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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

oh yeah. my favorite present just happens to be this years. a one of a kind 1965 German pinball machine. the magic of eBay. :)

Chestnuts roasted by punkass1 @ 12/15/2008 8:38 AM


Probably a tossup between NES and Castle Greyskull.
I really wanted (and got) Unicron,too,but that was only like 5 years ago!

Chestnuts roasted by Kid Nicky @ 12/15/2008 8:47 AM


Growing up in the 80s the holy grail of toys for boys was indeed the original NES. Other than that, I have a very fond memory of receiving Snake Mountain one Christmas. I must have driven my parents crazy talking into its echo microphone for the next week straight.

Chestnuts roasted by Clockwork @ 12/15/2008 9:06 AM


I know some families that do the opening-presents-at-midnight-thing, but I just seems wrong to me (no offence Matt). Part of the whole Christmas deal is rolling half asleep downstairs to the tree at the crack of dawn on the 25th, to see what loot Santa has (or hasn’t) brought you this year.

Anyway – every year I list my favourite Christmas present even received as Castle Grayskull. Surely I don’t need to go through how awesome it is here.

In keeping with that theme, the next year all I wanted was Snake Mountain. After all, I had Grayskull for He-Man and the gang to hang out in, now I needed a base for Skeletor and his Evil Warriors.
Being a playset, it was way too big a gift to pull on an ordinary ‘you’ve been good, you can buy a toy’ whim. The only chance I had was to ask for it for Xmas.

…But I never got it. Seemingly, over the course of the year after receiving Grayskull, my parents had decided that “I had outgrown such toys” (hey, I was about SEVEN at the time!!), and I seem to recall that year’s present haul was a load of nice-but-not-things-I’d-ever-askeed-for stocking fillers.

I never did get Snake Mountain, until years later, when I started seriously collecting all things Masters Of The Universe on the second hand / ebay / etc. market. Now I have two of every figure ever made (bar the super rare Laser Lights and Giants), and finally have my own Snake Mountain. It’s every bit as good as I had imagined all those years ago.

…Sorry for the long post, got caught up in memories!! =p

Chestnuts roasted by Jay Firestorm @ 12/15/2008 9:23 AM


My parents convinced me that they couldn’t afford to get me a train set. (I’m not 50, who knows why I wanted a train set!)

Anyway, it was official that I wasn’t getting one. But Christmas morning “Santa” had delivered me a train set. Not just a train set, but a super awesome one that had been nailed down to this huge piece of wooden board. It would never come apart!

It was awesome and totally convinced me that Santa Claus was 100% real for many years. Getting rid of any doubts I had, because he’d delivered an impossible gift!

Chestnuts roasted by Newt @ 12/15/2008 9:28 AM


I was one of the lucky ones, in that I had parents that wanted to spoil me, and spoil me they did. I would wake up Xmas morning to find box upon box of action figures under the tree. I don’t know how they did it, but my parents would usually buy the entire line of figures for me. Supernaturals, Visionaries, Starcom..I had most of them in one crack. And to think that I don’t have a single one of them left now…*sigh*

There are two presents that stick out in my mind as being my favorites. The first was the original NES. My brat neighbor had one when they first came out,and he made sure I knew it. My parents knew how much I wanted one, so a couple years later, I woke up Xmas morning and found an NES waiting for me. Remember the video of that kid opening the N64, I imagine that’s how I was.

The second favorite gift was a surprise, as I’d never asked for it. I was opening presents when I came across a box of .410 shotgun shells. I didn’t own a gun, so I figured my mom mislabeled a gift for my dad. Right then, my dad went around the tree and pulled out a long box and handed it to me. Inside was a little .410 single shot shotgun. In a way, that’s still my favorite gift I’ve ever received, and I wish I still had it.

Chestnuts roasted by Stunt Double @ 12/15/2008 9:48 AM


I got the Game Boy, Xmas 1989, and it was glorious.

