I am looking forward (as disappointed as I was; as incredibly and sadly disappointed as I was) to showing it to myth classes though in the evening for extra credit and having discussions on what the hell was wrong with it and why it stinks and so forth and so on. When someone does something really well it's often hard for a Myth 101 student to pick up on all the things they did well, but when someone screws something up bigtime, it's easier to try and piece together things or at least get them to recognize ways it differs and how it could have been better or more accurate.