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Halloween Countdown ’08: Mischief Night.

It's Mischief Night! I have no idea if this as important to today's kids as it was to me, but man, it wasn't uncommon for Mischief Night to be twice as fun as Halloween proper.

It's tough to equate throwing eggs with feelings of maturity, but that's kinda what it was for us. When we grew too old to dress in plastic costumes and go door-to-door for Dum Dum lollipops, Mischief Night was there for us.

Traditions varied from town to town, but for us, it was all about guiltless vandalism, staying out late, and being in places our parents wouldn't have approved of with people our parents wouldn't have approved of. Our neighborhood had a big variety in its child population, running the gamut from kids who weren't allowed to watch afternoon television until they finished their homework to drop-outs who would kick your ass for not smoking cigarettes with them. On a normal night, my friends and I would pull a synchronized scatter followed by a rendezvous back home at the sight of these scary hoodlums, but on Mischief Night, we got to be a part of their crew. (So long as we helped supply their eggs. Stardom had a price.)

Mischief Night was the easiest day of the year to prove your manhood. We didn't have to smoke or drink, or play stickball, or even know the correct angle to wear our baseball caps. We just had to hurl eggs and spray shaving cream.

In our neighborhood, the breakdown was this: You could shoot shaving cream at members of your own crew, but eggs were strictly reserved for obstacles and outsiders. To throw an egg at one of your own teammates was something of a social faux pas.

Like gangland solders comparing their pieces, everyone proudly displayed their modded shaving cream cans. Some burnt the nozzle to ensure a stronger steam of cream; others went with the more time-honored "toothpick trick." Others did both.

For me, it wasn't so much about the style as it was the quantity. One can of shaving cream packed a serious amount of ammo, but it wasn't anywhere near enough to last the duration of Mischief Night. You had to stock up, and you had to stock early. The stores around here didn't sell eggs or shaving cream to kids during the last week of October. If you swung by the freezer section, a sign above the eggs would warned that you could only buy them if you were 18 or older. It was a bit surreal. At no other time of year could anyone see such villainy in eggs.

Having enough ammo was important. Especially because it was within the rules to nail a teammate with eggs and shaving cream once they had nothing left to offer their compatriots in combat. Mischief Night was wonderful, but its godly blessings were temporary.

We'd spend most of the night vandalizing, using the shaving cream to pen obscenities on car doors, and egg yolks to stain the outside walls of the local school. I don't recall us ever being much into toilet papering trees, but honestly, if you gave any kid in the world the choice between throwing an egg and throwing a roll of toilet paper, you'd be scraping eggshells out of your eyes before you could finish the question. From our perspective, toilet paper was a needless burden on a night that we needed to carry three cartons of eggs and six cans of shaving cream across an eight block warzone.

It was good, stupid fun. So much fun, in fact, that we usually considered Mischief Night a two-day event, which carried over into Halloween night. There were at least a few years where we "ironically" trick-or-treated while covered from head to toe in shaving cream. In some screwy, roundabout way, we were in costume.

The poor people who answered those doors treated us with respect. They had to. They saw what we looked like and saw what we were carrying. One false move, and their homes would be covered in the same shit we were.

I get the sense that Mischief Night isn't what it used to be. At least, it isn't here. There will be dabs of shaving cream and cardboard tubes scattered around the streets tomorrow morning, but it definitely won't be what I saw in my childhood neighborhood, which was akin to the NYC streets after the Ghostbusters blew up Stay Puft.

"Bombing" was the term we used to describe our collective, unsavory behavior. Other towns used different titles, I'm sure. That was one of the interesting things about Mischief Night: It seems like it was "celebrated" in vastly different ways from city to city, state to state and even country to country. In the comments, talk about your own old traditions for this unholy holiday. Or die.

Posted by Matt on 10/30/2008. E-mail me!



Discussion Thread: 110 comments

Matt I had never heard of “mischief night” until this insanely perfect article came along.  Your writing skills are so awesome, I felt like I had gone along with you and your gang year after year!  Thank you for sharing this with us, it really has put me into full Halloween spirit!  Happy Halloween!

Chestnuts roasted by crazy_mainer @ 10/31/2008 12:25 PM


Happy Halloween, folks. Here’s a video of a one guy doing Michael Jackson’s “Thriller” a capella. In sixty-four parts:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pFAVxaEc9JQ

Did I mention he’s French? He’s French. French-accented Vincent Price rules. Enjoy!

Chestnuts roasted by Carpeteria @ 10/31/2008 12:31 PM


PS- We did lots of tp’ing and silly stringing and smashed only our friends pumpkins, and they in turn would smash ours!  We did this on Halloween night though, not on the 30th.  Oh and in Maine we also cannot buy eggs on halloween if you are under 18. Bizare.

Chestnuts roasted by crazy_mainer @ 10/31/2008 12:31 PM


On the mean streets of Greenwood, Indiana, we called this mischief night “Thursday”.

Chestnuts roasted by BUCKLY! @ 10/31/2008 12:31 PM


Here in Texas, I don’t think we ever had an official Halloween Eve prank night.  Not that I know of, anyway.  Oh sure, there were pranks, but those were committed on Halloween, not the night before.  In any case I never fell in with that crowd, so I wouldn’t have known if there was a “Mischeif Night.”

Happy Halloween XE people!  I have my college homecoming bonfire tonight so no partaking in the festivities for me.  I did manange to watch both Young Frankenstein and RHPS last night…it’s been my Halloween tradition for the last few years….

I probably won’t be able to read XE again until Sunday, so have a great weekend and SNT everybody!

