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Krewe of Elvis! (260K)

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The Krewe of Elvis, a "cyber-based" marching club (motto: "Where every member is a King"), is an offshoot of one of the first Mardi Gras Internet sites, http://mglinks.com, operated by Chip Curley of Nashville, Tenn., a.k.a. "Dead Elvis, and his wife Linda, a.k.a. "Elvira." Craig Imboden, one of the many Mardi Gras aficionados Curley has met over the Internet, came up with the idea of forming the marching group in the summer of 1998. Curley, an Elvis fan with the "resources" to stir up interest via his site, "checked into it," says Imboden, a.k.a. "Jester," "and the rest is history."

Indeed, from its humble beginnings as a small assemblage with few accouterments, the group has multiplied, in the words of Curley, into "a whole flock of Elvi. It's getting more like a parade every year." In addition to upgrading their sound system, KOE has developed a variety of signature throw items including bumper stickers, collector cards, wooden doubloons and hand-crafted medallion necklaces. Mardi Gras 2001 participants included graduation Elvi, a purple-haired King with his own security detail, a nurse dispensing medication, and Ann Margret carrying Elvis' love child, "Tiny E" (actually, a doll dressed as Elvis and wearing a heart medallion bead emblazoned with the words "I Flashed Elvis at Mardi Gras"). Asked about the preponderance of 1970s-era jumpsuit Elvi, as opposed to the svelte 1950s look, Curley remarked: "Most of us jut fit better in the jumpsuit."

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