by Jacaranda December 06, 2006
by DirkNiggla September 08, 2003
Raccoon in a Box is meant to be synonymous for weed. Specifically, weed sold by someone going door-to-door selling "magazines" out of bins or Tupperware in order to earn money for a "trip to France" usually by someone who obviously has no business going to France.
And it follows that the phrase "letting that raccoon out the box" can refer to smoking said weed, as well as a song written for the originators of said phrase.
And it follows that the phrase "letting that raccoon out the box" can refer to smoking said weed, as well as a song written for the originators of said phrase.
by Murphy A. March 12, 2012
any box/package still in its original covering or wrapping. usually used in terms of comics or toys or any rare item. said item looses its value once its been opened.
by mysty20 October 23, 2012
Small, tinny, lo-fi speaker used in recording studios for checking mixes will sound OK in a typical listening environment.
It was a rainy, hungover Sunday afternoon, and for the sixth time that day, Richard switched on his grot boxes, to check the mix of his latest musical masterpiece, before retiring back to bed for some serious jazz appreciation.
by RickG September 17, 2007
Mostly intended as a joke, the "Blotto Box" was a theoretical device that would send too much electricity over phone lines, making it impossible for any calls to get through. Depending on who you ask, the Blotto Box is either impossible or would kill you when you turned it on. The intended effect is that every phone would "ring and ring and ring" in an entire area code.
Blue box, red box, blotto box: schematics for many small devices were distributed during the era of telephone phreaking, but not all of them worked as advertised.
by Bitwise December 14, 2008