Rudy Panucci On Pop Culture

Author: Rudy Panucci (Page 84 of 581)

The RFC Flashback: Episode 1

Since this weekend marks the 31st anniversary of the debut of the original version of Radio Free Charleston, this week The RFC Flashback will take you back to the first episode of the second incarnation of RFC as a video program.

This video pilot episode from 2006 featured the alterna-bombastic rock of Whistlepunk and the comedy stylings of the No Pants Players.  It’s hard to believe that this was the beginning of more than 200 (and counting) episodes of Radio Free Charleston as a video show, and we even had a spin-off, The RFC MINI SHOW.

So wallow in a little nostalgia and see where the second life of RFC began.

Toy-Ventures Brings The Toy Magazine Back To Life!

The PopCulteer
September 4, 2020

I’ve probably mentioned this before, but I’m old. In fact, I am old enough to have begun my toy-collecting life as an adult in the time before there was such a thing as “The Internet.”

Back in those days, toy collectors got their news from magazines. There were several on the stands back in the early 90s: Jim Main’s Collectible Toys & Values, Lee’s Action Figure News and Toy Review, Tomart’s Action Figure Digest, Kalmbach’s Classic Toys, Toy Shop. I’m probably leaving out a few, but those were the leaders in the field.

Some of these magazines offered detailed, in-depth articles, printed on cheap newsprint, while others presented high-quality photographs of rare toys on expensive slick paper. They all filled a reference niche that the book market hadn’t quite caught up with yet. This was how you learned the history of the various toy companies and kept up with the hobby.

Then the internet happened and eventually they all went out of business.

Those classic toy magazines peddled nostalgia, and now those of us who were old enough to read them have nostalgia for them.

Happily, the nostalgia-merchants at Plaid Stallions.com (which is really Brian Heiler of MEGO Museum fame–Hi, Brian!) have created a new toy magazine, Toy-Ventures, and after a harrowing experience in crowdfunding, it is available and it’s an absolute treat.

Brian has a passion for the toys of his youth, particularly the lesser lights that don’t get that much attention from the average toy collector. Over seven years ago I raved about Brian’s book, Rack Toys, which looked at the cheap and cheesy toys sold in grocery stores and pharmacies.

This first issue of Toy-Ventures is devoted to Azrak-Hamway International, a little company that scooped up some terrific licenses and earned a spot in the hearts and fuzzy memories of millions of children of the 70s.

Azrak Hamway also scooped up Remco Toys along the way, and AHI, as they became know, produced a line of action figures that managed to ride the coattails of MEGO by snatching up one of the few major licenses that MEGO didn’t managed to get their hands on–The Universal Monsters.

The bulk of this first issue, printed on high-quality, thick paper with great photography and high production values, is devoted to AHI’s “Official World Famous Super Monsters Line” of figures, with full-color photos of the actualy toys, in and out of the package, the many package variants and knockoffs that came out over the years, and detailed notes. It’s pretty much the definitive guide to these figures.

However, there’s more AHI goodness in this issue. We get photos of rare, bizarre and sometimes cheesy rack toys that AHI made for Star Trek, Space: 1999 and Planet Of The Apes. There’s also a pretty entertaining piece on AHI’s parachute figures, and a great piece on one collector’s long hunt for AHI’s KISS wireless microphone. This is just a very well-produced magazine, with great production and graphics and terrific writing.

We even get a few pages that offer us a glimpse at other AHI product lines.

This first issue of Toy-Ventures is not only an entertaining read, but it’s also an impeccable work of reference. Kudos to Brian for hitting it out of the park with such a great theme for his first issue.

To get your own copy of Toy-Ventures, visit the MegoMuseum/Plaid Stallions/Odeon Toys store (where you can find some other pretty cool things to order) or check eBay. At the moment, it’s going to run you about sixteen bucks shipped to the US, and it’s well worth it if you have any interest in cool toys of the 1970s.

While you’re at it, check out MEGOMuseum. They just posted all sorts of huge news items about MEGO this week.

