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Wednesday, December 25, 2013

Just a Day at Work

Watch what happened at this photography processing shop.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4AnMlQNw1M8&annotation_id=annotation_709575&feature=iv

Poinsettia: The Christmas Star





Many people think that the large red leaves of the beautiful poinsettia plant are the flowers.  Actually the flowers are quite tiny and are a yellowish-white color.  The leaves are sometimes also colored pink, white, yellow or green.  The plants, which bloom in December, are also known as “the Christmas Star,” “the lobster flower,” “the Mexican flame leaf,” and “las Flores de Noche Buena.” Since the early nineteenth century, poinsettias have had a close association with the Christmas holiday in the United States.

Poinsettias are indigenous to Mexico and Central America so it makes sense that the first known mention of poinsettias is in Aztec sources. The flowers were used as a source of a red dye to color clothing.  The Aztecs saw the intense red color as a symbol of purity.

There are two very similar Mexican legends about the origins of the plant, both involving children.  In both legends, poor children could not afford to buy flowers so they lovingly collected weeds to place on the Christmas nativity crèche at their church.  As the congregants prayed, the offering was blessed as the weeds turned into a blazing red display.

Franciscan priests in Taxco, Mexico in the seventeenth century used poinsettias in their celebration of the Feast of Santa Pesebre.  A pesebre is a nativity scene similar to a crèche.

The earliest name for the plants was the Aztec cuetlaxochitl.  The most common modern name comes from Joel Roberts Poinsett (1779-1851), who brought the plants to the United States in 1825.  Poinsett was the first United States Minister to Mexico.

The Aztec understanding of the meaning of the poinsettia speaks to me: purity, especially since some Christians have come to associate the intense red color of the plants with the Blood of Christ.  It is sometimes forgotten that the most important Christian holiday is not Christmas, but Easter, which commemorates the death and resurrection of Jesus.

The poinsettia image is from Andre Karwath, a contributor to the Wikimedia Commons Project, and is used under the Creative Commons Attribution Share Alike 2.5 Generic provision.

Tuesday, December 24, 2013

An Excellent a capella Version of The Little Drummer Boy


An a capella version of The Little Drummer Boy by Pentatonix, a quintet who perform without instruments.  They named their group for the pentatonic scale, which has five notes per octave, since there are five members in the group.

The Little Drummer Boy was written by Katherine Kennicott Davis (1892-1980), a music teacher, composer, and pianist.  She based the tune on a Czech baby rocking carol which has never been successfully identified.  The original title of Davis' song was Carol of the Drum.  Davis left all her music royalties to Wellesley College.


Monday, December 23, 2013

What They Think of Us: Christmas Themed Horror Films


Below is an alphabetical list of Christmas themed horror films.  Most of these films are either set at Christmas time or feature a homicidal maniac dressed as Santa Claus.  In a few cases, the homicidal killer IS Santa Claus.  The list is by no means exhaustive.

Santa Claus is not actually a Christian religious symbol even though many people think that he is.  He is, of course, based very loosely on Nicholas of Myra, a very generous 4th-century bishop in Turkey.  Santa Claus is an increasingly secularized generic symbol of cheer, goodwill, and sharing with others.

These films demonstrate more than anything else a disrespect for the Christmas holiday.  Some express outright contempt.  Depending on the exact nature of their content, some of them may be blasphemous.

Bikini Bloodbath Christmas (2009)
Black Christmas (1974)
Black Christmas (2006)
Bloody Christmas (2012)
A Cadaver Christmas (2011)
Child’s Play (1988)
Christmas Evil (1980)
Christmas Nightmare (2001)
The Christmas Season Massacre (2001)
Christmas Slay (2014)
A Christmas Tale (2010)
Christmas With the Dead (2012)
The City of Lost Children (1995)
Day of the Beast (1995)
Deadly Little Christmas (2009)
Don’t Open Till Christmas (1984)
Elves (1980)
Feeders 2: Slay Bells (1998)
Gremlins (1984)
Initiation: Silent Night, Deadly Night 4 (1990)
Jack Frost (1997)
The Nightmare Before Christmas (1993)
Night Train Murders (1975)
One Hell of a Christmas (2002)
Ornaments (2008)
Psycho Santa (2003)
Rare Exports (2010)
Saint (2010(
Saint Nick (2011)
Santa Claus (1959)
Santa Claus and Merlin Battle Satan (1959)
Santa Claws (1996)
Santa’s Slay (2005)
Silent Night (2012)
Silent Night, Bloody Night (1974)
Silent Night, Bloody Night: The Homecoming (2013)
Silent Night, Deadly Night (1984)
Silent Night, Deadly Night, Part 2 (1987)
Silent Night, Deadly Night III: Better Watch Out! (1989)
Silent Night, Deadly Night 5: The Toy maker (1991)
Silent Night of the Living Dead (in development)
Silent Night, Zombie Night (2009)
Tales From the Crypt (1972)
To All a Good Night (1980)
Two Front Teeth (2006)
Wind Chill (2007)

Three really oddball films:
Bad Santa (2003) This (and its unrated version, Badder Santa) sounds like a horror film but is actually a vulgar comedy.
Nixon and Hogan Smoke Christmas (2010) A drug comedy.
Santa Claus Conquers the Martians (1964) A children’s film.

Wednesday, December 18, 2013

Another Light Bulb Joke: Thanalogists

How many Thanatologists does it take to change a light bulb?
They would not change it because thanatologists prefer dead bulbs.

Tuesday, December 17, 2013

Sweet Baby Jesus

"Sweet baby Jesus! It's cold!"

The woman said the phrase, laughing the entire time.  I'm sure she did not understand what she had just done.  It really was cold that morning.

The woman had committed what was probably an unintentional act of blasphemy.  Blasphemy is defined as active contempt, negligent disrespect, or even casual benign failure to respect the holy.  Using the name of Jesus as an exclamation constitutes a blasphemous act.

Wednesday, December 4, 2013

Christianity in Herculaneum

On 24 August 79 AD/CE Mount Vesuvius in Italy began to erupt, spewing out large rocks and streams of molten lava.  The Roman communities of Pompeii, Herculaneum, Stabiae, and Oplontis were destroyed as well as several nearby villas.  The port of Herculaneum was smaller than the port of Pompeii and existed as a resort town for the wealthy.  The towns were covered by 13 to 20 feet of volcanic ash and pumice.

Excavations at Herculaneum and the other towns yielded multitudes of intact buildings after the ash was removed.  Since a 1939 excavation at Herculaneum found only the bodies of a few women and children, it was thought that the town was successfully evacuated during the cataclysm.  It was not until 1981 that over 300 skeletons were found huddled together in cluster of buildings.

During the 1939 excavation of Herculaneum it was proven that Christianity had made inroads in the area when a wooden cross was found nailed to a wall in one of the houses.