Today is Fluffernutter day. Celebrate by bringing fresh white bread, peanut butter, and marshmallow cream together.
While this may be a childhood favorite for some - it's causing me to gag to even think about.
Since 2007, ACME has been proud to recognize that every year from the 8th to the 12th of October, International Cephalopod Awareness Days come around to teach the world about Cephalopods!
This event is all about celebrating and sharing how fascinating and incredible they are!
Today is Octopus Day, celebrating all the eight-armed fellows.
October 8, 1925 -
One of the most expensive movie made, at the time (at $3.9 million,) Ben-Hur: A Tale of the Christ premiered on this date.
Producer Irving Thalberg was short of "hedonist slave girls", so he called up Hal Roach and Mack Sennett to ask a favor: to loan out their famous "Bathing Beauties". They were happy to oblige, as many girls were making their film debuts. Among the group of 20 or so girls who eventually appeared in the film: Janet Gaynor, Carole Lombard, Fay Wray and Joyzelle Joyner.
October 8, 1927 -
The Hal Roach studio released The Second Hundred Years short, starring Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy - the first Laurel and Hardy film with them appearing as a team on this date.
When Stan's hair began to grow back after being shaved for this short, it grew straight up and unruly. He was horrified until it drew laughs; at that point he decided to cultivate the "haystack" look, and even developed a mannerism of pulling it up when he scratched his head.
October 8, 1977 -
The final masterpiece of Luis Buñuel, That Obscure Object of Desire premiered on this date.
Ángela Molina recalls her audition with Luis Buñuel: "I enjoyed it very much, and the first meeting I had at the studios seemed like going to see the doctor because - and I've not mentioned this before to anyone - he had to see me naked. There were nude scenes, and I imagine he needed convincing that I was what he required for his film, or whatever. He had to see the way I looked. I was wearing the same dressing gown that appeared in the film. He put his glasses on. It was a long changing room, and he was at one end of it, and then he said, with an absolutely loving and affectionately paternal smile... let's see, I don't remember what exact word he used, but I knew I had to expose myself. So, I opened my dressing gown for a moment like a little girl, because that's what I was. I was very innocent at that time. And then he put his glasses on immediately and said: "Cover yourself! Cover yourself! All this as though they were uncovering Tutankhamun's mummy," Molina laughing says.
October 8, 1966 -
The first Doctor Who episode to feature the Cybermen (the first episode of the Doctor Who serial The Tenth Planet) aired on this date.
The episode is the last episode to star William Hartnell as the First Doctor (and Patrick Troughton as the Second Doctor).
October 8, 1972 -
Richard Boone starred in the TV series Hec Ramsey, about a gunfighter intrigued with new methods of criminology at the turn of the previous century, which premiered on this date.
In the fall of 1972, NBC moved its successful Wednesday night Mystery Movie series consisting of Columbo, McCloud, and McMillan and Wife to Sunday nights and added a fourth show, Hec Ramsey, while turning the original slot over to three new mysteries (Banacek, Madigan, and Cool Million). Hec Ramsey was a product of Jack Webb's then prolific production company. The series, which ran for two seasons (a total of ten 90 minute to 2 hour episodes) was superficially a Western, but it was set in the waning days of the Wild West when science was beginning to play a more significant role in crime solving than gunplay.
October 8, 1980 -
... And you may ask yourself, "Well, how did I get here?"...
Today is the 42nd anniversary of Talking Heads' fourth studio Remain in Light was released on this date
October 8, 1983 -
Francis Ford Coppola's under-rated arthouse teen drama Rumble Fish, starring Matt Dillon, Mickey Rourke, Vincent Spano, Diane Lane, Diana Scarwid, Nicolas Cage, Dennis Hopper, and Tom Waits, opened in limited release in NYC on this date.
While directing One from the Heart, Francis Ford Coppola received a letter from a class of schoolchildren in the American Midwest. The children said, since he was such a good director, they had all enjoyed Apocalypse Now, would he please consider tackling their favorite literary work, a book called The Outsiders, by the children's author S.E. Hinton. Coppola agreed. While shooting The Outsiders, Coppola decided to make a second film back-to-back with it - a smaller, more personal work. The result was Rumble Fish, and it, too, is based on a book by S. E. Hinton.
October 8, 1984 -
The critically acclaimed TV movie The Burning Bed starring Farrah Fawcett, Paul Le Mat, and Richard Masur, premiered on NBC-TV on this date.
Based on the true story of Francine Hughes, who was accused of murdering her husband on March 9, 1977 in Dansville, Michigan. She was found not guilty by reason of temporary insanity, and her case created a legal precedent for how domestic violence cases were to be handled in the future.
Don't forget to tune in to The ACME Eagle Hand Soap Radio Hour today
Today in History:
October 8, 876 -
The First Battle of Andernach occurred on this date between the West Frankish king Charles the Bald and the East Frankish king Louis the Younger, near Kettig southeast of Andernach.