Radio Free Charleston Marathon

Longtime readers of PopCult probably remember that during Labor Day Weekend 1989, Radio Free Charleston made its debut on WVNS radio. Since RFC is now back in its original form as a radio program on The AIR, every Labor Day Weekend we do something to commemorate this. You can tune in to The AIR website, or just park your browser on this page and listen to this embedded radio player…

This weekend, starting at 5 PM, The AIR will run all of our 2020 episodes of the new, three-hour, Radio Free Charleston. This will take us well into next Tuesday, since we have to pause Sunday at Midnight for our overnight marathon of The Swing Shift. Right after this marathon concludes, the first twenty of these episodes will go into storage because they eat up so much server space.

If you want to listen to a great mix of music, with more than one-third of it being local, you know where you can find us.

That’s it for this week’s PopCulteer. Check back for all our regular features.

Let Loose The Foam Darts Of War!

The PopCult Toybox

Kids and adults alike have been cooped up in their homes for months now (if they’re smart), and the stress of the quarantine is building. Families are confined together. Conflicts can arise. Nerves are stretched to the breaking point. People are walking on eggshells, and any second can push people over the edge and make them snap.

People need a release. Something…anything…to break the tension.

If it comes down to open warfare, why not do it as safely as possible, with foam dart guns?

The X-SHOT Crusher is a new player on the scene, a foam dart blaster with a 35-dart belt, described by the manufacturer as “the ultimate beast.” Wearing proper eye protection, kids and adults can empty their weapons at each other and then laugh about it afterward.

This epic dart blaster, with brightly-colored sci-fi styling and a very reasonable price features a 35-dart rotating barrel that can shoot up to 90 feet. Powered by load handle pump-action, the X-SHOT Crusher offers two styles of blasting: Single shot or “Slam-Fire Modus” which enables you to fire up to four darts per second.

Over a foot high and almost 28 inches long, the X-SHOT Crusher is an intimidating foam dart weapon of mass distraction. The foam darts are much safer for kids than a conventional firearm, and can even be used indoors without causing injury or large holes in the walls. There are no batteries to buy because The X-SHOT Crusher is powered by air. Best of all, it’s only a toy.

The X SHOT Crusher is available at Target for under thirty bucks, and it’s a great stress reliever. It can encourage physical activity, which a lot of kids haven’t gotten much of lately, and even bored adults might want one so they can sit across the room and try to knock over action figures on a display shelf.

The X-Shot Crusher is the only blaster a kid really needs.

New Mixtape Episodes of Beatles Blast and Curtain Call On The AIR.

Wednesday afternoon The AIR brings you brand-new “mixtape” styled episodes of Beatles Blast and Curtain Call!  You can tune in at the website, or on this embedded radio player…

At 2 PM, your humble blogger returns with a one-hour mixtape of quirky and wonderful covers of songs by the Beatles, together and solo, on Beatles Blast.  We celebrate the late-summer joy of singing Beatles songs with a collection of cool interpretations by a diverse collection of amazing artists. Check out the playlist.

Beatles Blast can be heard every Wednesday at 2 PM, with replays Thursday at 10 PM, Friday at noon, and for this weekend, nothing on the weekend due to our RFC Labor Day Marathon, exclusively on The AIR.

Matthew Sweet and Susanna Hoffs “Gimme Some Truth”
The Smithereens “All I’ve Got To Do”
Sarah McLachlan “Blackbird”
Jeff Lynne “With a Little Help/Nowhere Man”
Steve Harley “Here Comes The Sun”
Heather Nova “We Can Work It Out”
Matthew Sweet and Susanna Hoffs “Beware of Darkness”
Wislon Pickett “Hey Jude”
World Party “Man We Was Lonely”
Edwin Starr “My Sweet Lord”
Fiona Apple “Across The Universe”
Golden Earring “I’ll Be Back”
Steve Earle “I’m Looking Through You”
The Jam “And Your Bird Can Sing”
Journey “It’s All Too Much”
Ben Harper “Strawberry Fields”
Yonder Mountain String Band “Think For Yourself”

At 3 PM Mel Larch devotes the entire hour of Curtain Call to a mixtape of songs from hit musicals from about 60 years ago, give or take five years. It’s the “greatest hits” of one of musical theater’s golden ages, presented as a bit of a time capsule in this year when stage productions are on pause. Check out this playlist:

“Put On A Happy Face” from Bye Bye, Birdie
“I Feel Pretty” from West Side Story
“Sit Down You’re Rockin’ The Boat”
“Getting To Know You” from The King And I
“If I Were A Rich Man” from Fiddler On The Roof”
“Food, Glorious Food” from Oliver!
“Do-Re-Mi” from The Sound of Music
“Wouldn’t It Be Luverly” from My Fair Lady
“Camelot” from Camelot
“Don’t Rain On My Parade” from Funny Girl
“Brotherhood of Man” from How To Succeed In Business Without Really Trying
“Whatever Lola Wants” from Damn Yankees
“Try To Remember” from The Fantastiks
“I’m Gonna Wash That Man Right Out of My Hair” from South Pacific
“So Long, Farewell,” from The Sound of Music

Curtain Call can be heard on The AIR Wednesday at 3 PM, with replays Thursday at 8 AM and 9 PM, and Friday at 10 AM. An all-night marathon of Curtain Call episodes can be heard Wednesday nights, beginning at Midnight.

NEW RFC and NOISE BRIGADE On The AIR Tuesday!

Tuesday on The AIR we deliver brand-new episodes of Radio Free Charleston, and NOISE BRIGADE.  In order to hear these lovely new sonic gems, you simply have to move your cursor over and tune in at the website, or you could just stay on this page, and  listen to this happy little embedded radio player…

We have yet another new Radio Free Charleston at 10 AM and 10 PM Tuesday.  This show kicks off with brand-new music from local band, Abandon The Ship (really, the album, “Overboard,” was just released three days ago), and new music from The Empty Hearts, Bananarama, Guided by Voices and The Killers with K.D. Lang. And also in this three-hour mix of local, national and international artists, we bring you a six-song set of tunes recorded live at Charleston’s World Famous Empty Glass, and a six-song suite from Athens Ohio-based Radarhill (with Nick Weckman).

Check out the playlist to see all the fantastic goodies we bring you this week…

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Abandon The Ship “All My Heroes OD’d on Herione”
The Soft Boys “I Wanna Destroy You”
The Bounty “Crisis In Faith”
The Empty Hearts “If I Could Change Your Mind”
The Amazing Delores “Love Magic”
Granny’s 12 Gauge “My Mind Is Somewhere Else”
The Company Stores “Still”
Tyler Childers “Charleston Girl”
Southern Culture On The Skids “King of the Mountain”
John The Conqueror “She Said”
New Country Rehab “Lizzie Died of a Broken Heart”
The Scrap Iron Pickers “Spy vs. Spy”
Mike Pushkin “Wrecking Ball”
Crack The Sky “Hold On/Surf City”
John Radcliff “RocknRolla”

hour two
The Heavy Editors “Within Reach”
TC&I “Scatter Me”
Joseph Hale “Time”
John Lennon “God”
Sheryl Crow “Mother Nature’s Son”
Brian May “Let Me Out”
Kate Bush “All We Ever Look For”
Red Audio “Radio Blah Blah”
The Aquabats “Walk Off”
Cherry Poppin’ Daddies “Faux Nice, Mock Fancy”
The Dollyrots “Nightlight”
Robert Smith “C Moon”
Susanna Hoffs & Matthew Sweet “Killer Queen”

hour three
Bananarama “Rhythm of Life”
Radarhill and Nick Weckman “Any Given Day parts 1-6”
Guided by Voices “Transfusion”
The Killers with K.D. Lang “Lightning Fields”
The Hatters “Mama”

Radio Free Charleston can be heard Tuesday at 10 AM and 10 PM, with replays Thursday at 2 PM, and Friday at 9 AM. This Friday at 5 PM we kick off our annual Labor Day Anniversary marathon of RFC, which will run through next Tuesday, pausing only for our Midnight Sunday marathon of The Swing Shift.

At 1 PM we bring you an encore of last week’s new episode of MIRRORBALL that you can read about HERE.

