Rudy Panucci On Pop Culture

Category: Uncategorized (Page 189 of 758)

Monday Morning Art: Muse

This week’s art is a digital painting that is the last image you see in the video for David Synn’s tune, “Muse.” The video debuted yesterday as part of the latest video episode of Radio Free Charleston, and you can see the video by itself right here…

I took David’s piano piece from his latest release, Legacy, and inspired by the title, tried to capture some of the ways an artist looks at his model, or his “muse,” at it were. This is a digital painting based on the last model we see in the video. You can purchase David’s music at his Bandcamp page, and keep watching PopCult, because I have another one in the works.  Today’s piece is a simple, tasteful, nude.

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

Meanwhile, Monday at on The AIR, we continue with our marathon of Radio Free Charleston. This runs until Tuesday afteroon, and wraps up with a brand-new episode that debuts Tuesday at 10 AM and 10 PM.  You can listen to The AIR at the website, or on the embedded radio player at the top of the right-hand column of this blog.

Sunday Evening Video: New Radio Free Charleston!

July 4, 2006, the video version of Radio Free Charleston made its official debut at The Gazz.com. Now, fifteen years later, we have a brand-new edition of our local music showcase!

Eight days ago as your PopCulteer and his lovely wife were heading to Madison, WV for our first music video shoot in 16 months, I realized that the fifteenth anniversary of the RFC video show was this year…on the Fourth of July, no less. I hadn’t done an anniversary episode of the video show since 2015, the year before my diagnosis of Myasthenia Gravis that caused me to cut back on the video stuff. So with a week to put a show together, I kicked into high gear and started trying to figure out what I could put in the show.

The two bands we filmed last week were in, as was the music video I’d been quietly working on for a couple of months. Then I dove into the vaults for some never-edited video of performances from 2008, and got some table scraps of animation from my brother, Frank Panucci, and I had the bulk of a show. All I had to do was head out and shoot host segments and then edit the show while my neighborhood sounded like a warzone, and here we are, just over forty minutes of local music and animation, featuring The Madison 2, Spurgy Hankins Band, David Synn, The Swivel Rockers and The Paris Project. Plus animation from Frank,  and editing by yours truly. The end result was Radio Free Charleston V2 218, “West Virginia Shirt.”

Host segments were shot on the roof of Charleston’s Quarrier Street Parking Building, which, while deserted, was not as quiet as we had imagined. Loud trucks, motorcycles, church bells and helicopters kept this from being a one-take show, which is why we have some jump cuts while I’m talking. I’m out of practice with this stuff.  Our namesake shirt for this episode come from Kin Ship Goods.  It’s actually called “Life On Mars” but I didn’t know that until I went to get the link.

Before we get into the music, there’s time for some senseless violence, courtesy of Frank.

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The RFC Flashback: MINI SHOW number 62

This week we go back to June, 2015, for an RFC MINI SHOW starring The Seude Brothers that was recorded almost four years earlier.

The Suede Brothers are a Rust Belt Rock trio out of beautiful Cleveland, Ohio. The Forest City three spread the good word across the Midwest and to the American South. To promote their appearance as part of Mission Coalition in September, 2011, we featured the band and their “Coos Bay Boogie” video on episode 144 of Radio Free Charlesston, but we didn’t do much with the Mission Coalition footage we had…until the summer of 2015.

Fourth of July Weekend Stuff To Do

The PopCulteer
July 2, 2021

Your PopCulteer is working on a treat for you all this weekend that may or may not happen. Because of that, I didn’t have time to compose a nice prose essay or put together a collection of fine photographs for you this week.

However, I will remind you that you can tune in to The AIR for a four-day marathon of Radio Free Charleston that starts Friday at 7 AM.  It runs until Tuesday and will wrap up with a new episode of RFC Volume 5.

I will also remind you about this week’s fun toy mystery that I posted here Wednesday, which was solved within an hour thanks to the hive mind of the internet (and Mark Hegeman,  who comprises quite a bit of the toy knowledge of that hive mind).

