PopCult

Rudy Panucci On Pop Culture

PopCult’s Best Of Christkindl Market

Over the past eleven years, your humble blogger and his lovely wife have made many trips to Chicago in the Christmas season, and we always find the time to visit Chicago’s Christkindl Market, one of the biggest traditional German holiday festivals in the US. In the tradition of the German town fairs of the holiday season, this Christkindlmarket is set up in the historic Daley Plaza, in the shadow of the famous Picasso sculpture. This pop-up market runs from before Thanksgiving until Christmas Eve, every year.

For today’s entry in The 12 Posts of Christmas, we’re going to go back and bring you a batch of photos from our visits over the years.

Enjoy!

This is the main entrance. Pro-tip: Don’t wait in line for them to open this one. There are three other entrances and if you get there right when they open, it’s way quicker to go to one of those. At least it was that way until this year, when they decided to only have one entrance and limit how many people got in at a time.

The problem with running this photo is that now I really want a pretzel stuffed with spinach and feta, and I’ve never seen them for sale anywhere around here.

Continue reading

The RFC Flashback: Episode One Hundred Sixty-Six

This week we go back to late August, 2012, for the first of three shows devoted to “Tribute To The Troops II,” an outdoor show held at Saint Albans City Park, produced by Wood Boys Music.  Over the next few weeks we’ll look at some of the top bands of the day, who donated their work for a great cause.

This week we feature the late Lee Harrah and his band,  HARRAH, Everpulse and In The Company of Wolves. The show kicks off with Cadence Weaver singing the National Anthem.

In the next two weeks you will see performances from Breedlove, The Under Social, Remains Unnamed, Deck of Fools, Johnny Compton, and Point of Jerus.

You can read the original production notes HERE.

A Very Special AIR XMAS MESS

The PopCulteer
December 19, 2025

I’m not gonna lie, folks…it’s been a rough week.

So today I’m going to take it easy a bit. I’m making The PopCulteer one of our 12 Posts of Christmas.

Today on The AIR you can hear a very special new AIR XMAS MESS.  This one-hour show, hosted by my beautiful wife, Mel Larch, will run Friday at 10 AM, 1 PM, 5 PM and Midnight, with several additional airings over the next six days as we fold it into our collection of holiday programming on The AIR.  In fact, you can expect The AIR to be mostly Christmas and Holiday specials until the day after Christmas, one week from today. We’ll interrupt that with our marathons of The Swing Shift and MIRRORBALL, but otherwise, we are going into Christmas Spirit Overdrive.

It’s painfully easy to tune in to  The AIR.  To listen to The AIR, you simply have to point your cursor over and tune in at the website, or you could just stay here, and  listen to the cool embedded player found elsewhere on this page.  It’s not rocket science.

Today’s special is our only new Holiday programming this year (with the exception of parts of Radio Free Charleston). It’s been a bit of a struggle to maintain any Christmas spirit in the face of overwhelming loss and a bleak political landscape, but we are going to do our best.

It’s what Knute Rockne would’ve wanted.

What we decided to do is bring you Mel’s favorite Christmas album, 1987’s A Very Special Christmas, and since it’s less than an hour long, we’ve enhanced it with three more very special Christmas songs.

Here’s the playlist for this year’s AIR XMAS MESS

A Very Special AIR XMAS MESS

“Santa Claus Is Coming To Town” The Pointer Sisters
“Winter Wonderland” Eurythmics
“Do You Hear What I Hear?” Whitney Houston
“Merry Christmas Baby” Bruce Springsteen And The E Street Band
“Have Yourself A Merry Little Christmas” The Pretenders
“I Saw Mommy Kissing Santa Claus” John Cougar Mellencamp
“Gabriel’s Message” Sting
“Christmas In Hollis” Run-D.M.C.
“Christmas (Baby Please Come Home)” U2
“Santa Baby” Madonna
“The Little Drummer Boy” Bob Seger, The Silver Bullet Band
“Run Rudolph Run” Bryan Adams
“Back Door Santa: Bon Jovi
“The Coventry Carol” Alison Moyet
“Silent Night” Stevie Nicks
“Christmas Wrapping” The Waitresses
“Please Come Home For Christmas” Mel Larch & The Diablo Blues Band
“Christmas Carol” Tom Lehrer

That is it for this week’s PopCulteer. Check, back for fresh content every day, even when we don’t feel like it. We have six more days of our 12 Posts of Christmas, and with any luck, we will find our way back to some semblance of normality soon.

