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Museum Piece
By Tea Krulos
Last winter, I visited the Milwaukee Public Museum for what will probably be the last time in their current location. Saying good-bye can be hard, but it was important for me to pay my respects. The museum has a lot of emotional geography for me. Just a few blocks away, construction has made rapid progress on a shiny new museum. It’ll be here before you know it.
I remember running across the dimly lit cobblestones in the Streets of Old Milwaukee exhibit as a kid. I stared up in terrified awe of the Tyrannosaurus Rex, towering above a felled Triceratops with a big chunk bitten out of it. There were school field trips and later in life there were first dates, talking about how Wes Anderson would go googly-eyed over the time capsule of design fonts and color palettes of the old diorama displays.
My most striking memory related to the museum comes from one frigid day in late January 2017, when I sought refuge there after I decided to leave a toxic relationship. The time leading up to this will always be remembered by me as absolutely miserable. I conducted a crude experiment that January. I noted if the relationship that day was good, bad, or just ok with a smiley, frowny, or non-plussed face each day on the calendar with a Sharpie. Toward the end of January, the calendar confirmed what I already knew. Wrapped in a blanket sitting in my office chair, my skin itchy from the dry winter, I stared, teary-eyed, at a month of mostly frowns, and a few straight horizontal lines with dot eyes above them. I realized that it was important to leave immediately. But I had no idea where to go.
I quickly stuffed a backpack with things I thought I might need– some clothes, a toothbrush, that sort of stuff, then I walked blinking into the winter sun. I knew I needed to get out of the neighborhood right away and I wanted to go somewhere where people didn’t know me and I could hide out and think. The universe hit me with an answer– my sanctuary could be the Milwaukee Public Museum.
My memories of that day at the museum are both incredibly vivid and a dream-like haze at the same time. I spent hours wandering around, looking at every display in the building, witnessing all of Mother Earth’s history.
I saw a diorama of the Silurian period, depicting what Wisconsin looked like 410 million years ago—an ancient reef with cone-shaped, squid-like nautiloids swimming and hunting trilobites scattered on the seabed below them. Fast forward 35 million years later, and there is ichthyostega, a cute bugger of an amphibian, sticking their snout out of a plexiglass pond, contemplating dry land, and a full-size model of a stegosaurus, smiling benignly in the Late Jurassic another 240 million years after that. Crystals and meteorites, fossils and skeletons.
Then the humans started walking around and the museum had a wide range of their antics around the globe over thousands of years. In the European Village, showcasing what traditional households looked like, I peered through a window and saw a German man, content, sitting at his kitchen table, whittling, his trusty schnauzer sitting on a chair next to him, staring at him intently. Revisiting the Streets of Old Milwaukee, I was seeing my hometown a couple hundred years ago, the saloon, the Usinger’s sausage shop with a mannequin carefully arranging a platter of plastic meat, and I visited the granny sitting on her porch in a rocking chair. She used to slowly rock back and forth but no longer does—I assume because people were a little creeped out by it.
I saw it all. Beadwork by indigenous Wisconsinites, Hopi pottery, the interior of a Japanese samurai sword workshop, Javan wooden puppets, Balinese dance costumes, Polynesian war clubs, gongs and rattles from Cameroon, and Australian aboriginal bark paintings.
It was a blur of artifacts and explanatory placards. I saw items from ancient Egypt and Greece [Greek kylix (wine cup) with women playing lyre and flute, c.530-520 BCE], things of war [Colt-Burgess Lever Action Carbine, .44 Caliber, 12 Shot Repeater c. 1883] ESCALATORS→ Second Floor, things of beauty [Headdress worn by dancers in the famed Feather Dance of the Zapotecs of the Oaxaca Valley, Mexico] ←RESTROOMS, animals from near [Wisconsin Mammals] and far [Savannas are inhabited by browsing animals such as the prehensile lipped black rhinoceros, impala and kudu].
