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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

I’d have to say my NES and SNES were the most wanted presents that I recieved, but the one that sticks out in my mind the most was a few years ago when my parents plopped the heaviest gift i’ve ever gotten into my lap and I had no idea what it was. It was the complete collection of the Far Side and it took me by surprise cause I apparently had just mentioned to my mother that I would love to have it not thinking that my parents would invest so much money in a book. I neglected my dads ability to find bargains online though.

Sure beats getting old and receiving tires for Christmas….even though I guess having tires beats sliding everywhere.

Chestnuts roasted by AdamB @ 12/15/2008 1:33 PM


Best Christmas present is a three-way tie.

1. U.S.S. Flagg
2. Castle Grayskull
3. Wrestling ring with Blue Cage

I loved being an only child growing up. I love the idea that 15 years later I got a brother to spoil and then a sister when I was 21. It is weird, but I love to give them stuff more than I used to love getting stuff…

Chestnuts roasted by BobbyA @ 12/15/2008 1:39 PM


Hands down the best gift I ever received was the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles sewer playset. I can’t describe how much I wanted this set so the first year it came out I asked for it from Santa to assure that it would arrive. Santa was a sure thing, right? Wrong. I did not get the playset and instead received a note stating that the elves had not made enough of them that year to go around. I was obviously too young to comprehend that the real problem was an overwhelming demand on the set that escalated into parents fighting over them at Toys R Us. I waited with bated breath, and homeless turtles, until the next year when I again asked for the set. Thank Christ that I finally got it. The funny thing is that the wait actually made the set EVEN BETTER. I still remember putting on the stickers… it was the closest I have been to actual magic in my entire life.

Chestnuts roasted by drew do @ 12/15/2008 1:50 PM


Are christmas crackers not big in the US then? I’ve been pulling christmas crackers every christmas since I was a kid in the mid 80s. Your review made them sound like some new and exciting concept. Trust me, I’ve seen crackers with worse gifts than those. At my work’s chritmas party last week there gifts in the crackers that no one could even figure out what they were meant to be! I was always a fan of the mini playing cards and the superball which always ended up under the cupboard in the dining room by the end of christmas dinner. There must be hundreds of them down there!

Chestnuts roasted by KFR42 @ 12/15/2008 2:32 PM


definitley NES as the best EVAR gift. sat with the box in my lap the entire day!

Also, The one gift I had no clue I would get…original GameBoy! 1990. My brother and I wanted a super nintendo in 93, but my mom was all being a bitch and standing her ground that we had a NES and didn’t need TWO consoles. We eventually got it as a joint b day gift march 94.

Chestnuts roasted by mandy_Reeves @ 12/15/2008 2:40 PM


Best gift ever: the Millenium Falcon, X-Mas, 1980.

I also got one of those mini “Zaxxon” games that looked like a small stand-up arcade cabinet. That was pretty cool, but… the Falcon, baby!

Chestnuts roasted by Oliver @ 12/15/2008 2:44 PM


My favorite ever ended up being the KARATE KID ATTACK ALLEY.

There was a huge box under my Grandma’s tree for the whole month of December. What was it?

I was pretty sure I could fit inside the box if I was a little smaller. Was it a pet midget?

EVEN BETTER.

It was the Karate Kid Attack Alley.

For those of you who haven’t seen it, picture a KARATE CASTLE GRAYSKULL, where every door was break away so you could kick dudes through it. It also had a trap door that you could activate by kicking a pole, and POP OUT MOTORIZED(by rubber bands) ATTACK NINJAS.

I can’t express how cool this set is. It lasted me for years, even providing a backdrop for wrestling figure hardcore matches.

Anyways, love the site and blog, starting up my own, link is in my sig…

Chestnuts roasted by CornSwordPres @ 12/15/2008 2:48 PM


cmj: When buying plushes from thrift stores, I just take them home, tie them up in a pillow case and run them through a regular cycle in the washing machine. It doesn’t damage them and it makes you feel better about cuddling with something that a million other hands have touched.

Chestnuts roasted by Cheetara @ 12/15/2008 3:28 PM


I have one of those ALF plushes from what I believe was my 3rd or 4th birthday in which I had an ALF themed birthday party with ALF cake, ALF party cones and ALF balloons. I have photographic evidence, but I don’t have it scanned (at least not yet).

Chestnuts roasted by Palmerholic @ 12/15/2008 3:46 PM


Reading all ya’lls comments, I’ve come to realize just how spoiled I really was. I had almost all the toys that’ve been mentioned here. Voltron, Power Rangers Megazord, TMNT sewer playset etc. Another thing I got, that I REALLY LOVED, was Mortal Kombat Trilogy for the PS1! The idea of combining every MK ever(up to that point in time) in one game seemd so AWESOME to me! And when I popped it in to play, I was COMPLETELY blown away! I had a TOTAL BLAST playin it! The dream match ups I had always imagined between certain MK characters could now , finally, actually take place! I think this was in 96. Such memories. =)

Chestnuts roasted by ULTRAMAN @ 12/15/2008 3:59 PM


By far…the greatest Xmas gift I ever wanted/received was the G.I. Joe headquarters. I remember cutting the ad with picture out of the Sunday paper toys r us flyer in the summer and telling my folks that it was all I wanted for Christmas that year and they could even combine it with my birthday present…I thumb tacked the ad to my bedroom wall and essentially obsessed over it every day for six months. When Christmas finally came there it was, the box was enormous and heavy to boot. I remember my Dad and I assembled it that morning and enjoyed many hours of Cobra’s assaults on the headquarters. If I close my eyes I can remember how it felt in my hands and how it smelled. A strange combination of plastic and high quality wet’em and stick’em decal adhesive.

