Thursday, October 31, 2019

Trick or treat till the neighbours come and die of fright



Ancient Romans celebrated a holiday called Feralia on February 21. At first it was a simple day off to recover from the holiday of February 20 (Salvia Divinorum), and to take care of last minute shopping before the holiday of February 22 (Salta Boca).



It was, coincidentally, the last day of the year according to the Roman calendar.

Over time it became a sacred day in its own right. It became a festival to honor the dead, and like most Roman holidays it involved some serious drinking. Feralia also resembled most other Roman holidays in that it outlasted the western Roman empire. The jolly men and women of the Mediterranean basin saw no reason to give up the riotous holiday, with all its drinking and orgies, despite countless reminders from an ascendant Christian church that drinking was bad (unless it was Jesus' blood) and orgies were worse.



At last, in the 7th century, Pope Boniface IV decided that the holiday was Christian after all, except that instead of honoring all the dead it should honor only dead saints, that instead of Feralia it should be called All Saints' Day, that instead of drinking and orgies it should be a day of prayer and meditation, and that instead of February 21 it should be observed on May 13.

The good peoples of the Christian world happily accepted the new name and date, but persisted in drinking and vigorous humping. As punishment for this inappropriate enjoyment, Pope Gregory III moved it to November 1, and unwittingly laid the foundation for our modern Halloween.

Hold that thought.



Since as early as the 5th century BC, the ancient Celts had considered October 31 the last day of summer. They called the day Samhain (rhymes with Clamhain), and they believed all the divisions between the world of the living and the world of the dead were dissolved for that brief period. They thought the dead used this window of opportunity to possess the souls of the living, and the thought scared the piss out of them.

A variety of bizarre rituals to ward off the dead accumulated around Samhain over the centuries, including the sacrificial burning of virgins (when any could be found).



When these Celtic rituals collided with the Christian All Saints' Day, all hell broke loose. People didn't know whether they should pray, drink, orgy, burn virgins, or what. They tried a lot of different combination: they got drunk and prayed, they burned virgins and got drunk, they prayed to have orgies and got drunk with virgins, they prayed then got drunk and had orgies with virgins.



Eventually they settled on sending their kids out in silly costumes to ask their neighbors for candy. This was intended to keep them out of the house while the drinking and orgies raged, but since everyone's doorbells kept ringing from everyone else's children, the drinking and orgies gradually faded away.

Of course, this brief outline only traces the development of Halloween as we know it in America. The holiday is still celebrated in countries all over the world in an astonishing number of ways.



In Bulgaria, for example, October 31 is a national holiday called Pazardzhik. In rural districts, children dress up as kitchen utensils and dash from farm to farm tying chickens' feet together. Any unhappy farmer attempting to shoo the children away from his chickens will find himself pelted with manure and glass shards as the children sing playful Pazardzhik carols. In Mexico, the Day of the Dead lasts from October 31 through November 2, which has long been a concern to students of the Mexican calendar. The celebration is a fusion of sixteenth-century Spaniards' All Souls' and All Saints' Days and the Aztec festival honoring Mictecacihuatl, the Aztec goddess of the dead. (Mictecacihuatl was said to have died at birth as the result of complications relating to pronunciation of her name.)



One can't help but marvel at the similarities between the Day of the Dead that arose in Meso-America and Kyrgyzstan's Day of the Very Sick (November 1), Papua New Guinea's Evening of the Emotionally Exhausted (October 31), and Vanuatu's Cardiovascular Appreciation Days (October 31 - November 2).

In Saudi Arabia, October 31 is Sandy Night. As soon as the sun sets, children scamper out into the desert and fill their home-made bags with sand. The holiday is believed to be derived from the ancient Bedouin tradition of sending children out to fill bags with sand.



In Chile, Halloween is infused with ancient Incan traditions. Fretful mothers extinguish the fires in their hearths for fear of attracting Spaniards while naughty children take their parents hostage and demand their weight in chocolate.



In Wittenberg, Germany, October 31 is celebrated as the day on which Martin Luther nailed his 95 Theses to the door of the church in 1517. Many of the town's children frolic giddily about, nailing Theses here and there with impish delight, while others try to catch and burn them as heretics.



Whatever your own tradition, enjoy Halloween.


Be careful out there though - you know what, - why not stay inside.



Demand Euphoria!

Monday, October 28, 2019

pneumonoul­tramicrosc­opicsilico­volcanocon­iosis




An invented term said to mean ‘a lung disease caused by inhaling very fine ash and sand dust’, but rarely used except for its curiosity value.



