Categories Culture

How to Destroy a Museum Visit in Under 5 Minutes


What Not to Not presents a speed-run guide to sabotaging culture: taking selfies with mummies, mispronouncing every name, and sprinting past the plaques like they owe you money.

A museum is supposed to be a cathedral of quiet awe, where history whispers from plaques and artifacts murmur centuries of stories. But if reverence sounds boring, don’t worry—there are faster ways to ruin the whole experience. Here’s your five-minute demolition plan, guaranteed to make curators weep and audio guides lose the will to narrate.

Step 1: Treat the Mummies Like Instagram Props

Why simply marvel at the miracle of preservation when you can frame Tutankhamun’s sarcophagus with duck lips and a peace sign? Bonus points if you say something like “He’s giving major crypt-keeper vibes.” That eerie silence wasn’t meant for contemplation anyway—it was meant for your ring light.

Photo by Narciso Arellano on Unsplash

Step 2: Mispronounce Every Ancient Name with Confidence

Museums are full of tricky names—Sumerian kings, Mesopotamian goddesses, Impressionist painters. The worst thing you could do is quietly look up pronunciations. Instead, stride through the halls loudly butchering them with gusto: “Cleo-petra, the original girlboss! Vincent Van Goofy! PICK-axe-oh!” Nothing deepens cultural credibility like weaponized certainty.

Step 3: Speed-Read the Plaques—Or Don’t Read Them at All

Time is money, and museums are long. Why endure those tedious 200-word explanations? Just glance at the title, nod sagely, and declare, “Wow, so ahead of its time,” before bolting to the next room. True mastery is finishing the entire museum in less time than it takes others to study one display case. Congratulations—you’ve reduced centuries of human achievement to a bad airport layover.

Photo by Marie Rouilly on Unsplash

Step 4: Commentary, Always Commentary

Every exhibit is improved by your personal TED Talk. Point at a fossil and mutter, “Honestly, I’ve seen worse at my uncle’s grill.” Stand before a Monet and announce, “Looks like my toddler could do that with finger paint.” Culture isn’t about humility or reflection—it’s about establishing dominance through hot takes.

Step 5: Exit Through the Gift Shop, As If That’s the Point

And finally, the museum’s climax: not the Rosetta Stone, not the Bronze Age figurines, but the keychain aisle. Why wrestle with the vastness of history when you can buy a glow-in-the-dark dinosaur eraser and be on your way? Nothing says “lifelong memory” like a tote you’ll use twice.

Photo by Snap Wander on Unsplash

The Twist

Of course, the joke is that everything above is the opposite of what you should do. A museum is one of the last places where time slows down, where silence is not emptiness but invitation. If you lean in—actually read, actually listen—you may find that a 2,000-year-old vase has more to say about human longing than an entire social feed.

So, if you really want to ruin a museum in under five minutes, make it all about you. If you want to not ruin it, do the harder thing: vanish a little into history, and let it astonish you.

Did this make you laugh (or cringe)?

If you know someone who speed-runs museums, share this post with them. History deserves better—and so do their Instagram followers.


You May Also Like

How to Stereotype a Whole Nation Based on a Netflix Show

Think you know a country because you watched one Netflix show? Think again. This satirical blog explores how pop culture fuels stereotypes—and why that matters.

Read More

What Not to Do in a Job Interview (If You Don’t Want the Job)

So you’ve landed a job interview. Congratulations! Time to blow it spectacularly. Whether you’re plotting your escape from corporate drudgery or just conducting social experiments with HR personnel, here’s your foolproof guide to making sure you never get a callback. Of course, if you do want the job, simply do…

Read More

The Easiest Ways to Be the Least Interesting Person in the Room

(And how to avoid becoming human background noise) Picture this: You’re at a dinner party. People are chatting, laughing, bonding over spicy hummus and childhood trauma—and there you are, nodding like a bobblehead, clinging to your drink like it’s your emotional support chalice. Everyone drifts away one by one, and…

Read More