Nostalgia Machine
Nostalgia Machine

Nostalgia Machine

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Butch Patrick Reveals What Life Was Like Growing Up As Eddie Munster
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Butch Patrick Reveals What Life Was Like Growing Up As Eddie Munster

Few television characters are as instantly recognizable as Eddie Munster, the lovable werewolf son from the classic sitcom The Munsters. Decades after the show first aired, fans still remember the quirky family that brought laughs and a spooky charm to television screens across America. What many viewers may forget is just how young the actor behind Eddie really was. Butch Patrick was only 11 years old when he landed the role that would make him a part of television history and turn him into one of the most recognizable child stars of the 1960s. Growing Up On One Of Television’s Most Unusual Sets THE MUNSTERS, Butch Patrick, 1964-1966/Everett Collection When The Munsters premiered in 1964, it offered a playful twist on the traditional family sitcom. Instead of a typical suburban household, viewers were introduced to a family of friendly monsters living ordinary lives while looking anything but ordinary. THE MUNSTERS, (from left): Butch Patrick, (Season 1), 1964-66/Everett Collection According to the Union Leader, at the center of the younger generation was Eddie Munster, played by Patrick. Despite his young age, he quickly became a fan favorite thanks to his mischievous personality and trademark widow’s peak hairstyle. The role required him to spend long hours in makeup and costumes, something most children his age could hardly imagine. A Legacy That Continues Decades Later Butch Patrick/Instagram Although The Munsters aired for only two seasons between 1964 and 1966, the show’s popularity never truly faded. Through reruns, merchandise, and fan conventions, new generations continue to discover the series and its memorable cast of characters. Patrick has remained closely connected to the show’s legacy over the years, regularly appearing at fan events and conventions where longtime viewers share memories of growing up with the beloved sitcom. According to the union leader, he recently participated in Manchester’s annual Chocolate Expo, where he signed autographs and joined a panel discussion about his career. 14 October 2018 – Hamilton, Ontario, Canada. Actor Butch Patrick (best known for his role as Eddie Munster on ‘The Munsters’) at Hamilton Comic Con at the Hamilton Convention Centre by Carmen’s. Photo Credit: Brent Perniac/AdMedia For many classic television fans, Eddie Munster remains one of the most memorable child characters of the era. And while decades have passed since those original episodes aired, the young actor who brought him to life continues to remind audiences why the show remains such a treasured part of television history. Next up: Penny Marshall And Carrie Fisher Shared A Friendship That Outlasted Their Marriages The post Butch Patrick Reveals What Life Was Like Growing Up As Eddie Munster appeared first on DoYouRemember? - The Home of Nostalgia. Author, Ruth A

TCM Honors Marilyn Monroe’s 100th Birthday as June’s Star of the Month
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TCM Honors Marilyn Monroe’s 100th Birthday as June’s Star of the Month

See the channel's Marilyn Monroe movie schedule for June, and download the full monthly calendar.

Penny Marshall And Carrie Fisher Shared A Friendship That Outlasted Their Marriages
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Penny Marshall And Carrie Fisher Shared A Friendship That Outlasted Their Marriages

Hollywood boasts many famous friendships, but few lasted as long—or earned as much affection—as the bond between Penny Marshall and Carrie Fisher. Long before social media made celebrity friendships public, the two stars built a connection that would span decades and survive the ups and downs of fame, family life, and personal struggles. According to Biography, their friendship became so enduring that Marshall once joked it had lasted longer than all of their marriages combined. Behind the humor was a relationship built on loyalty, trust, and a shared understanding of life in the spotlight. A Friendship That Began Almost Instantly LAVERNE & SHIRLEY, “The Playboy Show” (Season 8), Penny Marshall, Hugh Hefner, Carrie Fisher, 1976-83 / Everett Collection The two stars first met in the late 1970s through mutual friends, including Fisher’s then-husband Paul Simon and Saturday Night Live creator Lorne Michaels. Those close to them believed they would immediately hit it off, and they were right.             View this post on Instagram                         A post shared by GroovyHistory (@groovyhistorypics)   According to Marshall’s memoir, the pair quickly became inseparable. Despite their different personalities and careers, their lives seemed to fit together naturally. What began as a friendship soon became one of the most important relationships either woman would have outside of family. More Like Family Than Friends Carrie Fisher Penny Marshall1395.JPG FILE PHOTO New York, NY Carrie Fisher Penny Marshall Adam Scull-PHOTOlink.net / ImageCollect Over the years, their bond grew beyond Hollywood friendship. Marshall became a second mother figure to Fisher’s daughter, Billie Lourd, and the two women developed traditions that lasted for decades. One of their most famous rituals was their annual joint birthday celebration. The parties became legendary, attracting everyone from longtime friends to major Hollywood stars. Yet the gatherings reflected something deeper than celebrity status. They were a celebration of a friendship that had become family. Even after Fisher’s death in 2016 and Marshall’s passing two years later, their connection remains one of Hollywood’s most touching stories. In an industry where relationships often come and go, they built something remarkably lasting. For fans who grew up watching these two icons in different corners of entertainment, their friendship serves as a reminder that some of life’s most meaningful relationships happen away from the spotlight. Long after their careers made history, it was the bond they shared with each other that left one of the most lasting impressions.             View this post on Instagram                         A post shared by Hollywood Box (@hollywoodboxuk)   Next up: The Story Behind Keith Richards’ Accidental Creation Of Rock’s Most Famous Riff The post Penny Marshall And Carrie Fisher Shared A Friendship That Outlasted Their Marriages appeared first on DoYouRemember? - The Home of Nostalgia. Author, Ruth A

