jape" - a dated term meaning practical joke. "practical joke" is obvious; occasionally abbreviated "PJ". "pranks" are usually considered different from shenanigans in that shenanigans are harmless and pranks aren't. See "What is a Shenanigan" above. "Practical Joke" may have the same connotation. Words meaning "One who performs a shenanigan": ------------------------------------------------- perpetrator, perp, shenaniganer, shenner, shenster, shenaniganster, shenaniganizer, shenaniganist, hooligan Words meaning "The intended victim of a shenanigan": ------------------------------------------------------- victim, mark, recipient, target ...and finally, "shenaniganism" is the lifestyle or belief system of one who devotes a large part of his/her life to shenanigans. --------------------------------------- 6. Shenanigans We've All Heard Before --------------------------------------- There are certain things that get posted about once a month by different people. Perhaps this is a shenanigan itself; If not, here are some of them so that you can avoid being the one to post them. [alt.shenanigans veterans: I'm probably forgetting a few of these. Suggestions are welcome.] 1. DORM PRANKS. I'm sure there are some creative ones - I've heard some great ones - but there are certain ones that haunt us: "Pennying" someone into their dorm; rearranging their furniture; bricking up their doors; and so on. Chances are that, unless you made it up yourself, (and often, even if you did) we've heard it. 2. Using "Business Reply Mail" cards to mail, say, for example, BRICKS... Not only is this not a shenanigan; it's also illegal and simply doesn't work. Here's a quote from a United States Postal Service bulletin: "When someone attaches your business reply envelope to a larger package (or even to a brick), you don't have to accept it and pay postage. Postage is due on non-letter size pieces only if the sender affixed your business reply _label_." [Editor's note: Yes, the "brick" bit is in the bulletin. Their parentheses, not mine.] -------------------------------- 7. Books related to shenanigans -------------------------------- [This list is by no means complete. If you've got any such books, or can clarify something about these ones, kindly mail me the info as below. Dates and Publishers would be nice, too.] - Richard P. Feynman, "Surely You're Joking, Mr. Feynman!" Feynman was one of the world's greatest theoretical physicists and was awarded the Nobel Prize in physics; but this is not a book about science. It's a collection of stories from his past, ranging from scientific discovery to meeting girls - and many of them are first-rate shenanigans. An excellent book, particularly if you think that scientists are boring. - Richard P. Feynman, "What Do _You_ Care What Other People Think" A second book by Feynman, this one is mostly serious. It includes some stories from his past, and the latter half of the book tells of his experience in the committee that studied the "Challenger Disaster". Despite a more serious tone, it's a funny and enjoyable book. Feynman died in 1988, and will be missed. - Penn Jillette and Teller, "How to Play With Your Food" A collection of food-related magic tricks, shenanigans, pranks, and humorous stories. Includes props for some of the tricks. - Penn Jillette and Teller, "Penn & Teller's Cruel Tricks for Dear Friends" Another collection by Penn and Teller, again with props included. Also, the book is a shenanigan in itself - try reading it and be prepared to be confused at first. - Don Novello, "The Lazlo Letters" ...and "Citizen Lazlo: The Lazlo Letters volume 2" Workman Publishing, NY, 1977 and 1992 Don Novello (who played Father Guido Sarducci on Saturday Night Live) has collected a series of letters written by himself under the pseudonym of Lazlo Toth. The letters are to world leaders, corporate giants, and others, and most include a reply. A humorous inspiration to the literary-minded shenaniganist. - There are also two other books of similar letter-writing pranks: "Outrageously Yours" by Bruce West, 1986 "Modest Proposals" by Randy Cohen, 1981 Specifics on these would be appreciated. - Harry Anderson, "Games you can't lose: A guide for suckers" Pocket Books, 1989 Harry Anderson, the magician, comedian, and sometimes actor on Night Court and Dave's World, wrote this collection of sucker bets and such. - Peter van der Linden, "The Official Handbook of Practical Jokes," Signet, ISBN 0-451-15873-3, 1989 and "The Second Official Handbook of Practical Jokes," Signet, 1991, ISBN 0-451-16924-7 Two collections of practical jokes, urban legends, and delightfully bad illustrations. - "Legends of Caltech" and "More Legends of Caltech", authors unknown This details both Rosebowl shenanigans, the Hollywood sign changeover, and a bunch of other random shenanigans done by Caltech students. Caltech is also where Richard Feynman taught and goofed off for many years. I think the books are available from the Caltech bookstore: (818) 395-5121 - at least, they used to ship them everywhere... - Neil Steinberg, "If At All Possible, Involve A Cow" ISBN: 0-312-07810-2 St Martin's Press, 1992 A book about college pranks in general; it covers a number of different universities, and has a chapter devoted to comparing MIT pranks to Caltech pranks. RE/Search Publications, RE/Search #11 "Pranks" ISBN 0-940642-10-7 RE/Search Publications, 20 Romolo #B, SF CA 94133 Interviews with: Tim Leary, Abbie Hoffman, Paul Krassner, Mark Pauline, Boyd Rice, Monte Cazazzo, Jello Biafra, Bruce Conner, John Waters, and Henry Rollins. More about pranks than shenanigans... but there's a fine line. - The Journal of Irreproducible Results (periodical) This Journal publishes parodies of scientific studies. It is conceivable that any shenanigan with the pretense of scientific rigor or possible technological utility could be sent in for publication. Here's the submission address: Marc Abrahams, Editor The Journal of Irreproducible Results c/o Wisdom Simulators, Inc. PO Box 853 Cambridge, MA 02238 [send a SASE for writers' guidelines] - Games Magazine (periodical) Games has a lot of puzzles, brain teasers, contests, and information on gaming in general. It also, however, presents