Rudy Panucci On Pop Culture

Month: January 2025 (Page 1 of 4)

Eurythmics Take Over Sydney’s Big Electric Cat Friday On The AIR

The PopCulteer
January 31, 2025

Sydney Fileen returns with a new episode of Sydney’s Big Electric Cat devoted the band, Eurythmics, Friday on The AIR.  The AIR is PopCult‘s sister radio station. You can hear our shows on The AIR website, or just click on the embedded player found elsewhere on this page.

Friday at 2 PM on The AIR, we have an encore of a special episode of MIRRORBALL where Mel Larch devoted her hour of Disco to the music of Disco legend, Jimmy “Bo” Horne.   You can scroll down and read the original notes and playlist HERE.

You can hear MIRRORBALL every Friday at 2 PM, with replays Sunday night at 11 PM and throughout the following week Monday at 9 AM and Tuesday at 1 PM plus there’s a mini-marathon that includes the latest episode Saturday nights at 9 PM

At 3 PM, it’s Big Electric Cat time as Sydney Fileen delivers a special NEW mixtape edition of her show that pays tribute to the stunning duo that helped propel New Wave Music into the mainstream.  This week you get two hours of Eurythmics on BEC.

Annie Lennox and Dave Stewart formed their band from the ashes of another band, The Tourists, and in 1983, they exploded into international success with the song that opens this episode, “Sweet Dreams are made of These.”

On this week’s Big Electric Cat, Sydney brings you highlights from the six albums Eurythmics released during the New Wave era. In addition to their electronic two-person-band sound, you will hear their later band music and collaborations with major artists like Aretha Franklin, Stevie Wonder and Elvis Costello.

Check out this killer playlist…

Big Electric Cat 124

Eurythmics
“Sweet Dreams Are Made of These”

“English Summer”
“Take Me To Your Heart”
“Your Time Will Come”
“Heartbeat Heartbeat”
“Love Is A Stranger”
“Wrap It Up” (With Green Gartside of Scritti Politti)
“I Could Give You (A Mirror)”
“Somebody Told Me”
“Here Comes The Rain Again”
“Right By Your Side”
“Who’s That Girl”
“No Fear, No Hate, No Pain (No Broken Heart)”
“Sexcrime (Nineteen Eighty-Four)”
“Winston’s Diary”
“Would I Lie To You”
“There Must Be An Angel”
“Sisters Are Doing It For Themselves”
“Adrian”
“It’s Alright (Baby’s Coming Back)”
“Missionary Man”
“Thorn In My Side”
“When Tomorrow Comes”
“The Miracle of Love”
“Beethoven (I Love To Listen To)”
“I Need A Man”
“Shame”
“You Have Placed A Chill In My Heart”
“Hello I Love You”

Sydney’s Big Electric Cat is produced at Haversham Recording Institute in London, and can be heard every Friday at 3 PM, with replays Saturday afternoon,  Monday at 7 AM, Tuesday at 8 PM, Wednesday at Noon and Thursday at 10 AM, exclusively on The AIR.

That’s it for this week’s PopCulteer, check back for all our regular feature, with fresh content, every day. If all goes well, we will have a video AND a photo essay from last weekend’s GI Joe Winterfest on Sunday.

STUFF TO DO as January Turns To February

We already have one month gone in the new year, and the second one starting, so here’s PopCult‘s weekly guide to things you can get into in and around Charleston, West Virginia.

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. Also, if you have a show that you’d like to plug in the future, contact me via Social Media at Facebook, BlueSky or Twitter. I dont charge for this, so you might as well send me something if you have an event to promote. Some links look like they shouldn’t work because they have lines through them, but that’s just a WordPress glitch, so click on them anyway. They should still work.

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

Most Fridays and Saturdays you can find live music at Taylor Books. There is no cover charge, and shows start at 7:30 PM. Friday it’s Bug Kinder-Schuyler, while Saturday you can hear RFC faves, Verdeant Band.