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Saturday, October 26, 2019

The ACME Eagle Hand Soap Radio Hour (144)

Thank you for joining us today.

Before our feature presentation, ACME would like to start the evening with another Bugs Bunny (and Elmer Fudd) Looney Tunes cartoon, the 1947 Easter Yeggs, directed by Robert McKimson.



The Easter Rabbit's despondent voice and his therefore ironic catch phrase, "Keep Smiling!", are a takeoff of a character created by Mel Blanc for George Burns and Gracie Allen's radio show during the 1940s; Mel's character was called "The Happy Postman".


ACME would like to wish everyone a Spooky Halloween with a special Drive-In double-feature tonight. The programming department has put together a double feature revolving around nuclear holocaust, a very fun topic indeed. Tonight we have the 1951 film Unknown World and the 1958 Italian co-produced film, The Day the Sky Exploded, co-directed by Italian horror master Mario Bava. So we would like you to relax (quick, find the most comfortable seat on the sofa,) get a snack (perhaps, some popcorn,) and a beverage and join The ACME Eagle Hand Soap Radio Hour in watching the first film in today's double feature, Unknown World.



There seems to be some inspiration for this film taken from Jules Verne's Journey to the Center of the Earth. Both feature an underground sea, in both the entrance to the Earth is close to the top of the Earth (Iceland in Verne's novel and Alaska in this film) and the escape from underground is unexpected and amazingly rapid.


I'm guess we could all use a break, right about know. As you run into the kitchen and get a beverage refill or run into the bathroom and replenish the eco-system, we here at The ACME Eagle Hand Soap Radio Hour want to watch the 1956 John Sutherland produced (and CIA funded) cartoon, Destination Earth.



Kids remember,by introducing the American way of life on Mars, we can be sure that the quasi-communist Oggs days are numbered.


Our second feature tonight is the 1958 film, The Day the Sky Exploded, known as the first Italian science fiction film. So please join us here at The ACME Eagle Hand Soap Radio Hour and sit back, get comfortable and enjoy watching our second feature this evening. The Day the Sky Exploded.



The voice of the American astronaut character, John McLaren is provided by Shane Rimmer, Canadian actor better known for voicing Scott Tracey of the English series Thunderbirds.



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Thursday, October 24, 2019

Monday, October 21, 2019

Saturday, October 19, 2019

The ACME Eagle Hand Soap Radio Hour (143)

Thank you for joining us today.


Before our feature presentation, ACME would like to start the evening with another Bugs Bunny Looney Tunes cartoon, the 1947 Rabbit Transit directed by Friz Freleng. (This is Bugs' final encounter with Cecil Turtle.)



Cecil and Bugs had previously raced each other in 1941's Tortoise Beats Hare and 1943's Tortoise Wins by a Hare. Unlike Tortoise Wins by a Hare, this cartoon presumes that Bugs and Cecil have never met before now.


The programming staff at the home office of The ACME Eagle Hand Soap Radio Hour was encouraged (forced by threats of physical violence) to program more kaiju films. So they thought that they would put together a double feature of Gamera films (created in 1965 by the Daiei Motion Picture Company in Japan, to rival the success of Toho Studio) - the 1965 Gamera - The Giant Monster, (the start of the series,) and the 1969 Gamera vs. Guiron, released directly to American television that year as Attack of the Monsters. So we would like you to relax (quick, find the most comfortable seat on the sofa,) get a snack (perhaps, some popcorn,) and a beverage and join The ACME Eagle Hand Soap Radio Hour in watching the first film in today's double feature, Gamera - The Giant Monster.



This is the only film in the Gamera series that was filmed in black and white. In fact, this was the final kaiju movie to be filmed in black and white.


I'm guessing that we could all use a break, right about know. As you run into the kitchen and get a beverage refill or run into the bathroom and replenish the eco-system, we here at The ACME Eagle Hand Soap Radio Hour want to watch the the 1951 Looney Tunes Daffy Duck/ Porky Pig cartoon, The Prized Pest.



Look for this; When sitting on a chair in the den, Daffy is shown reading a Bugs Bunny comic book.


Our second feature tonight the 1969 Gamera film, Attack of the Monsters, the Americanized version of the Japanese film, Gamera vs Guiron. So please join us here at The ACME Eagle Hand Soap Radio Hour and sit back, get comfortable and enjoy watching our second feature this evening.



