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Funky Fondue, Christmas Crackers, Awesome ALF.

The Advent Calendar has been updated through December 13th. Slow and steady.

My secret hobby of thumbing through twenty-year-old recipe magazines has given me a serious appreciation of holiday fondue, which I suppose is no different than non-holiday fondue, but please let me have this. I was thrilled to find these microwaveable Swiss cheese fondue cups in the Christmas section of our local supermarket, sandwiched between wrapping paper and bags full of red and green jelly beans. Odd mix, but it seemed to work.

While the cups o' cheese are theoretically ready-to-eat once they're heated, the contents are really meant to be poured into a traditional fondue pot before serving, with any extra additives the chef might want to...add. It was wishful thinking to believe that the mixture would taste any good as-is, because it DOES NOT, and without the added wine and oils, I kinda felt like I was dipping bread cubes into someone's sneeze.

On the other hand, I'm finally motivated to open one of the seventeen fondue kits we've received for Christmas over the past five years. Christmas is a time for silver bells and silver linings.

Not more than three feet away from the strange cups of Swiss cheese were packages of Holiday Crackers, nearly identical to the ones I reviewed last year. I'd hoped that the different art style on this year's crackers meant that there would be a different gamut of prizes, but it was the same crap I got last year. Boo.

Click here see the loot. Really random and worthless stuff, including a plastic whistle, 9-piece jigsaw puzzle, half-sized pencils and paper crowns. The concept of these crackers is alluring, but boy, the prizes are a sad finale.

For those unaware, you're supposed to leave a cracker at each child's table setting for Christmas dinner. They pop it open, get a prize, and then celebrate by eating. If I ever meet a child who would applaud the gift of a half-sized pencil, I may give it a go.

The prizes were largely disappointing, but one was actually worth cheering for...

Some kind of Macross/Transformers-style paper action figure, which you get to put together yourself! He's tiny and he doesn't hold together well (getting his eight body parts to stay together for that one photo above took fifteen minutes), but I think, if I was six-years-old, and I was about to eat dinner, and I found this thing on my plate...yes, I would be okay with that. But then, I am eternally flexible and easy to please.

And now, the meat of today's entry...

It's time for our seemingly-annual "BEST CHRISTMAS PRESENT EVER" survey. I can't even pretend that we haven't done this before, because not only have we done this before...we've done it several times. But it ain't Christmas unless you talk about the stuff you got when Christmas mattered ten times as much.

However, I'd like to change things up from the previous surveys a bit. This time, don't just chat about the best Christmas presents you received -- tell everyone about the gifts you wanted the most. Even if you stopped caring about 'em by December 26th. I'm talking about the stuff you spent weeks and weeks dreaming about. The toys that made you feign a belief in Santa Claus, just on the off-chance that he really did exist and could help you achieve your goals.

If I had to pick one that I didn't actually get, it'd be the first Nintendo Game Boy. I don't know if it was sold out or too expensive or what, but despite my best begging, my parents passed on that one and got me a bicycle instead. It was a great bike, but I pretended to hate it because it wasn't a Game Boy. Kind of a bastardy thing to do, but I guess it worked, because I got the Game Boy for my birthday two months later.

And I had to pick one that I was dying for and did get, that's easy:

Yes, the original Coleco "ALF" doll. I've told this story in bits and pieces, but here's the whole, exciting tale. I was an ALF maniac from Day 1, buying into the sitcom as the absolute pinnacle of edgy comedy. I quit boy scouts for a year because it conflicted with ALF's television schedule. I lived and breathed ALF. Before the world was swarmed with ALF-related posters, puppets and coloring books, the world's first chance to bring him home was Coleco's awesome plush doll.

This doll was all I wanted for Christmas in 1986. Had I received ten boxes of crayons and one ALF doll, I would've been happy. When requesting ALF as one of my Christmas presents, all tact went out the window. I didn't portray the stuffed animal as something I wanted, but more like a serum needed to cure a debilitating disease. I reminded my mother of ALF's importance on a daily basis, doing everything in my power to make her understand how horrible Christmas would be (for me and her both) if it came and went without an ALF doll.

