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LEARNING DAY

Learning Day: Kids Can Rock and Roll🌭

It is a Saturday morning in the mid ’90s. You are up uncharacteristically early, perhaps awakened by the sound of a lawnmower off in the distance of your charming, middle-class residential neighborhood. Birds chirp pleasantly outside your window, perched in the horse chestnut tree that towers above your modest bungalow — which, being the only home you have ever known, does not seem like an impossible fantasy of wealth. Mom and dad are still in bed, together, as they always will be. You pad across the carpet to the living room and turn on the TV, which hums to life with a satisfying thunk, and flip over to channel 25. YTV. Youth television. Your television.

The good cartoons don’t start for a little while, but sometimes there’s cool stuff on before the prime cereal hours. Could be an episode of that goofy old Batman show, or that Mega Man cartoon that only ever seems to pop up at random. Hey, maybe you’ll even see some of that neat show about ninjas fighting.

You are confronted with horrors beyond your imagination.

Kids Can Rock and Roll was a nightmarish parade of gaudily made-up men enacting little bits in the formless void interspersed with insipid songs about respecting authority and doing your homework. It was a cheap effort at instilling pro-social values in a generation that was coming up on Bubble Tape commercials, toy slime, and killer fairies. In short, it was a TV series for nobody, crafted by madmen shaking off the haze of a decade-long coke binge and stepping into a world they could no longer comprehend.

The show was hosted by a band named Kideo, a power trio composed of Ace Manners on guitar, Buddy Goodfellow on bass, and PJ Styles on drums. They all wear the same white greasepaint and superhero-style masks in colors matching their glam wigs and outfits. The schtick would have been derivative in KISS’s heyday twenty years earlier. In the mid ’90s, they looked like the kind of act that would feature at the Bar Mitzvah of a boy whose parents openly blamed him for the death of their other, better child. Even now, seeing Kideo fills me with the kind of revulsion otherwise reserved for blowfly infestations and Peachtree Carnivore.

Am I being too harsh on three guys who might have had a modicum of real musical skill and just happened to lose out in the Great Wiggles War of the ’90s? Maybe. But I have a lot of rage inside of me at the state of the world, lashing out at whatever happens to be nearby makes me feel more in control, and this column is my trashable public bathroom stall. Thus: prepare to face my impotent, decades-late wrath, surviving members of Kideo — if indeed any of you still remain on this cursed earth.

Every episode of Kids Can Rock and Roll opens with the “Kideoath,” in which the band members swear to prove that children are capable of rocking and rolling. It is a meaningless promise built on a foundation of lies. If the show had empowered children to learn some fundamentals of rock music, like playing power chords or crafting a stage persona or shamelessly appropriating African-American culture and erasing its originators, then maybe it would have been worth something. But the vast majority of Kids Can Rock and Roll’s runtime simply features three clowns standing next to musical instruments and doing criminally-indictable wordplay.

They knew how bad this was. Maybe they thought they could push it around to being ironically enjoyable through over-the-top delivery and frequent drum stings. But you can’t ironically succeed at entertainment any more than you can do so at lovemaking. In both cases, saying “sorry, that was a terrible joke” afterwards doesn’t endear you to anybody. Trust me.

The closest Kideo gets to actually teaching kids anything about music is when Ace Manners takes out his guitar and tries to explain how it works. Sorry, that isn’t a great way of describing it. If you want to learn anything about resonance or amplification then flip over to Bill Nye or The Magic Schoolbus. Here’s what Kideo has to teach us about guitars.

Who is this for? The audience shots in some of the musical segments suggest five to six year olds, but if I showed this to my six-year-old niece she’d say “Auntie Merritt, what crime did these men commit against God that they are being punished thusly?”

So yes, they do sometimes actually play their instruments. Kideo’s songs have titles like “Stranger Danger,” “It’s Apparent to a Parent,” and “Clap Snap Tap Rap.” Yeah, they rap. Sort of. It sucks, obviously, but nobody says “Well my name is _____ and I’m here to say,” so fuck it.

In the video for “It’s Apparent to a Parent,” the band goes to court to attempt to convince a jury of children to listen to their parents. It’s an anthem to putting yourself in your mother and father’s shoes and submitting to their authority, trusting that when you one day raise a child of your own, you will understand why they didn’t let you play with the bandsaw. You know, rock and roll stuff.