You can find live music every night at The World Famous Empty Glass Cafe. Mondays feature open mic night. The first Tuesday of every month sees the legendary Spurgie Hankins Band perform. There’s both Happy Hour music and local or touring bands on Thursday and Friday, and live bands Saturday nights. On Sundays when there’s a new Mountain Stage, musicians from the legendary WV Public Radio show migrate to The Glass for the Post-Mountain Stage jam.

Live at The Shop in Dunbar hosts local and touring bands on most weekends, and is a nice break away from the downtown bar scene.

Louie’s, at Mardi Gras Casino & Resort, regularly brings in local bands on weekends.

In Huntington, local institution, The Loud (formerly The V Club), brings in great touring and local acts three or four nights a week.

The Wandering Wind Meadery holds several events each week, from live piano karaoke to bands to burlesque.

The multitude of breweries and distilleries that have popped up in Charleston of late tend to bring in live musical acts as well.

Roger Rablais hosts Songwriter’s stage at different venues around the area, often at 813 Penn, next door to Fret ‘n’ Fiddle in Saint Albans. You might also find cool musical events at Route 60 Music in Barboursville and Folklore Music Exchange in Charleston.

To hear music in an alcohol-free enviroment, see what’s happening at Pumzi’s, on Charleston’s West Side.   You can also visit Coal River Coffee in Saint Albans for live music in an alcohol-free environment. I am looking to expand this list, so please contact me through the social media sites above if you know about more alcohol-free performance venues.

For cutting-edge indepent art films, downstairs from Taylor Books you’ll find the Floralee Hark Cohen Cinema by WVIFF. Each week they program several amazing movies in their intimate viewing room that you aren’t likely to see anywhere else.

Please remember that viral illlnesses are still a going concern and many people who have very good reasons are still wearing masks, and many of us, understandably, are still nervous about being in crowds, masked or not. Be kind and understanding  while you’re out. And if you’re at an outdoor event, please remember that it’s awfully inconsiderate to smoke or vape around people who become ill when exposed to that stuff.

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 that I was able to scrounge up online…

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Beatles Blast Goes Country: Curtain Call Goes Prehistoric, Wednesday on The AIR

For the first time in the same week since last July, The AIR brings you great new episodes of Curtain Call and Beatles Blast that are both departure episodes of a sort.  You can tune in at the website, or just stay right here and  listen to the convenient embedded radio player lurking elsewhere on this page.

At 2 PM (EDT) Beatles Blast brings you an hour of Country-fied (or Country Fried) Beatles music.  Ringo Starr has a new Country album, written and produced by T Bone Burnett, and it’s currently sitting at the top of whatever passes for charts these days, so I thought it might be time to explore the influence of Country Music on The Beatles, and vice-versa.

In this show you will hear very Country-sounding tracks by The Beatles, together and solo, plus a selection of Country covers of Beatles tunes, and we open and close with tracks from Ringo’s “Look Up” album.

Check out the playlist…

Beatles Blast 117

Ringo Starr “Time On My Hands”
The Beatles “What Goes On”
The Beatles “Honey Don’t”
The Beatles “Don’t Pass Me By”
George Harrison “Sunshine Life For Me”
Paul McCartney with Carl Perkins “Get It”
John Lennon “Crippled Inside”
Yonder Mountain String Band “Think For Yourself”
Dar Williams “You Won’t See Me”
Pickin’ On “A Hard Day’s Night”
Willie Nelson “Yesterday”
Wanda Jackson “Run Devil Run”
Steve Earle “I’m Looking Through You”
Dave Maclean “Ticket to Ride”
Matt Axton “Octopus’s Garden”
Ringo Starr with Buck Owens “Act Naturally”
Paul McCartney & Wings “Sally G”
Ringo Starr “You Want Some”

Beatles Blast can be heard every Wednesday at 2 PM, with replays Thursday at 11 PM, Friday at 1 PM,  and Saturday afternoon.

At 3 PM (EDT) on Curtain Call, Mel Larch dives into the archives deeper than anyone thought possible, and offers up a mixtape of the best of Broadway…from 1890 to 1920.