One of the more obscure and desperately yearned for gifts that I eventually received was the official Galoob Inspector Gadget action figure. This was likely 1985 or so when I received its glory. Just as Inspector Gadget was no ordinary ’80s franchise, the Inspector Gadget figure was no ordinary toy. This thing was stacked: about eight inches tall, and loaded with the features one would hope and pray the lord of toydom would bestow upon any child’s play thing. His neck and arms telescoped, his hat would hold his extra arm or even better, his hot pink helicopter with handlebars, his feet were springs, and he came with a mallet and handcuffs.

http://bp3.blogger.com/_FQNdkocpgx8/R1nKFYrT0zI/AAAAAAAABHg/Typ6RLQEmkM/s1600-h/Inspector_Gadget.jpg

This was the toy to end most toys; Galoob went much further than necessary to create an amazing three-dimensional representation of a cartoon character from, in a sea of much more popular ’80s cartoons, marginal at best in its popularity.

I was completely psyched to receive this toy, and it was likely at most two months before every accessory was permanently lost and the toy itself was tossed to the depths of some unknown childhood closet horrors. I don’t have the slightest clue what happened to it, but I definitely remember the excitement I had over the impending hope of receiving it and the climax of seeing it under the tree that year.

Chestnuts roasted by Carpeteria @ 12/15/2008 9:57 AM


The one that I remember the best as really really wanting was the game genie. I didn’t have Nintendo power and for those of you who are younger you have to remember that this was before the internet so I was stuck trying to beat all my games based only on my own skill (very unfair). At that point my brother and I had a ton of NES games and gone as far as we possibly could in most of them so getting a game genie would be like getting a ton of NES games because we could finally get to higher levels and see the endings with invicibility and extra lives codes. I think it universal that every parent mess with their kids on christmas at least once, especially when they are being so annoying about how bad they want something and my parents chose this toy to do it with. I was already nervous because he-men and g.i. joes i asked for were a given but NES games were expensive so there was always a chance I wouldn’t get them. So on christmas day there was no game genie under the tree, my dad even saw I was disappointed and took my aside and said he was sorry but it was too expensive. So now that I was 100% sure I wasn’t getting it and became Ralphie, I put my best face on and tried to enjoy what I had going, then my dad asked how our christmasses were and I said good, and then he said that this was a magical christmas tree and reached into the tree where he had hidden one last gift which was of course the game genie and christmas was saved, except for the fact that we would then go to both grandparents houses on christmas day I wouldn’t get to play with anythign till the next day.

Chestnuts roasted by Rob @ 12/15/2008 10:23 AM


Millenium Falcon. Millenium Fuckin’ Falcon. That thing haunted my dreams that entire year. I lived and breathed that glorious toy spaceship, imagining all the endless adventures I’d have with my Luke and Han action figures. I begged my mom and dad day and night for the damn thing. It MUST have been impossible to find that year, because my parents basically broke it to me that they couldn’t find it, a rare breakdown in Christmas secrecy protocol. I figured a Christmas miracle would take place, and it would be under the tree on Christmas morning. But, alas, no Falcon. No rotating radar dish. No swiveling gun turrets. It’s hard for me to admit, but it STILL stings today, over 20 years later, that I never got my dream gift.

When Star Wars toys had a resurgance a few years back, and they re-released the Falcon, my mom and dad bought me one, kind of as a makeup gift. It’s cool, and I keep it in my house, but it doesn’t quite make up for that one Christmas.

Chestnuts roasted by tanta07 @ 12/15/2008 10:31 AM


Oh, and as a follow-up to the Millenium Falcon Christmas, I’ve recently taken notice of the ridiculously over-the-top Millenium Falcon currently being sold at Target for about $150. The thought keeps crossing my mind that maybe buying this uber-Falcon would heal the wounds from never getting it as a kid. Then I quickly realize that there really isn’t any rational reason to buy a $150 Millenium Falcon.

Chestnuts roasted by tanta07 @ 12/15/2008 10:41 AM


I don’t remember how old I was, but one year I was crazynuts for something called Hit Stix, these drumsticks on wires attached to a little speaker you could clip to your belt. When you hit them on things, or–and this was the thing that to me seemed like some kind of futuristic technology, doubtless retroengineered from the Roswell crash–even if you just waved them in the air, hitting them on nothing at all, they made a terrible clicking sound vaguely like a snare drum.