In my family, the tradition was to celebrate on Christmas Eve and open all of the presents at midnight. Christmas Day was virtually meaningless for me. Whatever you guys consider the day after Christmas to be -- that was Christmas Day for me..

And so, on Christmas Eve in 1986, after hours of Canada Dry and crab legs and clanging metal folding chairs, the clock struck midnight to signal "Christmas proper," and we all started tearing the wrapping paper. I opened many fine gifts that night, but the ALF doll was not one of them. Engulfed in Christmas spirit, I decided not to kill my mother. On the inside, I was dying.

Early the next morning, I groggily wandered into the living room, perhaps armed with a holiday-only version of the sixth sense. There was really no reason for me to get up so early, as it had long been established that there would be no extra presents on Christmas morning.

And yet, there they were. A bunch of things under the tree. Wonderful things. Things that weren't wrapped, but simply placed in plain view. Board games, an Inhumanoids figure, and yes...Coleco's ALF doll. COLECO'S. ALF DOLL.

I guess it wasn't really a miracle, but it sure felt like one. I thanked my parents. I thanked my sister, even though she had nothing to do with it. I thanked Santa, because why not? ALF was mine. No longer limited to thirty minutes a week with my favorite being on this or any planet, I tugged that doll around as if it was my conjoined twin, and to this day, it's the only stuffed animal I've ever been proud of owning.

As seen above, ALF arrived in an extremely cool spaceship-themed cardboard box. Look at that doll and look at that box. Picture them in mint condition. Now picture them unwrapped under the holy glow of a lit tree at dawn on Christmas morning. Total magic.

From his curious tuft of light brown hair to his awesome Tic Tac teeth, getting my stupid ALF will always rank among my favorite Christmas memories. Everybody gets their own Red Ryder BB Gun moment, and this was mine. What was yours?

Posted by Matt on 12/15/2008. E-mail me!



Discussion Thread: 232 comments

My best one came last year, after a third tough year in a row. That was the year one of my cats was killed and the other lost his kidney function because of the pet food recall, and I had to ask for help to afford to keep the surviving cat who had been my best friend for 15 years.

Well one day at the end of November a surprise package arrived with a return address and name I didn’t recognize. When I opened it, I found out bunch of guys I had just met who were from my state on TFW…had sent me a Masterpiece Starscream, an expensive toy I’d wanted for years but would never be able to afford, just because they wanted to make me feel better. I actually cried for half an hour after I got home. :’) This year, he’s holding the angel over my three mini nativity scenes.

As to the other question, I guess it would be my Good Luck Care Bear back when I was 15. And it did show up under the tree. The last toy my parents ever bought me, because they didn’t indulge my TF obsession. And, of course, its still with me.

Chestnuts roasted by Moony @ 12/15/2008 2:36 AM


I remember a very long time ago, trying to convince my parents, that my birthday was way more important than some bearded dude we had never met.

So on my birthday I received a Junk Yard Dog and a Roddy Piper LJN figure, just 2 figures, I was disappointing, but they were my favorite 2 wrestlers, so that was cool.

I got hooked on wrestling from collecting wrestling stickers in bags of chips, and it became an all encompassing passion for me. I lived it, breathed it. Saturday morning cartoons meant nothing compared to Saturday Nights Main Event. I cant fathom how aggravating this must have been for my parents.

And then came Christmas. The days, weeks, months leading up to Christmas was filled with me leaving catalogs and WWF magazines lying open to toy sections with all my favorite wrestlers circled. Tuning into wrestling programs and trying to have serious conversations with my father about “Macho Man” Randy Savage and George “The Animal” Steele. Literally jumping up and down in joy because a WWF toy commercial came on TV so my parents could see exactly what I meant. They could see the awesomeness for themselves.

