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Christmas Taffy and Monopoly Ornaments.

How is today Thursday? I'm being serious. I know it was Tuesday when I went to bed last night. I am completely and totally convinced that Wednesday was stolen from me. I really needed Wednesday this week, too.

The only possible explanation for this is the "missing time" phenomenon most closely associated with alien abduction, but I don't feel particularly uneasy or violated. I'm at a loss, but if it turns out that one of you is responsible, you will find out the hard way that I am a ninja.

After realizing that the ease of online Christmas shopping has robbed me of a single visit to a Toys "R" Us store this month, I decided to remedy that situation this morning. Christmas ain't Christmas without random toy store runs.


To accommodate the influx of holiday shoppers, they created a really weird, roped-off winding maze toward the registers. It was so ridiculous. They had eighty-seven registers open, and yet they still felt the need to create this foreign queue system where some girl in a Santa cap tells you when you're allowed to push your wagon closer. Meanwhile, the cashiers with empty lines were screaming for this Santa-capped girl to send people over to them, but she can't hear anything because she's too caught up in performing wagon traffic control.

The people waiting on line were nearing a riot, but honestly, that's pretty much why I went to the store to begin with. Navigating through packed aisles...pretending my wagon is the Spy Hunter car as I attempt to beat some slow sap to the stupid price check device...trying not to laugh when people accidentally knock over piles of boxed toys...ahhhh. It's nuts, but it's a staple of the season.


Picked up a couple of choice items while there, including this amazing candy-filled mesh stocking. I can't complain since it was almost the cheapest thing in the entire store, but I feel it's my duty to remind everyone that these cheapo candy stockings cannot pass as anyone's "real" Christmas stocking. If you've got a kid and your kid's counting on a stocking...this won't work. It's fine as a side dish, and it also works well for purely decorative purposes. Despite the generic, dollar store-esque appearance, the overall package is pretty festive.

Two bucks buys you a handful of name-brand gum and candy, along with a handful of not-so-name-brand Christmas taffy. Actually, there's way more Christmas taffy in the sock than anything else, which would be okay if the taffy wasn't so rock hard that only a mythical creature made entirely of stone could eat it safely.

It took me around twenty minutes to chew a single piece down, and I was surprised to find that different portions of the taffy seemed to have different flavors. Some parts were sour, some were sweet...others had no flavor at all. It's like Santa made a soup from the waste materials of more popular candies and capped it off with a bucket of red food dye. Which is pretty awesome when you think about it. If Santa was a vintage Indian, he totally would've figured out how to make use of the buffalo's tail.


Less generic and far more noteworthy is a new (?) collection of tree ornaments from Hasbro, fashioned after a number of the toy giant's most popular playthings. How did I never see these before? I must assume that they just debuted yesterday afternoon, and since Wednesday was stolen from me by aliens, I'm only hearing about them now.

The assortment is incredible, with ornaments based on everything from Mr. Potato Head to Play-Doh. Since I caught them so late in the season, all of the really good ones were already sold out. Fortunately, even the less-amazing kinds were still well worth whatever ridiculously bloated price Toys 'R' Us was hawking them for.


I picked up two, starting with this "Operation" ornament, featuring a pair of reindeer challenging each other to pluck rubber bands and plastic butterflies from their cardboard patient's doughy body without setting off the fire alarm. When you put it like that, Operation sounds really fucked up.

What's even more fucked up is how one of the reindeer is absolutely cracking up over his opponent's apparent lack of skill. It's hard enough to keep that nose from buzzing when you're silently concentrating, but when you've got a reindeer doing comedy tumblesaults three feet away, it just isn't possible. I wrote this paragraph because it is my personal belief that all Christmas ornaments should have little stories written about them. Did you hear the one about the red glass ball and the Mormon bishop?

Story time: One year, my sister bought me Operation for Christmas. It remained under the tree for weeks before the big day, and of course, I spent many nights inspecting the neatly wrapped box, hoping for a clue. Finally, I got frustrated and made what was intended to be a small slit in the wrapping paper, but turned out to be a giant rip. She spotted the rip, and as punishment, I didn't get Operation for Christmas. My sister sucks.


As much as reindeer playing board games warms my soul, I think I like this "Monopoly" ornament even better. The former coal train has been liberally stuffed with around 400 silver Monopoly player pieces, which is interesting when you consider that there's been no more than twenty Monopoly player pieces in the history of the game. Indeed, Christmas is a time for magic.

