"I heard today that there were new teenage clubs being formed, patterned after the Big Show," said Edith.
"Clubs?"
"Yes. The police arrested a whole group of them in Sandusky, Ohio, for stripping off their clothes during a local hop."
"That's not so good," said Roy.
"Oh, I don't know. They weren't really doing anything wrong."
Roy almost choked. "Nothing wrong...."
"No. They were conducting the whole affair on a highly moral plane. The police let them go, and dismissed the case when their parents showed up and suggested that it was all rather natural, and that they felt no harm had been done."
"The parents said that?" asked Roy incredulously.
Weeks passed, and the Big Show went on. The audience, which had always been huge, now became almost universal. And no longer were there any remarks about nudity, but instead "sunbathing" groups began springing up everywhere. For a time this development, which began to edge its way into public places with an accelerated pace, rather than private camps, stirred up another storm, and there were demands that Sunbathing Magazine be banned from the newsstands. This fell through when the authorities pointed out the magazine was tame compared to the show in the heavens.