This is a collection of tunes from when the Broadway Musical was just beginning to take shape, blending light opera, vaudeville, music hall, minstrel shows and Yiddish theater influences into what we recognize today as the musical theatre experience. The sound quality is not great, since the newest of these recordings is well over a hundred years old, but the historical value is priceless, and the topics of the songs, surprisingly enough, still resonate today.

Check out this playlist…

Curtain Call 152

“Prohibition Blues” from Ladies First
“If You Only Knew” from Star Gazer
“Oh Promise Me” from Robin Hood
“Laughing Song” from An Artist’s Model
“The Purity Brigade” from The Belle of New York
“Gypsy Love Song” from The Fortune Teller
“The Toreador” from The Toreador’s Song
“Moses Andrew Jackson, Goodbye” from Mrs. Wilson
“I’m Tired of Eating In Restaurants” from Bandanna Land
“Adam and Eve” from The Pied Piper
“Young America” from The Jolly Batchelors
“The Aiaihea (Hula Shouting Song)” from Bird of Paradise
“You Can’t Play Every Instrument In The Band” from The Sunshine Girl
“Til The Clouds Roll By” from Oh Boy!
“Becky Is Back In The Ballet” from The Ziegfeld Follies of 1917
“Swanee” from Sinbad
“When The Moon Shines On The Moonshine” from The Ziegfeld Follies of 1919
“If I Knock The L out of Kelly” from Step This Way
“I’ll Say She Does” from Sinbad

Curtain Call can be heard on The AIR Wednesday at 3 PM, with replays Thursday at 8 AM, Friday at 10 AM, Saturday at 8 PM, Monday at 9 AM and Tuesday at 1 PM. A marathon of classic episodes can be heard Sunday morning and afternoon starting at 9 AM, and an all-night marathon of Curtain Call episodes can be heard Wednesday nights, beginning at Midnight.

Also on The AIR, Wednesday at 11 PM,  The Comedy Vault brings you a brand-new episode featuring highlights of Monty Python Live, in 1982.

RFC and The Swing Shift Are Brand-Spankin’ New Tuesday!

Your humble blogger is back from Winterfest and that means we are back to what passes for normal. Tuesday is once again “New Show Day” on The AIR.  As such, we have new episodes of  Radio Free Charleston and The Swing Shift for you. 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 Tuesdays at 10 AM and 10 PM, with boatloads of replays throughout the week.

This week RFC kicks off with almost two hours of our usual mix of local, independent and free-format music, and then a bit more than our third hour recreates an Alternative Rock sampler from 1989 that was heavily played on the original broadcst version of RFC. .

We open with a new tune from Sgt. Van, who I just got to see a couple of days ago at GI Joe Winterfest, and we continue with new music from Falling Stars, Novo Combo, Emmaline, The Polkamaniacs, Rob Moore, The Subjunctives, The Settlement and more.

Our third hour starts about ten minutes early so I can bring you every song from HITS Magazine’s Night of the Living Post Modern CD sampler from 1989. I tell you a little bit about how I had to do RFC back when we were on broadcast radio over 35 years ago, and why CD samplers were like manna from Heaven.

The links in the playlist will take you to the pages for the artists in this week’s show where possible, except in the third hour because I’m lazy…

RFC V5 211

hour one
Sgt. Van and The Highway Dogs “Night Owl”
Falling Stars “Waiting For Love”
Novo Combo“It’s Only Temporary”
Emmaline “Soft Spot”
Massing “Flattery (Rejuiced)”
The Polkamaniacs“The Edgar Allen Poe-ka(Death Deluxe Remix)”
Rob Moore “Chicago Dog”
The Subjunctives “It’s A Shame We Didn’t Get More Time, Lance”
Government Cheese “Single”
Clownhole “Aqua”
Red Audio “Girl From Outer Space”
Unmanned “Arrested”
The Dollyrots “5+5”
Jay Parade  “Hearts And Minds”
63 Eyes “The Cellular Cellar”

hour two
Tony Levin “Turn It Over”
The Settlement “Rainbow”
Mogwai “Fact Boy”
Marillion “Forgotten Sons”
Steve Harley & Cockney Rebel “Red is a Mean, Mean Color”