I thought I'd have more to say about a Monopoly-themed tree ornament, but I don't, and now that I look over this entry, it seems that I've written enough already anyway. I can't believe how many words are up there. So many WORDS! This is obviously due to my new keyboard. It's so much easier to type when every button isn't serving as a shelter for a year's worth of cigarette ashes and sunflower seed shells.

Quick note: If you were one of the very generous people who sent me something this year, could you please e-mail me? I've gotten a couple of things without names included. Don't you want your emoticon-riddled thank-you e-mails?

Survey: Describe your best Christmas decoration. I don't think we've done this one before. It could be something that just looks cool, or it could be something that has sentimental value. Since I'm not in a position to monetize your responses, I can be flexible.

Posted by Matt on 12/13/2007. E-mail me!



Discussion Thread: 215 comments

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Thursday is awesome! I’m getting some real work done here.

Chestnuts roasted by GravyDavy @ 12/13/2007 2:00 PM


My best/favorite Christmas decoration is a mouse in bed in a walnut shell. I found it while playing blind man’s bluff in this old, dusty room of the church I attended when I was a child. I immediately fell in love with and have put it near the top of the tree for years and years. Just thinking about makes me happy!

Chestnuts roasted by DarkSideofBrightness @ 12/13/2007 2:01 PM


Lousy NYC weather. they promise us snow and we get rain.

best decoration would have to be my old school muppet baby xmas plushes. which are probably now burried in my mother’s ex-husband’s basemet. atleast i have something to do in Maine for the holidays now.

Chestnuts roasted by DrWorm @ 12/13/2007 2:05 PM


Hmmm….. The best Christmas decoration in my house (not my college apartment, where all I could get was the lights on the balcony thingy) is either my mom’s Santa collection or the family’s nutcracker display. The nutcracker one is part of a total package: they’re sitting atop the fireplace, usually with a garland around them (only closer to Christmas, since they’ll die if they go up too soon), and the stockings are hanging directly below. Santa can go to hell (lol bunnies), that nutcracker thing kicks ass.

Chestnuts roasted by Ben @ 12/13/2007 2:09 PM


WOW! I’m one of the first to comment. I haven’t gotten a Christmas ornament in a while. We kept reuisng them. I have this cool Scooby-Doo one where he’s in his doghouse and it’s all decorated with lights. Not much, but I like it!

Chestnuts roasted by Aaron @ 12/13/2007 2:11 PM


My best Christmas decoration? I’m going to have to think about that one for a while..I have so many!

That Monopoly ornament is weird. OK, that is clearly the tender of a steam locomtive (Layman’s terms: The car they put behind the engine that stores the engines fuel (namely, coal, but sometimes wood or even oil).

So they’ve got this locomotive tender, but it’s full of monopoly pieces. Which implies that they are fueling the locomotive by burning monopoly pieces. What???

Chestnuts roasted by Cameron T. @ 12/13/2007 2:12 PM


For some reason, I’ve always been attached to a tin soldier ornament at my parents’ house. It’s just a clothespin and some felt but it was my favorite. When my parents’ basement got flooded when I was a kid, a lot of the ornaments were ruined and we thought that one was as well. My parents bought a wooden tin soldier ornament to replace it for me but it wasn’t the same. After a couple weeks of drying out, we could finally open the ornament boxes and the tin soldier ornament was absolutely fine.

I have my own tree now and have requested the ornament but was flatly denied and told I would inherit it.

Chestnuts roasted by rowdykatie @ 12/13/2007 2:13 PM


Taffy sucks. Out here in the mid-west, any time anyone goes to, go forbid, Florida for vacation, they bring back the freshly made box of salt water taffy, not to be confused with Christmas taffy, this taffy is chewy and fresh, but still sucks big pulled taffy balls.

Dear Santa,

If your going to bring me magic taffy, save it! I’d rather have coal…I’m freezing.

Thanks,

Mully

Chestnuts roasted by Mully @ 12/13/2007 2:15 PM


P.S. Santa, also I could use some correct grammar and punctuation when posting at X-entertainment.com and eff-it, spell check too.

Oh, and a RSS feed for Matt!