I sat down on a bench for a while and reflected on…everything. My spinning head was starting to slow down. It was the right place at the right time for me. My subconscious must have known I was in desperate need of a perspective of several million years. Your little life and your sad, dumb little problems aren’t even a grain of sand here. Oddly that made me feel just fine, I was a quiet passenger on Planet Earth.
I’d look at some displays, then find a bench and sit there, staring off into space, observing my fellow humans. I saw groups of kids looking in wonder at a mastodon skeleton. There was an elderly man contemplating a diorama depicting the construction of the Temple of Ramesses III. I especially had curiosity looking at couples. Some looked happy and smitten, others bored and annoyed. It was the moving display of the whole pizzicato of the human experience. I watched the people passing by and tried to ignore a shadow of loneliness falling over me.
By late afternoon, the museum had become deserted and quiet. I listened to the echo of the escalator clacking on an endless loop and it dawned on me that I had no plans beyond hiding out here for the day. I didn’t want to leave. I began thinking that maybe I could hide somewhere and spend the night. I needed a spot to curl up like the desert fox burrowed underground in the Land of Sun: The Southwest display. I was, as the Talking Heads sang, “just an animal looking for a home.”
The third floor seemed like the best option for this. I could set up camp behind the family of rhinoceroses in The Savanna Bush or hide out in a dark corner of the recreation of a Guatemalan public market. But the best option seemed to be in the Circumpolar and Asia wing, a display where you could enter a facsimile of an igloo with a bench inside, a scene of an Netsilik Inuit woman behind plexiglass, tending to a fake fire.
“Life inside the igloo was cramped but comfortable,” the placard read. “Seal oil, burned in stone lamps using moss or animal hair wicks, provided heat and light. Fur-lined snow benches provided comfortable working and sleeping areas.”
Maybe I could just rest here, pretend to feel the heat of the seal oil fueled flames and fall asleep, warm in my winter jacket. Or maybe I could just live there, like that guy who lived in an airport in Paris for 18 years.
It was time to face cold reality. I came to terms with the fact that I had to leave, so I headed down to the lobby, then called one of my sisters, asking if they could take me to my parent’s house, so I could sleep on their couch. Every day after that was easier.
The museum will change. Change is sometimes inevitable and that is okay, even great sometimes.
Tea’s Weird Week: I’m Looking for View-Masters
I got an idea I’m working on, possibly somewhere at QWERTYFEST MKE or a QF related event– a View-Master Theater, where there are maybe 6 or 8 stereoscopes (View-Master is the popular brand name) that people can scope (sorry for the pun) out.
If you’re not familiar, View-Master is a little device, usually red plastic, that you put a reel disc in, then you look into it and advance through the photos with a lever. I used to enjoy them as a kid and they still make them. The first View-Master was marketed in 1939 and it grew in popularity throughout the decades that followed. Companies made reels based on everything from nature to travel to pop culture.

This idea was spun because I discovered some classic reels related to Milwaukee and Wisconsin, there’s one that shows some famous spots around the state and another that looks like it’s maybe from the 70s with slides from the Milwaukee County Zoo, and another for the Domes (and there’s probably others out there, too). I guess what I’m saying is that I’m low key collecting View-Masters and reels.
I’m especially interested in:
-Anything related to Wisconsin.
-Sci fi/ horror/ fantasy/ super heroes
-1940s-1980s travel/ spotlights on cities or countries
-Music/ bands
-Anything weird, of course
-Not looking for: Disney (they made TONS of reels) or pop culture post-80s
If you got ones you’re willing to part with or sell on the cheap, I’m interested. The’ll go to a good home and I intend to share them with others. E-mail me: teakrulos@gmail.com
Please Clap Dept. Speaking of QWERTYFEST, we’re entering the final stretch of fundraising. Every little bit helps, so please donate (and get some great perks in exchange) to help us make it happen: https://www.indiegogo.com/projects/qwertyfest-mke-2025#/
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Tea’s Weird Week: If You Don’t Support QWERTY, You Might End Up Butt-hurty (Revisited)
I wrote a similar column title last year in a plea to get people to support something I’m proud of– QWERTYFEST MKE. QF was officially started by me and my co-organizer Molly Snyder in 2023. This year will be our 3rd annual event (though I should note we do smaller events throughout the year, too). It’s been a wild ride, but I absolutely love some of the things we’ve accomplished with the resources we’ve had available.