Despite being for kids, the monster action is filled with blood and gore (Guiron chops up Space Gyaos, Zigra slices Gamera open, Zedus gets his tongue ripped out etc), though none of the monsters in the series have red blood and are mostly various pastel colors



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Monday, October 14, 2019

Pilgarlic




A bald-headed man, or a person regarded with mild contempt.



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Saturday, October 12, 2019

The ACME Eagle Hand Soap Radio Hour (142)

Thank you for joining us today.

Before our feature presentation, ACME would like to start the evening with another Bugs Bunny Merry Melodies cartoon, the 1947 cartoon A Hare Grows in Manhattan directed by Friz Freleng.



A scene sometimes cut out of the airing of this cartoon: Bugs becomes part of the Egyptian cigarette billboard to escape the bulldog chasing him was cut to remove one Egyptian giving another a hot-foot, another Egyptian pointing to a cigarette butt at his feet, and to crop the shot so that way the word CIGARETTES is not shown.


October 12, 1996 - Back in late 1968, The Rolling Stone thought that they had come up with a great way to promote their just released album Beggars Banquet. They teamed up with director Michael Lindsay-Hogg to create a tv special with a circus theme, featuring the likes of The Who, Jethro Tull, Marianne Faithfull, John Lennon, Eric Clapton, Keith Richards, Yoko Ono, and Taj Mahal. Filmed over a very long 15 hour shooting day, the special didn't seem to be to the Stones liking (too much back story to get into here,) the special was shelved for nearly 28 years.

Finally on this date in 1996, The Rolling Stones finally release their landmark 1968 all-star BBC television special, The Rolling Stones' Rock And Roll Circus, on this date. (A lifetime ago, I worked on the cable tv premiere of this special for Viacom.) Directed by Let It Be‘s Michael Lindsay-Hogg, the performance was recorded in front of a live audience in London in 1968 and was originally conceived as a BBC-TV special. Today we would like to celebrate this time capsule of the end of the swinging 60s by asking you to sit back (quick, find the most comfortable seat on the sofa,) get a snack and a beverage and join The ACME Eagle Hand Soap Radio Hour in watching this classic long born tv special, The Rolling Stones' Rock And Roll Circus.



This is Brian Jones's last live performance with The Rolling Stones. He was kicked out of the band a few months after the show was filmed, in June of 1969 and died a short time later.



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Monday, October 7, 2019

Saturday, October 5, 2019

The ACME Eagle Hand Soap Radio Hour (141)

Thank you for joining us today.

Before our feature presentation, ACME would like to start the evening with another Bugs Bunny Looney Tunes cartoon, the 1946 Rhapsody Rabbit directed by Friz Freleng.



The same year Warner Bros. released Rhapsody Rabbit, MGM produced a very similar Tom and Jerry cartoon called The Cat Concerto, which features Tom being distracted by Jerry while playing in a concert. Most of the gags are identical to both cartoons, and they used the same music that was played. The Cat Concerto won an Academy Award for Best Animated Short Film.


You would be forgiven if at the end of this week, you mind feels like it's been through the mill. The programming department of The ACME Eagle Hand Soap Radio Hour feels your pain. The various revelations coming from Washington hurts everyone brain. The staff has been celebrating National Vodka Day since Wednesday (the official day was October 4th.) From somewhere deep within their alcoholic stupor, they decided, why not celebrate by watching on of the worst films ever produced. On October 5, 1959, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer release upon an unsuspecting public, Girls Town, starring, among other people, Mamie Van Doren, Mel Tormé and in his acting debut, Paul Anka.

Now, the Geneva Convention prevents us from showing the actual film; our legal department advised (demanded) that we show the very funny version released by Mystery Science Theater 3000 in 1994. The ACME Eagle Hand Soap Radio Hour is hoping to become a balm to the nation by asking you to watch MST3K skewer this very bad film. So we would like you to sit back (quick, find the most comfortable seat on the sofa,) get a snack and a beverage and join The ACME Eagle Hand Soap Radio Hour in watching Girls Town, with running commentary from Mike, Crow, Gyspy and Tom Servo.



Keep an eye out for Sister Grace, played by gossip columnist and F. Scott Fitzgerald mistress Sheilah Graham. And teen-age delinquent Flo, played by pre- 60s icon Peggy Moffitt, model and muse to designer Rudi Gernreich.



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Thursday, October 3, 2019

4:37 pm along the Rue Brisemiche



Mlle. Eugenie Genouxcrus, overcome with emotions, had to be carried from the Gauloises festive when she realized that they no longer made the original Butterfinger candy and her life had lost all meaning and purpose.



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