My Guidelines for Pranks
#1: First things first - nobody gets hurt. Lawsuits and court battle suck. If it's safe,
you can get in trouble, but not NEARLY as much. This is the only rule that I will NEVER
waive, no matter how good the prank is.
#2: No permanent damage to the school or any expensive objects associated with the school
(buses, computers, teachers cars, freshmen, etc.) Assuming you do get caught, this way the
worst they can make you do is reverse whatever you have done. Otherwise, they will make
you pay for repairing the damage. And remember, especialy if you go to a public school,
the government has been known to pay several hundred dollars for a pair of pliers - imagine
what it'll cost to fix a window.
#3: These are mostly meant for high school students, in small groups. Thus, it is best to
keep manpower requirements to a minimum. Although I may include some larger-scale pranks,
the majority will be doable with at maximum a dozen people, mostly less.
#4: Because you are using high school students in small groups, cost should be kept
down. No renting helicopters, buying cars, etc. Some exceptions may be made, but probably
not many.
#5: Time can be important. Most pranks are pulled off in a matter of hours,
after susbstantial planning. At most, you have a week at the end of the school year
to pull of these pranks. Thus, the majority of these pranks are of limited complexity.
Again, I am willing to allow a certain number in with a greater complexity, but only if
the prank is REALLY good.
Keep these guidelines in mind while reading the plans, or when writing to me.
If you are going to write to me ([email protected]),
please include the following information:
- Your name/alias
- Brief description of prank and instructions
- Approximate cost (high, medium, low, unknown)
- Number of people required (minimum)
- Estimated time required
- Materials and tools required
If I like the prank, it'll go up on the Prank Page.
Return HOME