Can you believe it? Drumsticks that worked by magic! HOORAH! At last, I would have the power to make an unpleasant sound by just waving one thing around in the air, saving me from the tedium of having to bang two things together.

I constantly announced to anyone who would listen, and many who wouldn’t, that I wanted these Hit Stix for Christmas. I’m sure I even mentioned it to a department store Santa. And lo and behold, on Christmas morning I actually got the things. I was absolutely delirious with excitement. No one in the history of man’s endeavors had ever been as thrilled about anything as I was about these Hit Stix. I turned them on and waved them around: Clickity clickty click. Joy!

After about two hours, I never played with them again.

Chestnuts roasted by Eric @ 12/15/2008 10:53 AM


When Mork & Mindy was a popular show(especially before jumping the shark with the marriage and baby),I begged for Mork & Mindy merchandise. I especially wanted the talking Mork doll. I got not only that, but Mork & Mindy toys, candy, coloring books and other small figures. My parents had a pretty good radar when it came to stuff I wanted.

When E.T. came out, same thing. I begged for an E.T. doll, and when I got it on Christmas morning, he became MY inseparable little alien companion until the weird faux-leather skin began to disintegrate.

But I think the best Xmas present I ever received was my doll house.I think I was 6 or 7 when I got it. It was a kit that my parents(back when they were married and made a great team) assembled and decorated together, working on it up until the last minute to get it perfect. Several little dolly families came and went in that house, as well as tiny teddy bears and action figures, and it was truly a special, heartfelt gift that fueled my little imagination for years afterward.

Chestnuts roasted by Puppatoons @ 12/15/2008 11:04 AM


I was old enough to just miss the era of video games. (The “Computer Age” intersected my education for just one semester. For my last semester in college, 1984, I wrote my papers on my dad’s Commodore 64; used a dot matrix printer.)

Up until that time in “modern history”, my brother and I built model planes and tanks. I usually built the planes, and my brother the tanks. Mostly WW2 stuff. We even used them for animated movies we made with our Super 8 movie camera. (I think you can search the net to learn about those!)

I was never a great artist. I always envied people who could sketch cartoons or faces or paint flowers and such. So my artistic outlet was building these models. And models were cool to get even when I was in high school.

So: BEST PRESENTS EVER. Part of me wants to go back to 6 or 7 when I got a slot car set. But that was gone in a few months. I think the time for me when Christmas was special as 13, 14, 15 years old. You’re old enough to really understand all the nuances of Christmas. But you still were just a kid and got attached to your presents. For a few years, my “feature gift” would be a really large scale model airplane. When I was 15 I got a B-17. I think it was by Revell, but it was the “Chow Hound” for those of you who used to build them. The day after Christmas, I got up at 7:00AM, and worked straight through until 2:00AM. I mean, I stopped for lunch, and I had to wait for some parts to dry and all that. But by 15 years old I was really good at building models. I was also the type of guy who would fully paint and detail the interior despite the fact that no one would ever see the inside. The thing is, I would know the interior was painted. By the time I got done with this after 20 straight hours of work, it looked awesome! I remember the moment I got the final parts on, whatever they were, and I set it down, stood back and looked upon it. I had one of those transcendent moments all model builders want; for a fleeting second, I felt like I was looking at an old WW2 photo of a B-17 rolling off the line at the Boeing plant.

Eight or nine years later, I got a grown up job, and moved away from home. In my first small, garden apartment, there was not much room. I took my star models with me. But as time in the new apartment went by, little pieces were breaking off, and I did my best to keep them together.