On Christmas morning I made my way to the living room and saw a number of large boxes with my name on them…
The first box, a half dozen wrestling figures, I was delighted even though there was an SD Jones and a Corp. Kurshner in there. Next box, another half dozen wrestling figures, a new box and another half dozen. Box after box of wrestling figures… every single carded wrestler available up to that point. Dozens of them, Managers, Tag-Teams and the ring too.

If I won a million dollars in the lottery, it could only equal that day. That day there wasn’t a thing left I could even dream about having, cause I had it.

Hands down that was the best, most memorable Christmas/Gift ever. Even my Mom clearly remembers my Dad running from store to store for weeks before Christmas, with a checklist, hunting down every figure that he knew was available.

Chestnuts roasted by goblin22 @ 12/15/2008 2:43 AM


Good question, Matt. I think my oft-repeated N64 gift gets a mention here. I has wanted an N64, but a year or so passed when I realized that I was too poor to buy one, and I thought that my parents were too cheap to get it. I had confided in the fact that it would never be mine.

But what happened on that fateful day? Well, one seemingly random present was an extra N64 controller. I got confused and my parents lied and told me that it was probably for the kid across the street. Not a few minutes later…it happened.

Yes, my friends, I was belted by the “surprise gift that we hid in the kitchen cabinet” routine and inside that enormously wrapped box was none other than an N64. My reaction was something akin to that “Little kid freaking out at getting an N64″ video, but I had a much more subdued reaction.

More on another actual “wanted and got” gift when it’s not 2AM with a final that I have to take tomorrow.

Chestnuts roasted by Invader Norbert @ 12/15/2008 2:56 AM


While that Christmas commercial channel on Youtube reminded me of my deep obsession with pink-dressed barbies, there is only one gift I ever wanted more than my first CD player- my cabbage patch doll.
I was desperate to have one and told my mom every day starting at Halloween that it was what I wanted. I totally believed that I wasn’t going to get one because that year (maybe 1988? ’87?) they were ridiculously hard to find. I remember trying to be really patient while my brothers were opening presents and trying not to loose it on x-mas day if I didn’t get one. I think I didn’t even pee without that doll for half a year.

Chestnuts roasted by poptarthero @ 12/15/2008 2:57 AM


I got a pony.

Seriously. Every little girl’s dream.

After that, I don’t think I ever felt the need to specifically request anything for Christmas ever again.

http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v452/WriterMcKay/Alfie/AlfieXmas.jpg

Chestnuts roasted by Molly @ 12/15/2008 3:09 AM


Homina homina homina.

Mista Snowman cracked me up today!

By the way, my gift I never got was a Power Wheels :(

Chestnuts roasted by Woody @ 12/15/2008 3:10 AM


Oh, and in a weird twist of fate, I swear to you…that pony’s name was ALF. And no, I didn’t name him.

Chestnuts roasted by Molly @ 12/15/2008 3:16 AM


Wow, Molly! How long did you have him?

Chestnuts roasted by Moony @ 12/15/2008 3:22 AM


A friend of mine has the exact same ALF doll! We’re going to use it in one of our upcoming films!

Chestnuts roasted by JLD Films @ 12/15/2008 3:23 AM


Ten years, up until the day he died in April of ’06. He was the best pony in the history of EVER. Even if he was kind of insane and enjoyed using me as a shot put. He was so much fun – more like a giant dog than a pony.

Chestnuts roasted by Molly @ 12/15/2008 3:24 AM


Molly, I hate you. HateyouhateyouhateyouIwannapony.

Chestnuts roasted by Ariel @ 12/15/2008 3:24 AM


Ok, I feel bad for hating you now that I know it’s dead. But still. My grandfather wanted to buy me a pony when I was a kid, but my parents wouldn’t let him. The had some crazy idea about not letting me become a spoiled brat or something.