While you’re remembering all that stuff, and I’m trying to come up with a surprise thirteen years in the making, check out some stuff you can do in and around Charleston this holiday weekend. There is way, way more stuff than this going on, but these events were put on by folks who were industrious enough to make my job easy by creating easily-swiped graphics with all the important info. So go check this out, or find something else, but only go out if you are fully vaccinated. This mess ain’t over yet, folks.

That is our quick and easy PopCulteer this week. Your PopCulteer is not slacking. He’s trying to pull off a surprise treat for all of you. Check back with PopCult every day for fresh content, and you may just find out what it is.

Celebrate Independence With Radio Free Charleston

Starting Friday, July 2 at 7 AM we will begin a four-day marathon of Radio Free Charleston Volume 5, on The AIR .  You can celebrate America and RFC at the same time!

At the beginning of 2020, I changed the format of Radio Free Charleston, combining the one-hour, local-focus RFC with the two-hour, not local RFC International into a three-hour weekly show that brings you local music mixed in with the coolest music I can find from all over the world.

This marathon will run from Friday at 7 AM until Tuesday at 1 PM. It will culminate with a brand-new episode. Fans of local music can tune in and hear their local favorites played alongside brand-new music from the world’s best bands from a variety of different genre. We’re even going to pre-empt the Sunday Midnight marathon of The Swing Shift for this.

This is part of us celebrating The Fourth of July weekend, and part of it is celebrating fifteen years since Radio Free Charleston made its triumphant return as a web-based video show (that video show is “volume two”). It’s also five years since we re-launched The AIR in its current format, as a free-form internet radio station adjunct to PopCult. So pick your party. We’re having a marathon!

If all goes according to plan, we might even have an additional surprise this weekend to mark the fifteenth anniversary of the RFC video show.  As part of this marathon, some of the episodes of RFC V5 we had to bump off the server last summer will be brought back so you can hear them once again.

Tune in at The AIR website, or on the embedded player in the right column of PopCult, you know…over there near the top of the page.

Help Identify This Mystery Figure

The PopCult Toybox

UPDATE: The Mystery has been solved, less than an hour after this was posted. Read the answer at the bottom of this post!

Usually here in PopCult, I’m the person telling you all about cool toys and figures and things, and I usually have all the details needed to enlighten you.

This time, I’m the one needing enlightened. I need your help identifying this figure I found on a recent trip. I have been researching this for weeks, and while I came up with a few leads, none of them have panned out.

Let me tell you how this mystery guy showed up in my collection: On the way back from WonderFest early in June, we stopped at the Peddler’s Mall in Winchester, Kentucky. Peddler’s Mall is a small chain of antique malls that have proven to be rich hunting grounds for vintage toys, comics and trading cards. While speed-shopping through the place (Mrs. PopCulteer was in the car, enjoying the air conditioning), I found this guy in one of the booths.

I was intrigued, but probably picked him and put him back three or four times before I decided that he was too interesting to pass up at $8.99.

Due to the construction type, material and sculpting quality, I would say he probably dates back to the late 1950s/early 1960s.

The tag around his neck identified him as “Decades Vintage, Vintage Plastic Toy.”

Not a lot to work with there.

My first thought was that he might be a Marx Toy, but the figure has no markings at all, anywhere.

Let me describe him as objectively as possible: The figure appears to be 1/8 or 1/9 scale in size. It is a seated figure of a middle-aged man, dressed in what appears to be mid-century casual attire, with a suit jacket, no tie and his shirt unbuttoned.  His pants are cuffed. His shoes are slip-on loafers. In his seated position, his feet are pointed down, indicating that he was seated in a taller chair, or a rocking chair, or possibly bleachers or as a passenger in a vehicle.  He is not posed as though he is driving. One hand is raised slightly off his leg, while the other rests on his other thigh. He is seated in a casual manner, with one leg arched outward.

The figure is molded in a dark tan/light brown styrene plastic.

He is hollow, with two-piece (front and back) construction. The Sculpting quality is quite good, on par with a Marx sculpt, but the assembly is rather sloppy, with gaps in the seams and sloppy glue application.