Chestnuts roasted by Scooter @ 12/15/2008 4:02 PM


The ONLY stuffed animal you’ve been proud to own? What about all the Bulba-quests?!?

Chestnuts roasted by Eddie Lightning Frog @ 12/15/2008 4:11 PM


HEY YEAH, what ABOUT the Bulba-quests?!?

Chestnuts roasted by ULTRAMAN @ 12/15/2008 4:25 PM


I loved ALF when I was a kid, and I too, mad an unrelenting obsession with him. I had like 4 of those damn things. THe original, the talking one, a small one, and one that I won at a fair back in Germany. AWESOME. (My parents still have the video they shot of me winning, and then picking out my ALF doll).

NO PROBLEMO.

I dragged that damn ALF doll all over the place.

I need to tear through my parents attic now to find my ALF dolls.

Chestnuts roasted by NintendoMan @ 12/15/2008 4:40 PM


When i was in kindergarten, i was desperate for a Rainbrow Bright doll. I really have no idea why…my favorite toys were Transformers and Robotech…yet here i was begging for a Rainbrow Bright doll. To this day i’m not sure what i thought was so awesome about them. Anyways, christmas day came, and i ran downstairs and ripped open the doll-shaped package under the tree…and it was a Mickey Mouse doll that talked when you pulled it’s string. What the fuck? Then i saw that there was a note attached to it from SANTA himself. The note said that although he was sorry, Santa’s workshop ran out of Rainbrow Bright dolls, and that he thought i would like this Mickey Mouse just as much. Well, of course i did, since Santa himself chose it for me. Years later i asked my parents if Rainbrow Bright had been unfindable that year, and my dad told me that Rainbrow Bright was very easy to find…he just couldn’t bring himself to buy a Rainbrow Bright doll for his first-born son. Damn, dad.

Six months later i got Optimus Prime for my birthday, so everything was just fine.

Chestnuts roasted by guidedbyvenkman @ 12/15/2008 4:46 PM


I love all of you people. Why are there no X-E conventions? My Alf Doll Christmas story is so similar to Matts that it’s uncanny. Don’t know about all of that midnight present opening though, that sounds amazing.

Also, I had the same thing going on with both Teddy Ruxpin, (who I didn’t get for years) and the Huey doll from DuckTales. Also Game Genie. Had to bring my A-game to get the Game Genie, holy shit did I.

Chestnuts roasted by Bartleby @ 12/15/2008 4:51 PM


Venkman, I’m a 26 year old guy. I’m writing to tell you that you are not alone and that I too, tried to get myself a rainbow bright doll one Christmas. I don’t know why Rainbow Brite is so fucking awesome, but she is, and our fathers should have understood that our asking for the doll was motivated out of love for a totally rad chick. Not the desire to change its makeup and have tea parties or whatever.

Now I wonder what other weird stuff we may have in common. When you were a kid, did you have a huge crush on Pippi Longstocking at any point?

Chestnuts roasted by Bartleby @ 12/15/2008 5:01 PM


Lori, that Dixie’s Diner story sounds so familiar. Did you post it here before? Or do I know you from somewhere?

Also, what did you name your baby? That story is so cute.

Chestnuts roasted by Molly @ 12/15/2008 5:04 PM


I had a Game Genie for the NES Super NES and Sega Genesis too. I also had a Teddy Ruxpin. Spoiled I tell ya, FLAT OUT SPOILED! lol.

Chestnuts roasted by ULTRAMAN @ 12/15/2008 5:05 PM


Sorry for the triple post, but I need to know, why is it weird to buy your son a Rainbow Brite doll and totally acceptable
to buy him something creepy like My Buddy? I mean really now.

Chestnuts roasted by Bartleby @ 12/15/2008 5:05 PM


Bartleby, I did not have a crush on Pippi Longstocking, but I DID have a massive childhood crush on David Bowie in Labyrinth.

Even then, I liked things a little freaky.

Chestnuts roasted by Rev. Back It On Up 13 @ 12/15/2008 5:25 PM


Well, that might not entirely be your fault. His crotch bulge in that movie is rumored to have eerie powers of persuasion. You may ask what I’m talking about. I’m talking about the bulge. The bulge with the power. The power of VooDoo.

Chestnuts roasted by Bartleby @ 12/15/2008 5:30 PM


Man I can’t wait for Dec 14th to get here already

Chestnuts roasted by Rob @ 12/15/2008 5:32 PM


Rev: David Bowie as The Goblin King was my first ever crush. Hell, I STILL have a crush on Bowie, and watching him in Labyrinth (my favorite movie ever, incidentally) makes me feel all happy in my pants.

Chestnuts roasted by Cheetara @ 12/15/2008 5:37 PM


well, my dad is a fairly easy going guy now…but when i was in kindergarten, he was pretty young, me being his first son and all…he was probably 27. Maybe he was just upset that i didn’t want a baseball mitt or something. I mean, i wasn’t even allowed to make a GUN OUT OF MY HAND when i played with the neighbor kids. yet, years later, my 14 year old brother asked for a blow-dart gun for christmas AND FUCKING GOT IT. People always think being the first born rules, but man, we get all the mistakes of parenting. I couldn’t see PG-13 movies until i was 13, but my brother got to see Predator when he was 8! Goddamn!

And no, i did not have a crush on Pippi Longstalking, but i did have a huge f-ing crush on Penny from Inspector Gadget. Or maybe i just really wanted her to share her computer book with me. I was only 5 or 6 after all…what does a crush really mean at that point? Computer book envy!

Chestnuts roasted by guidedbyvenkman @ 12/15/2008 5:42 PM


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