Publisher: 100 Word Stories Podcast
Weekly Challenge: 227 (Soundcloud)
Topic: Masks
Submitted: August 25, 2010
Published: August 29, 2010
Participants: 9 total
Recommended Topic: Barcode
The hideous creation oozed itself around the lab. The doctor’s experiment was getting out of hand. It was scary, except it wore silly masks of three cartoon characters.
He told one person of his experiment. It was after he injected her with nanites to cure his fiance’s terminal disease. Before their very eyes, her arm turned a dark purple.
It later became shiny and then started to droop as if it were geletan. A few days later, she was just a mess of purple ooze moving around, longing for revenge.
As she absorbed him through osmosis, he turned purple too.
About the 100 Word Stories Weekly Challenge
About the 100 Word Stories Weekly Challenge
100 Word Stories
…And, as always, keep it brief!


The 100 Word Stories Weekly Challenge was (and still is) hosted by Laurence Simon—better known in Second Life as Crap Mariner—who built a wonderfully strange, tight-knit community around storytelling discipline.

Originally, he started a daily random theme on ScriberOptics via 100words on May 13, 2005, based on a photo, using a combination of everyone’s submitted words rather than posting a single topic. He would write short 100-word stories featuring recurring characters, such as Abraham Lincoln and the Mustard Man.

In June 2005, he then spun the stories into their own subdomain from his personal blog at podcasting.isfullofcrap.com, featuring multiple authors and guest entries. Rather than daily challenges, he settled for weekly challenges, which were due on April 21, 2006, for the topic “Bunnies!” It was published on April 22, 2006. He continued each week posting a topic and invited people to write a story of 100 or [sic]Less Nessman 2.0 words long. Most participants went for exactly 100. It was a form of microfiction—a subset of flash fiction—where the limitation wasn’t restrictive but creatively freeing. Within those 100 words, stories could be funny, heartfelt, surreal, absurd, reflective, or unexpectedly powerful.
Laurence encouraged contributors not just to write but to perform. He always invited people to record themselves reading their stories and send in the audio so their voices could be part of the experience. If someone didn’t—or couldn’t—he gladly read their story for them. Sometimes he even used software to alter his voice, adding character variety, humor, or dramatic flair, so every episode felt like a small production rather than just a reading.
The project chose to respond to the creative emptiness of podcasts at the time not with cynicism, but with creativity. Laurence filled the internet with humor, storytelling, discipline, and imagination. Eventually, the project continued under his broader creative umbrella, “One A Day Until I Die,” where he continues to celebrate the joy of storytelling in all its weird and wonderful forms.
Episodes usually feature everyone’s submissions together in one podcast, and listeners vote on their favorites. The weekly winner not only gets bragging rights but also the honor of choosing the next topic—meaning the community itself shaped what came next. Many participants came from overlapping creative spaces: writers, musicians, podcasters, and especially people in Second Life, where the challenge became something of a shared cultural experience. It wasn’t just a writing exercise; it was friendship, collaboration, creative play, and a small but meaningful part of internet history.
I even had the chance to meet Laurence once at the Second Life Community Convention, where he was handing out refrigerator magnets promoting the podcast — including one I still have today on my fridge. It’s a little artifact from a wonderfully weird, wonderfully human creative era.
This project mattered. It still does.
Paper/Wood Floor Theme from an old version of 100 Word Stories Circa 2009
Reflection
December 28, 2025
Weekly Challenge #227 (“Masks”) let me lean into something darker, stranger, and a little bit absurd. I took the prompt literally and mixed it with science-fiction tragedy: a failed cure, nanites gone wrong, a body dissolving into vengeance-driven purple ooze… while still wearing ridiculous cartoon masks.

I submitted both text and audio on August 25, 2010, creating a 54-second reading of the story using Audacity and LAME to produce a smaller MP3 file. To go along with it, I posted the audio on SoundCloud and doodled a quick cover—a simple hand-drawn mask repeated across a purple blob background to fit the story’s theme. It wasn’t meant to be polished art; it was meant to echo the story’s mix of humor, dread, and surreal weirdness.
Like so many 100 Word Stories challenges, this one reminded me how much creativity you can squeeze into a tiny word count when the deadline is coming and the ideas get strange in the best possible way.




