Twas The Night Before Christmas

December 23, 1823 –The famous poem A Visit From St. Nicholas was first published on this date. It begins, Twas the night before Christmas, when all through the house / Not a creature was stirring, not even a mouse …. Fourteen years after its first publication, an editor attributed the poem to a wealthy professorContinue reading “Twas The Night Before Christmas”

I got Dinah Shore on the other line.

Bunkies, what would the holidays be with Pee Wee Herman’s Christmas Special (now filled with original commercial goodness!). Remember to scream ‘really loud‘ when the secret word ‘YEAR‘ is said: The lighting apparatus used in Miss Yvonne’s hair actually shorted and smoked during production and the crew had to intervene to remove the power packContinue reading “I got Dinah Shore on the other line.”

Our annual salute to prisoner 1073015 –

Through the mid-‘60s, Phil Spector was focused on singles, with his definition of an album being “two hits and ten pieces of junk.” He took a different approach, however, when he put together a Christmas album in 1963, where he put a great deal of effort into every track. So please join us at ACMEContinue reading “Our annual salute to prisoner 1073015 –”

Curiosity killed the cat … and the scientist

December 21, 1898 –Radium, which existed since the world was young, was minding it own business when French local busybodies and known chemists Pierre and Marie Curie isolated radium; one of the first radioactive elements to be discovered. They won a joint Nobel prize for their work, and Marie Curie went on to win anotherContinue reading “Curiosity killed the cat … and the scientist”

Follow along – I promise it will make sense

The Winter Solstice in Northern Hemisphere will be at 10:58 AM (EST), the shortest amount of daylight of the year and the longest night. It’s officially the first day of Winter and one of the oldest known holidays in human history. Anthropologists believe that solstice celebrations go back at least 30,000 years, before humans evenContinue reading “Follow along – I promise it will make sense”

Stalin: Portrait of an Evil Bastard

Josif Djugashvili was born in the Gori District of Tiflis Province in Georgia, Imperial Russia, on December 21, 1879 (or December 18th or the 22nd. When you’re an evil bastard dictator, you get to choose your own birthday). His father was a drunken and often unemployed cobbler, illiterate, and like Josif’s mother, Ekaterina, had onlyContinue reading “Stalin: Portrait of an Evil Bastard”