Chestnuts roasted by Cameron T. @ 10/31/2008 12:34 PM


We didn’t have anything like this around here, but thanks to Bill, I know it did exist in Georgia (btw, way to go, trashing Tech players’ cars!  Go Dawgs!)
 
Happy Halloween, everyone!

Chestnuts roasted by Teddy Ray @ 10/31/2008 2:02 PM


Mischief night  : Hell yeah. 
Phillies winning the World Series : Oh HELL YEAH!!
The Champions Parade on Halloween Day : OH GOOD LORD YEAH!!! 

Chestnuts roasted by Lucky Lighter @ 10/31/2008 2:10 PM


Another Detroiter here. Yep, good old Devil’s Night. TPing was the big thing my old neighborhood. There was a bit of shaving cream and egging, but the TPing was crazy some years. Downtown was really crazy on Devil’s night though. Tons of abandoned building being burned and people just going nuts. Nothing wrong with abandoned building burning, but the fires usually spread to house that had people living in them. I’m not sure when the whole calling it Angel’s Night started (maybe late 80′s), but I guess it’s working. I still remember watching tv on Devil’s Night and seeing pictures of all the burning building.

Chestnuts roasted by Alyssa @ 10/31/2008 2:10 PM


I really really miss those days.  *sniff*

Chestnuts roasted by Hazard @ 10/31/2008 2:14 PM


I killed a man for candy, and it turned out to be Russel Stover chocolate. Totally not worth the years of guilt.

Chestnuts roasted by Barry @ 10/31/2008 2:31 PM


I remember it the same as matt, school yards and shaving cream on your friends. On Halloween day though, that was big in the mid to late 80′s for Staten Island kids

Chestnuts roasted by John Y @ 10/31/2008 2:33 PM


Carpeteria: Two very enthusiastic thumbs up!

Getting ready to go vote!

Chestnuts roasted by Reni @ 10/31/2008 3:09 PM


Weird, I guess it’s only called “Gate Night” here in Canada.  People would vandalize stuff here on the 30th when I was a kid, but it usually only seemed to be the house of one of the most hated teacher at the Junior High School, that happened to be in my neighbourhood. Never participated for the simple reason that I wouldn’t want somebody messing with my stuff…

Chestnuts roasted by Samboomba @ 10/31/2008 3:12 PM


Matt, the Halloween juke is doing that annoying there where it tells me to upgrade my flash player, yet still doesn’t play even after I make sure I have the latest version. BOO, and not in the good Halloweeny way.

Chestnuts roasted by Nicole @ 10/31/2008 3:24 PM


*Thing, not there. That annoying there? God, I sound like a hick. This is what I get for having to work at 6am…

Chestnuts roasted by Nicole @ 10/31/2008 3:25 PM


Happy Halloween everyone!  I’ll be missing out on tonight’s final post, but it will not detract from the awesomeness that has been this year’s Halloween countdown.  Matt has been sooooo on top of it.  And I can’t wait for advent!  Now… I’m off, to mess up every cassette.  From London, to Idaho…

Chestnuts roasted by velouria_78 @ 10/31/2008 4:12 PM


Here in Indiana, I never knew anyone to do anything special for Devil’s Night.  A big tradition, however, is “cornin’ cars”.  It was done a lot on Halloween, but it was also done on random October nights. 

Basically, kids hide in an old corn field and find some ears of corn that has hardened kernels.  When a car comes by, the kids strip a bunch of kernels off of the ear and throw them at the car as it drives by.

Chestnuts roasted by Adam E @ 10/31/2008 4:33 PM


Wow, this sure has been a great countdown!

And even though it’s almost over, there’s only 31 days until Advent!

/happydance

Chestnuts roasted by Captain Will @ 10/31/2008 4:36 PM


Happy Hallowe’en everybody!

Last night, I volunteered as a freelance spook at a haunted trail a group held at our church. Provided my own costume, scary sounds on CD, and portable strobe light. They want me to come again tonight, but Trick or Treat takes priority. Right now, I have no little relatives to take ’round the ‘hood, but handing out candy in costume works just as well. Although last year, we had quite a bit of goodies left over. With my Diabetes, I can stretch any leftovers well into Spring.

Hallowe’en, Christmas, and Easter. Candy from those times somehow tastes way better than any other time of year.

Chestnuts roasted by kingklash @ 10/31/2008 4:41 PM


Weeird.
I hear about all that mischief-making in the movies, but out here in the Bay Area, it just never was. I’d never heard of it, or heard of people doing it.

The closest I ever got was patrolling the streets when I was 15 with a bunch of stoned and half-drunk teens attempting to trick-or-treat. We didn’t damage things or break stuff or made messes- we were just loud, rowdy and utterly obnoxious.

Chestnuts roasted by kittymao @ 10/31/2008 5:27 PM


Great Countdown Matt, Happy Halloween everyone!

Chestnuts roasted by Fox @ 10/31/2008 6:12 PM


HAPPY HALLOWEEN everybody!
Got the girls in their costumes and the jukebox kicking. Trick or treating is coming on soon!

Chestnuts roasted by The Manimal @ 10/31/2008 6:15 PM


I wanna eat all the trick-or-treat candy so bad.

*curls into a ball in the corner and cries*

Chestnuts roasted by Mystie @ 10/31/2008 6:36 PM


Hope you’re all having a swell time. :)   I’m posting the final Countdown entry in just a little while…let’s say an hour or two.

Chestnuts roasted by Matt @ 10/31/2008 6:39 PM


THE FINAL COUNTDOWWWWWWWWWWWWWWN……..sorry, had to get that out of my system.

Chestnuts roasted by Loneman1 @ 10/31/2008 7:10 PM


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