Jump to content

Kibology: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
you got his title wrong, shame on you
No edit summary
Line 8: Line 8:


== External Links==
== External Links==
* [http://www.kibo.com/]
* [http://www.kibo.com/ kibo.com]
* [http://world.std.com/~mmcirvin/kibology/index.html Matt McIrvin's Kibology] humorous articles and a brief history of alt.religion.kibology
* [http://world.std.com/~mmcirvin/kibology/index.html Matt McIrvin's Kibology] humorous articles and a brief history of alt.religion.kibology
* [http://www.angelfire.com/la/carlosmay/ARK.html Froggy's ARKaeology Site] Includes collections of posts from defunct "Unauthorized Kibological Archive" websites of the early and mid 1990s plus links to many Kibologists' webpages
* [http://www.angelfire.com/la/carlosmay/ARK.html Froggy's ARKaeology Site] Includes collections of posts from defunct "Unauthorized Kibological Archive" websites of the early and mid 1990s plus links to many Kibologists' webpages

Revision as of 22:20, 3 December 2003

Kibology is a humorous Usenet-based satire of religion, partly parodying Scientology. It is centered on the Usenet newsgroup alt.religion.kibology. The central figure of Kibology is Kibo. Practicioners of Kibology are called Kibologists or (sometimes more disdainfully) Kibozos.

James "Kibo" Parry and his friends began Kibology about 1989. In its early Usenet days it was centered in the newsgroups talk.bizarre and alt.slack, until the creation of alt.religion.kibology in late 1991. The faux religion aspect faded in the mid 1990s, and the newsgroup became oriented to the sense of humor of Kibo and his followers. The newsgroup also follows various internet "mad scientists" and "crackpots" like Archimedes Plutonium with a mixture of mockery and appreciation for the unintended humor they produce.

Some posts talk about the fictious nation of Kibonia, which Kibo is the capricious dictator of.

In addition to "Fearless Leader Kibo", other Kibologists have developed cult followings of their own from their unusual and humorous writing, the most prominent of these include Stephen Pacheco, Lisa Pea (Elisabeth Rea Higgins), Matt McIrvin, Stephen Will Tanner, Stefan Kapusniak, Joe Bay, and E. Teflon Piano.

  • kibo.com
  • Matt McIrvin's Kibology humorous articles and a brief history of alt.religion.kibology
  • Froggy's ARKaeology Site Includes collections of posts from defunct "Unauthorized Kibological Archive" websites of the early and mid 1990s plus links to many Kibologists' webpages