Ah, yes... Venkman... This was not only the proto-trick of House Kink but one of the founding tricks of Triple A. The idea that spawned this was to have a trick where the strings crossed. One of the things about Double A (at least back in '99) that bored all of the founding fathers of Triple A was that all of those tricks were just sets of two smaller tricks. So McBride conjured up a trick where the strings crossed but was landable. The science of it is that you throw two opposite around the worlds. They cross and twist above your hands. Then as they come down they cross the plane of origin and the same direction that was twisting them before is now untwisting them. So if you're enough of a bad @$$, you could theoreticaly do a double twist in and a double twist out.

Here's how you do the single twist one...

1) Start with an outwards Around the World at a 45æ angle. You want this one to be coming up and over from behind you.

Quick tip: This ATW will have to be about 2/3 the speed of the second one, so don't throw this one too fast.

2) Throw an Around the World with your red hand in the opposite direction at a 45æ angel. This one will be coming up and over towards you.

Throw this one faster than the first one. Not neccessarily harder, just faster.

3) They should hit and cross above and in front of you. I find that I always seem to lead it a little with my blue hand...
4) At this point the whole thing has sunk lower than your hands and is untwisting.
5) Pull 'em back.