At 2 PM Steven Allen Adams graces us with a new edition of NOISE BRIGADE that opens with a double shot each of Rundown Kreeps and The Aquabats. Check out the playlist to see what Steve’s got up his sleeves…

NOISE BRIGADE 011

Rundown Kreeps “Yellow Truck”
Rundown Kreeps “We All Go”
Aquabats! “Bed Head!”
Aquabats! “Sneak Attack!”
Mad Caddies “Waiting for the Real Thing”
Richard Cheese “I Was Drunk”
Pennywise w/ Jim Lindberg “Boss D.J. (Cover)”
Kill Lincoln “Used Up”
Blink-182 “Quarantine”
The Slackers “Nobody’s Listening”
Kill Lincoln “Ignorance Is Bliss”
NOFX “Worse Things Happen at Sea”
NOFX “Glory Hallelujah”
Western Standard Time Ska Orchestra “Tunnel Vision”
Masked Intruder “Bad Reputation (Cover)”
Bayside “Interrobang”
Stand Atlantic “Jurassic Park”
The Real McKenzies “Beer and Loathing”
Sleater-Kinney “I Wanna Be Your Joey Ramone”
John Reuben “Soundman”

NOISE BRIGADE alternates weeks with Psychedelic Shack Tuesdays at 2 PM, with replays those weeks on Wednesday at 11 AM and 10 PM, Thursday at 8 AM, Friday at Noon, Saturday at 10 AM, Sunday at 4 PM and Monday at 7 PM.

At 3 PM your PopCulteer brings you some encore plays of The Swing Shift. I’m taking some time to work on our next batch of episodes, which will drop two weeks from now. We are quickly approaching episode 100 of The Swing Shift, and to mark the occasion I plan to devote three episodes to 100 years of Swing, with sets of tunes from each decade. Because of this, I want to take my time to pick the perfect playlist. And next week’s RFC marathon gives me an extra week to put it all together. The current plan is for episodes 99, 100 and 101 to all debut on the same day, in just two weeks.

You can hear The Swing Shift Tuesday at 3 PM, with replays Wednesday at 7 AM and 6 PM, Thursday at 2 PM and Saturday at 5 PM, only on The AIR. You can also hear all-night marathons, seven hours each, starting at Midnight Thursday and Sunday evenings.

Monday Morning Art: Liberty Under Attack

 

This week we close out the month of August with a digital painting that is a bit of a mish-mash of influences. There’s a little bit of Eugène Delacroix, a dash of Gustav Klutsis, a hint of Jean Metzinger, just a smidge of Marcel Duchamp and a big, heaping helping of Jack Kirby all mixed up in this piece.It can even be considered political, if you wish. I shall let the work speak for itself.

If you want to see it bigger, just click on the image.

Meanwhile, Monday on The AIR, we bring you eight hours of Disco Music from 7to 3 PM. This is our first marathon of Mel Larch’s MIRRORBALL, which can be heard every other Friday at 2 PM for the time being. We’ve also dropped a replay of MIRRORBALL into our Wednesday evening schedule, for those of you with a midweek urge to boogie.

At 3 PM on Prognosis, Herman Linte brings us a new show that once again fills its 120 minutes with freshly-minted progressive rock music, all released in 2020. Herman assures me that it will be filled with forward-thinking music from a variety of virtuosos.Check out the playlist…

Prognosis 062

Echoberyl “Taking The Space”
Steve Thorne “He Who Pays The Piper”
Tangent “Lie Back and Think of England”
The Waterboys “My Wandering In the Weary Land”
The Gardening Club “Boy On A Bike”
Bill Frisell “Electricity”
Elysian Fields “The Battle of Mugwhal and Lord Jakal
Steve Howe “See Me Through”
Telergy “Take To The Sky”
Rubber Tea “American Dream”
Abel Ganz “The Light Shines Out”
Tiberius “Skylark”
Nick D’Virgilio “Not My Time To Say Goodbye”
Rick Wakeman “Pavros Monis”

That’s followed by a classic Prognosis and an evening of Psychedelic Shack and Radio Free Charleston. You can hear replays of Prognosis Tuesdays at 8 PM, Wednesdays at 9 AM, Thursday at Noon, Friday at 9 AM and Saturday at 9 AM.

You can listen to The AIR at the website, or on this embedded radio player…

 

Sunday Evening Video: The Ballad of Kyle T. Magatt

The Ballad of Kyle T. MaGatt from Sam Holdren on Vimeo.

