It's Roger Moore in a beard and playing with cats and fighting villains! What's not to like? SimonUK and Ryan get on board to bear witness as Anthony Perkins decides to make some quick cash by entering the petroleum industry! It's all hands on deck as James Mason and many other familiar faces mix it up in a high stakes chess match that no one in the US ever managed to watch!
Of the near universal experiences of my generation (that being the generation known as "X") was the certainty that you were plopped down in front of a television as soon as you could sit upright and you were a fan of Sesame Street. It was partially a product of the fact we usually had three networks and a PBS affiliate on our TV's and very little else, but also because it was recognized by our parents as both entertainment and a source of education.
As a kid, I remember the combination of Muppets, kind adults and kids, animation and music made it a variety show that I personally wanted to watch. I am sure I had favorite bits and characters, but that's all been lost to time as all I can remember is a general warm spot for the show, the actors and the Muppets. And, now, the nostalgia when seeing footage from that era hits me like a wave. It's tapping into brain cells that haven't been accessed much in years, and related feelings both directly and indirectly tied to the show.
For old-skool Austinites, I saw this movie in the theater in 1984 at Northcross Mall. That summer my dad was living in Austin and the family in Spring, TX as we worked to move everyone to Austin for my father's new job. My thinking is that on one of our many trips to Austin to see The Admiral and check out the town and where we'd live, my folks took the evening and took me (9) and my brother (11) to see this movie.
Mostly I remember thinking the bits with Kermit in disguise as Hollywood and Broadway types were hysterical. I recognized a good number of the cameos at that point (Dabney Coleman, Brooke Shields, Linda Lavin, etc...) and it was good to see my old muppety pals again on screen.
That year I also picked up the official Marvel Comics adaptation, but it was released as a few issues, and I didn't get one of them. Still, they used exact dialog from scenes, went very cartoony, and so I know some very specific dialog from this movie from re-reading those comics over and over (the Penguins yelling "well, excuuuuuse me!", for example).
We talk a lot about movies and cultural artifacts around here, but the world has genuine heroes. Archbishop Desmond Tutu has passed.
The Archbishop's efforts in the anti-Apartheid movement in South Africa and his role as ambassador to the world were instrumental in the disintegration of the old government in his homeland. And then he kept working.
We will see his like again, and it's important to know these lights when we see them. What a gift he was to the world.
From the President of South Africa, Cyril Ramaphosa:
A man of extraordinary intellect, integrity and invincibility against the forces of apartheid, he was also tender and vulnerable in his compassion for those who had suffered oppression, injustice and violence under apartheid, and oppressed and downtrodden people around the world
For me, this film is ground zero for what has become what I oversimplify and refer to as my Hallmark Christmas Movie fascination. I'm not sure I even watched Crazy for Christmas (2005) on Hallmark the first time. It could have been Lifetime or some other network. But I think I watched it Christmas 2005 when it first aired. I know I watched it in Phoenix, and by 2006, I was in Austin.
What I mostly remember was that it starred Howard Hesseman of WKRP in Cincinnati fame, which was how I wound up checking it out. "Oh, yeah, that person" quickly became what brought me back to these movies as I checked in on the Tiffani Amber Theissens and others who were happy to pick up a check and turn in a performance in a movie that would get eyeballs and not embarrass anyone became a thing.
This movie co-stars Hesseman, but really hinges on Andrea Roth, who has an imbd page as long as your arm, as a single mom struggling to finish school and raise a kid. She works as a limo driver to pay the bills. On Christmas Eve, a local eccentric millionaire requests her, specifically, to drive him around for the day. She has a kid and doesn't want to do it, but the money is too good.
We had a good few days of festivities. Thursday was Santa With Muscles Day, which... really, should never be repeated.
After much COVID testing, we were able to host Christmas Eve for my parents and cousin, Jamie's Dad and brother (The Dug) and his wife, K. Unfortunately we were in a gray area with my brother's family until Christmas Day, so we missed them on Christmas Eve.
Cocktails, too much food, some jolly music and cheer was had by all. It's also my cousin's birthday, so it's always a one-two punch of festivities on Christmas Eve. As always, after parents left, we checked in with The Pope, watched some Hallmark, watched some Christmas specials, etc... it was lovely.
As we do each Christmas Eve, we're giving Darlene Love a spin. If you've never listened to Ms. Love, give it a shot - see why she's so great live.
It's been an... interesting year here at League HQ, genuinely filled with love and loss and ups and downs. It's been a year of instability and amazing support. And even this Christmas Eve is filled with questions.
But all you can do is put one foot in front of the other and just keep going. And that's true in the better years, too.
On this night of anticipation, I hope you are either spending the holidays as you wish or have plans for a good night in the coming days. All I know is that we get another year coming up as this rock hasn't flown away from the nuclear ball anchoring our planets here, or been consumed by it yet.
We've got another chance. Let's all do better. Let's all try to remember that we're all we've got.
While Darlene Love is the patron saint of Christmas here at The Signal Watch, there's always room under the tree for more voices. And where would we have been in 2021 if not for Ms. Hannah Waddingham?