I have to know the answer...What happens on May 33rd, but only on leap years?

pkbites posted this question back in November. While I’ve only been a member of the message board for a few months, this is the only question to date that the board hasn’t had a satisfactory answer to. The question comes from a radio morning show in Milwaukee. The current prize list, if you need motivation to answer, is as follows:

104 CDs, a Sony 200 disk programmable CD changer, an electric guitar, a Palm Pilot, a one year technical course membership, and a Direct TV satellite system with 1 year of service.

The site, RJ’s Digs, indicates that the closest answer seems to be the difference between the lunar cycle and the solar cycle trying to rectify the two by adding an intercalendar month of 33 days.

The previous post included suggestions from toadspittle and pcubed that sounded reasonable. Maybe it’s the birthday of a fictional character or something from a nonsensical fiction like Tiggers only take baths or quit bouncing on May 33rd, but only on leap years.

It wasn’t my intention to plagiarize pkbites, I gave him credit for the original post. I hoped to bring the question back to the board and get the answer. It’s driving me crazy. My own personal hell. Thanks pkbites.

The intercalendar month thing is interesting. There may be a calendar system in which you introduce a 33-day month at the vernal equinox (ie in May.) It may be that the intercalendar month answer was essentially right, but there was some slight error in phrasing which disqualified it, given what sticklers these people are reported to be.
For example, they might not have specified the exact name of the calendar system. Bear in mind that there are a lot of weird calendars out there- in looking for answers to this question, I stumbled on some guy’s scheme for a 33-year leap year cycle based on the life of Jesus.

-Ben