The subtitle of the above animated cartoon is “About a Deplorable Fellow in a Little Red Hat.” This cartoon by West Virginia expatriate, Sam Holdren, is very topical about the big thing in the news this year. It’s beautfully executed in the style of classic UPA cartoons, and it should be seen far and wide. Be advised that it may cause head exploding when viewed by members of a particularly pathetic political cult. This is a cautionary tale, and some people just can’t handle being cautioned. That doesn’t mean you shouldn’t try. Science and medicine should never be politicized, and it’s sad that we live in a time when cartoons like this are necessary.

Douglas Imbrogno, whom I mentioned in this blog just last Friday, posted an interview with Sam at WestVirginiaVille, and it’s a great read that delves into Sam’s history at WVSU as a student and teacher, and his work as a location scout in the motion picutre industry. Of course, he also talks about the creation of this cartoon.

Sam was the  writer, director, animator, voice artist, music composer, and sound editor for The Ballad of Kyle T. Magatt, and the film and all related images are copyright 2020 by Sam Holdren himself. It’s a shame that nobody has managed to hack into the signal for FOX News so they could run this during their prime-time propaganda programs. It might shake loose a few brains from the shackles of their red hats.

The RFC Flashback: MINI SHOW number 32

This week we go back to a show that debuted in August, 2014, but was really recorded three years before that.

This episode of The RFC MINI SHOW stars Charleston Rock Institutions, Blue Million. This is footage of Alan, Andy and Gary that we recorded in April, 2011 at The Empty Glass. Our crew that night included the late Johnny Rock, the drummer for the legendary RFC band, Go Van Gogh. You’ll see him in a couple of shots.

Blue Million was one of the original local bands featured on the radio version of Radio Free Charleston, and they are still making music all these years later.

This episode of The RFC MINI SHOW features two songs from the band’s night at the Glass back in 2011, one of which had never been seen before.

Your Friday Disco Has Slipped

We offer up our ninth episode of MIRRORBALL  Friday afternoon on The AIR. You can hear this show on The AIR website, or just click on this embedded radio player…

At 2 PM we present an AIR Music Special, the ninth edition of MIRRORBALL, hosted by Mel Larch. Our unexpected hit continues in its bi-weekly groove, and this week’s grooves include what you see in this playlist…

MIRRORBALL 009

Donna Summer “Hot Stuff”
Andy Gibb “Shadow Dancing”
Ashford & Simpson “Found A Cure”
KC & The Sunshine Band “Keep It Comin'”
Silver Convention “Fly Robin Fly”
The Commodores “Machine Gun”
Chic “My Feet Keep Dancing”
David Bowie “John, I’m Only Dancing”
Maxine Nightingale “Right Back Where We Started From”
Peter Brown “Dance With Me”
Shirley and Company “Shame, Shame, Shame”
Average White Band “Pick Up The Pieces”
The Bee Gees “Stayin’ Alive”

You can tune in at 2 PM and hear the third edition of MIRRORBALL. We will drop a new episode roughly every other Friday afternoon, until Mel gets tired of doing it, or people stop listening. Later today, it will go up in the Podcast section of The AIR website, so you can listen on demand. MIRRORBALL will also be replayed Saturday at 8 PM, Sunday at 11 AM and Tuesday at 1 PM. Next week we’re going to bring you an eight-hour marathon as our Monday Marathon, starting at 7 AM Monday, and the new episode will be played at 2 PM. We’ll probably sneak in a few more airings during the week.

PopCult Has Been Here Fifteen Years

The PopCulteer
August 28, 2020

It’s hard to believe that I’ve spent more than a quarter of my life writing PopCult. The first post went live on August, 28, 2005.

I’m at that age when time starts to seemingly move at an accelerated pace. I’m also at that age where those damned kids keep getting on my lawn, but that’s a topic for a different column.

It doesn’t seem that long ago that Douglas Imbrogno offered me the chance to cover anything under the broad umbrella of “pop culture” for a blog as part of his ambitious idea for The Gazz.com to become a multimedia bridge to a post-print era for The Charleston Gazette. I also need to credit Doug with coming up with the name, “PopCult.” My idea was to call the blog, “Cool Stuff,” or “Really Cool Stuff,” or maybe “Really, Realy Super-Neat Cool Stuff,” but Doug recognized that I was in a bit of a naming rut and bestowed upon the blog the perfect moniker. It was really cool to be part of The Gazz crowd and be in on the ground floor of the next generation of local media.