 

Frothy The Undead Snowman

Today’s entry in The 12 Posts of Christmas is the latest epic micro-budget movie from our old friend, Jake Fertig. Its a heartwarming holiday classic, guaranteed to become an annual viewing tradition.

A freak snow storm. A day off school. Playing outside in the snow. What could be better? When Walt and Reidun found out they were going to get a snow day off of school things were looking good…until it came for them. Now, two children are trying to convince a disbelieving parent that something is after them. They hardly believe it themselves, so how can they expect their mother to? In their cinematic debut Reidun Fertig and Walter Fertig deliver an amazing performance in a holiday cinetacular film fit for all audiences!

This is a fun and funny little film, and we really needed something like this after the week we’ve had.

I do find myself wondering about a sequel.

Attempting Holiday Cheer and Remembering Brian on RFC

We are two days late with a drastically altered edition of Radio Free Charleston that you can hear today on The AIR.  To listen to The AIR, you simply have to point your cursor over and tune in at the website, or you could just stay here, and  listen to the cool embedded player found elsewhere on this page.  

You can hear Radio Free Charleston Thursday at 2 PM, with several replays throughout the week.

This week’s show starts out with half an hour of great local and independent Holiday music, then brings you about 90 more minutes of our usual mix of local and independent tunes, with some great new music and contributions from our Chicago pipeline. We open the show with The Carpenter Ants featuring the legendary John Ellison, and then it’s smooth sailing until our third hour, which is a mixtape tribute to my friend, Brian Young.

I wrote about Brian yesterday, and I had to do something to honor his memory and musical excellence in the show. I actually had this episode of the show recorded and ready to edit when power outages slowed me down, and then I found out that Brian had passed.

So I threw out the third hour and re-recorded all my announcing segments late Wednesday evening. If you think I sound more sedate than usual, that’s why.

I’m not doing links or even a full playlist for the third hour because I’m recording this show so late on Wednesday night.

You will get to hear Brian’s music, plus a bit where he called into the original broadcast version of RFC and talked about a live, over-the-phone song he and Kris Cormany had performed the previous Thursday, from Key West, Florida. You’ll get to hear a hint of his humor there.  We’ll have more of that when we do the video tribute to him next month.

Check out the playlist. Links in the first two hours will take you to pages for the artists…

RFC V5 252

hour one
The Carpenter Ants with John Ellison “Never Too Old For Christmas”
Jim And The Sea Dragons “Seaside Sleigh Ride”
Audrey Smiley “God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen”
Brian Diller “Christmas Time of Year”
Deni Bonet & Chris Flynn “Can’t Wait To See You On Christmas”
PALLAS “Christmas Northern Star”
The Kevin Brown Quintet “Oh Come Oh Come Emmanuel”
J. Marinelli “Crankers vs. Wankers”
Moron Police “Alfredo and the Afterlife”
Nervous Twitch “The Day Job Gets In The Way”
Payback’s A Bitch “Searching For Eden”
Magnetic Skies “Your Shadow”
Cheap Trick “Wham Boom Bang”
Gina Marie and the Golden Bucks “Snake Around”
Heavy Set Paw Paws “For a Livin’/Bad Breath (live)”

hour two
The 4D Man “Univac 9000”
Scott Collins “Nashville Sugar”
Gardenn “Empty Bottles”
Kissing The Pink “Love Lasts Forever”
Julian Lennon “I Won’t Give Up”
The Settlement “Blindman/Drums/Blindman Pt. 2 (live)”
Custard Flux “Les Mâchoires de la Mort”
Vexian Arch “This Empty Cup

hour three
The Brian Young Mixtape Tribute, including music by Three Bodies, Brian Yound and Keith Walters, Whistlepunk, Mother Nang, Electro Biscuit and Superfetch.