Chestnuts roasted by Mully @ 12/13/2007 2:17 PM


Mully, Christmas has come early.

Chestnuts roasted by Matt @ 12/13/2007 2:19 PM


I always wondered what “Raindeer Games” referred to and now I know.

Chestnuts roasted by Rob @ 12/13/2007 2:26 PM


My best Christmas decoration(s) are a family of bean bag reindeers. My mom bought them when I was small child, but I don’t know where they came from. Their names all start with R’s; one of them is Ramona, I know that for sure.

This year my youngest sister managed to “lose” them, which is to say she has misplaced them somewhere inside my grandmother’s house of hoarded stuff. So next week I’ll see if I can rescue them and restore them to their rightful place atop the TV.

Chestnuts roasted by GloomyJack @ 12/13/2007 2:29 PM


I have two great decorations in contention for the top spot this year. On my tree I have a wind-up, glow in the dark skeleton, leftover from Halloween, that I’ve put a tiny little red Santa hat on. If the decoration doesn’t have to be on a tree, I built a miniature version of the Haunted Mansion, and have decorated it for Christmas, including mini lights!

Chestnuts roasted by Dr Sketch @ 12/13/2007 2:34 PM


Man, it has been forever since I commented! But this entry made me think about what happened last night, or possibly this morning. I went out drinking with some buddies, and sometime between my fifth tequila and getting home I must have stopped in at a drug store and gone on a mini-rampage. I woke up this morning, and I found in a bag next to my bed a plug-and-play Genesis and a Garfield Chia Pet. I have strange taste while drinking.

My favorite Christmas decoration has to be this old Pere Noel we keep on the mantle every year. I don’t remember where overseas we got it, but it’s about a foot tall and made entirely out of dried prunes. It should by all accounts be totally horrifying. Still, it manages to be classy and totally in-place for the Christmas season.

Chestnuts roasted by Declan Dempsey @ 12/13/2007 2:34 PM


My favorite Christmas decoration is my snow globe/salt and pepper shaker. It’s red, it’s plastic, it’s square and it’s probably from 1967. On one side, you have your salt. On the other, your pepper. And in the middle, a tiny plastic Christmas village swimming in tiny plastic Christmas snowflakes.

Chestnuts roasted by velouria_78 @ 12/13/2007 2:35 PM


As someone who had to work on Wednesday, and only Wednesday, of this week, I can assure you that it did indeed happen.

I’m going to have to think for a bit about our “best” decoration, because we have so many we can’t even use them all. But the one that first jumps into my head is this awesomely crappy wicker basket in the shape of a reindeer. The basket part is stuffed with some kind of hay or something. I’m pretty sure my family has had this thing since the 70s if not longer. Every year for my entire life, that little Rudolph basket has been dragged out and put on top of the entertainment center. It’s so ugly, but it’s a necessary part of every Christmas for me.

Chestnuts roasted by jazzy @ 12/13/2007 2:49 PM


My favorite ornament would have to be the really old, multicolored, works-only-half-the-time blinking star that sits atop my parents tree every year since I can remember. The thing’s total crap and ugly as hell but I’m filled with Christmas Spirit whenever I see it

Chestnuts roasted by MulanLang @ 12/13/2007 2:51 PM


Hm… We just decorated our first christmas tree with store-bought decorations- I have yet to inherit any from my parents.
But there are two from my parents’ tree that I would LOVE to inherit.
one: the christmas mouse in a shoe- with a greenandred sleeping cap. It’s probably older tham ne!
two: Goofy dressed up as Jacob Marely, all transparent-blue and ghosty-looking! It’s an awesome ornament.
I’m sure there are many more- Like, my grandma gives us christmas ornaments for christmas, so I know I’ll get those at SOME point in the future… but I haven’t seen the Home Tree for years- they always come to our house, or don’t put up the tree.

*thinks*
Maybe… this is the year I should ask for them…

Chestnuts roasted by kittymao @ 12/13/2007 2:58 PM


Oh, man! I totally bought that stocking for someone for Secret Santa, along with some really classy Christmas goblets that were about $1.50 each at Walgreens.

My favorite Christmas decoration is probably our Nativity scene…although, come to think of it, I haven’t seen it in a few years. One of my tackiest ornaments, though, is a Ron Weasley ornament that my mom picked up from the clearance rack one year when I was really obsessed with Harry Potter. And we still have a styrofoam angel I made back in kindergarten. That’s mostly a sentimental decoration, because it is ridiculously ugly (and 14 years old).

