Ok, so this is the sequel to this thread:  
viewtopic.php?f=3&t=2682
That thread was friday night, this one is about saturday night (last night).  My buddy and I got together and worked on our costumes a bit more.  We added some boxes and went as these guys:  
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T7H9xEesilU
Our costumes were pretty much spot on, and as you can imagine, we got tons of attention the whole night - lots of guys high-fiving us, girls screaming and running up to take pictures with us, and (from the people who had not seen the SNL skit and didn't know what we were) lots of highly disturbed/shocked reactions as well.   
 
We went to a couple house parties were we knew most of the people and got very positive reactions - ovations and cheers when we walked in, lots of friends taking pictures with us, etc.  Then, we went out on the town to a bar with a DJ and a dance floor, and then more of a straight up dance club.  Those places are what I want to talk about.
So, here's my observations:
1) Outrageous outfits seem to amplify people's natural reactions, and polarize them a bit (pretty obvious I know).  People who had negative reactions generally did not hide their reactions at all, and often would just turn away in disgust and leave.  On the other side, there were people (men and women) who immediately loved our outfits and wanted to interact with us, pull us into their group, take pictures of us/with us.  Those people probably would have been friendly/open to us even if our costumes hadn't been outrageous.  People who were confused didn't try to hide their confusion and just blatantly stared at us.
2) Getting that much attention makes it harder to observe.  There were so many people (men and women) constantly staring at us, so it was a ton to keep track of all the women and see which were just laughing at our costumes and which were jocking.  My personal theory - all of them were jocking...   
 
I have this feeling that this experience was maybe similar to what hot girls feel when they dress up in a very revealing outfit and get tons of attention out at a bar/club.  I've had feelings kinda like this before, but this was by far the most outrageous thing I've worn out to a bar/club before, so the experience was much more obvious.
3) There were, however, several girls at the dance club who just stopped dancing entirely when they spotted us, and just stood there staring for 30 seconds with their jaws down.  There was one girl (kinda attractive, but not hot) in particular that did this 3 different times, about every 20 minutes she would come by.  She clearly wanted to interact with me, but I just kept dancing and having a good time on my own/with my friends who I had come with.
Since I want to work on being indifferent and getting rid of my neediness before I do anything to sleep with/date any girls, I felt like there was no reason why I should approach her and start talking to her (or any of the other girls who stopped and just stared).  I was having a perfectly good time on my own, it was extremely loud and not conducive to talking, and there was nothing I wanted from her, so why would I strike up a conversation with her?  In the past I probably wouldn't have started a conversation with her either, but I would have felt stressed about it and judged myself negatively for not "having the balls to talk to her," so it was kind of freeing actually.
4) Finally, this might be the most interesting insight - I found that the girls who approached us, or even the ones who stopped and stared and made it extremely obvious, were not very attractive.  There were a lot of hot girls out, wearing next to nothing, but the ones who approached us were almost universally the middling ones - not the really ugly ones, and not the really attractive ones either.  Single, in groups, with boyfriends, etc - it didn't seem to matter.
I got the gut feeling several times just from catching glances of several of the really hot girls there dressed in skimpy outfits (essentially lingerie), that they were upset because we were stealing their thunder.  Like one of just a couple nights in the year when they can really show it all off and get ridiculous amounts of attention without being seen as slutty, and we came in looking goofy and outrageous and stole the attention away from them.  I caught one hot girl look at us, then roll her eyes and make kind of a "humph" face and turn and walk the other direction...
I kind of have this feeling that because we weren't taking ourselves seriously and clearly were being goofy and acting a bit like fools that we were a bit off-putting to really attractive girls.  Maybe the middling ones were duly impressed by the fact that we were getting lots of attention and had the guts to go out dressed like that, but I think that our experience was qualitatively different than this one, for example ( 
http://www.naturalfreedom.info/viewtopi ... 567#p23567 )
As we walked around the casino, I was catching women in my mouth just left and right! Subconsciously they could tell by Connie and I's body language and dynamic that I was a MAN...consciously they couldn't put their finger on it, but I intrigued them. The best part is that a good part of that crowd was local...meaning if I'm ever out on my own and they see me, they will be much more receptive to me in future instances because of the light they saw me in last night. 
So, while it was fun, and a good experience (I would totally do it again), I think that playing the clown is not really something to make a practice of.  Instead, I want to keep working on developing that body language and dynamic that Kidd talks about (and fine-tuning the observation skills so I can better read people's responses to it as well)...
Sorry if this was a bit rambling, but I figured people might find it interesting, and it was useful for me to analyze it all as I was writing...