You can hear this episode of Radio Free Charleston Thursday at 2 PM on The AIR, with replays Friday at 9 AM, Saturday at Noon and Midnight, Sunday at 8 PM and  Monday at 11 AM, exclusively on The AIR.

I’m also going to  embed a low-fi, mono version of this show right in this post, right here so you can listen on demand.

 

After RFC, stick around for special AIR Holiday programming.

War Is Over (If You Want It)

Today’s entry in the 12 Posts of Christmas is an OSCAR-winning animated short featuring the music of John & Yoko.

From the video’s description:

WAR IS OVER! Set in an alternate WWI reality where a senseless war rages on, two soldiers on opposite sides of the conflict play a game of chess.

A heroic carrier pigeon delivers the soldiers’ chess moves over the battlefield as the fighting escalates.

Neither soldier knows his opponent as the game and the war builds to its climatic final move. Whoever wins the game, one thing is for certain: there are no winners in war.

Written by Sean Ono Lennon and Dave Mullins, it features John Lennon & Yoko Ono’s iconic anti-war holiday song ‘Happy Xmas (War Is Over)’. Directed by Dave Mullins, Produced by Brad Booker and Exec Produced by Yoko Ono Lennon and Sean Ono Lennon with music by Thomas Newman, the film has been created as a co-production of Lenono Music, ElectroLeague, Lightstorm Entertainment, WētāFX and Epic Games.

It won the 2024 Academy Award (Oscar) and the ANNIE Award for Best Animated Short.

WAR IS OVER! Has been released to YouTube to raise awareness of the UK charity, War Child. Helen Pattinson, CEO of War Child UK says: “I want to thank Sean Ono Lennon, Yoko Ono, Dave Mullins, Brad Booker, Thomas Newman, the John Lennon Estate and all the brilliant people who have come together to create this powerful film. It is an incredibly moving piece of art that shines a light on the tragic consequences of war, which remain all too real in the world today. Their creativity and compassion, as well as that of John and Yoko, continues to help us tell the stories of hundreds-of-millions of children whose lives are being torn apart by conflict, many of whom are currently facing the added dangers of bitter cold, hunger and displacement. Right now, as temperatures drop in places like Gaza, Afghanistan and Ukraine, families are struggling to stay warm and keep their children safe. Every donation helps us to deliver lifesaving support, from safe spaces and specialist psychological care, to emergency support for essentials like heating fuel and food. This winter, it is not the thought that counts, but action. Together, we can give children the protection, warmth and hope that they deserve.”

You can donate to War Child HERE.

Remembering Brian Young

I hate having to do this again so soon.

Brian Young, one of the most consequential people in my life, and a huge contributor to this blog through his work with me on Radio Free Charleston, passed away Tuesday afternoon, two days after suffering a stroke.

He was surrounded by his wife, Debra, his daughters, Birdie and Cadance and more family. I hate this for them and send my deepest love and condolences. This has me torn up and I can only imagine how horrible it has to be for them.

Brian was one of my best friends, but we weren’t attached at the hip. We were the kind of friends who could go months or years without seeing each other, and then instantly pick up where we left off when we reconnected.

Brian was a genius drummer, a technical wiz with video and communications technology and he was one of the funniest people I ever met. In the 36 years we knew each other, I can’t think of a single disagreement we’d had. Aside from being hilarious and fun to be around, Brian was also the most competent and reliable person I’ve ever known. You could always count on him.

Brian is also one of the “RFC Big Shots” listed at the end of every video edition of Radio Free Charleston.