Ace sings: “It’s apparent to a parent so when I become a parent then it might become apparent to me / That the safety of my children is the thing that’s by a million is the most important thing to me.”

First off, rhyming “me” with “me” is the kind of lazy horseshit that shouldn’t have flown in children’s media even back in the ’90s. Second, despite the subject matter, the whole production feels… unwholesome somehow. A grown man in clownface testifying to a jury of kids about how he’ll care passionately about the well-being of his children — from the perspective of a child — is the kind of scene that should be appearing in the DMT-induced visions of a child stampeded to death at a circus, not whatever this is.

And it’s not like I’m unjustly judging this from the perspective of a jaded adult, either. Kideo played at the YTV Festival of Friends in 1992 at Canada’s Wonderland — basically our Six Flags, which used to be Paramount movie-themed but is now just whatever — and the reception was frostier than a snowman’s bussy in Baffin Bay, beb.

They’re belting out “Kids can rock and roll / When they’re two years old!” and nobody gives a fuck. The audience was more receptive to Shari Lewis’s Lamb Chop ventriloquist act than these three bozos. Sorry, that’s offensive to the hard-working bozo community.

Seriously. Lamb Chop fucking killed.

I don’t think Kideo ever got over this. Oh, sure, they shook hands with Shari Lewis backstage, said “hey, great wordplay with your sheep dummy out there,” but on that day, within them was planted the seed of a noxious envy. They knew, then, that they would never be Raffi. They would never be Sharon, Lois, and Bram. Hell, they would never even be Bob Schneider and the Rainbow Kids.

They channeled their rage and frustration into an anthem for unity and fellowship. It would be their magnum opus, the moment at which they transcended little ditties about respecting your teacher and not climbing into unmarked vans. It would tackle an important social issue. They called it “In a World of Black and White.”

From the title you probably assume it’s going to be about how you shouldn’t judge people based on the color of their skin or something. It’s kind of that, but it’s also kind of the apotheosis of a puppet-induced madness by a trio of color-coded maniacs.

It opens with a monologue about “how easy life should be in a world of black and white.” And then— you know what? I’m just going to show you the lyrics. I don’t think you’d believe me if I tried to summarize them.

Huh? Wha? This doesn’t sound like a track about how our apparent differences are meaningless in the face of our shared humanity. It sounds like the opening to a children’s song produced by the Aryan Brotherhood.

What are we doing here? It’s like aliens heard about the hu-man concept of race and decided to make first contact by creating a video explaining their inscrutable take on it.

Next, we pan over shots of the Statue of Liberty, Notre Dame, and a pagoda as we enter the bridge. Ace and Buddy sit before the glorious sight of Niagara Falls as the former croons “Would it matter to you…” Given the fullness of time, you would never guess how that sentence ends.

Fuck, man. I get what you’re going for, but fuck. You can’t surprise me with shit like that. It took me a full ten minutes to come down from the shock of Ace’s poignant question, delivered with the manic grin of a man who looks like he’s getting a secret thrill from saying this stuff from behind a mask. And just when I thought I’d recovered, I unpaused the video and they got me again.

“In a World of Black and White” failed to solve racism or exterminate the races or whatever their goal with it was. Kideo leapt off Niagara Falls and snuck across the border into the United States, where they went on to have lucrative if unglamorous careers as members of Joker’s gang until he blew them up with a big bomb shaped like his face. When asked why he did it, the Joker said “none can understand my jokes…”

This article was brought to you by our fine sponsor and Hot Dog Supreme: Alpha Scientist Javo, who doesn’t care what color you are, as long as you aren’t a dumb asshole that sucks. Unfortunately Javo thinks that everyone is a dumb asshole that sucks. Them’s the breaks, kid.

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LEARNING DAY

Learning Day: White Rabbits Can’t Jump

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Learning Day: Utterly Wicked🌭

I’m sorry. The internet’s for conversation, and I’ve monologued. Lichdom should be relatable. So today’s interactive. You just need a few small things.

No morals. Extra bitterness. A toy store. A marker. A power drill. Paper. Decent handwriting. A spade. A jar. Red wine. Nine cents. A shovel. Ziploc bags. A lookout. A lawyer.

We can split the lawyer:

While Beatrice slacks off a bit, Beatrice and Beatrice are legit. I haven’t been to jail this year. Remember Beatrice’s motto: no face, no bribe.

