You need a box with two hand holes, a "frog" (can be a real pet frog if handled safely, or a realistic toy), and a couple of friends to act as the "freaked out" audience. The Contrast:
"One Girl, One Frog" leverages small scale and focused perspective to probe larger questions about care, transformation, and human relationships with nonhuman life. Its strengths lie in affective immediacy and formal restraint; critical readings reveal rich interdisciplinary connections to ecocriticism, childhood studies, and narrative theory. One Girl One Frog Video