Yesterday, Twin Peaks creator David Lynch sent out a cryptic missive on his Twitter account, that read, "Dear Twitter Friends: That gum you like is going to come back in style! #damngoodcoffee":

At the exact same time, the show's co-creator, Mark Frost, tweeted the exact same thing:

Fans of the series will recognize that both "That gum you like is going to come back in style" and "damn good coffee" are well-known quotes from the series. The mysterious tweets have started up the rumor mill as fans wait to see whether these small words mean big things are in store.

While Twin Peaks fans are desperate to believe that in the age of Netflix revivals the show could return, previous iterations of these cryptic tweets have been nothing more than genre-specific guerrilla advertising intended to inspire fans into buying Twin Peaks DVD collections.

That said, there are some reasons to believe something else is happening this time. First, Twin Peaks has already been released on DVD, Blu-Ray, iTunes and Amazon Prime. Store shelves, virtual and otherwise are already lined with the various seasons, Twin Peaks: Fire Walk With Me, Twin Peaks: The Complete Series, and Twin Peaks: The Entire Mystery, which included deleted scenes restored by Lynch himself. There can't be much more in the old Twin Peaks mine, unless Lynch and Frost are actually ramping up to the release of some limited-edition Twin Peaks branded gum.

Adding fuel to the fire, Kyle Maclachlan, the once-and-future Agent Dale Cooper, has been lunching with Lynch:

As anyone in Hollywood can tell you, lunch is serious business.

Additionally, in 2013, Lynch told Twin Peaks cast member Ray Wise a reboot was a possibility, stating: "Well, Ray, you know, the town is still there. And I suppose it's possible that we could revisit it. Of course, you're already dead (...) but we could maybe work around that."

Speculation about the show's return has been rumored since the final episode of Twin Peaks aired and Laura Palmer appeared to Agent Cooper and told him, “I will see you again in 25 years.” That episode was set on March 26, 1989. If math is not your strong suit, that was 25 years ago.

Leave it to the always-surreal Lynch to finally be a literalist.