a lot of dirty tricks including fake ads, practical jokes (every april issue), and even the odd Penn & Teller trick. Some of the past articles have discussed practical jokes, carnival gaffs, and sucker bets. ---------------------------------- 8. Resources for useful materials ---------------------------------- Since creativity is at the heart of shenanigans, there is no set of "tools" that one needs; What one needs is merely the right attitude. Nonetheless, some items just inspire shenanigans, and it's nice to keep a few handy. Johnson Smith Company 4514 19th St. Court East PO Box 25500 Bradenton, FL 34206-5500 This company sells all of the "classic" practical joke items - joy buzzers, water balloons, fake parking tickets, ad infinitum. Send for a catalog. Oriental Trading Company P.O. Box 3407 Omaha, NE 68103-0407 (800) 228-2269 OTC doesn't sell anything that is intended for practical jokes - but it's a goldmine for the creative shenaniganster. Balloons, rubber balls, plastic fish, funky toy sunglasses, stickers... All sold by the dozen or by the gross, at incredibly good prices. Call and ask for their catalog - they'll ship it UPS for free. American Science and Surplus PO Box 48838 Niles, IL 60714-0838 (708) 982-0870 An EXCELLENT catalog with scientific and all sorts of other bizarre surplus items, many ready-made shenanigans in themselves. It's also fun to read the catalog cover to cover, as their descriptions are quite amusing. Edmund Scientific Company 101 E. Gloucester Pike Barrington, NJ 08007-1380 (609) 547-8880 Another scientific supply house. A bit on the expensive side, but they do have alot of useful items for the technically-oriented shenaniganist, and a few bizarre novelty items - magnets of all sorts, telescopes and lenses, weather balloons, and of course Sea Monkeys and jumping quarters. Gall's Inc. 2470 Palumbo Drive Lexington, KY 40555-4658 (800) 477-7766, fax (800) 944-2557 These guys are THE place to order all sorts of neat-o police equipment, everything from breathalyzers to police car light bars and sirens and firefighting equipment, etc. It's a GREAT catalog to flip through no matter what, and just about the only things the public isn't allowed to order is car entry tools and police badges. (Don't forget the POLICE LINE: DO NOT CROSS tape) Of course, don't forget the produce section at your local supermarket. You'd be amazed at how many strange looks you can get just by carrying the right fruit or vegetable. Try naming it and talking to it for added effect. -------------------------------------------- 9. Organizations devoted to shenaniganism -------------------------------------------- Although most shenanigans are done by "ordinary folks" and among groups of friends, there have been attempts to organize groups of hooligans for the purpose: Random Student Organizations (RSO's) - These are rumored to exist at many colleges and universities. They are devoted to "randomness", which usually involves doing strange things just to confuse people. As such it qualifies as a shenanigan. Unfortunately, RSO's aren't always the easiest people to contact. If you're unsure if there's one at your institution... Start your own. If there's one already you'll probably run into it. The Cacaphony Society - This is a loosely-connected bunch of organizations in various US cities (San Francisco and Seattle are two that I know of.) They stay underground, since their activities are occasionally above or below the law. They are interested in creating cacaphony (confusion) and tend to do it by behaving strangely in public. I've heard several of their escapades, and they're some of the most elaborate and funny shenanigans I've heard... Any specific information on either of these organizations will be eagerly added to the FAQ. --------------------------------------------------------------- 10. Shenanigan info available online, related newsgroups, etc. --------------------------------------------------------------- Related newsgroups: alt.folklore.urban is a newsgroup that deals with "urban legends", and many shenanigans are urban legends - the kidnapped garden gnome that sent postcards from throughout the country, the students who stole all of the barber poles in a town... Of course, these might have happened, probably more than once. You may also want to check out alt.folklore.college, alt.folklore.computers, alt.fan.lemurs, and of course alt.fan.henry-j-tillman. If shenanigans are too mild for you, try alt.revenge. The alt.shenanigans archive: All of the posts, good and bad, from alt.shenanigans - down to the first post - are in this archive. It's usually within a week of up-to-date. It's at ftp.xmission.com, in the /pub/users/m/mgm/shenanigans directory. If you have trouble accessing it, or don't have FTP access, send mail to altshen AT starlingtech.com, and we can possibly make other arrangements. You'll also find the latest version of this FAQ at this site. [The alt.shenanigans archive is currently a bit out of date; I'm working on a way to automate it. Stay tuned.] The shenanigans mailing list: This mailing list exists independently of alt.shenanigans, and is used for planning 'unpublicized' shenanigans. For further information, send mail to altshen AT starlingtech.com . The alt.shenanigans Web Page: http://www.xmission.com/~mgm/shenanigans/ Includes basic info, access to the FAQ and archives, links to other shenanigan-related sites, and the best of alt.shenanigans - a compilation of particularly good posts to the group. ------------------------- This FAQ is Copyright (C) 1993,4,5,6 michael moncur. It may be distributed in any form as long as the file, including this notice, remains intact. Distribution in any collection sold for commercial purposes is explicitly PERMITTED provided that you notify me of your intent to do so. Portions of this document were written by the people who wrote them. Actual mileage may vary. Do not hang from towel or insert head into towel loop. Cooking time may vary depending on size, shape, and variety of potato. Not the Beatles. Cape does not enable user to fly. -- ...michael moncur, BC, OEADM - mm2@pobox.com [X] fot#1... "I don't have any solution, but I certainly admire the problem." --Ashleigh Brilliant