3; [Good afternoon, citizens of Venture City! Are you engaged in something especially interesting on this fine day? No? Well that's fine, too! Because regardless of what it is you happen to be doing, right now, at this very moment, a curious teenager in a bizarre getup is peering at you, a book in one hand and his chin held in the other. He observes for a handful of seconds, whether you've noticed him or not, before he grins manically and leans away.]
How fascinating.
7; [At a hot dog stand somewhere in the city, there is a fluffy-haired Japanese American teenager in far too many layers for the weather with a foil-wrapped dog in one hand. He appears to be inspecting it rather than eating it, turning it every which way in his hand. It appears he has also been prodding the ingredients, as he has ketchup, mustard, and relish on three individual fingers that he's yet to do anything about as his hand remains suspended above the food substance.]
[He also appears to be talking to himself, or perhaps the hot dog.]
The hot dog is in fact not made of dog at all, but commonly a cooked sausage, fit between a split bun and eaten as a sandwich. It has many variations, including changing out the sausage for a corn dog-- also a sausage, dipped in corn bread and often deep fried --and covering the sausage in many condiments. A Coney Island Hot Dog involves chili sauce and often onions, and originated nowhere near Coney Island, New York, but in fact in the early 20th Century in Michigan.
Philip | Kamen Rider W
[Good afternoon, citizens of Venture City! Are you engaged in something especially interesting on this fine day? No? Well that's fine, too! Because regardless of what it is you happen to be doing, right now, at this very moment, a curious teenager in a bizarre getup is peering at you, a book in one hand and his chin held in the other. He observes for a handful of seconds, whether you've noticed him or not, before he grins manically and leans away.]
How fascinating.
7;
[At a hot dog stand somewhere in the city, there is a fluffy-haired Japanese American teenager in far too many layers for the weather with a foil-wrapped dog in one hand. He appears to be inspecting it rather than eating it, turning it every which way in his hand. It appears he has also been prodding the ingredients, as he has ketchup, mustard, and relish on three individual fingers that he's yet to do anything about as his hand remains suspended above the food substance.]
[He also appears to be talking to himself, or perhaps the hot dog.]
The hot dog is in fact not made of dog at all, but commonly a cooked sausage, fit between a split bun and eaten as a sandwich. It has many variations, including changing out the sausage for a corn dog-- also a sausage, dipped in corn bread and often deep fried --and covering the sausage in many condiments. A Coney Island Hot Dog involves chili sauce and often onions, and originated nowhere near Coney Island, New York, but in fact in the early 20th Century in Michigan.
[Please feel free to stop him, someone. Anyone.]