Though the law gets complex, our job’s easy. I’ll translate a magick textbook into sober adult, and then we’ll both apply it. Easy, right? Just follow my lead. It’s like a wedding dance: wave your arms behind me, and it’ll look like we both practiced.

Also, we’re casting advanced hell magick.

Summer’s winding down, and Shoggoths fit a vacation mood. Archangels have opinions about necromancy, but I have opinions on deez. We’ll find a balance.

We’ll voodoo the haters later.

For advanced hell magick, we can’t trust just anyone. Pedigree matters. I bought Utterly Wicked new, in a bookstore with new shelving and an intact door. The home of great leaders’ worthless memoirs, and proof of Dorothy’s prestige. She even has comps from other wytches. For instance:

Finally, a loaded wand. And Chris is right–don’t unleash wytch vengeance unless you truly need justice or get bored. Otherwise, they might pay. They might ALL FINALLY PAY.

Utterly Wicked has community support. Notable, compared to the siloed efforts of plasma experts and God’s cheerleaders. Multiple authors deem Dorothy’s ideas safe and sane, and at least one chain bookseller. A slight appeal to authority on my part, but I wouldn’t want us to do anything stupid.

Graveyard dirt? Wytch metaphors still lose me. I only get similes, like a club comic. Denise implies bitter fucks need Utterly Wicked, so I’m in the right place. I’m a satchet of recriminations stitched together with vendettas. With Utterly Wicked we can finish off our shit lists. Here’s Volume One of mine:

Get yours ready. We’re in an advanced class: no scrambling for targets mid-dick curse. Load, aim, and chant. Civilians are just combatants you scried early.

Don’t trust me. I’m hexing four versions of myself, and they’re all casual liars. Trust Dorothy.

I’ll admit, I almost flinched away from power. It’s hard to accept that magick’s real and magick’s inconvenient rules aren’t. But I’m the youngest Dayle sibling, so this scans. Honestly, it seemed odd that so much of magick wasn’t about me.

Remedial magi might hear the ramblings of a newly single teenager. The caption beneath half a barbell curl. Fair. That tone marks a master. Emotion powers witchcraft, and no one said they had to be mature. The darkest curses of all are lobbed by unchanged infants and borderline divorcees.

That’s all I need, but some of you are on that Chuck Schumer lifetime sub shit. Try one more reverse disclaimer:

Dorothy gets wordy, I’ll summarize: bytch darklings staye hōm. If she sounds bitter, check your loins. They’re cursed. We’ve found the real deal.

With the Glindas gone, Dorothy warns against using sick curses on our worthless enemies. But we should use them, unless we’re mitch-bade. But don’t. While I’m not used to that mixed messaging in spellbooks, it’s good exercise for autocratic life. Absorb these three laws

Note that this rule shifts to fit your morals. If you’re an asshole in your day-to-day life, you can be Morgoth Jr. without consequences. Summon a shitcoin and curse everyone that believes in you. After that, cast a mean spell on them.

Again, your conscience is the limit. For a late American, that’s Gurren Lagann. Yours is the middle finger that pierces heaven.

Hey, it’s that disclaimer from 3D printed guns and key parties. Nice pull.

Obviously.

The point: dark magick’s only bad if you feel bad about it. I recommend feeling awesome about it. In fact, kill some shots before casting. At least, that’s my plan. I read every news alert in my inbox, and I’m primed for a relapse. Cheers.

As you’ve gleaned, hell magick’s first step is deciding if you should use hell magick. Yes. But is it real?

For a cynical clown, this quote would be a godsend. A perfect weapon in an endless war against believing in stuff. For me, it restates the obvious. Irksome. I haven’t seen this much pre-demon chatter since Sinners, and Dorothy doesn’t even have one Michael B. Jordan.

Though it leads to a point: magick offense is the best defense.

Curse first, ask nothing. Dorothy’s less threefold law, more secondfold amendment. If it sounds like there’s a lot about how awesome melting the weak is instead of doing it, silence. Now. Or I’ll blight your bloodline for a thousand wytch years. Those are mortal years with cool skull rings. I have six, and I wear them all.

The Loa dig the look.

Oh shit! Doll time. I love these, get ready. Though Dorothy recommends Mattel, anything stolen from a child will do. Ditching your conscience really cuts down wizardry costs.

Time for human marionettes and/or white guilt.

