TREND: Extreme body modification features a wide range of alterations, including some people who get horns implanted on their heads or remold their ears to make them pointy.
DALLAS (AP) -- Allen Falkner's tongue is just one of his unusual features. It is split down the middle, and when he sticks it out, it looks like a two-pronged snake tongue. The alteration -- along with others -- to the 36-year-old Dallas man's body might appear shocking, but they're standard for people in the underground activity known as body modification. It's a trend that has been growing steadily for about a decade, attracting more followers now that tattoos and simple piercings are more mainstream. "I think there's definitely more and more interest all the time," said Falkner, owner of a Dallas tattoo and piercing shop called Obscurities. Extreme body modification features a wide range of alterations, including some that are illegal in Texas and elsewhere. Some people get horns implanted on their heads. Some install magnets in their hands, creating a "sixth sense" for feeling magnetic fields. Others remold their ears to make them pointy. "People want, I think in general with society -- especially the younger sect -- to be different," said Luis Garcia, international liaison for the Association of Professional Piercers, which takes no official stance on the modifications. "It's not different anymore to have your navel pierced." Falkner did his work himself, experimenting with various methods and instruments that included scalpels and string. Already sporting multiple tattoos and piercings, he said he further modified his body for aesthetic reasons, and in part just to see if he could. Falkner runs several Web sites dedicated to the topics and said he gets e-mails all the time from people interested in modifying themselves. Likewise, Garcia said people often ask for implants, split tongues, scarring or other procedures at his shop in Philadelphia. With television shows profiling tattoo shops and increasing numbers of piercings in the mainstream, more people are searching for procedures for the "one-upping factor," Garcia said. "I've had people as young as 15 inquire," Garcia said, noting that he won't accommodate their requests for legal reasons. And neither will most established tattoo and piercing shops. Extreme modifications are banned in a handful of states, including Texas and Delaware, which specifically prohibit tongue splitting. But similar procedures usually fall under a legislative gray area. Many artists also won't do them for fear of lawsuits or insurance fiascos, Garcia said. "It's definitely underground," he said. "Any person that does implants out of their shop is taking a big risk." He cited health consequences as the main hurdle to widespread practice. Garcia had his transdermal chest implants -- a type of implant anchored under the skin but protruding outside -- removed after a few years. He got "a couple of infections that were an annoyance and just a constant irritation," he said. Falkner also removed some implants from his wrist because they constantly banged against things or got in the way. Doug McBride, spokesman for the Texas Department of State Health Services, said underground and non-professional alterations could end in problems. "If this is being done by unqualified people using equipment and facilities that are not sanitized or sterile, then you're going to have that increased risk of infection," he said.
Feature Stories
When piercings aren't enough, some go extreme
- Feature Stories
-
-
Hey, kids! Take a photo with Santa!
Hey, Parents! Hey, Kids! Want to take a photo with Santa? Then be sure to stop in at the New Castle News between 4:30 and 6:30 p.m., on Thursday, Nov. 18, just before the Light-Up Night Parade begins in the downtown.
-
Small towns across the country bear the scars of Iraq
Small towns across the country bear the scars of Iraq
MCKEESPORT (AP) -- Edward "Willie" Carman wanted a ticket out of town, and the Army provided it. Raised in the projects by a single mother in this blighted, old industrial steel town outside Pittsburg -
IRS raids tax preparers in seven cities
IRS raids tax preparers in seven cities
WASHINGTON (AP) -- IRS criminal investigators this week conducted raids in seven cities to shut down tax preparation businesses suspected of abusing a one-time telephone tax refund.
The Internal Revenue Service, i -
Recordsraise more questions about tissue taken from body of Alistair Cooke
Records raise more questions about tissue taken from body of Alistair Cooke
NEW YORK (AP) -- The medical records that accompanied the body of "Masterpiece Theatre" host Alistair Cooke were wrong in just about every possible way. His name was misspelled. -
North Beaver orchard wins compliments
North Beaver orchard wins compliments
By MARYALICE MELI mameli@ncnewsonline.com
For one dairy farmer, Thursday's inspection of the 43-acre Dawson's Orchard in North Beaver Township was an eye-opener. "You learn a lot on these tours," said Blanche Kind, -
When piercings aren't enough, some go extreme
When piercings aren't enough, some go extreme
TREND: Extreme body modification features a wide range of alterations, including some people who get horns implanted on their heads or remold their ears to make them pointy.
DALLAS (AP) -- Allen Falkner's t -
BODY MODIFICATION: Common Terms
BODY MODIFICATION: Common Terms
Here's a look at some common terms in the underground trend known as body modification:
*Transdermal implants: Implants that begin beneath the skin but protrude outside, such as metal spikes or beads.
*Subdermal implants: -
Dog parks have fur flying in some communities
Dog parks have fur flying in some communities
BOWWOW: Dog parks are a product of increasing dog ownership, growing recognition that exercise and socializing can reduce canine misbehavior, and the lure of rubbing elbows with fellow dog lovers.
DAYTON, O -
Slave's story undergoes scientific scrutiny
Slave's story undergoes scientific scrutiny
EAST HADDAM, Conn. (AP) -- Archaeologists have begun digging up the 200-year-old graves of a slave family in hopes of separating fact from fiction in the legend of "the black Paul Bunyan."
The dig has the bless -
Residents turn out for 30th annual Enon Valley Community Day10 years later, TWA families still in pain but trying to move on
Residents turn out for 30th annual Enon Valley Community Day
By JOSIAH LOCKLEY jlockley@ncnewsonline.com
In Lawrence County, community events don't come much quirkier than Enon Valley Community Day. But it's a good kind of quirky. There was something t10 years later, TWA families still in pain but trying to move on
NEW YORK (AP) -- Andy Krukar boarded TWA Flight 800 with a diamond ring in his pocket. He was planning to place it on his fiancee's finger at the Eiffel Tower during a romantic weekend in P - More Feature Stories Headlines
-






