Butcher, a health writer, lists other oddities, like cases of " genuine freakishness " that include menstruating men, men with two penises, a woman with 10 breasts, and pregnant women with cravings for plaster, charcoal and cloth.
42.
The Seahawks were consumed with the freakishness of the final play _ Denver linebacker Glenn Cadrez's 37-yard touchdown run with a fumble from sacked quarterback Jon Kitna _ which allowed them to ignore the events that made them vulnerable to the improbable.
43.
Given the freakishness of both the Mariners'American League West lead as well as the unbalanced schedule, the six-game visit to the baseball citadels here and in New York figured to be the last, best road trip of the regular season.
44.
She has a wonderful scene that crystallizes the theme of miscommunication with Jean-Pierre Leaud, who hasn't been this well used since his cameo in the marvelous " Vie de Boheme, " which had a similar cool-hand freakishness.
45.
He has been too long gone from his greatness and now Tyson _ soon to celebrate a 36th birthday and with a title fight tonight at The Pyramid against champion Lennox Lewis _ has turned into a grotesque and ridiculous fighter whose only appeal is his freakishness.
46.
But the freakishness of the play _ the near tackle at the 44-yard line, the leg cramp Mariet Ford suffered on the way to the end zone, the Stanford trombone player crushed in the end zone _ lifted the sequence from amazing to surreal.
47.
The awful moments he creates have the time-delay impact of a nightmare : The potency of the horrors hit and linger after the freakishness of an image or a moment fades away and the creeping realization of exactly what you've just witnessed finally hits you.
48.
Writing four years later about Barbra Streisand, The London Sunday Times could not decide whether she was " America's greatest female singer or a power-mad woman whose control-freakishness makes working with her all but impossible save from a kneeling position ."
49.
Steeped in the exotic back-country blend of freakishness and religious fever that characterizes the works of Flannery O'Connor, it is also far more forgiving and hopeful than anything O'Connor ever wrote, allowing readers to enjoy shadowy Southern Gothic with an inspiring promise of sunshine.
50.
The saddest character is Junky Jonathan ( Jonathan Lawrence ), a pierced, tattooed, flaming-haired junkie who could give Marilyn Manson a run for his money in visual freakishness, but who beneath his disguise is really a lonely gay boy pining for an unattainable Mr . Right.