Cookie Monster look-alike rock found in Brazil goes viral
Category: News & Politics
Via: perrie-halpern • 3 years ago • 7 commentsBy: Leslie Ignacio
A Cookie Monster look-alike agate that was discovered in Brazil went viral last week.
California gem collector Mike Bowers posted a video of the rock on his Facebook on Jan.16 that quickly took off on all forms of social media.
As Cookie Monster's signature song "C is for Cookie" plays in the video, a stone that's been cut in half is opened, the interior revealed as a geological dead ringer for the Sesame Street favorite.
Although white and rough looking on the outside, the shiny and smooth agate mineral on the inside clearly carries the blue face of Cookie Monster on the inside.
The rock's viral fame eventually caught the attention of Cookie Monster himself, who tweeted, "Me no geologist, but me think dat rock look a lot like me..."
Me no geologist, but me think dat rock look a lot like me... https://t.co/444KeOrAbi — Cookie Monster (@MeCookieMonster) January 25, 2021
Bowers' Facebook page is made up of video postings that show off his collection of unique minerals and crystals he owns. The Cookie Monster rock was originally found in Soledade, Brazil, in November, and was given to Bowers by gemologist Lucas Fassari, who had called him to say, "You need to see this."
Bowers said he received offers of more than $10,000 for the celebrity stone, but he plans on keeping it in his cookie jar.
"At this point we are keeping the stone," he told NBC News. "It will most likely end up in a museum or high-end collection or (with) a very special person, but for the time being we are enjoying it."
Snopes asked, ''Is the ‘Cookie Monster Rock’ Real?''
The short answer is ''Yes!''
The long answer is a good complement to Perrie's seed.
I don't know if Sesame Street is still around, but they should buy it.
I guess this is akin to a geologist having an orgasm.
Pretty cool!
Cookie Monster rocks!
A great example of the randomness of nature producing something amazing
One million monkeys with typewriters times one million years equals all the works of Shakespeare...