Gustav said:
What song was it? Can you give me instructions on how to whistle with my finger and thumb in my mouth? I could never do that. Can you also tell me what you know about the Philadelphia Experiment?
I apologize for overlooking your query.
The song was, "Overdose" by Tomcraft.
1. Practice whistling using just your lips. If you can do this well already, you are almost there.
2. Put your thumb and middle or pointer finger up to your lips and form a small gap between the tips. The gap should be about 1/4 inch at most.
3. Stick the two fingers slightly into your mouth and close your lips around just enough to allow air to flow through the gap between your fingers. Your lips should be stretched tightly, not loose.
4. Press your tongue to the back of your lower jaw, just behind your bottom row of teeth. You should feel a small ledge or bump there.
5. Blow air using the top of your tongue to guide the air through the small gap in your fingers. Blow lightly at first, finely adjusting your finger, lip, and tongue placement until you hear a faint whistle. Then begin to blow more air to make for a louder whistle.
Warning
* Blowing hard, especially when you're determined to make this work, can result in dizziness and lightheadedness. Take it easy, and give yourself breaks when practicing.
The Philadelphia Experiment. According to Google Earth, The USS Elridge currently resides in a long abandoned Soviet Naval museum. No one is sure of how it got there. It is highly likely that is not the Elridge, but a synthetic replication composed of various destroyer scrap collected after World War II. Another theory is that the USS Elridge encountered sentient life in slipspace, a dimension where time and physical space occur all at once in a microscopic, one dimensional plane. This sentient life returned the Elridge to a random shipyard, which just happened to be in landlocked Smolensk, knowing nothing about ships or borders. Project Rainbow was ultimately deemed an "interesting failure" by brass. The lead scientists on the project are also responsible for the loss of several space probes, a fact that the heirs to their research logs giggle about. All of this is evidence that Unified Field Theory has been left incomplete to this day.