Damn, that’s lucid. Bending reality should be cheap and effortless (for me, not my worthless enemies). A clown would want more white guilt or casual racism. As a Wytch God, I’d like hotep spells. I’ll explore that later.

Fantastic. I expected self-conscious voodoo, hoped for hotep magick, and found Reddit corrections. Voodoo dolls, which are real and work, aren’t a Caribbean invention. That’d be ridiculous, unlike stabbing miscarriages into dolls. Dorothy could run a show for skeptic wytches called MythTrusters.

Why were so many black people pissed? I can’t find the 17th century in my Freedom Textbook. Or 18th century. Or 19th—screw it. Back to pyramid magick.

Pfft, that doesn’t even rhyme. Darc magick’s come a long way.

To be clear on the genre of awkward: Dorothy’s not a klan wytch, or even Ed Wuncler’s palm reader. The tone’s more Pelosi kneeling with a pointy dashiki. Dorothy limps out of the history of doll appropriation for detours into ancient Celtic curses, Italian curses, and Bible curses. Hold on, me. Explain that last one?

Sounds like the cosmic hall monitor’s schtick. Rebuttals?

Fair. Back in the tangent, Dorothy goes on a bit.

Hope you’re taking notes, because I’m not. None of this comes up later. Though this detour’s refreshingly consistent with Dorothy’s stance that all theology, everywhere, is the absolute, physically active truth. She recommends borrowing diverse ideas in your own magick. Like cool hieroglyphs, or inventing cramps, or grave robbing.

Actually, let’s finish our dolls first.

Like all Dukes of Hell, Dorothy loves dolls. Not just wax caricatures from Cairo–the Margo Robbie kind. After a straight recap of Barbie’s history, Dorothy reveals our strongest weapons against our exes, former lovers, and bygone paramours.

That’s right, the industrial revolution’s hit wizard divorce. Hell’s blades are mass-produced, and cheaper than video games or food. And alcoholic warlocks can keep all their fingers.

As a master wax sculptor, I’m a little put off. Chances to show off are rare. Still, Mattel makes hexing much more relatable. You’re still following along, right? I’m doing this for you.

Fast and loose, as usual in the wytch trenches. It’s decades too late for my psyche, but you should take note. Shatter your manager’s mind, not yours. You don’t need to profile the toy aisle, thought it helps:

Done and done. Since you’re following along, try to find a pale, empty-eyed brunette. Any given American Girl product. Don’t sweat if you can’t. Mine’s perfect, so I can pick up the slack. Your art supplies matter more:

You brought modeling clay, right?

To abridge quite a bit of crazy: the gods want a crafts project to the best of your will and ability. I don’t have much ability, but I’ve got Rayner levels of will. An archmage’s journey starts in the library, and ends in Loew’s.

Suggested tools include, without foolery: permanent markers, scissors, modeling clay, duct tape, electrical tape, ribbons, cords, herbs, oil, cotton balls, fiberfill, fabric, and your intuition.

Now, this seems like a lot. But I have an example for you. Just follow along.

See, Dorothy suggests 11″ dolls. And sure, eleven’s a lot of crazy. My roots oblige me to go further. I’ll work with this doll:

To faithful readers, this is Elsie Dinsmore, the kindest plantation heiress Reconstruction missed. Did you miss her? I missed her.

To the spirits, this Kristi.

Right, that’s nuts. We have to accessorize. This is Kristi:

Or Kristi Jr. Mini-Christy? Misty. To the spirits, this is Misty.

Misty doesn’t like imported plastic. Which, if I check her box, likely includes her. I’m not sure why buying Misty felt smart. Maybe Grok told me she’d save Duke and Shipwreck’s jobs from progress. Either way, now I can’t find Snake Eyes and Misty’s throwing Sieg Heils like she’s trying to karate chop a fly.

Nah. There’s more hoodoo to do.

Not knowing would be nice. Ah well, here’s Kristi’s legal name:

How are the skate parks in El Salvador?

Aight.

The bottom doodle’s a broken thumb.

You’re still following along at home, right? Or work? You’re making an 18-inch Kriti Noem voodoo doll? Dope. I woke up today so that we could make 18-inch Kristi Noem voodoo dolls. I bought this book so we could make 18-inch Kristi Noem voodoo dolls. I learned magick to make 18-inch Kristi Noem voodoo dolls.

For extra curse, Dorothy suggests using…I’ll let sensei explain. She looks saner than me today.