So what is QWERTYFEST? The inspiration comes from a Milwaukeean named Christopher Latham Sholes. Sholes was an inventor, newspaper editor, and politician. He worked with collaborators at the Kleinsteuber Machine Shop, which was kind of like a Makerspace of it’s day, located on State St., right next to Turner Hall (where our QWERTYFEST opening night party will take place), it was located where State Street Pizza Pub is today. Although there had been attempts at a typing machine before, Sholes developed the first commercial typewriter. Part of that design was the QWERTY keyboard configuration (named after the first 6 letters of the first row), which we still use on our computers and phones today.
Oh, by the way, I’m giddy to say we teamed up with the National Bobblehead Hall of Fame to create a Sholes bobblehead, which you can pre-order HERE.
I won’t go on and on about typewriter philosophy, but in a world filled with parasitic AI programs, deep fakes, spam bots, disinformation, trolls, cyberbullying, privacy concerns, vapid influencers, social isolation, etc. etc. it is a relief to sit in a space with your brain and a piece of paper you can clack-clack-clack away at. QWERTYFEST gives you a chance to do that and hang out with other people who love creativity– writers, readers, artists, musicians, builders, and other creators.
But as much as we love to see (and hear) typewriters in action, QWERTYFEST is more than a “typewriter convention.” We like to celebrate the QWERTY keyboard in all iterations. This year we’re going to be working with DarkFusion Systems to feature more mechanical keyboards people can try out. Our Quick Brown Fox Typing Contest will be back with manual and electric typewriter categories, as well as a texting one. Equally important– we want to celebrate writers of all genres who use these keyboards. New opportunities for local writers to connect and showcase their work is something we love to see.
We also have an appreciation for other analog/ vintage technologies and are working some of that in– pre-digital cameras, board games, records, stamp collecting, stereoscopes– if anything like that is your passion, let us know. Last, me and Molly are both advocates of Milwaukee culture in general, so we like to share Milwaukee history and innovation and collaborate with local businesses we feel are making the city a better place.
Me and Molly are the familiar faces of QWERTYFEST, cause we’re the organizers, but I want to mention the incredible support we’ve gotten both locally in Milwaukee and in the typewriter community. It’s humbling to say that there’s too many people to thank– I would feel awful forgetting anyone. So this is just a huge blanket THANK YOU to everyone who has helped support QWERTYFEST and our related projects (like our zine, QWERTY Quarterly).
And one of those supporters could be YOU. We launched our 2025 fundraiser on Indiegogo. We are trying to raise a lot of money. Venue rental, paying entertainers, artists, and other guests, plus a ton of other costs that pop up here and there adds up to a lot really quickly, but we’re glad to say that almost all of that money goes to local businesses and creators. Our pledge levels include great perks like subscriptions to QWERTY Quarterly, our beloved “We Built Milwaukee on Beer and Typewriters” T-shirt, tickets to our QWERTYFEST events, typed letters or poems, and more. Donations help, so does sharing the fundraiser on your social media, email lists, or wherever you can.
Look, here’s the short version: we want to do big things with QWERTYFEST MKE and you can help make that happen by supporting our fundraiser here: https://www.indiegogo.com/projects/qwertyfest-mke-2025#/

Next week on TWW: The Nadine Zine! Want TWW delivered to your inbox? You can sign up for my Substack HERE. Follow me on: Facebook Bluesky Instagram
Tea’s Weird Week: Hot Cryptid Summer (Part 1)

Local legends have drawn tourist dollars for decades, attracting curious legend trippers. Celebrations like West Virginia’s Mothman Festival (Sept. 20-21) and the Ohio Bigfoot Conference (which happened earlier this month) draw big crowds, but in the last few years the number of festivals celebrating lesser known cryptids have grown. Frogman Fest (which happened in March) in Loveland, Ohio, for example, was inspired by an odd case of a 4-foot-tall frog sighting in 1972. I really love to see towns across the country embrace these strange stories and have some pride in them! I decided to list out some summer cryptid fests for all you legend trippers. This column has listings May through August, I’ll write a part 2 of this in August to list more taking place end of summer and into fall.