The detail on the sculpting goes to great lengths to depict fabric textures, but the figure is completely smooth on his rear end and the backs of his legs, indicating that he was meant to be paired with a seat of some kind, possibly a sofa or a rocking chair.

His two-piece construction reminded me of a Hartland figure, but those figures are considerably smaller, more crudely sculpted, and are usually painted.

This guy shows no sign of ever having been painted. The pigment used on him is very close to what Marx used on a few solid plastic figures, and the quality of sculpting is on par with Marx, but the complete absence of any manufacturer marks tells me it isn’t a Marx figure, or at least not a Marx figure that was made for sale to the general public.

I have not been able to identify the face. I think he bears a slight resemblance to the actor, Robert Young, the star of the sitcom, Father Knows Best and the medical drama, Marcus Welby, M.D., but the figure is not dressed the way either of those characters would have been depicted in merchandising at the times they were on the air.

He may very well be another celebrity of the day, or he could be a politician, preacher,coach or retired athlete, or historical figure. However, the lack of a tie is a curious omission if that last one were the case.

At the Marx Toy Convention I showed a photo of him around, and nobody recognized him. Mark Hegeman, who knows way more about vintage toys that I do was stumped, but suggested he might be part of a model kit. Aurora made a model kit of President Kennedy in a rocking chair, but Mark looked him up on Google, and the Aurora figural kits had many more pieces and were molded in different-colored plastic, plus this guy doesn’t look like Kennedy. However, there is a possibility that he might be a refugee from another company’s model kit. I haven’t ruled it out.

In fact, I haven’t ruled out a lot yet.

He could be an advertising figure that was attached to a store display. He might have been part of a large-scale dollhouse playset. It’s possible that this was a very small-scale production for a private display, possibly to sell furniture or something.  He could also be a passenger in a remote-control car or plane. He might be an historical figure of some sort, possibly part of a set that came seated on a display. He might even be a miniature version of a statue of a famous author, separated from his base.

He does not show signs of being permanently attached to any base.

So I am stumped. I’m including plenty of pictures here, and you can click on them for a larger version. If you can help me solve the mystery, please leave a comment. I’d really like to know who he is.

More photos after the jump…

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Lost Decades, The Madison 2, The Swivel Rockers on a new RFC Tuesday.

Tuesday on The AIR  we deliver a partly brand-new episode of Radio Free Charleston. It’s three hours of music that lets you support the local scene and indulge your strange musical desires. 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 the cool embedded player over at the top of the right column.

We have a newish Radio Free Charleston at 10 AM and 10 PM Tuesday.  This week we open with a new track from The Lost Decades, and bring you one all-new hour of RFC, and one encore of the very first episode of RFC International. Life, technical issues and laziness have kept us from doing a new RFC in five weeks, so getting this one done on time was a pretty neat accomplishment.  We do manage to bring you some killer new and vintage local and independent music in our first hour, plus some really great stuff in hours two and three.

After the first hour of RFC, stick around because the second hour revives The first RFC International, from 2016, which hasn’t been heard by human ears in almost five years.

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

RFCv5 053

Lost Decades “Crushed At Dawn”
The Madison 2 “Small Town (live)”
The Madison 2 “Chains (live)”
The Swivel Rockers “Sweet Little 16 (live)”
The Swivel Rockers “She Loves My Automobile (live)”
Danny Elfman “Everybody Loves You”
Garbage with John Doe and Exene “Destroying Angels”
The Residents “The Aging Musician”
Matt Berry “The Blue Elephant”
All Torches Lit “Vagabond”
mediogres “Morning Delight”
Mark Beckner Group “Odessa”
Sierra Ferrall “In Dreams”

hour two (RFC International #1)
The Beatles and Led Zepplin “Helter Skelter”
The Beetlevanias “Smells Like Teen Spirit”
The Rutles “Shangra La”
Chemical Beats “Welcome To The Black Parade”
Todd Rundgren “While My Guitar Gently Weeps”
The Beatnix “Stairway To Heaven”
Be Bop Deluxe “Surreal Estate”
Kerry Livgren “Mask of the Great Deceiver”
The Buggles “Vermillion Sands”
Nightwish “The Heart Asks Pleasure First”