Genesis P-Orridge, General Idea And File Magazine’s Subversive Mail-Art (NSFW)
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Genesis P-Orridge, General Idea And File Magazine’s Subversive Mail-Art (NSFW)

“For each work of art that becomes physical, there are many variations that do not” – Sol Lewitt, Sentences on Conceptual Art in the British journal Art-Language, 1969     Launched in 1972 by Canada’s art collective General Idea (active 1969–1994), FILE magazine called for reader contributions and included a directory connecting artists and writers. The magazine was part of the mail art movement in which artists found a way to show, share and swap their own work without the need for institutional consent and conformity. Lifting its name and logo from the popular postwar US glossy Life, FILE ran for 26 issues before closing in 1989, with cover stars including Debbie Harry, Tina Turner and Mr Peanut.     The Genesis P-Orridge Letters British artist, musician and hilarious entertainer of public schoolboys Genesis P-Orridge (born Neil Andrew Megson; 22 February 1950 – 14 March 2020) contributed to the magazine, posting contributions to FILE headquarters in downtown Toronto. P-Orridge sent letters, photos, graphic pornography, negative press about his band Throbbing Gristle (“I wish I’d gone home” reads the title of one show review), stickers (“COUM Guarantee Disappointment”) and racy pictures of bandmate and star of aggro chic (NSFW) Cosey Fanni Tutti. P-Orridge sent his submissions in envelopes addressed to FILE at “Genital Pyrheam”, 241 Yonge Street “Torontoe” and decorated with non-sequiturs, the occasional dripping knob and other symbols. His letters are on display at Art Metropole, the world’s oldest artist-run bookstore founded by General Idea.       General Idea and FILE Magazine FILE was created and published by Gernal Idea founxers Felix Partz (born Ronald Gabe; 1945–1994), Jorge Zontal (Slobodan Saia-Levy; 1944–1994), and AA Bronson (Michael Tims; b. 1946). The magazine would be a “parasite within the magazine distribution system”. As Bronson explained: “We knew that if it looked familiar, people would pick it up, and they did. We thought of it as a kind of virus within the communication systems, a concept that William Burroughs had written about in the early ’60s.” The cover of Issue #1 featured Mr. Peanut. “Image of the Month” was Robert Cumming’s photograph of a Ritz cracker, its dimples superimposed with anuses. Asshole Ritz CrackerDate: 1972 Artist: Robert Cumming American, 1943-2021 – via: Art Institute Chicago   General Idea, “Self-portrait with Objects,” 1981-82 montage, gelatin silver print, 14” x 11” (National Gallery of Canada; photo courtesy NGC) The trio met in Toronto in 1969, drawn to the city’s compact but vibrant countercultural scene. As Bronson put it: “The counterculture scene was small at that time. The three major nodes were Rochdale College, Theatre Passe Muraille, and the Coach House Press.” They formed General Idea, adopted pseudonyms and used their work to shine a light on mass media and gender conformity, as witnessed in their Miss General Idea Pageant (1971). Partz explained the pageant: “It was our examination of the existing art world… a questioning of the process by which masterpieces are created… validated… selected and worshipped.” They were, according to Bronson, born out of the “late 60s psychedelia of student revolution, fluorescent posters, underground newspapers and Marshall McLuhan, and inspired by Canada’s first artist-run centre … Intermedia.” In FILE Issue #5, The “Glamour” issue, the trio programmatically stated: “We wanted to be artists and we knew that if we were famous and glamorous we could say we were artists and we would be. . . . We knew Glamour was not an object, not an action, not an idea. We knew Glamour never emerged from the ‘nature’ of things. There are no glamorous people, no glamorous events. We knew Glamour was artificial. We knew that in order to be glamorous we had to become plagiarists, intellectual parasites.”     Art Metropole In 1974, they founded Art Metropole, a distribution centre and archive, which held various low-cost formats, including artists books, video and audio works as well as multiples. Still operating today, Art Metropole holds an important place in the history of alternative arts venues in Canada. In the 1980s, General Idea targeted the booming art market with their queer politics. Having relocated to New York, in 1987 General Idea reconfigured Robert Indiana’s LOVE sculpture to read “AIDS.” General Idea came to an end in 1994, with the deaths of Partz and Zontal from AIDS-related causes.   AIDS Stamps, 1988. The General Idea AIDS logo repeated thirty-five times on this sheet of postage stamps. Genesis P-Orridge Genesis (Breyer) P-Orridge (1950–2020) was born in Manchester, England. S/he is one of the founding members of performance collective COUM Transmissions, music group Throbbing Gristle, and experimental pop rock band Psychic TV. Later in h/er career, P-Orridge embarked on The Pandrogyny Project with h/er partner and collaborator Lady Jaye Breyer P-Orridge, which aimed to surgically and spiritually transition the two artists into a combined person. P-Orridge’s complex legacy encompasses h/er multimedia artworks, h/er music, and h/er own notoriety and controversy. S/he is widely considered to be the godparent of industrial music. S/he is credited as popularizing body modifications including tattoos and piercings. H/er performances and artworks have been exhibited internationally. S/he was exiled from the United Kingdom. H/er prolific output as an artist and performer disavowed conventionality and demonstrated h/er commitment to constant evolution: whether that be transforming the culture in which one lives or the physical body that one occupies.   Correspondence by Artists: Genesis P-Orridge is on at Art Metropole until 31 May. Via: NGC, ACI, ArtForum, AnOther. The post Genesis P-Orridge, General Idea And File Magazine’s Subversive Mail-Art (NSFW) appeared first on Flashbak.