Chestnuts roasted by Vanilla Fire @ 12/13/2007 3:02 PM


Sadly my favorite christmas decoration would have to be a toilet seat cover. I don’t even know where this thing came from but it is quite silly. When the seat is down there is a Santa face on a red background with “HO HO HO” floating above his head. When the lid gets flipped up there stares a wide eyed santa with a mitten over his mouth with the proclaiming “OH OH OH” now. Bathroom breaks during the month of december was always much more rewarding.

Chestnuts roasted by Travis B @ 12/13/2007 3:05 PM


Nork: I know exactly how you feel, we are extremely homesick. I miss my cats and my fish. I know they’re fine (well, maybe not the fish), but I can’t help but feel constantly guilty for not being at home with them… and the Christmas tree.

Matt: They’ve had those Hasbro ornaments for at least two years. I always see them at Walgreens and consider getting them, but never do. They’re probably cheaper there, too.

And now an excerpt from my blog regarding my favorite Christmas ornaments… “I had several favorite Christmas tree ornaments as a child but the set I loved most were the gingerbread people: a gingerbread man and woman, made of an indecipherable substance that I alternately call rubber or plastic. They looked good enough to eat with their bright, white trimmings and candy-like faces. They didn’t smell like gingerbread, but something entirely different and indescribable, a scent that I still occasionally dream of, though it was not food-like in the slightest. They were German-made, and thus extremely well-crafted, a talent of the country as a whole, whether it be toys or cars or Luftwaffe airplanes.”

Chestnuts roasted by Special K @ 12/13/2007 3:14 PM


Great survey topic! (It seems I had to describe more than just one.)
I think my favorite decoration has to be my plastic toy soldier for the yard, affectionately named “Fred.” He’s never been displayed outside, but we used to hang out a lot when I was a little kid. (This does beat out my plastic yard angel, which I saw all over as a kid but couldn’t find to buy for over ten years. But now I have one, and she is awesome. Also the XMas man, an old styrofoam and shiny plastic leaf elfy guy from a department store my grandma used to work at. That takes the bronze medal in my Christmas decoration olympics.)

I’ll also pick an ornament, because I don’t classify them quite the same as the other “decorations.” This is probably the somberero guy. It’s a blue duck with a giant sombrero, and while it’s looking very worn this year, we still hang it under the tree next to the 1960s package ornaments. (Silver medal goes to the set of three animals that my mom, grandma, and I were given- chipmunk, cardinal, and mouse. Bronze is the wooden Little Mermaid ornament that my mom hates so much.)

As for the new Advent Calendar installment, I might as well write it here- I love how it follows an actual story (and a good one, too!), but I get the biggest kick out of Mista Snowman because he embodies the true spirit of the Advent Calendar to me.

Chestnuts roasted by Rainbowfeet @ 12/13/2007 3:16 PM


My best Christmas Decoration is a stocking my older sister made for me when I was a baby. As for the tree, my Rescuers Down Under ornaments from McDonald’s!

Chestnuts roasted by Starsmudge @ 12/13/2007 3:16 PM


I was going to say my miss piggy and fozzie stuffed animals too! I figured she was never going to let me take them when I moved out, but luckily my family’s new dog is a bit of a chewer so that means a lot of the softer, lower to the ground christmas decorations aren’t even getting put out this year. This means I have a better argument as to why I should take them.

Also I recently got my first christmas decoration that my mom can’t lay claim to. (I’m constantly hearing “well I know I bought it for you, but I bought it for you when you lived here and I’m just not ready to give it up yet!”) It’s an autographed Martha Stewart snowflake ornament that I got after waiting in the line from hell. Unfortunately, it can’t come out out of the box because that’s that part that’s actually signed.Even so, its my first Christmas decoration for my new house,so I’d have to say it was my new fave.

Chestnuts roasted by colls @ 12/13/2007 3:21 PM


Ooh! Kittymao- I love that Goofy ornament! It’s been one of my favorites since I was little, and it’s the only one of the Mickey’s Christmas Carol ornaments that made it to the tree this year. You described it perfectly.

Chestnuts roasted by Rainbowfeet @ 12/13/2007 3:26 PM


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