hour three
Ian Dury and the Blockheads “Sex and Drugs and Rock and Roll”
Madness “One Step Beyond”
Lene Lovich “Lucky Number”
DEVO “Jocko Homo”
ELP “Benny The Bouncer
Franz Ferdinand/Sparks “Dictator’s Son”
David Bowie “Blackstar”
Transvision Vamp “Velveteen”
Jellyfish “Brighter Day”
Split Enz “Bullet Brain and Cactus Head”
Hazel O’Connor “Writing on the Wall”
Kate Bush “Suspended in Gaffa”

You can hear this episode of Radio Free Charleston Tuesday at 10 AM and 10 PM on The AIR, with a replay Thursday at 3 PM. This Friday we’re going to begin an RFC Marathon that will run all weekend long. I’ll tell you about that in a day or two.

As is now the norm, 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.

The Swing Shift will return with a new episode next week.

Monday Morning Art: Bottle Shadows

This week our art is a photograph. I ran it through a few filters, but I didn’t really do much in the way of painting or redrawing anything. The art in this is the composition. I was outside Saturday, for way more time than I normally spend out of doors, and the way the late afternoon sun caught these bottles and cast those wild shadows struck me as camera-worthy, so I whipped out my phone, and you see the results above.

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

Meanwhile, Monday at 2 PM on The AIR, we bring you a classic episode of  Psychedelic Shack, followed at 3 PM by an encore of a recent edition of 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 at the top of the right-hand column of this blog.

Psychedelic Shack can now 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. Classic episodes can be heard Sunday at 9 AM as part of our Sunday Haversham Recording Institute collection.  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. You can hear two classic episodes of the show Sunday at 2 PM.

At 7 PM, stick around for a 12-hour marathon of my favorite single episodes of the programs on The AIR.

Sunday Evening Videos: Marx Toy Mania

Tonight we have two PopCult Videos that were shot on June 18, 2021. First we have a quick look at the first day of the 2021 Marx Toy Convention, and below that you’ll find a quick look at the Marx Toy Museum sale that happened later that evening.

On June 18 and 19, 2021, after a one-year hiatus due to the pandemic, The Marx Toy Convention made a triumphant return to The Kruger Street Toy & Train Museum in Wheeling, West Virginia!

The PopCult cameras were on hand, and here’s a brief look at the sights, and some of the sounds of the 2021 Marx Toy Convention!

Later that day we made the short drive to Moundsville and The Marx Toy Museum which officially closed in 2016. However, the museum’s owner, Francis Turner–whose collection formed the basis of the museum, has reopened the Marx Toy Museum for one-night sales every year since its closing, and after one year off due to the pandemic, on June 18, 2021, following the first day of the Marx Toy Convention, Francis welcomed collectors into the museum once again. This is a quick taste of what we saw…

The RFC Flashback: MINI SHOW number 61

This week we flash back to June, 2015, when I brought you footage shot the previous March at JoeLanta (now ToyLanta).

ToyLanta, of course, is the annual gathering of devotees of the original 12″ GI Joe, held every year in Atlanta Georgia. We’re talking about one of the most fun toy conventions in the country. All the proceeds go to benefit the Cody Lane Memorial Toy Museum, which will present hands-on play experiences and amazing action figure dioramas. I can’t want to go back in person, next year.

The JoeLanta Jam Band consists of our friends Radio Cult (Ricky Zhero, Bambi Lynn and Jeremy Slotin), teamed up with guest musicians from the world of GI Joe collecting. There are some very talented folks in the hobby, and their talents extend beyond customizing and building action figure dioramas.

In this edition of The RFC MINI SHOW you’ll get to hear David Lane, one of the JoeLanta organizers, handle lead vocals while master dioramist and model-building Mike Gardner tears it up on lead guitar on a cover of “Give Me Three Steps.” Later, Alex Massey, a GI Joe wunderkind of the diorama world, shows off his guitar chops, teaming with Radio Cult for “Detroit Rock City.”

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