[1198] in Humor

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HUMOR: More on Twinkies

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Andrew A. Bennett)
Mon Nov 13 08:28:38 1995

To: humor@MIT.EDU
Date: Mon, 13 Nov 1995 08:18:38 EST
From: "Andrew A. Bennett" <abennett@MIT.EDU>

There is an (unrelated) web page out there somewhere that even has photos...
-Drew

Date: Sun, 12 Nov 95 11:57:39 EST
From: mabehr@MIT.EDU (Michael Behr)
Subject: Speaking of Twinkies.... (fwd)

[dunno where this came from.  it's pretty amusing...  -cpage]

EXPOSURE:
     A Twinkie was left on a window ledge for four days, during which time
     an inch and a half of rain fell. Many flies were observed crawling
     across the Twinkie's surface, but contrary to hypothesis, birds -- even
     pigeons -- avoided this potential source of sustenance.
     Despite the rain and prolonged exposure to the sun, the Twinkie
     retained its original color and form. When removed, the Twinkie was
     found to be substantially dehydrated. Cracked open, it was observed to
     have taken on the consistency of industrial foam insulation; the
     filling, however, retained its advertised "creaminess."
RADIATION:
     A Twinkie was placed in a conventional microwave oven, which was set
     for precisely 4 minutes -- the approximate cooking time of bacon. After
     20 seconds, the oven began to emit the Twinkie's rich, characteristic
     aroma of artificial butter. After 1 minute, this aroma began to
     resemble the acrid smell of burning rubber. The experiment was aborted
     after 2 minutes, 10 seconds, when thick, foul smoke began billowing
     from the top of the oven. A second Twinkie was subjected to the same
     experiment. This Twinkie leaked molten white filling. When cooled, this
     now epoxylike filling bonded the Twinkie to its plate, defying gravity;
     it was removed only upon application of a butter knife.
EXTREME FORCE:
     A Twinkie was dropped from a ninth-floor window, a fall of
     approximately 120 feet. It landed right side up, then bounced onto its
     back. The expected "splatter" effect was not observed. Indeed, the only
     discernible damage to the Twinkie was a narrow fissure on its
     underside. Otherwise, the Twinkie remained structurally intact.
EXTREME COLD:
     A Twinkie was placed in a conventional freezer for 24 hours. Upon
     removal, the Twinkie was not found to be frozen solid, but its physical
     properties had noticeably "slowed": the filling was found to be the
     approximate consistency of acrylic paint, while exhibiting the
     mercurylike property of not adhering to practically any surface. It was
     noticed that the Twinkie had generously absorbed freezer odors.
EXTREME HEAT:
     A Twinkie was exposed to a gas flame for 2 minutes. While the Twinkie
     smoked and blackened and the filling in one of its "cream holes"
     boiled, the Twinkie did not catch fire. It did, however, produce the
     same "burning rubber" aroma noticed during the irradiation experiment.
IMMERSION:
     A Twinkie was dropped into a large beaker filled with tap water. The
     Twinkie floated momentarily, began to list and sink, and viscous yellow
     tendrils ran off its lower half, possibly consisting of a water-soluble
     artificial coloring. After 2 hours, the Twinkie had bloated
     substantially. Its coloring was now a very pale tan -- in contrast to
     the yellow, urine-like water that surrounded it. The Twinkie bobbed
     when touched, and had a gelatinous texture. After 72 hours, the Twinkie
     was found to have bloated to roughly 200 percent of its original size,
     the water had turned opaque, and a small, fan-shaped spray of filling
     had leaked from one of the "cream holes."
     Unfortunately, efforts to remove the Twinkie for further analysis were
     abandoned when, under light pressure, the Twinkie disintegrated into an
     amorphous cloud of debris. A distinctly sour odor was noted.
SUMMARY OF RESULTS
     The Twinkie's survival of a 120-foot drop, along with some of the
     unusual phenomena associated with the "creamy filling" and artificial
     coloring, should give pause to those observers who would unequivocally
     categorize the Twinkie as "food." Further clinical inquiry is required
     before any definite conclusions can be drawn.


- -Mike

- ------------------------------------------------------------------------
  mabehr@mit.edu                                    mabehr@lcs.mit.edu
  Mass. Institute of Technology           Programming Systems Research
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------
        I'd rather be cutting out my liver with a dull spoon...

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