The results of the epic battle was Charles' complete defeat. Thusly proving medieval royalty did not put much thought into the feeling of their progeny when naming them - Charles was not in fact bald but quite hairy and Louis was already 42 when this battle took place. To make matters worse, Louis had a younger brother known as Charles the Fat, who was probably not fat. Really, parents can be so cruel.
Don't worry, this won't be on the test.
October 8, 1582 -
Because of the implementation of the Gregorian calendar this day (and the four previous days) does not exist in this year in Italy, Poland, Portugal and Spain.
This leads to mass confusion and most of the populace just go back to bed and wait for tomorrow.
October 8, 1869 -
Franklin Pierce, an American politician and the fourteenth President of the United States, serving from 1853 to 1857 is to date the only president from New Hampshire and was the first president born in the nineteenth century.
His good looks and inoffensive personality caused him to make many friends, but he suffered tragedy in his personal life (all three of his children died in childhood - don't ask how his third child died) and as president subsequently made decisions which were widely criticized and divisive in their effects, thus giving him the reputation as one of the worst presidents in U.S. history.
After losing the Democratic nomination for a second term, Pierce reportedly quipped "there's nothing left to do but get drunk" (quoted also as "after the White House what is there to do but drink?") which he apparently did frequently. He once ran over an elderly woman while driving a carriage drunk. Franklin Pierce died in Concord, New Hampshire on this date at 64 years old, from cirrhosis of the liver, thus ending his miserable life.
October 8, 1871 -
Mrs O'Leary's cow started The Great Chicago Fire that destroyed more than 17,000 buildings, killed more than 300 people and left 90,000 homeless, on this date.
Bad cow.
Catherine O'Leary seemed the perfect scapegoat: she was a woman, immigrant, and Catholic - a combination which did not fare well in the political climate of the time in Chicago. This story was circulating in Chicago even before the flames had died out and was noted in the Chicago Tribune's first post-fire issue. Michael Ahern, the reporter that came with the story would retract it in 1893, admitting that it was fabricated.
In 1997, the Chicago City Council passed a resolution exonerating Mrs. O'Leary - and her cow - from all blame.
Occurring the same day as the Great Chicago fire, a forest fire broke out at Peshtigo, Wisconsin, eventually killing about 2,500 people while burning some 850 square miles including, Holland, Michigan, and Manistee, Michigan (making it the largest lost of life by fire in the United States.)
October 8, 1918 -
Sgt. Alvin York (Gary Cooper) of Tennessee became a World War I hero by single-handedly capturing a hill in the Argonne Forest of France, killing more than 20 enemy soldiers and capturing 132 others on this date.
What makes this feat all the more amazing is that York original applied and was denied Conscientious Objector status because of his religious beliefs.
October 8, 1919 -
The first U.S. transcontinental air race began with 63 planes competing in the round-trip aerial derby between California and New York. Each way took about three days.
air race
Seven men lost their lives during the race - flying was extremely hazardous at the time. Even the winner, Lieutenant Belvin W. Maynard, would meet his death three years later, while stunt flying at a county fair in Rutland, Vermont, on September 7, 1922.
October 8, 1928 -
Police raid 20 speakeasies in New York City in an effort to crack down on illegal liquor sales on this date.
New York City Police remain blind drunk, wandering the streets for three days afterward.
October 8, 1945 -
A patent for microwave oven was filed (US patent No. 2,495,429) by Percy LeBaron Spencer, who accidentally discovered that microwaves melted a chocolate bar in his pocket (the first item to be intentionally cooked in a microwave was popcorn.)
Spencer, an eighth-grade dropout and electronic wizard, worked for the Raytheon Manufacturing Corporation of Massachusetts developing a radar machine using microwave radiation. The first commercial microwave was produced nine years later and sold for $2,000.
October 8, 1948 -
When I was younger, I was ready to go off at any time. My wife, Linda, and I would go out to the Limelight in New York, and I would see people and be able to freeze them with a look. People were even too scared of me to tell me that people were scared of me.
Johnny Ramone (nee John William Cummings) the lead guitarist for The Ramones was born on this date.
October 8, 1956 -
New York Yankees pitcher Donald James Larsen pitches the first perfect game in a World Series - no walks, no hits, no runs.
His perfect game was the only no-hitter of any type ever pitched in postseason play until Doc Halladay pitched one on October 6th, 2010.
October 8, 1993 -
Ted Danson appeared in black face at a Friars Club roast for Whoopi Goldberg on this date.
His offensive comments amused Whoopi Goldberg but the incident becomes a great embarrassment.
October 8, 2011 –
On September 26th, 2011 Mikey Welsh, the former bassist for Weezer, posted on Twitter, “Dreamt I died in Chicago next weekend (heart attack in my sleep). Need to write my will today” followed by, “Correction – the weekend after next”.
He died on this date from a heart attack, possibly brought on by a drug overdose, in his sleep in a Chicago hotel room. If only they had read their Nostradamus.
And so it goes
Joyzelle Joyner, indeed.
ReplyDeleteHey, she appeared in The Sign of the Cross. She was famous to her friends and family.
ReplyDelete