Actor
Sebastien starred in the never-running sitcom “My friend Bongo” in the early ‘00s. Bongo, was the grooviest primate to ever grace the never-seen-screen. Known for his snappy yellow pleather wardrobe and catchy catchphrases, Bongo was the king of cool. One day, while flipping through a pile of fan mail, he stumbled upon a question that sent him on a wild experience: "Is pleather still a groovy material to wear?"
He decided to visit the Groovy Guru, a mystical fashion expert living in a psychedelic VW micro bus parked outside the El Segundo hot spot, “Rita’s Artificially Sweetened Lemonade Place”. The Guru greeted him with a smile and a knowing nod. "Ah, Bongo, the pleather question. It's as timeless as peace and love."
The Guru showed Bongo the Thinknado App, where he flirted with the absurd.
Is pleather still a groovy material to wear?
What
What
If?
Picture an awesome surfer riding the crest of a sitcom wave at sunset, forever frozen in that perfect moment. This eternal TV freeze-frame becomes our lens for tackling your peculiar predicament.
Inspired by this timeless surf scene, why not create a Pleather Preservation Society? Members dress exclusively in pleather outfits from various decades, living their daily lives as if stuck in a perpetual sitcom. They’d perform mundane tasks with exaggerated enthusiasm, always ready for an imaginary laugh track. The society could host Groovy Material Mondays where participants debate the merits of different synthetic fabrics while striking dramatic poses. They’d organize pleather fashion shows in public spaces, complete with overacted surprised reactions from passersby. This absurd social experiment might just reveal if pleather truly stands the test of time – or at least provide some entertaining insights into the fabric’s enduring appeal.
And so, Bongo continued to rock the airwaves of his mind with his ingenious style, knowing that some things never go out of fashion, he can be seen poolside or disco gardening on just about any day in sunny southern California.
If loving Thinknado is wrong, then I don't want to be right, because it's the rollercoaster of brilliance I've been waiting for my entire life!