She’s still way ahead. And has some recommended filler:

All fantastic, if I had any at press time and/or in my life. Mint causes impotence, but the grocer said to leave immediately. Coins make the mark “sickened by his or her own greed,” but that’s a dead end. Luckily, we still have arts and crafts:

Sold. Not the tummyache, we’re making a Manchurian candidate. It’s brainjacking or bust.

Then again, why not?

Extreme, but that comes with the times. We started with dumping our conscience for a reason. Even Dorothy gets antsy before teaching us to fill Misty with hell ghosts.

Some wytches turn back now? After filling a Ken doll of their new dad with black onyx? Couldn’t be me. Make sure to follow along. If your doll didn’t have a cavity, use a power drill. I’ll wait.

Right, Dorothy wrote this before the SS ran more ads than Pepsi. If the Rule of Three exists, I’ll cut off an arm to break the thumb cranking off her boss. Preferably mid-action.

The on switch is called a death date, and it’s almost as scary as looking outside. Let’s rock.

This hell magick feels off. Something’s missing.

Real shit.

Great question. I guess Nazi Chucky kills me? I thought I’d die ripping off Yossarian, so it’s nice to go with some originality.

Yeah, Nazi Chucky kills me. Dorothy’s more surprised by haunted dolls than anyone reading. If Misty wasn’t at least a half-Chucky, I’d call Dorothy a fraud. Fortunately, there’s a cure.

Shit, the magick swamp water. Mine’s back at work. Let’s try something else.

Admirable impulse, since an unburned doll’s like an unfinished. One snag: I’m not quite ready to burn down my building. Based on volume there’s a full day care, church, or dancehall upstairs. I’d never do that to a dancehall.

Is Dorothy fucking serious? Dumping M3GAN 3.0 on the curb like an old couch? That’s how you get Chucky’d and fined for littering. I’m starting to worry, we’re all out of classical elements.

Right, earthbending. I always forget the style that loses unless you’re blind.

Say less.

Thank fuck. I have just the thing.

I kept it. Again, Dorothy’s the sane one here.

Now we just need a fuckton of graveyard dirt to kill this doll. Field trip! You’re following along, right? Tell your boss you’re off to bury the monster you created. Or that someone died. Both are true, really.

Dramatic! Bring some normal dirt. Dorothy wants us in the graveyard, but it’s just going to be some quarter-assed metaphor. Probably lint after a poem.

Man, fuck brick jokes. If Krazy Kat was so good, why didn’t corpos exploit it forever? It should be three film abominations deep by now. The kind of DVDs you bury in graveyard dirt.

Still doing it. I’ll admit, working with me’s a pain. I’ve always got ten more questions than necessary. Today, with Misty in tow? They’re just a reflex. I need this doll out of my world. Let’s keep trucking.

After one more question. In your Hollywood-poisoned minds’ eye, what’s that old wytch look like? Dorothy’s wise old hoodoo tutor? If I seem pissier about this now, it’s the plantation doll.

While the web’s great for finding Hot Victims Near You, let’s go with “old.” Retiree ghosts might be kinder to strangers than people murdered by them.

This better be worth it.

This isn’t worth it.

Beyond the ethics-and-dignity stuff, there’s a god to deal with. Dorothy says we need Oya’s hall pass to step inside. Note the West African pick—in Utterly Wicked, black magick’s a pun. There’s also some guys with whack-a-mole flashlights staring at me, but one problem at a time.

Shit, fun-loving gods suck. All their jokes end in eternal torment. And their romances. And their sewing contests. I might end today as a tarantula. Good thing we’re not here to rob graves.

His and hers necromancy, cool. Gotta stand out when you’re robbing graves. Thank Oya I’m George Lucas’s stalker:

Can we commit this moral crime/normal crime now?

Done—I don’t leave home without my cash-poisoned wine. So mote whatever.

It looks like a waste of money, but it also feels like one. Oya has a quality extortion racket.

As in ancient Yoruba terms and conditions? Oya has a GitHub page? Otherwise, this sounds like begging at the cool gods’ table. I’d hate to miss heaven because they think I’d ruin the party.

We’re finally ready to pick a grave. Good news: your job determines your ghost’s prestige class. Forever. It’d be nice if they mentioned that in high school.

Good news for law students, hospital residencies, and spree killers: the nightmare never ends.