It turned out that Doug was far more ambitious than the upper management at the Gazette, who, over the years, kept scaling down his plans until PopCult and John Brown’s Wine blog are about the only things left. Doug is doing his own thing now with WestVirginiaville and other projects, which I highly recommend to my readers.

While it doesn’t seem like it’s been fifteen years, it also sort of seems like a lifetime ago, if that makes any sense. Since the debut of PopCult, The Charleston Gazette merged with The Charleston Daily Mail, and then the merged entity was purchased out of bankruptcy by HD Media, who are currently trying their best to figure out how to run a print newspaper in a world where most of their revenue streams have migrated to other media.

When PopCult debuted George W. Bush was president, and we naively imagined that there was no way possible we could ever see a worse president in our lifetimes. I try to keep politics and current hard news out of PopCult, but it’s tricky when 2020 seems to be an extended comedy sketch written by Michael O’Donoghue when he was in a really bad mood. 2020 is the year that the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse were laid off when their positions were determined to be redundant.

When PopCult debuted, smartphones were not yet a thing, and the idea that people would watch television content on a tiny screen seemed ridiculous.

When PopCult debuted, people could smoke in public, and most bars in the area were too filled with smoke for yours truly to last comfortably for more than five minutes before being forced to leave.

When PopCult debuted Disney had not yet swallowed up Marvel, Lucasfilm or most of Fox. AT&T was a phone company, and Comcast was a cable company and I think I was still using dial-up internet.

When PopCult debuted I didn’t have any idea that I would be able to revive Radio Free Charleston as a video program, let alone come to own an internet radio station, The AIR,  that is now the audio component to this blog.

The last fifteen years saw the death of my mother and Melanie’s mother, and Melanie and I finally tied the knot after dating for 24 years. I also discovered that I have an auto-immune disorder called Myasthenia Gravis, but oddly enough, it’s clear that I had that before I started writing the blog. It just took eleven years to diagnose. Adjusting to that new medical reality has been an adventure.

When I began writing PopCult I was a full-time caregiver, and travel was something I could never contemplate doing. Since then Melanie and I have been able to travel to Atlanta, Chicago, New York, Washington DC and other cool places, and we’ve been to toy shows, world premiere plays, Broadway Musicals, Major League Baseball games, chocolate factories, toy museums, art museums, designer toy shops, outdoor sculptures, Ferris wheels, TV shooting locations, film sets, recording studios and too many other cool places to mention.

However, if you’re curious, look through our archives. I covered our travels extensively via video and photo essay posts.

Of course, at the moment we aren’t exactly making any travel plans due to the pandemic, but hopefully we’ll be back at that again in a year or so.

Since August, 2013, I’ve been posting at least once a day (a couple of posts had to be removed because of threats of an expensive lawsuit from an insane Canadian millionaire, but aside from that, I think I maybe only missed two days due to technical issues). I plan to still be here writing about toys, music, comic books, movies, audio productions, cool places, animation, and anything else that I think looks cool in the world.

I’ve also probably posted around 800 of my original pieces of art in this blog. I’m still trying to get good at it.

I’ve often wondered just exactly how qualified I am to write about pop culture. Don’t get me wrong, not many people around here can match my knowledge of classic animation, comic books, vintage toys or obscure and weird music, but I do fear that I lean a little heavy on nostaliga and don’t keep up with current pop culture trends.

Then I remember that pop culture lasts forever, and writing about The Beatles, The Marx Brothers, The original GI Joe, The Original Captain Marvel, Jack Kirby and New Wave and Progressive Music is still a pretty cool gig.  I’m not a technology hipster. I don’t own any Apple products, and I’m still not exactly sure what Tik Tok or Quibi is, but if that makes me a dinosaur, then I’m okay with that.

Dinosaurs are just about the most freakin’ cool things there are. That will never change.

I don’t know what the future holds for PopCult. I’m perfectly content to keep plugging away doing it here for as long as The Charleston Gazette-Mail will have me, and when the day comes when they can no longer spare the server space, I’ll probably pick up my archives and relocate to my own website and at some point I’ll probably get tired of writing at least one post every day, but to be honest, I could see doing this for another fifteen years. I look back at this body of work, and aside from the typos I invariably spot, I feel a sense of pride. I hope you folks like it, too.

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