third hour
Depeche Mode “Everything Counts (Live)”
Pere Ubu “Waiting For Mary”
Godfathers “She Gives Me Love”
Love & Rockets “So Alive”
24-7 Spyz “Jungle Boogie”
John Moore & The Expressway “Out Of My Mind”
Xymox “Obsession”
New Model Army “Stupid Questions”
Concrete Blonde “God Is A Bullet”
Human Drama “The Waiting Hour”
Renegade Soundwave “Biting My Nails”
Tom Tom Club “Suboceana”
Third World “Forbidden Love”
Indio “Hard Sun”
The Wonderstuff “A Wish Away”
Rainmakers “Reckoning Day

You can hear this episode of Radio Free Charleston Tuesday at 10 AM and 10 PM on The AIR, with replays Wednesday at 9 AM,  Thursday at 2 PM, Friday at 9 AM, Saturday at Noon and Midnight, Sunday at 8 PM and  Monday at 11 AM, exclusively on The AIR. Now you can also hear a different classic episode of RFC every weekday at 5 PM, and we bring you a marathon all night long Saturday night/Sunday morning.

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 encores of last week’s episodes of  MIRRORBALL at 1 PM and Curtain Call at 2 PM.

At 3 PM we offer up a new episode of The Swing Shift that pays tribute to Chick Webb, an overlooked Titan of Big Band Swing, who sadly, passed away young and does not get his due. In addition to discovering a teenaged Ella Fitzgerald, he led an orchestra that was on the same level as Duke Ellington, Benny Goodman and Count Basie.

This week’s show reminds the world how great his band was.

Check out the playlist…

The Swing Shift 167

Chick Webb and his Orchestra, with Ella Fitzgerald

“Heebie Jeebies”
“Blues In My Heart”
“On The Sunny Side of the Street”
“Darktown Strutter’s Ball”
“I Can’t Dance, I Got Ants In My Pants”
“Stompin’ At The Savoy”
“Blue Minor”
“Lonesome Moments”
“That Rhythm Man”
“Down Home Rag”
“A Tisket A Tasket”
“Harlem Congo”
“Pack Up Your Sins and Go To The Devil”
“Spinning the Webb”
“Ella”
“Wacky Dust”
“FDR Jones”
“I Found My Yellow Basket”
“‘Tain’t What You Do (It’s The Way That Cha Do it)”
“Clap Hands, Here Comes Charly”

 You can hear The Swing Shift Tuesday at 3 PM, with replays Wednesday at 8 AM, Thursday at 9 AM,  Friday at 10 AM and 8 PM and Saturday afternoon, only on The AIR . You can also hear all-night marathons, seven hours each, starting at Midnight Thursdays and Sundays.

Monday Morning Art: Two Cups On Ohio Street

This week’s art is an acrylic still life, on illustration board. It depicts a scene I accidentally grabbed a photo of in Chicago last month.  It’s just two cups, half-filled with coffee, hanging out on Ohio Street, just off Michigan Avenue.

I’ve actually had this on my desk for over a month, waiting to be finished. I got in late Sunday from Winterfest, and decided that it looked done enough, even though I’ll probably go back and tame that blue on the lady’s pants in the background at some point.

And I guess since people and things in the background were moving, it’s not really a still life, but the focus is supposed to be the cups, which were decidely non-animated.

To see it bigger try clicking HERE.

Over in radioland, Monday beginning at 2 PM on The AIR, we bring new episodes of Psychedelic Shack, and Herman Linte’s weekly showcase of the Progressive Rock of the past half-century, Prognosis.  You can listen to The AIR at the website, or on the embedded radio player elsewhere on this page.

The problem is, I’ve been gone all weekend, and had a message that they will send the episodes to me, along with descriptions, Monday by Noon, my time. And that means I have no idea what will be on either show until hours after this post goes live.

So tune in for the FUN OF DISCOVERY!