But then, I had to move, and the living quarters would be much smaller, and I just knew these beauties of mine would not survive the move. And if they did, I would have absolutely no where safe to put them. I just pictured them coming apart, and dying a humiliating death, piece by piece. So I decided that these Warbirds needed a proper sendoff into eternity. At the time I lived in Lemoyne, which is right across the river from Harrisburg, PA. Somehow, I borrowed the neighbor kid’s little red wagon. I put my planes in the wagon and walked down to the Walnut Street foot bridge that goes across the Susquehanna River to City Island. I was really choking up, thinking of all the childhood memories connected with these models. Think of all the fun you have playing video games with your brother. Well, you can say once the TV is off, there is no remnant of that fun. Here, in the wagon, was the distilled essence of what I did during my childhood with my brother.

Walking to the bridge, I thought of those WW2 documentaries again. You see the U.S. airplanes getting destroyed in 2 ways. One way is in glorious combat, going high, and falling hard. The other image in my mind was those films where they have all the P-47′s and P-51′s, and they’re chopping them up and melting them down. I decided on the former to give my planes one shot at The Sky.

I got to the bridge, totally uncaring about what people might think of what I was about to do. I was having “a moment” and didn’t care. The first one I sent off was my P-38 Droop Snoot with the invasion stripes. It went first cuz I lost one of the props a while before. The remaining prop actually spun as it did a slow bank to the right, into the drink.

The next one was my huge-ass B-29 Enola Gay. I took the A-Bomb out of the bay, the “Little Boy”, as a souvenir. The bomb that I actually loaded with one of my dad’s .45 caliber bullets. That’s right you bastards, that atomic bomb in my plane was actual live fucking ordnance!

Then the Red Baron’s Tri-Decker Fokker. I kept the Red Baron from that one.

A few more memories went into the river, but the last one was my F-4 Phantom. The pilot was long gone, but the Radar Intercept Officer in the back seat was still inside. So that plane was going to fly into Glory getting shot down over Hanoi, and plunging into Haiphong Harbor. I ejected the Back Seat Guy, and sent the Phantom off with the biggest toss of them all. That thing actually glided for a bit, did a slight climb, and then a perfect roll onto it’s back, then nosed into the drink.

Click the link below to see a video of Baron Von Richthofen on my workbench. The guy from the F-4 is still somewhere in my stuff, but I couldn’t find him.

Oh yeah, I think when I threw that last plane off the bridge, I think I mumbled, “Rosebud.”

Chestnuts roasted by Alexander @ 12/15/2008 11:20 AM


i have 2 alfs i got one in edmonton and one i bought at value villlage

Chestnuts roasted by kyle @ 12/15/2008 11:38 AM


Outside of fireball island, i would say the nintendo 64. I remember how hard they were to find. I really did not think I would get one. This was before the day of game stop and pre orders. My mom some how got her hands on one. I was the only kid that was able to get one of these for Christmas. This led to many late late nights.

Chestnuts roasted by fireballislandsurvivor @ 12/15/2008 11:39 AM


The only big items I ever really wanted was Voltron. My aunts and uncles all split up to get me each of the pieces, so while visiting that side of the family, I ended up being able to form the entire robot.

Prior to that, I saw kids at school with them, who I felt didn’t deserve them. Most didn’t know how to play with them properly, while me who knew the Yellow lion had those secret ear flaps, was without. Once I got it finally, I’d bring it to school and finally join the kindergarten cool club.

Eventually I let my cousin have it, since I naively thought I would get it back, but that’s the last I saw of it. Thought about rebuying it on ebay, but cost aside, it just doesn’t feel right unless it’s the original one I had.

I do still have ALF. It’s my brother’s, but it’s in the parent’s attic, along with the other 20 years of memories.

Chestnuts roasted by Dann @ 12/15/2008 11:41 AM


I tell you what I wanted.

I wanted the original Dinozord Megazord.

Back then, it was just The Megazord. The one. The ‘only’ one. And holy shit goddamn, did it look awesome on television.

I wanted this thing more than High School O6 wanted to get laid. This was it! The Fucking Megazord! And it was gonna be the greatest toy ever.

So Christmas came that year. We were at my grandmother’s, on my father’s side. And in comes my aunt with this Hugeass Gift. And I know what it totally is. It’s gotta be it. The Fucking Megazord. Nothing else could be this big and cool, right?