Exorcism options do go a little beyond career:

I get the logic. I get the broad symbolism. I like the idea of cosmic justice too. But the executed and murdered are my last choice for matters of wrongdoing or justice. They are the Detroit Lions of wrongdoing or justice. Consider someone that didn’t die screaming.

As for dead child dirt: the fuck? How much incense does it take to advocate, test, or think of collecting dead child dirt? If you need a friend, join a class. Strike up a conversation at a bar, about leaving fun-sized graves alone.

As a wytch (warlokk?) at Greenwood Cemetery at 6 AM to steal exorcism dirt, Dorothy strikes me as unwell.

Whatever, no graves get robbed riffing. Time to pick one.

Elsie’s a nice name. We should bring that back.

I guess the line exists. After all the porn gambling and fake poets and nazi bedtimes stories and Sucker Punch, I’m at my limit. Without an alternative to robbing +5 infant coffins, I have to let the doll kill me.

If you’ve followed along: sorry. At least we’ll die for petty spite. I bet the whole thumb snaps off.

Other dirt!I knew this shovel had a purpose. What are some sane graveyard alternatives?

Home dirt is, sadly, preventative. We’re already in the shit, and Misty lives there too. I want the opposite of her safe return. The church is why I’m stuck hexing Darth Botox in the first place, so they’re out. As for digging around a school, during a nonce panick? I’ll take my chances with Misty.

Granted, I’m sure some comedy writers have a shot against the Secret Service. I, on the other hand, can land a flip sometimes. With three tries, and single viewers. Give me more to work with.

Fine. Might as well get there early.

Meet the Metropolitan Detention Center, a.k.a. the MDC. Where the 13th amendment’s fine print kicks in. Sometimes they skip feeding people, to focus on reform. Hard to beat for bad juju.

Nice and haunted. Can you believe it’s only two blocks from Greenwood? Normally you’ve got to walk three to bump into an indoor plantation. We’ve got 25% of the prisoners, thanks to 25% of the hustle. Misty should like it here.

With this, we can lay Misty to rest. In a box full of prison dirt in my home, where I will never fuck again. You’re following along, right? From now on, you have to explain the political caricature sealed in Freedom Dirt. It’ll make you stronger.

Say bye to Misty before you go.

Almost cute, isn’t it?

We’ve mastered 71 pages of dark, forbidden magic. Out of 232. I might come back.

This article was brought to you by our fine sponsor and Hot Dog Supreme: Elliot Watson, the most powerful of all magick users, who uses their powers to guide these hexes on their important journey. Also plays a mean harmonica.

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LEARNING DAY

Learning Day: Winning at Trivial Pursuit

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Learning Day: Turbo Teen Writer Arcade Strategy Guide 🌭

I can explain this one in four words. Strategy guide for Turbo. I’m going to need two more words. Teen Writer. I might need thirty-three more words. It’s a 1985 arcade game simulating the job of being a staff writer on the animated show Turbo-Teen as if it aired continuously until the year 2020, but the strategy guide for that. Thank you in advance for whatever awards this is eligible for.

This article was brought to you by our fine sponsor and Hot Dog Supreme: Patrick Herbst, the child with the horrible disease that inspired Turbo Teen’s creation.

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LEARNING DAY

Learning Day: Alligator Pie🌭

Fish don’t realize they’re in water until they’re plucked out of it. Canadians don’t realize how specific their culture is until they move to another country. It took dedicated effort to purge “toque” and “pop” from my vocabulary when I first arrived in the US. Trickier was not making reference to children’s entertainment whose cultural recognition stopped dead at the 49th parallel.

Canadian content, for whatever reason, often sounds made-up to Americans. We had a show about a rural woodsman type who fixed everything with duct tape and it was one of the most popular comedies in the country for many years. Train 48 was a terrible, ad-libbed dramedy taking place entirely on the southern Ontario commuter transit system. And of course, there was a kids’ series where an alcoholic photographer tyrannized a living mannequin man and his puppet friends in a famous Toronto department store.

But sometimes, as I look back at the cultural artifacts spawned by government investment in the arts and entertainment, even I’m surprised by how intensely, pointedly Canadian some of them are. To wit: Alligator Pie.

A frequent library borrow for child Merritt, Alligator Pie is a 45-minute VHS tape about a boy named Nicholas Knock going to the park. It’s based on the work of Dennis Lee, an author who wrote a lot of poetry for kids. You can think of him as sort of a Canadian Shel Silverstein, only without all the gonzo journalism for Playboy.

