Following the sling of mysterious monolith appearances from all over the world, a “gingerbread monolith” was discovered planted in California in the United States, just in time for Christmas.
The nearly 7-foot-tall monolith made of the tasty treat appeared atop a hill at the Corona Heights Park in San Francisco yesterday, Christmas Day, and has since been discovered by local residents, as per local media outlet KQED on the same day.
After the news outlet showed photos of the monolith to the San Francisco Recreation and Parks Department general manager Phil Ginsburg, he quipped, ” Wow. Even makes a Jewish parks director smile.”
When asked what they plan to do with the installation, Ginsburg replied that it “looks like a great spot to get baked” and that “we will leave it up until the cookie crumbles.”
It will be left there for some time as the general manager noted that “we all deserve a little bit of magic right now,” according to the report.
The appearance of the festive monolith has since gone viral on the internet. For one, Gyroscope app founder Anand Sharma has visited the site and is looking for those responsible.
Ok who did the gingerbread monolith? pic.twitter.com/P2RQNT7SGI
— Anand Sharma (@aprilzero) December 25, 2020
Sharma also noted that the said gingerbread monolith “smelled good too.”
It smelled very good, too pic.twitter.com/CnQLoCTk0i
— Anand Sharma (@aprilzero) December 25, 2020
The San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency director, Jeffrey Tumlin, also visited the said monolith, and shaed on Twitter, “In the perfect act of SF 2020 defiance, there is an expertly-iced gingerbread monolith atop Corona Heights. Miracle?”
https://twitter.com/jeffreytumlin/status/1342562434448388096
The appearance of the gingerbread monolith comes just after sightings of metal monoliths in the Netherlands, Romania, Britain and other parts of the US. Ian Biong /ra
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