This is by no means an exhaustive list. If this sort of thing is your jam, I recommend signing up for Sharon Hill’s Pop Cryptid Spectator Substack, which explores representations of “pop cryptozoology” including updates on cryptid themed events.
Hodag Heritage Festival (May 17)
Rhinelander, WI
Wisconsin’s favorite cryptid, the Hodag, dates back to a hoax from the 1890s by town prankster Eugene Shepard, which evolved to become the love and pride of Rhinelander. I wrote more about this for Milwaukee Magazine last year: https://www.milwaukeemag.com/what-is-the-hodag-rhinelander/
Hodag Heritage Festival has been around about five years now and has grown quite a bit. The line-up for this Saturday looks really fun: a pancake breakfast, talks related to folklore, a Hodag calling contest, and much more. It’s organized in part by The Hodag Store. More info: https://www.rhinelanderchamber.com/hodagheritagefestival

Grafton Monster Festival (June 13-14)
Grafton, WV
West Virginia is one of the country’s most cryptid-dense states. Mothman of Point Pleasant is the most well-known, but there’s a lot of other strange creatures out of time and space running around there. Take, for example, the Grafton Monster, a cryptid described as being 7-9 feet tall with white, seal-like skin, and no discernable head, but a face peering from the creature’s chest. It was said to give a loud, deep bellow. There were several sightings around Grafton, WV in June of 1964.
More info on the 2nd Annual Grafton Monster Festival, organized by The Grafton Monster Museum: https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=61563258026085
Big Muddy Monster Festival (June 21)
Murphysboro, IL
Also known as the “Murphysboro Mud Monster,” this Bigfoot creature described as being slathered in mud, was first seen by a couple getting hot and heavy parked on a lover’s lane in southern Illinois in 1973. Several other people claimed to see– and smell– the stinky cryptid. Big Muddy has since become an iconic symbol of Murphysboro. More info: https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100094542990087

Veggie Man Day (July 13)
Fairmont, WV
Another West Virginian cryptid and a strange one. The “Vegetable Man” was a humanoid entity that looked to be made out of plants that was allegedly encountered by a West Virginian hunting in the woods in 1968. The first Veggie Man Day is taking place at the Frank & Jane Gabor West Virginia Folklife Center. More: https://www.facebook.com/events/s/veggie-man-day-2025/1177423897211539
Squonkapalooza (Aug. 2)
Johnstown, PA
Based on Pennsylvanian lumberjack lore, the Squonk is said to be a butt ugly cryptid that is constantly weeping over their own ugly appearance. Aw, poor Squonk– I like you just the way you are. Like all of the festivals I’m listing, Squonkapalooza is a nice mix of craft/art vendors, presentations, and entertainment. Check out more: https://squonkapalooza.com/

Fearsome Folklore Festival (Aug. 23)
Murfreesboro, TN
This one doesn’t focus on a particular entity but is a free, “family friendly folklore and cryptid themed celebration.” Speakers, live music, cryptid drawing workshops, and a petting zoo– I’m assuming the zoo is of known animals and not cryptids. Both Squonkapalooza and this one are created by Cryptid Comforts.
More info: https://www.facebook.com/events/1256884292699296
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Please Clap Dept.: Speaking of festivals, this one isn’t cryptid related, but I’m co-organizer of typewriter/ innovation/ writing celebration QWERTYFEST MKE. We are launching fundraising next week and need your help to meet our goals. Stay tuned!
Next week on TWW: Apocalypse Every Show Now. Want TWW delivered to your inbox? You can sign up for my Substack HERE. Follow me on: Facebook Bluesky Instagram





