STM Blog
When Flick’s Tongue Froze: A Christmas Story That Hit Differently in Southern California
Why Flick’s tongue stuck to a frozen pole in A Christmas Story — and why that scene felt different growing up in Southern California. Nostalgia meets real-world science.
Last Updated on December 25, 2025 by Daily News Staff
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For many of us, A Christmas Story isn’t just a holiday movie — it’s an annual ritual. The leg lamp, the Red Ryder BB gun, the Old Man’s furnace… and of course, the moment Flick accepts the double dog dare and sticks his tongue to the frozen tetherball pole.
But growing up in Southern California, that scene always landed a little differently.
In places like Lynwood, winter rarely meant frozen playground equipment or snow-covered streets. It meant cool mornings, maybe a stiff breeze — and on rare occasions, a freeze warning that had families covering plants overnight. Those nights stood out precisely because they were unusual. Snow sticking to the ground? Almost unheard of.
So when Flick’s tongue froze solid to that pole, it felt less like a warning and more like Midwestern folklore — something that happened somewhere else.
The Science Behind the Scene
Despite how extreme it looks, the moment is scientifically accurate.
Your tongue sticks to metal because:
The tongue is wet
Metal rapidly conducts heat away
Moisture freezes almost instantly
A thin layer of ice bonds skin to metal
It doesn’t require snow — just cold enough metal and moisture. In colder climates, those conditions line up easily. In Southern California, they rarely do.
The Part the Movie Leaves Out
A Christmas Story cuts away before showing Flick’s rescue, and that’s intentional. But in the real world, firefighters wouldn’t pull or panic.
The solution is simple:
Warm water poured over the tongue and metal
The ice melts
The tongue releases safely
No heroics. No tearing skin. Just physics.
Why the Scene Endures
The power of the scene isn’t just the gag — it’s the shared childhood experience:
Bravado fueled by peer pressure
Instant regret
The quiet humiliation of adult intervention
For Southern California kids, it was less a cautionary tale and more a glimpse into another world — one where winter itself was a character. That contrast is part of why the scene still resonates decades later.
Some lessons are regional.
Some are universal.
And some — like the double dog dare — transcend weather entirely.