I met him at The Charleston Playhouse in 1989, the night I’d been invited there by Johnny Rock. We hit it off, and I hired him to work part time at WVNS, where I hosted the evening show every night, plus the original broadcast radio incarnation of Radio Free Charleston.

It was there that we’d improvise comedy bits for the show and began collaborating on other projects. In the ensuing years he’d call me in to run camera on some of his projects, I wound up co-producing demos for his band, Three Bodies, and we became very close friends.

In the early 90s Brian contracted an illness that had him hospitalized for quite some time. He pulled through, but was on medication that impaired his health a bit. Around the same time my parents started having various health issues, and I wound up withdrawing from most of my social circles to act as their caregiver.

Brian and his daughter, Cadance, at a Halloween show in 2007.

We’d still touch base. He called me the day before his first marriage and we talked for about three hours, and agreed to stay in touch. However, life got in the way, and a decade passed before the fateful day in early 2006 that he called me again, and pitched the idea of reviving Radio Free Charleston as a video show, which would be produced at LiveMix Studio, his new business that he’d founded with Kai Haynes and Greg Wegmann. I’d been hearing about LiveMix, and this was just a few months after I began writing PopCult. We still kept up with each other’s work, and this was a perfect storm for us to collaborate again.

If Brian hadn’t called me, there would not have been any video episodes of RFC, and it’s doubtful that it would still be going as an internet radio show to this day. RFC is my greatest work, and if not for Brian, it would have been long forgotten, consigned to the memories of the folks who tuned in to it on broadcast radio in the middle of the night 35 years ago.

I owe Brian so much, and the Charleston Music Scene owes him a huge debt.

Brian as part of a Zombie Kick Line

I would be remiss if I didn’t go back to Brian’s sense of humor. If he saw this he’d start mocking it and peppering it with high-pitched f-bombs while reading parts of it in goofy voices.

In some ways, Brian was my comedic soulmate. We could always crack each other up. It could be pure silliness, dark absurdity, clever wordplay, or just goofiness, but it was always funny.

And fun.

Thanks to social media, Brian and I were able to stay in touch better than we did back in the pre-internet days. Just a few weeks ago I was reminiscing on Facebook about a day where Brian and I ran amuk at the Charleston Town Center.

About 35 years ago, during the heyday of the original version of Radio Free Charleston, I was running around the Charleston Town Center with Brian Young, and we went into the arcade they used to have in the food court and, using a roll of quarters I had been given by an advertiser (they did weird stuff like that back then), we decided to launch an assault on the arcade’s claw machine.

We traded off, with one of us operating the claw, and the other spotting from the side.

In less than half an hour we burned through most of the roll of quarters.

We had to stop because we had emptied the machine. Brain went to Graziano’s and got a trash bag for us to carry them around in.

Then we proceeded to run around the mall like lunatics giving little plush animals to our friends who worked there, along with a few folks we’d never met. I still had about twenty left, which I gave to the kids in my mom’s daycare center.

Brian responded to this with “Good times.”

Whistlepunk

That was the Cliff Notes version of the story. After we’d emptied the claw machine (perfectly legally and legitimately) the guy who ran the arcade called Mall Security and said we’d broken into the machine and stole the little plush animals.

So while we were running around the Mall giving out the plush gifts, Mall police were attempting to catch us, in the particularly inept way of lukewarm pursuit that only Mall police can manage.

Two grown men, not yet 30 but acting half our age, managed to elude them for over an hour, running all over the mall, ducking in and out of different stores, before escaping to the parking building and freedom.

At one point, one of us, I forget which, but there was instant agreement, yelled, “Let’s run down the up escalator!” So we took off down the up escalator in the center of the mall, got to the bottom, saw all the Mall police piled into one of the glass elevators coming down to where we were, and just stopped running and escalated back up to the second floor.

I think at that point they gave up.

Brian and I brought out the inspired lunacy in each other.