You can also think of him as the guy who wrote the lyrics to the Fraggle Rock theme song, because he did! He also wrote a bunch of other songs for the show, and one of the albums of music from that Henson production jointly won a Grammy Award in 1985. The other winner? Shel Silverstein’s Where the Sidewalk Ends!

Of course, I didn’t know any of this as a kid. All I knew was that Alligator Pie was packed full of two things, besides Canadian-themed rhymes and songs: puppet violence and claymation horrors. When I say “puppet violence,” I don’t mean like, felt stabbings or anything. But, as we’ll see, someone in this production either hated puppets or just got a kick out of launching them into trash cans, swimming pools, and puddles of mud. And when I say “claymation horrors,” well, I don’t think I need to explain that. Aardman gentrified the genre when they made plasticine obey the laws of physics. They wouldn’t have the guts to do whatever the hell this is.

So: Nicholas is going to the park. He’s relating this story to his classroom during show and tell, to which he’s brought his best friend, who is an egg. The egg’s name is Egg and he perpetually wears a frozen mask of dawning horror on his little egg face.

Egg isn’t Nick’s only pal, though. The day of his trip to the park, he’s woken up by three other puppets: Bigfoot, McGonigle, and Hannah V. Varoom.

How does Nicholas respond? Does he:

A. Marvel at the size of his enormous bedroom in his early ’90s middle class Toronto home which would easily cost millions of dollars today

B. Run screaming from the epicenter of the puppet uprising

C. Hurl his best friend at them like a living missile

It’s C, of course! Egg is curiously quiet during these scenes. It’s unclear if Nicholas’s imagination can’t support the animation of the animal trio as well as Egg simultaneously, or if Egg has simply accepted his position and knows that nothing he might say could change it. The animals do a little song, during which Nicholas describes them as “marching like the mounties,” but it’s interrupted by an ominous glow and menacing voice emanating from the vent.

That’s Mr. Hoobody, a kind of trickster spirit who lives in Nicholas’s furnace. He is a fairy in the manner of the old tales — less Tinkerbell and more menacing presence. Also, he’s played by a guy who looks like a Canadian Randy Quaid.

Mr. Hoobody terrified me as a child. Now, I find him to possess an intriguing sexual charisma. Not going to interrogate that.

Stop motion break! First, a poem about something called “Psychapoo,” which emerges from Nick’s toothpaste tube and starts doing antics all over his medicine cabinet while shouting out Newfoundland. It’s only mildly upsetting, so I’m going to give it 2 out of 5 on the Adventures of Mark Twain Claymation Nightmare Scale.

But what comes next is much, much worse. Nicholas and his friend Monica sit down for a pancake breakfast, and gloved arms emerge from the table to perform a song called “Periwinkle Pizza,” which name drops a number of Canadian cities. It’s not stop motion, but it’s not exactly puppets, either. It looks like this.

I feel how Egg looks.

The song ends with a plate devouring the last pancake. For some reason this really creeps me out. And it’s far from the last food bit we’re going to see today.

At this point in the frame story, the teacher is starting to get frustrated with Nicholas’s constant diversions. Get to the goddamn park, kid! There are upwards of six other students waiting for their turn in our enormous and implausibly well-staffed school.

So Nicholas, his grandfather, Monica, and Egg all head to the park. But something is amiss. Mr. Hoobody lurks in the shadows, watching them. It’s a good thing he’s a supernatural creature/figment of Nicholas’s imagination, otherwise this might be almost unwholesome.

The animals, in turn, see Mr. Hoobody stalking Nicholas. They grab his tricycle and set out after him.

But they’ve forgotten that Mr. Hoobody is a creature of chaos. Uttering a rhyming incantation, he opens up a fire hydrant which blasts the animals into a pool and a trash can.

It’s hard to get across in screenshots of a low-resolution VHS upload, but there’s something very funny to me about the camera lingering on a monkey puppet floating limply in a kiddie pool, and I’m pretty sure whoever’s job it was to shoot this scene thought so too.

The kids stop at a bakery so Nick’s grandpa can get some cookies. He tells them to wait outside, because it’s the ’90s and internet panics haven’t yet convinced the public that letting two kids stand outside a store for five minutes will result in their immediate kidnapping and dismemberment. Or maybe grandpa just doesn’t really like them that much. Either way, the kids are entertained by a little show introduced by a cookie conductor and her cast of singers.

