The challenge takes the Ouija board principle and boils it down to a few pencils and a sheet of paper. Participants draw a cross on the paper, effectively splitting it into quadrants where they write yes in two of the sections and no in the other two.
Two pencils are then placed with one on top of the other in a cross shape on top of the cross that's drawn on the paper. Once the pencils and paper are in place, players ask Charlie, Charlie, are you there? or Charlie, Charlie, can we play?, according to the .
Oftentimes the pencil will move, supposedly under the control of a child demon from Mexico named Charlie.
It's more likely the precarious position of the pencils is to blame, still though, I've seen enough scary movies to avoid summoning spirits even as a prank. Plus demons and children are two things I try to avoid.
The Charlie Charlie Challenge and the screams it's evoked are all the talk Tuesday morning, but really the game is nothing new and it actually appears to be a watered down version of a Mexican tradition called .
Of course, some of the of this game are pretty hilarious, so at least there's that.
Click to read more on this story at HuffingtonPost.com.
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