Psychedelic Shack can be heard every Monday at 2 PM, with replays Tuesday at 9 AM, Wednesday at 10 PM, Friday at 1 PM,  and Saturday at 9 AM. You can hear Prognosis on The AIR Monday at 3 PM, with replays Tuesday at 7 AM, Wednesday at 8 PM, Thursday at Noon, and Saturday at 10 AM.

At 8 PM you can hear some funny stuff on a random classic episode of The Comedy Vault.

Tonight at 9 PM for the Monday Marathon we bring you ten hours of live local music from The AIR archives.

Sunday Evening Video: The Snowman Cometh Again

This week we are going to re-present an animated film that we previously featured in this spot twice over the last twelve years or so.

Originally I posted this in the middle of a series of snow storms in January, 2014. Then six years later I was being all aging-hipster ironic and presented it at the tail-end of a month-long series of heat waves. This weekend, because I really did have a couple of readers request this recently, and also because I’m trying to get the blog written in advance before I leave for GI Joe Winterfest,  we’re bringing you the classic animated adaptation of Raymond Briggs’ children’s book, “The Snowman” for a third time.  Luckily, it’s really, really good. I mean, if it sucked I wouldn’t have even shared it once.

This version has the original opening, featuring a spoken word intro and brief appearance by Briggs himself. The OSCAR-nominated “The Snowman” was produced by John Coates and directed by Dianne Jackson, both of whom worked on The Beatles’ “Yellow Submarine.” It’s a classic of 1980s animation, and it might just help take your mind off of some of the awfulness permeating the world at the moment.

The RFC Flashback: Episode One Hundred Nineteen

We take you back to February, 2011 for Radio Free Charleston episode 119, “Transformer Shirt.” This episode featured the RFC debut of Sasha Colette, a song from “Norman Rockwell’s An American Love Story,” a special surprise song from Symphony Idol winner Ryan Hardiman and DEVO/Valentine’s animation by Frank Panucci.

This is a bittersweet show, with host segments shot at Hubbard Hospice House, just hours before Mel’s mother, Betty Larch, passed away. Making it even more bittersweet is the presence of Mark Scarpelli on two of the songs in this show. It’s a great time capsule of theatre and music from early 2011, but it’s tinged with a bit of sadness.

You can find the original production notes HERE.

Symphonic Disco On A New MIRRORBALL Friday

The PopCulteer
January 24, 2025

Your PopCulteer and his lovely and healthy wife are on the way to Louisville for the GI Joe Winterfest show, but  we do have some radio shows to tell you about Friday on The AIR. This afternoon we serve up a new episode of MIRRORBALL and an encore episode of Sydney’s Big Electric CatThe AIR is PopCult‘s sister radio station. You can hear these shows on The AIR website, or just click on the embedded player found elsewhere on this page.

MIRRORBALL

Friday at 2 PM on The AIR, Mel Larch brings you a major departure from her normal classic Disco era fare. This time you’re going to get highlights from a new release by a classic Disco artist. In fact, this is a preview of an album that doesn’t come out until almost a month from now.

It’s a new record by France’s top Disco artist of the 1970s, Cerrone, and it’s his classic Disco hits, but they’ve been re-recorded with a symphony orchestra.

With “Disco Symphony” Cerrone revisits twenty-one of his greatest hits performed with the Symphony Orchestra of Cannes (+50 musicians) directed by the legendary Randy Kerber. You’ll also hear Cerrone himself on the drums, plus an additional bass-guitars-keyboards band playing with the orchestra. Merging the power of electronic music, the groove of Disco and the unique touch of a symphony orchestra.

For this show, you might want to pull that bellbottom tuxedo and sequined evening gown out of the closet, and do the baroque boogie like Bach, Beethoven, Boney M and the Bee Gees. It’s the mash-up you didn’t know you needed.