I’m counting this introduction as a separate entity from the main event, because it features a completely different cast and animation style. I give it a 3 out of 5 on the Adventures of Mark Twain Claymation Nightmare Scale, mainly because an alligator eats one of the living, singing cookies at one point.

The overture complete, the curtains part on “The Sitter and the Butter and the Better Batter Fritter.” It’s a tongue twister about the narrator’s little sister’s sitter who buys a pat of bitter butter from a baker to bake a fritter. Each character and object morphs from one scene to the next, an ever-changing tide of flesh that’s practically Cronenbergian.

“You’re being overdramatic,” you’re thinking. Am I? Here’s how things progress. The sitter creates a malicious, living entity out of butter. She abandons her creation when it proves too bitter to consume.

The sitter then returns to the baker for a sweeter batter. She eats the resulting fritter, but then her neglected creation eats her in turn.

Finally, the sitter’s charge arrives. Finding no sign of her sitter, she instead notices the bitter butter fritter and decides to consume it, sweetened with a spoonful of jam.

The piece ends with a recitation of who devoured who: the sweet fritter inside the sitter, who is inside the bitter butter fritter, who is in turn inside the little sister. I give this sequence a full 5 out of 5 on the Adventures of Mark Twain Claymation Nightmare Scale for its disturbingly exuberant depiction of nesting doll vore.

I’m going to skip past the “mass paralysis cured by food fight” scene in an iconic Toronto diner because there are no puppets in it. But shortly after, the movie remembers its frame story and cuts to a shot of the most exasperated kindergarten teacher you’ve ever seen.

Just wait, lady. It’s 1991, and the Reaganite “Common Sense Revolution” of slashing all social services hasn’t hit Ontario yet. In a few years, you’ll yearn for the days when your biggest problem was meandering kids’ stories about boiler demons and sad eggs.

Speaking of: Mr. Hoobody casts a spell invoking “Mississauga rattlesnakes” to animate a garden hose and abduct Egg.

What does he do with him afterwards? Does he:

A. Destroy him with a dark magick which calls upon the ancient powers of Bobcaygeon

B. Break him down psychologically to convince him that Nicholas never really loved him

C. Launch him into the air for unclear reasons

It’s C. If Alligator Pie is given an opportunity to fire a puppet into the sky out of a t-shirt cannon, it’ll take it.

Nicholas is distraught at Egg’s fate of being carelessly hucked into a disgusting puddle. So, we interrupt the flashback to flash back to an even earlier scene when Nicholas relates a fond memory… of the time he carelessly tossed Egg into a disgusting puddle.

Nicholas and Monica finally make it to the park, deal with some rhyming mushrooms who sing a song about downtown Toronto streets and the department store featured in Today’s Special, then catch up with Mr. Hoobody, who’s had another costume change. He dispenses with the goofy rhyming tricks and just fucking casts Force Lightning at them.

Things look bad, until the animal puppets — who have since rescued Egg and are flying high above the park with a bundle of balloons — come to their rescue. I’m going to drop the quiz gimmick because at this point, it should be obvious how they do that.

Mr. Hoobody is defeated… or is he? No. He’s not. He uses his lightning powers to bring down the animal puppets. Bigfoot lands first, on one end of a see-saw.

Then, Hannah and McGonigle hit the other end, causing a Puppet Launch Combo!

Bigfoot is catapulted into the air, landing directly in front of Nicholas.

Finally, Nicholas confronts Mr. Hoobody in a one-on-one curse battle for the fate of Egg.

Nicholas prevails, and the children all gang up on the middle-aged man and boo him until he evaporates.

The end. Or… is it?

Yes. Yes it is. I did the math, and Alligator Pie pitches puppets at a rate of roughly one every four minutes. That’s got to be some kind of record. In conclusion, I recommend Alligator Pie to anyone who hates puppets and wants to seek vicarious revenge on them. I do not recommend you show it to your children unless you want to teach them to fear the stop-motion arts or if you want them to grow up into weeaboos but for Canada. Loonie-aboos, if you will. Will you? Too late, FINAL SECRET PUPPET LAUNCH!

This article was brought to you by our fine sponsor and Hot Dog Supreme: Neil Bailey, Mr. Hoobody’s long lost evil twin. Basically the same but not from Canada. Spoooky!