Chestnuts roasted by Ariel @ 12/15/2008 3:27 AM


2 favorite gifts that I got come to my mind for some reason and I can’t decide between them, so I’ll mention ‘em both:

The first was the He-Man figure “Modulok”. Hands down the coolest He-Man figure ever made. I just found out that Matt wrote a tribute to Modulok on this site already, so check it out if you have never heard of this wonderful toy. I remember going to the Service Merchandise store (is that chain even still around?) with my mom and making a point to do nothing but stare at the packaged figure on the rack for a good ten minutes so that she would get the hint that I REALLY wanted it for Christmas. She got the hint and I still have all of Modulok’s parts stored in a coffee can, along with the Multi-Bot figure that I got the following year.

The second was a game called “TORPEDO RUN”. This was technically a board game, but was part of the “floor war” series by Milton Bradley (of which this was apparently the only edition of the series ever made), which meant that it contained a gigantic cardboard ocean gameboard too big for the table so that it had to be placed on the floor. Each player set up plastic battleships on one half of the board and then the players raced to “sink” their opponent’s ships by firing plastic disks from submarines that would cause pieces of the enemy ships to “explode” through the magic of spring-loaded technology. I absolutely loved playing this game with friends and family and played it for years until everything finally fell apart due to wear and tear from heavy use. Good times!

Chestnuts roasted by Benjamin @ 12/15/2008 3:43 AM


Benjamin: That sounds like an AWESOME game!

Chestnuts roasted by ULTRAMAN @ 12/15/2008 3:51 AM


My parents wouldn’t let us play video games “because they rot your brain.” So I didn’t get the SNES I wanted, or later, the N64. Oh, we had PC’s though. Dubious as the whole brain rot excuse was, I guess the kids with SNES didn’t learn DOS. So that was something.

The other big one was the Creepy Crawler maker. I asked for it two years in a row. I was so jealous of the kid in my second grade class who walked around with his pockets full of homemade rubber bugs. I ended up buying it myself with Christmas money from my grandpa after he moved away. I’m pretty sure I didn’t stop playing with it until sometime in my freshman year of high school.

The past few years, Christmas and birthday, I’ve been asking for a new flash and lithium battery for my old Canon Rebel.

My parents enjoy giving the gift of LL Bean. Always have.

Chestnuts roasted by hobbitsubculture @ 12/15/2008 3:51 AM


That fondue looks gross.

There was one year I asked for a miniaturized version of the big light rail trains that ran through the city. I had been told Santa’s elves could make anything and I wanted to take advantage of it. Mom didn’t have much fun trying to track that nonexistent item down. There was a Pound Puppies train under the tree instead, but my faith in Santa was unshaken for a couple more years.

The best thing I ever got, though, I never really asked for.

Chestnuts roasted by Mars @ 12/15/2008 4:17 AM


Like Matt, we also celebrated christmas at midnight on Dec 24. The 25th was pretty boring and meaningless, aside from the morning where as Matt said, there would be a couple unwrapped toys under the tree.
In 6th grade, I really really wanted the Sega Game Gear with the Lion King game included. I hinted for months and months to my parents that it would be awesome if I had it and would always go to the electronic section of stores so they could see me eying it. Sadly, on Christmas Day of 1994 I was very disappointed to find nothing, nothing or a bike helmet, I forget. I was heartbroken and angry at my parents though I could not show it for fear of a lashing with the extension chord. Later I saw that the Lion King game sucked and I didn’t feel bad, this would me much later however.

When I was five I really wanted a Disneyland castle with Mickey and Co. that opened up and you could play in the rooms and even had an elevator. On Xmas Eve I unwrapped it and remember feeling overjoyed… ahh to be a kid again.

Chestnuts roasted by WolfMan @ 12/15/2008 4:45 AM


We did the presents at midnight too. I remember there was one year when we waited till morning. It was weird, to say the least.

I don’t really remember WANTING anything a whole bunch. I’m positive I wrote a Christmas list every year when I was little, but I have no idea what was on it. It probably involved the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, since my life used to revolve around them. And I think one year, we asked for that giant Mighty Max castle, and we didn’t get that, but we did get a Mighty Max island that looked like a dragon head. That was pretty cool.

