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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

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oh, and i second the idea of an x-entertainment convention is a very good one. i’ve only recently started posting on here, but i’ve loved this site for years. this is the only message board you can comment on and not expect someone to yell at you for something.

Chestnuts roasted by guidedbyvenkman @ 12/15/2008 5:47 PM


During my formative years, I was under the influence of crotch bulge voodoo.

That certainly explains a lot, now that I think about it.

Chestnuts roasted by Rev. Back It On Up 13 @ 12/15/2008 5:50 PM


in 1989, when I was 8 years old, I wanted a Little Mermaid doll so very, very badly. Her tail was removable! You could make her a mermaid, or a person, or some kind of hideous freak with a fishtail for a head! Now, as I had a marked preference for boys toys as a little girl, my parents were always keen to encourage me to play with girl’s toys, so I figured that getting Ariel was a dead cert.

So, at 5am on December 25th, 1989, after tearing open everything I found that I had not in fact gotten my Little Mermaid. And despite my other gifts, (which I no longer remember) I was still disappointed. And my parents were completely bewildered, as they had gotten me an Ariel doll, it just seemed to have vanished. My little brother also seemed to be missing presents, so my dad was sent to check ‘if Santa has left something behind’. All I knew was that I didn’t have my Ariel doll. But wait! My little sister had just unwrapped one! Had I committed an act so naughty that Santa had given my most-desired present to her instead?

Well, as it turned out, at the tender age of 5 my sister was already versed in the subtle art of treachery. She’d snuck downstairs before anyone else, and moved presents from the piles for me and my brother into hers, assuming that as Santa had brought them, nobody would be any the wiser. Unfortunately for her, ‘Santa’ knew who should be getting what present, so I got my Ariel doll after all and endless bathtime re-enactments of key scenes from the movie such as ‘oh god, who polluted the ocean with all this bubble bath?!’ were to follow.

Ariel was actually the last girl’s toy I ever asked for. The next year I wanted Heroquest, which tipped me onto a slippery slide leading directly to the pit of Games Workshop and Warhammer. I’ve yet to find my way out.

Chestnuts roasted by Jen @ 12/15/2008 5:55 PM


Oh! A Puffalump. Not just any Puffalump, but the sunny yellow-colored cat. I was delighted to get her on Xmas morn, despite the fact my dad found a whole new way to tease me by referring to my beloved toy as ‘Fluppeldump’.

Oh, and I also scored a Cabbage Patch Kid at the height of Cabbage Patch Mania. How my parents pulled that one off I’ll never know, but Gladys Belvia is still in my possession. Somewhere.

Chestnuts roasted by Indigo_X @ 12/15/2008 5:55 PM


I still have one of those ALFs, it’s sitting in my room. My younger brother was horrified of ALF for some reason, so ALF was my accomplish in crime for years.

Chestnuts roasted by Jordan @ 12/15/2008 6:00 PM


Christmas 1998. I woke up early Christmas morning only to find a single large box under the Christmas tree. I eagerly tore open the package to find an air conditioner box. I was confused and upset. My parents made up some lame excuse that Santa must have ran out of boxes and to see what was inside. To my utter amazement was nearly every Ninja Turtle figure and accessory released. Donatello, Leonardo, Splinter, Shredder, Rocksteady, Michaelangelo, Raphael, April, Foot Soldier, Bebop and the Cheapskate all in packaged, pristine glory. Christmas 1991 was magical with the SNES, Mario and Final Fight but it can’t beat the surprise of a box of Ninjas!

Chestnuts roasted by Daniel @ 12/15/2008 6:19 PM


Stopped by the Gallery to check up on things, get the newspaper that’s delivered here every day, and quickly dip into the internet.

Every year Matt asks, every year I reply with the same thing, but I will give three answers: the usual two, because I can’t tell about the best without telling the worst that I got the year before, and one of the ones I always wanted as a wee child.

The one I never got: Hugo, as mentioned above. Awesome guy.