Check out this very danceable playlist…

MIRRORBALL 110

Cerrone with Symphony:
“Love In C Minor”
“Look for Love”
“Cerrone’s Paradise”
“Rocket In The Pocket”
“All We Are”
“The Impact”
“Je Suis Music”
“Give Me Love”
“Love Is Here”
“My Desire”
“Africanism Gimme Some Loving”
“Drum Symphony”
“Hooked On You”
“Took Me So Long”
“Supernature”

You can hear MIRRORBALL every Friday at 2 PM, with replays Sunday night at 11 PM and throughout the following week Monday at 9 AM and Tuesday at 1 PM plus there’s a mini-marathon that includes the latest episode Saturday nights at 9 PM

Sydney’s Big Electric Cat Enters A Forbidden Zone

Also on The AIR  at 3 PM, it’s Big Electric Cat time as Sydney Fileen delivers a special mixtape edition of her show that pays tribute to one of my favorite bands, Oingo Boingo. Truth be told, Sydney called on me to recommend a few tunes for this playlist when she put it together last fall.

Before Danny Elfman was an Oscar and Bafta nominated and Emmy Winning soundtrack composer, he helped mutate the theatrical troupe, The Mystic Knights of the Oingo Boingo, into the trailblazing New Wave band, Oingo Boingo, and before his career as a film composer became his main creative outlet, his band was one of the definitive examples of West Coast New Wave Music.

You will hear the New Wave era hits, misses and deep album cuts from Oingo Boingo, and some tracks from Danny Elfman’s “So-Lo” album, in this fast-moving and mind-blowing mixtape special. I even tipped off Sydney to a few pre-fame rarities by the band.

Check out this killer playlist…

Big Electric Cat 120

Oingo Boingo
“Violent Love”
“Forbidden Zone”
“Ain’t This The Life”
“You Got Your Baby Back”
“Ballad of The Caveman”
“Only A Lad”
“Little Girls”
“On The Outside”
“Controller”
“Private Life”
“Nothing To Fear”
“Grey Matter”
“Who Do You Want To Be”
“No Spill Blood”
“Nothing Bad Ever Happens To Me”
“Good For Your Soul”

Elfman on stage with Oingo Boingo, circa 1985

Danny Elfman
“Gratitude”
“It Only Makes Me Laugh”
“Everybody Needs”

Oingo Boingo
“Just Another Day”
“Dead Man’s Party”
“No One Lives Forever”
“Stay”
“Weird Science”
“Not My Slave”
“Cinderella Undercover”
“Wild Sex (In The Working Class)”
“California Girls”
“Goodbye, Goodbye”

Sydney’s Big Electric Cat is produced at Haversham Recording Institute in London, and can be heard every Friday at 3 PM, with replays Saturday afternoon,  Monday at 7 AM, Tuesday at 8 PM, Wednesday at Noon and Thursday at 10 AM, exclusively on The AIR.

Check PopCult for fresh content every day and all our regular features. Thanks for reading this week’s PopCulteer!

Toy Review: Voltron’s 40th Anniversary Robeast Dieklops

The PopCult Toybox

Before I get into this figure review I have a confession to make.

I never watched Voltron. I was a 22 year-old newlywed (married to someone who did not like for me to have toys) when the show premiered in 1984, and while I was aware of it because the toys looked cool, I was not allowed to have such things in my life at that time. All I know about the show was that it was adapted from a Japanese cartoon, which like many others, featured a group of kids in vehicles that joined together to form a giant robot.

Despite that undeniably cool premise, I had other things going on at the time.

The timing was off for me to really get into the show. After I was freed from that marriage and able to collect toys and enjoy life, other classic toys took priority.  So I hardly know anything about Voltron that I didn’t mention above.1980s TV animation, at least up until Ralph Bakshi’s New Adventures of Mighty Mouse, is pretty much what I consider to be the low point of the art form. Voltron was just not something even remotely near my wheelhouse.

So it was a bit of a shock late last year when the 40th Anniversary Voltron Robeast Dieklops showed up on my porch. I had totally forgotten that I’d ordered it, more than a year earlier, and had to wrack my brain (and go through old PayPal statements) to remember what had happened.

Basically, I got an email with an insane pre-order discount on this very expensive figure, and had just been paid quite a bit from a client who had been late with their payments, so I pre-ordered it before they had even decided on the production run and final retail price. I was only mildly acquainted with Voltron, but I thought the figure looked pretty cool, and would fit in with my giant Outer Space Men, and could make a good alien adversary for my monster-fighting Adventure Team GI Joe diorama that I’m sure I will finally build once I have all the time, space and money in the world.