So I tear open the wrapping paper, and I look at the box, and I read it, because I could kind of read back then. I was like four. At least, I think I could read. Maybe. I dunno. Maybe I could just *tell* by looking at it.

My aunt, bless her heart, had gotten me the giant ‘radio-controlled’ Megazord. It was just a big solid block of the combined robot form, and you controlled it with a wire and little remote thing.

It sucked, and I cried.

I did not get the Fucking Megazord.

Alright, maybe that doesn’t seem so bad, but you’re underestimating how badly I wanted this thing and how horribly I was scarred by not getting it. I wanted it so bad that I continued to ask for it for ‘years’ afterwards, more as an aside than anything else. I never got the damn thing and I Wanted It, so I asked, on the offchance they’d somehow get one and get it to me.

However, every subsequent time that a Megazord came out, all the way up through Turbo, I got it. Well, almost. Somehow the Zeo Megazord slipped through the cracks, probably because I was fading out of PR fandom by then.

But even though I didn’t like PR too much…I ‘still’ wanted The Fucking Megazord. This thing became my Holy Grail of toys.

And then Early eBay came along, and my father got in on it. Not unlike Matt himself, here, my father was frequently going to places, buying up crap, and selling it for thrice what he paid. And eventually, the idea popped into my head–Hey, this thing’s got to have old toys on it too, right?

So I asked. And I received. My father bought a lot of The Fucking Megazord and a Dragonzord for probably something like twenty bucks. I even needed the new Dragonzord anyway since I had broken my first one.

I finally had it. The Fucking Megazord. And that sucker stood proudly on my shelves for a decade afterwards or something, until I moved again. Now, well, he sits in a box because I don’t have anywhere to display him currently, because there’s a ton of Transformers everywhere.

And that’s my story about Christmas.

Chestnuts roasted by Onslaught Six @ 12/15/2008 11:44 AM


Sweet copy of Lake Placid 2 on the shelf, BTW.

Chestnuts roasted by Marion Cobretti @ 12/15/2008 11:56 AM


When I was younger my grandma would get those dumb catalogs full of random crap and me and my brother would circle all the stuff in them that we wanted at thanksgiving so she could order everything for us. One of the grails every year was the set of 100 random comic books! that they had Every year me and my brother would dutifully flip to that page and circle it with the biggest brightest pen we had. One year, I think I was about 10 maybe, I finally got it. I opened up my package and saw the glorious comics books, but wait, it seems like there isn’t nearly enough books in here to equal 100….I counted them out, there were probably about 30. That whole weekend my brother and I searched the house under the dillusion that my grandma was hiding the remaining books somewhere for a future date. By the end of the weekend we had found them, in the burn barrel, destroyed. I was so bummed out. Apparently My grandmother had personally flipped through each one to make sure there wasn’t any vulgar words or gore and destroyed the ones that did. I still lose sleep thinking about what great comics I missed out on.

Chestnuts roasted by ole\' greenie @ 12/15/2008 12:08 PM


The thing I can remember wanting for Christmas with every fiber of my being was a Magic Nursery Pet, specifically the cat. It was essentially a furry baby doll whose species would not be revealed until you had opened the package and pull its ears out of the small grooves atop the head. You could either get a bear, bunny, cat, or dog. Now I knew full-well that no one could control which one I actually got, as the whole point was for it to be a surprise. But I can remember literally praying to God that A. I would get one for Christmas, and B. that it would turn out to be a kitty. Well, I got one- but it ended up being a bear-_- Major disappointment. I technically got what I wanted, but in a way I didn’t. Click my name to see a picture of this beast.

Favorite gift ever? My record player. It’s the last gift my father ever gave me and I love it to pieces. After all, if you’re not listening to Black Sabbath on vinyl- you’re not listening to Black Sabbath.

Chestnuts roasted by Cheetara @ 12/15/2008 12:19 PM


One of the best was probably when I actually got a GameBoy, the original, back when it first came out. I got it on Christmas Eve and it was awesome.