Now, for those who haven’t been here before, here’s the setup.
The year: 1977. I was eight years old. The family unit was based in Oakland, California in those days, and we would make an occaional trip back to the Sooner State and have Christmas at the Childhood home of Ma, and we made it that year. We got some of the usual stuff, treat sacks, socks, small toys, the three presents for Little Brother and myself (one of our grandmas always gave three for reasons we never understood), and it was all good. Until….
Until it was time for the individual gifts from individual relations to others. I got a big package from one aunt, and I was excited because of the size. It was soft, it could have been a beach towel, a blanket, a jacket, anything would have been better than…
.
.
Toilet paper.
.
.
yes, toilet paper. For a eight year old boy who liked science, science fiction, Spider-Man, robots, building those little science kits that Radio Shack used to sell, stuff like that. Even now, no-one knows what the stupid idea behind that was. But the next year, Xmas back in Cali, I got a Shogun Warriors Great Mazinga. Wish I still had it.

Chestnuts roasted by kingklash @ 12/15/2008 6:31 PM


The gift that I wanted more than life itself, but never got was the Strawberry Shortcake house … not the little strawberry, the two story house that she moved into during one of the animated specials. At the time I was crushed that I never got it, but last year I saw the original ad for it on Wisbook.web & I am now adult enough to realize that $100.00 for a plastic house in 1985 (ish) was insane. Maybe one day Ebay will come through.

The best presents I remember getting was a stereo when I was in 7th grade & my American Girl “Molly” doll. I also used to get really excited by a 64 pack of Crayolas & Play-doh.

Chestnuts roasted by brs212 @ 12/15/2008 6:39 PM


ps: My brother & I got the ALFs for Valentine’s Day and they are both in a display place of honor in our basement rec room.

Chestnuts roasted by brs212 @ 12/15/2008 6:40 PM


kingklash, was grandma the religious sort? I know some families who give each kid three presents because, hey, it was good enough for Jesus.

Chestnuts roasted by Molly @ 12/15/2008 6:47 PM


Giving three gifts because of the three that were given to Jesus? That’s an interesting custom…

Already told my story, I’m just waffling on getting things done that need to be done the day before my trip…

Chestnuts roasted by Moony @ 12/15/2008 6:57 PM


I don’t really remember wishing for anything specific. My lists for Santa were always just some formality that my parents rarely abided by.

But I remember one Christmas morning, I woke up and went to the living room, and burst out in squeals Because Santa brought me Blinking Beauty!

Bow, Blinking Beauty was a Barbie horse. All white, with a beautiful mane that when you brushed it, the horse blinked its thick-lashed eyes!

I didn’t want it for my Barbie, oh no!
I was just enamored with horses.
When Rainbow Brite came out- I got Starlite instead of Rainbow Brite.

Chestnuts roasted by kittymao @ 12/15/2008 7:26 PM


brs212: I have that special on bootleg VHS (Strawberry Shortcake’s Housewarming Surprise) and God help me, I still love it.

Chestnuts roasted by Cheetara @ 12/15/2008 7:46 PM


I wanted She-Ra’s Crystal Castle SO BAD. I never did get it, but my best friend did so at least I got to play with it.

The toy I wanted more than anything and actually did get was the Jem and the Holograms KJem Radio Station playset that folded up into a guitar. Selling it in a garage sale is one of my life’s greatest regrets :(

Chestnuts roasted by fulgora77 @ 12/15/2008 7:46 PM


I love me some fondue. Anyone ever been to The Melting Pot? Best. restaurant. EVAR.

I used to love ALF. Never had any toys, had plenty of comics. I even wrote a letter to him and got an autographed photo. Man, I wish I knew where that thing was.

Best gift evar? Picture it: Greenville, Georgia, 1985, Christmas morning. I go into our den and there, under the tree, amidst all my secondary gifts, was the Nintendo Entertainment System. With the NES Zapper. With the stupid (yet awesome at that moment) R.O.B. accessory. And of course, Super Mario Brothers, Duck Hunt, and Gyromite. Maybe some other games, I don’t remember. The only thing that has come close to making me that happy was my iPod.