The Story Behind Keith Richards’ Accidental Creation Of Rock’s Most Famous Riff
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The Story Behind Keith Richards’ Accidental Creation Of Rock’s Most Famous Riff

Rock history is filled with stories of inspiration striking at unexpected moments, but few are as remarkable as the creation of The Rolling Stones’ signature hit, “(I Can’t Get No) Satisfaction.” Decades later, the song remains one of the most recognizable tracks ever recorded, thanks largely to a guitar riff that changed music forever. All of this came entirely by accident, leading to Keith Richards concocting a powerful song that still earns high praise to this day. A new biography of The Rolling Stones by author Bob Spitz revisits the band’s extraordinary journey and sheds fresh light on one of its most legendary moments. At the center of the story is Keith Richards and a late-night burst of creativity that arrived while he was barely awake. The Idea For This Song Idea Came To Keith Richards In The Middle Of The Night ROLLING STONES: VOODOO LOUNGE, The Rolling Stones, 1994/Everett Collection According to Independence, the inspiration for “Satisfaction” came while the Rolling Stones were staying at a hotel in the United States during the height of their early success. As was his habit, Richards went to sleep with a guitar and a cassette recorder nearby. During the early hours of the morning, he suddenly woke up, picked up his guitar, and recorded a melody that had appeared in his head. Along with the now-famous riff, he reportedly mumbled the words “I can’t get no satisfaction” before immediately falling back asleep. The Rolling Stones (l-r): Charlie Watts, Keith Richards, Mick Jagger, Bill Wyman, Brian Jones, ca. 1960s / Everett Collection The next day, Richards had no memory of recording anything. Curious about the cassette, he rewound it and discovered the rough recording. What followed was one of the most important musical moments in rock history, as the riff would eventually become the foundation of a song that defined an era. The recording also included an amusing detail. After capturing the melody, the remainder of the tape reportedly consisted of nothing but the guitarist snoring, making the accidental creation story even more memorable. A Defining Moment In Rolling Stones History SHINE A LIGHT: Charlie Watts, Keith Richards, director Martin Scorsese, Mick Jagger, and Ron Wood on set, 2007. ©Paramount Classics/Courtesy Everett Collection The biography also explores how The Rolling Stones evolved from a group of blues-loving musicians into one of the most influential rock bands ever assembled. Their rise included chance encounters, groundbreaking performances, and friendships with fellow music legends such as the Beatles. Long before stadium tours and global fame, the band was struggling through modest beginnings in London. Even their famous name came together at the last minute when founding member Brian Jones spotted a Muddy Waters song title and used it during a phone call arranging performances. SHINE A LIGHT, The Rolling Stones: Mick Jagger, Ron Wood, Keith Richards, Charlie Watts, 2007. ©Paramount Classics/Courtesy Everett Collection Yet among all the dramatic moments in the band’s history, the creation of “Satisfaction” stands apart. The song became one of their biggest hits and helped cement their reputation as pioneers of modern rock music. Today, the origin of this song remains one of rock’s greatest tales of inspiration. What began as a half-asleep recording in a hotel room became a defining soundtrack for generations of music fans around the world. Next up: The Hula Hoop History Is Much Older Than Most People Realize The post The Story Behind Keith Richards’ Accidental Creation Of Rock’s Most Famous Riff appeared first on DoYouRemember? - The Home of Nostalgia. Author, Ruth A