He arrived early in the Christmas rush, and sat on a pile of stuff in my living room until I finally had time to open and examine him this week. Since mine arrived, he’s pretty much sold out everywhere but from the company that made him.  He’s $150 plus shipping from Panosh Place.  They only made 500 of these, and on eBay and other third-party sites he’s selling for twice that price and more. I noticed that Panosh Place says he has five points of articulation, but when shooting the photos I discovered that he actually has seven. His arms swivel at the shoulder, but also at the elbow. This is in addition to his neck and his legs (at the hip).

Keep in minid that this is a limited-production designer toy, meant to be displayed. It’s not a cheap toy for a kid. It’s an expensive toy for an overgrown kid.

For a large designer toy, the price is pretty much fair market value. My massive discount was quite a bargain. The year-plus wait for him to arrive allowed me to completely forget that I’d ordered him, so it actually made it even more of a cool thing for me. It’s not often I get to surprise myself with a toy purchase.

Let’s look at the photos and see how he checks out…

The back of the box is very informative for those of us who are largely ignorant of the show.

Fresh out of the box, still in his tray, and I’m struck at how much he looks like somebody asked Alex Toth to redesign GWAR for animation.

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Midwinter STUFF TO DO

Your PopCulteer has wrapped up this week’s medical obligations and is heading out to GI Joe Winterfest in Louisville this weekend, but if you aren’t going there, here’s PopCult‘s weekly guide to things you can get into in and around Charleston, West Virginia.

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. Also, if you have a show that you’d like to plug in the future, contact me via Social Media at Facebook, BlueSky or Twitter. I dont charge for this, so you might as well send me something if you have an event to promote.

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

Most Fridays and Saturdays you can find live music at Taylor Books. There is no cover charge, and shows start at 7:30 PM.

You can find live music every night at The World Famous Empty Glass Cafe. Mondays feature open mic night. The first Tuesday of every month sees the legendary Spurgie Hankins Band perform. There’s both Happy Hour music and local or touring bands on Thursday and Friday, and live bands Saturday nights. On Sundays when there’s a new Mountain Stage, musicians from the legendary WV Public Radio show migrate to The Glass for the Post-Mountain Stage jam.

Live at The Shop in Dunbar hosts local and touring bands on most weekends, and is a nice break away from the downtown bar scene.

Louie’s, at Mardi Gras Casino & Resort, regularly brings in local bands on weekends.

In Huntington, local institution, The Loud (formerly The V Club), brings in great touring and local acts three or four nights a week.

The Wandering Wind Meadery holds several events each week, from live piano karaoke to bands to burlesque.

The multitude of breweries and distilleries that have popped up in Charleston of late tend to bring in live musical acts as well.

Roger Rablais hosts Songwriter’s stage at different venues around the area, often at 813 Penn, next door to Fret ‘n’ Fiddle in Saint Albans. You might also find cool musical events at Route 60 Music in Barboursville and Folklore Music Exchange in Charleston.

To hear music in an alcohol-free enviroment, see what’s happening at Pumzi’s, on Charleston’s West Side.  This Saturday at 7 PM, Pumzi’s plays host to Minor Swing and The Jordan Dyer Trio. You can also visit Coal River Coffee in Saint Albans for live music in an alcohol-free environment. I am looking to expand this list, so please contact me through the social media sites above if you know about more alcohol-free performance venues.

For cutting-edge indepent art films, downstairs from Taylor Books you’ll find the Floralee Hark Cohen Cinema by WVIFF. Each week they program several amazing movies in their intimate viewing room that you aren’t likely to see anywhere else.

Please remember that viral illlnesses are still a going concern and many people who have very good reasons are still wearing masks, and many of us, understandably, are still nervous about being in crowds, masked or not. Be kind and understanding  while you’re out. And if you’re at an outdoor event, please remember that it’s awfully inconsiderate to smoke or vape around people who become ill when exposed to that stuff.

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 that I was able to scrounge up online…

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