Chestnuts roasted by Teddy Ray @ 12/15/2008 7:51 PM


When I was seven, I got those damned American Girl Doll catalogs because they were ALL BRAND NEW ALL THE RAGE. I wanted one, and out of the three(!) they had then, I wanted Kirsten.. and all her accessories.

Christmas came and I got Kirsten…. and… Kirsten… Yep, just the doll. And I wasn’t allowed to take down her hair… so, she’s still in pristine condition. Nothing like a doll you can’t undress and can’t really play with to make a boring gift that you wanted OMG SO BADLY.

Chestnuts roasted by Cat the Vampire Slayer @ 12/15/2008 7:58 PM


I had several ALF things. The closest one to that doll was an ALF puppet from Pizza Hut; he has a chef’s hat, a spoon and an apron that says “Cooking with ALF.” It should still be in the closet somewhere.

Then there were three ALF storybooks: one story was Earth-based and had Kate in it, one was set on Melmac and the other was for some reason set in some kind of Earth/Melmac hybrid. They were all done by the same guy, go figure.

Chestnuts roasted by Mars @ 12/15/2008 8:22 PM


Rev.-

Your comment is as enigmative as it it horrendously disturbing.

Chestnuts roasted by PlantMonster @ 12/15/2008 8:23 PM


You know, I’m trying to think of some big extravagant gift that I wanted OH SO BAD…but my mind is just blank right now. I don’t know why. I’m sure there were a bunch.

Most of my BEST gifts have been total surprises. Like the Bach Strad trumpet in 7th grade. That’s probably been one of my greatest Christmas gifts, since it has brought me so much joy in the years that followed, and still does.

And then there was Bust of Pallas (you know, like in “The Raven”) that my Dad got me a few years ago just because I sent him a link to one….

And then the year that I got a REAL Swiss army knife. I had wanted one for a long time, and I got a miniature one as a gift a few weeks (months?) before, but we all knew it wasn’t a “real” one. Dad said I wasn’t old enough. Man, when I unwrapped that, it made me cry….

Chestnuts roasted by Cameron T. @ 12/15/2008 8:23 PM


enigmatic (oops!)

Chestnuts roasted by PlantMonster @ 12/15/2008 8:24 PM


Mine had to be either the NES or the god damn Ghostbusters firehouse. I remember I got VERY upset when I was reading the newspaper and I saw another kid had already written to santa for the firehouse (our paper publishes these every year, letters to santa). I was under the impression that Santa only had ONE of everything.

Chestnuts roasted by MrTroy @ 12/15/2008 8:30 PM


OMG,Aaron,how young are you that you couldn’t play SSBM because it was rated T? I’m pretty sure they didn’t even start those ratings till I was an adult!
Same thing goes for Norbert’s N64. I bought my own N64!
Thank God there’s some people on here like King Klash and the model plane dude so I don’t feel like I’m a million years old.

Chestnuts roasted by Kid Nicky @ 12/15/2008 8:44 PM


I just wanted to tell people if you type in Alf’s special Christmas into youtube there is an awesome ALF christmas special that somebody uploaded. It has a dark subject which is surprising but of course it’s very funny just like any ALF episode.

Chestnuts roasted by Goob @ 12/15/2008 8:48 PM


Sorry about the lack of AC timeliness, all — surprise work + surprise sick is kicking my ass. I’m definitely posting the entry for the 14th tonight, at least.

Chestnuts roasted by Matt @ 12/15/2008 9:17 PM


Matt, rest up. You are no good to us dead.

I think getting Lazer Tag was the best gift for me as a kid. Partly because I got two sets and that meant I didn’t have to play alone and shoot myself in the mirror.

Chestnuts roasted by Bill @ 12/15/2008 9:23 PM


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