I’m trying to remember what my favorite Christmas presents of all time were and I’m having a tough time, because I always forget where all my possessions came from. I remember being really happy with that big Crayola plastic briefcase of crayons. I loved coloring, and keeping my colors organized. I was also really happy to get Michael Crichton’s The Lost World, the year that came out in hardcover. I think the Jurassic Park books are the only real books I’ve read more than once.

Now that I’m in my 20′s, my mom never seems to know what to get me. And my brother usually just looks in my Amazon Wish List and gets me graphic novels. I remember my first few graphic novels were all Christmas presents, which I loved. Batman: Year One, JLA: Tower of Babel, Kingdom Come, and Watchmen. My tastes haven’t matured much over the years.

Chestnuts roasted by Diego @ 12/15/2008 5:05 AM


I really have a terrible memory when it comes to my childhood, so much so that other than a few events that stand out, I sometimes doubt I actually existed before the age of 12 (which is when I got my first personal CD player for my birthday, btw). So I don’t have any strong memories of wanting things for Christmas, except for a Vermont Teddy Bear. Which I did get one year, from my grandmother. Only, the one she picked out for me (since I hadn’t specified a particular bear) was a princess. With a very fancy dress that I was certain would get dirty the minute I took her anywhere (and back then, I toted my stuffed animals all over the place). Plus, I was never really that into princesses (or ponies for that matter, although I did have a fair share of My Little Ponies, but that was it), so I didn’t connect with her the way I did with most of my plush toys (seriously, I used to write out a schedule after each Christmas so I could spend quality time with all my new stuffed animals).

Chestnuts roasted by Evalana @ 12/15/2008 5:38 AM


This is a two parter, but both are really good.

First, the crackers. I LOVED crackers. But I mainly loved them cause of the sound they made, and the present was a small bonus. But one year, like 15 years ago, I got teeny-tiny red address book (yes, small enough to fit in a cracker). ‘Whatever’ I thought, but kept it around and started putting all my really important info (like girlfriends birthdays and stuff) in it. Fast-forward to now. That lil red book has been lost, driven over, stolen, and washed twice. Yet is still in ledgable shape and I STILL use it. Goes to show, don’t underestimate those crackers. One just might change your life.

Oh, and I really really wanted one year a huge lego castle. But wound up with a dinky lego pirate cove. So I bought lego knights and stuck them in the pirate cove.

Chestnuts roasted by Eggnoggy @ 12/15/2008 5:44 AM


Voltron! i did get him but straight out of the box the yellow lion’s head fell to the floor, needless to say it took 2 weeks for the k mart it came from to get in more for an exchange! Also this christmas my mom has ordered me a toyami version! i’m 27 and I AM GETTING TOYS FOR CHRISTMAS!!! (yeah toys as in plural)

Chestnuts roasted by zorn @ 12/15/2008 6:04 AM


I’ve always been, and always will be a Christmas dayer. And by that I mean someone who waits until Christmas day to open their gifts. Iv’e always thought that if you wait until Christmas day to open them, your doubling yur fun. By doin it on Christmas Eve, your making the actual day pretty boring for yourself. But that’s me. =)

Chestnuts roasted by ULTRAMAN @ 12/15/2008 6:04 AM


The thing I wanted the most for christmas when I was younger was this bizarre washing machine toy. i think the aim was to throw plastic clothes into it while it was spinning. Not got a clue why I wanted it, but I never got it. :/

The best present I ever got for christmas was my saxophone. :D

xXx

Chestnuts roasted by Katie @ 12/15/2008 7:30 AM


My wants were kinda different. the thing I wanted most and never got were tickets to see Motley Cru.

Chestnuts roasted by punkass1 @ 12/15/2008 8:23 AM


The PS2. Definitely

Chestnuts roasted by ReasonablyCleverGuy @ 12/15/2008 8:37 AM


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