I’m going to miss that. I’m not the only one. Aside from the fun and games and craziness, Brian Young is one of the best human beings I ever met. I know I’m not the only person who feels that way. Everybody loved Brian. My heart is broken for his family.

I will always be grateful for having known Brian. He made this world, and my life, better.

Later today I will be re-recording the third hour of this week’s Radio Free Charleston radio show to bring you an hour of his amazing drumming with a variety of bands. That will debut Thursday at 2 PM on The AIR.  Next month, following this month’s video edition of the show dedicated to Lee Harrrah, there will be a video edition of RFC dedicated to Brian.

There will be no formal service for Brian. Instead, next summer, there will be a concert that will be a celebration of his life. I will keep you posted on that when the plans are made.

Despite all the fun, we were capable of being deadly serious, as you can see by our expressions in this photo.

STUFF TO DO Invades The Holidays

We find ourselves still a little truncated this week due to some internet and power outages that have played havoc with our PopCulting, so we’re going to try to keep it short and sweet and cover some cool STUFF TO DO all over the state, as briefly as possible. We still have a bit of a monster of a list of things to do.

I felt obligated to say that because of our feature image.

Keep in mind that Winter weather may make going out a very poor life choice, so be careful out there, even though it’s supposed to warm up this weekend. Also, Charleston’s December ArtWalk happens Thursday from 5 PM to 8 PM, so go check it out and take in the Holly Jolly Brawley tree festival while you’re at it.

As always, you should remember that THIS IS NOT A COMPLETE LIST OF EVENTS.  It’s just a starting point, so don’t expect anything comprehensive, and if you feel strongly about me leaving anything out, feel free to mention it in the comments.

We are very happy to remind you that Cristen Michael has created an interactive calendar that is way more comprehensive than this list of STUFF TO DO, and you can find it HERE. Just click on the day and the event and you’ll be whisked away to a page with more details about loads of area events.

You can find live music in and around town every night of the week. You just have to know where to look.

Most weekends you can find live music at Taylor Books. There is no cover charge, and Friday and Saturday shows start at 7:30 PM. This weekend they have The Carpenter Ants on Friday, and Minor Swing on Saturday.

To hear music in an alcohol-free enviroment, see what’s happening at Pumzi’s, on Charleston’s West Side. Pumzi’s has been beefing up their offerings recently, so be sure to check that link in case we miss something. Saturday they have The Steve Himes Connection jazzying up the joint for Christmas.

You can find live music every night at The World Famous Empty Glass Cafe.  Wednesday night RFC regulars, SPACE FREQ, hold an open rehearsal starting at 8 PM.  This weekend they have The East End Ghouls featuring Mutter Maggottë, mixing Burlesque with Drag for fun and profit on Saturday.

You can find live music in and around town every night of the week. You just have to know where to look.  Keep in mind that all shows are subject to change or be cancelled at the last minute.

Here we go, roughly in order, it’s graphics for local events happening over the next week or so that I was able to scrounge up online…

Continue reading

A Look Back At A Big Toy Store

Today’s entry in The 12 Posts of Christmas goes back two years (and two days) ago, for our first video visit to Sir Troy’s Toy Kingdom. In recent months, Sir Troy’s has expanded, opening another massive toy store just South of Cleveland. Here’s a repost of our 2023 visit…

I have to place the blame on FiestaWare.

I speak, of course of the beloved, multicolored dinnerware line, produced right here in West Virginia, and obsessively collected by Mrs. PopCulteer, Mel Larch. That FiestaWare.  That’s how I wound up in Canton, Ohio last summer right after the Marx Toy Show in Wheeling.

A new FiestaWare outlet store opened at the Hartville Marketplace & Flea Market, just North of Canton, and we decided to go there after the Marx show, since we were already fairly close to it.