Merry Christmas X-E!

Chestnuts roasted by Fox @ 12/15/2008 12:23 PM


I was just sitting here thinking about some of the other Xmas presents I’ve received, and thought of a rather obscure one. Does anyone else remember the board game, The Omega Virus? It was about a rampant computer virus, and you had to track it down without getting killed. It came with this voice box thing that would give you clues on where it was. I can never seem to find anybody else that remembers it, let alone someone that has played it.

Chestnuts roasted by Stunt Double @ 12/15/2008 12:39 PM


I loved my dolls like children. In fact, when I’d get a new doll for Christmas or my birthday, I’d lay in bed with it that night, imagining that I was in the hospital with new baby I had just brought into the world. One year, the Best Catalog showed up, and in the toy section was a “Real Baby”. It was one of the first baby dolls made to look like an actual newborn. This would take my fantasies to a whole new level. It was all I could talk about getting for Christmas. I even picked out a name for her. On Christmas morning, I bolted out of the room and, lo and behold, Santa had left her for me, sitting on top of the wrapped gifts from Mom and Dad. I called her by name as soon as I saw her, ran to her, and scooped her in my arms. I took her pretty much everywhere I went for about two years. Most loved gift ever.

The thing I still remember asking for and not getting? Barbie Loves McDonald’s. It was so amazingly detailed.

One of the worst stings ever? I made a Christmas list one year, and had two larger gifts on it. One I can’t remember, but the other was Dixie’s Diner. It was incredible. Again, the detail was amazing, right down to little ceramic diner mugs for the dolls. I wanted this thing bad. Apparently, my grandparents thought it was cute too, but since they were already buying me the other forgettable thing on my list, decided to go ahead and get this and give it to my little sister. When she opened it, I swear I almost cried. It wasn’t so much out of jealousy, but out of frustration, because I knew she didn’t care and wouldn’t appreciate it. Sure enough, she promptly lost most of the pieces, broke pieces off of the diner, and misplaced most of the dolls’ clothing. Worst yet, it turned out to be highly collectible, and that stuff costs a pretty penny on eBay these days. It still hurts to think about it. I still can’t believe they’d give a notoriously irresponsible and destructive kid something so fragile and awesome. That wound may never heal.

Chestnuts roasted by Lori @ 12/15/2008 1:15 PM


Christmas in the Lemur Household was a somewhat crazy affair when I was a kid. My father worked nights, and on the 23rd of every year, his company paid out unused “gear days” (kinda like personal days, but not really … it’s archaic and hard to explain) to give their employees a cash bonus. So every 23rd, my dad and older sister (ten years older than me) would head to Lionel Kiddie City to do the big toy shop for the holiday. We always got one “big” (read: expensive) present, a couple of cheaper toys, and the the socks and jeans and sweats every kid needs. My sister, you see, was the insurance policy making sure that the big gift/gifts were always exactly what was wanted. This system developed after my mother did the big toy shop and bought everyone what she thought they should want as opposed to what they actually wanted. I ended up with a Victorian doll house that year that required me to glue together roughly a million little wooden pieces. That thing never got finished. So, there rarely was a year in which the “big gift” was in doubt until my sister got married. But at that point, I was twelve and over Christmas and just wanted my Gameboy games and my Walkman so I could successfully ignore my family.

Chestnuts roasted by Lemur @ 12/15/2008 1:20 PM


First off, let me say that this advent calendar is an emotional rollercoaster.
Now that THAT is out of the way, let me say that my one christmas gift I always wanted as a child, but never received was the 2XL talking trivia robot. I’ve been told that is is basically a revamped Alphie robot. But in my day, 2XL was the shit, and I wanted it so bad, but my mom and dad apparently thought that it was too much of a boy toy to get it for me, and instead I was drowned in barbie dolls. The best gift I ever really got was probably my first bass guitar. I already knew I was getting it, because I had to go to the music store to pick it out, but I wasn’t allowed to play it until christmas, so the build up almost killed me.

Chestnuts roasted by Leigha @ 12/15/2008 1:27 PM


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