Gonzo Christmas Orgy !!hot!! May 2026

By Dr. Gonzo (on assignment from the Ghost of Christmas Whatever)

He looked at me. He looked at the chaos. He looked at the hamster cage now full of pickled eggs.

The lifestyle of the Gonzo Christmas Party is not for the faint of heart or the sober of liver. You don’t "attend." You surrender . You walk in wearing your ugliest sweater—the one with the reindeer that looks like it’s having a stroke—and within an hour, that sweater is tied around your head like a turban because you’ve decided you’re now the emperor of a small, drunken island made of empty Champagne bottles and shattered snow globes. gonzo christmas orgy

And indeed, Santa—the real one, or a very committed hallucination—was wrestling the thermostat. "It’s too hot for the reindeer!" he screamed. The reindeer, for the record, were three dachshunds wearing felt antlers and looking deeply disappointed in humanity.

This wasn’t a party. This was a lifestyle choice. And I was all in. He looked at the hamster cage now full of pickled eggs

And that, dear reader, is the gospel of the Gonzo Christmas Party. You don’t need mistletoe. You need a liver of steel, a sense of humor made from broken ornaments, and the willingness to wake up on December 24th wearing a lampshade, next to a stranger named Carol, with no memory of why you have a tattoo of a candy cane on your ankle.

You haven’t seen a Christmas party until you’ve seen one through the bottom of a glass that’s been laced with something that tastes like peppermint and poor decisions. It was 10 p.m. on December 23rd, and I was standing in a loft that smelled like burnt gingerbread and regret. The host—let’s call him “Nick”—had decorated his place like a North Pole brothel. Tinsel draped over a stripper pole. A Nativity scene where the Wise Men were doing lines of powdered sugar off a copy of The Economist . You walk in wearing your ugliest sweater—the one

The punch bowl was a cauldron of chaos. It started as mulled wine. Then someone added Everclear. Then someone else threw in a candy cane, a melatonin gummy, and a goldfish cracker for protein. By midnight, the punch had achieved sentience. It whispered my name. It asked me if I believed in Santa. I said yes, and it replied, “Good. Because he’s currently trying to fight the thermostat.”