We went there and Mel got some new pieces and while we were there, we checked out a few other fine shopping destinations. I was on the fence about going to one of them. I saw “Sir Troy’s Toy Kingdom” on the Google Maps, and having been burned many times while looking at toy stores in new cities, I was prepared to be disappointed. In fact, I almost didn’t even go.  We stopped on the way out of town because it was practically on the ramp to get back on I 77 South to come home.

Mel stayed in the car, and I went in expecting nothing more than plush, STEM toys and maybe some wooden trains or something.

I was not prepared for the sensory overload of a toy store, stocked with new stuff–not antiques, larger than any Toys R Us that I’d ever been in, and filled with almost any toy you can imagine. I was greeted by a five-foot motion-activated animatronic raptor, and it just got wilder from there.

This is not your average independent toy store.

Sir Troy is actually a longtime LEGO collector who had opened up a couple of shops in malls around the area, before deciding to go whole-hog and open a complete, full-service toy store in The Beldon Village shopping complex in Canton, right off of Insterstate 77.  This location is a 30,000 square-foot behemoth of a toy store, reportedly the largest brick and mortar store devoted to new toys in the country, and it’s a worthy day trip for any toy collector, kid, or adult pretending to have a kid because they love toys so much.

The store is loaded with the newest Hot Wheels, Barbies, Marvel Action Figures, GI Joe, action figures of all kinds, plush animals, model kits, model railroads, boardgames, children’s books, Schleich figures, Playmobil, outdoor toys, educational toys, slot cars…I could go on, but the videos might give you a better idea. Oh, and they have what is likely the largest collection of LEGO sets for sale in the country. This location just opened in November, 2022, and it’s already become a bit of an underground legend among toy collectors. We had to go back last month with the PopCult cameras, arriving just before they decorated for the holidays.  If something about the stores seems familiar, well, you’ll have to watch the videos to find out why.

Seriously, several of the “departments,” like Barbie, Hot Wheels, Breyer, Bruder, LEGO, Marvel Legends and more are bigger than entire other toy stores. There’s a candy and soda section (stocked by Grandpa Joe’s, from Pittsburgh) that’s probably twice the size of the average GameStop.

Above you see the “short” video, which runs nearly ten minutes. There was simply too much visual excitement to cram into a shorter clip. I should warn you that this is a very frenetic video and in places it looks like you’re watching The Blair Witch Project in fast motion. Below you’ll see the director’s cut, which is around twenty-five minutes, and includes a guided tour of the massive LEGO display that takes up one corner of the store (Thanks again, Jeff!).

Below that I have a photo essay, which is mostly made up of screen grabs from shots that I couldn’t fit into the videos. Sir Troy’s Toy Kingdom is about a three-hour drive from Charleston, taking Insterstate 77 almost all the way there.

The Photos

This is a tiny slice of a massive Hot Wheels section, wherein each peg holds one style of car, so you don’t have to go digging like a heathen the way you have to everywhere else.

This is the 2023 holiday Breyer Horse, part of a gigantic section of nothing but Breyer’s.

Another cool Breyer horse.

I don’t know if you understand how big this thing is.

A small portion of the gigantic Cleveland-inspired LEGO diorama.

Are you into model airplanes? They have a few.

Holiday Star Wars figures, not to be confused with the Star Wars Holiday Special.

I hear people complaining about not being able to find GI Joe: Classified figures…

…maybe that’s because they’re all here.

And finally, we have The Village People, reunited as Playmobil figures.

RFC Delayed This Week

Due to technical issues, power outages and horrible news,  this week’s new Radio Free Charleston will debut on Thursday. Today we’ll be running an encore of the 2021 Christmas episode on The AIR at 10 AM and 10 PM.  You can point your cursor over and tune in at the website, or you could just stay here, and  listen to the cool embedded player found elsewhere on this page.  

This week’s show, which was pretty far along when everything went to hell, will debut on Thursday at 2 PM.

You can also expect another of our 12 Posts of Christmas later today.

Sorry for the delay.

« Older posts

© 2025 PopCult

Theme by Anders NorenUp ↑