Showing posts with label Halloween. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Halloween. Show all posts

Saturday, November 30, 2024

Rish Outcast 290: Wanna See Something Really Scary?

Just in time to celebrate the 42nd anniversary of the release of Michael Jackson's Thriller, Rish talks to Marshal and Big about movies that scared them. 

What scared you?



Flicks mentioned include:
THE SHINING (1980)
CREEPSHOW (1982)
PET SEMATARY (1989)
A NIGHTMARE ON ELM STREET (1984)
FRIDAY THE 13TH (1980)
JAWS (1975)
PHANTASM II (1988)
THE RING (2002)
AN AMERICAN WEREWOLF IN LONDON (1981)
STAR TREK II: THE WRATH OF KHAN (1982)

If you want to download the episode, Right-Click HERE.

If you want to support me on Patreon, click HERE.

If you wanna see something really scary, click HERE.

Logo by Gino "Something Really Hairy" Moretto.

Sunday, July 07, 2024

Rish Outcast 283: All's Well That Ends Well

Inspired by Big Anklevich and Taylor Swift, Rish talks about some of his favorite unhappy endings.

Warning: Spoilers abound!

Timecodes (unreliable)

Invasion of the Body Snatchers (1978) - 20:02

Halloween: Season of the Witch - 25:20

Se7en - 28:45

Buffy the Vampire Slayer (Normal Again) - 31:05

Pet Sematary - 35:15

The Mist - 37:25

Planet of the Apes (1968) - 38:16

On Her Majesty's Secret Service - 42:35

The Descent - 44:44

Also, various Stephen King stories (The Jaunt, Gramma, The Mist), Big Anklevich stories, The Outer Limits, maybe more. 

If you want to download the episode, Right-Click HERE.

If you want to support me on Patreon, click HERE.

If you want to hear the whole Taylor Swift song, go HERE.

Logo by Gino "All's Swell" Moretto.

(I published this at 7:07 on 7/7)

Friday, November 03, 2023

Rish Outcast 263: Underdecorated 2

Rish finishes the presentation of his story "Underdecorated" . . . just in time to take down your decorations!

Note: I meant to post this before Halloween, but a town ordinance said I couldn't.

To download the episode, Right-Click HERE.

To support me on Patreon, click HERE.

Logo by Gino "Chunderdecorated" Moretto.

Tuesday, October 31, 2023

Best Day o' the Year

I deeply love Halloween.  I met this girl, Paola, who claims to love "spooky season" more than anybody, and I thought I'd wish her a happy October 31st . . . but she treats Halloween as so holy, she took the day off.  Touché.

I recently bought another Sean Connery mask to replace the one I lost somewhere.  Unfortunately, it's a Connery-circa-1983 mask, but hey, I'll still use it.  I grabbed it last night to record a Halloween greeting, having forgotten to do so over the past week (I even considered doing it up at the cabin, and was disappointed I hadn't brought it when some cool fog rolled in last week).  I also thought about driving to the cemetery, but instead, just did it outside the storage unit where I keep the mask, since no one was around to interrupt, mock, or attack me.

I decided to do the "Rap" bit from the end of Michael Jackson's Thriller, having known the words for forty years now (what I wouldn't give to hear a recording of little kid Rish Outfield saying, "Darkness falls across the land...").  I rehearsed it once, trying to make sure I got the words right, did the accent, and didn't trip over myself since I can't really see out the eyeholes.

Then it was time to record it.  I went through the whole song with no errors.

And then, at the last possible second (during the laugh), I screwed it up.

Figured I'd share that here.




Tuesday, October 24, 2023

Rish Outcast 262: Underdecorated 1

Rish presents the first half of his Halloween story "Underdecorated" about a town without holiday spirit.  

Or is it "Undecorated?"

To download the episode, just Right-Click HERE.

To support me on Patreon, click HERE.

As always, Gino "Down Underdecorated" Moretto created the logo.

Monday, October 31, 2022

10-31


It's the finest day of the year, and I'm traveling.  My body clock continues to be mis-working, because even though our plan was to get up at seven to make the seven-thirty train two blocks away, by six-thirty I was awake and showered.  Jeff's philosophy is that it's better to be early than late, so we packed up our stuff and headed out.  I wanted to thank the staff here, but they looked at me like I was way out of line, so I have yet to understand the European way of doing things.  I had packed an apple and a Coke Zero in my backpack, and we took the Tube one last time (I asked a bloke if I could sit down beside him and he blinked and said, "Wha?  Of course."), getting off at King's Cross, then lining up to go through passport control.  We are required to take all the things out of our pockets and put our belongings in trays, which go through detectors, and I did so . . . only to wait an inordinate amount of time waiting for my stuff to come through.  

Well, when it did, I found a puddle inside the tray: the Coke Zero had seemingly leaked and/or exploded inside the backpack.  This was unfortunate and did not please me, despite what you would guess.  I carried my more-than-dripping backpack to the nearest trash can and emptied it as best I could into it.  A row or two away, an employee was cleaning up the floor where someone had dropped their coffee cup, and when I asked her for some paper towels, Jeff looked at me like I had decided to start beefing my stroganoff there in the terminal.  That also did not please me.  

Eventually, I made it through customs and found a restroom where I could try to clean out my backpack.  They had no paper towels there (which again, unfortunate), but I held the bag open in front of the air hand dryers over and over again as their five second cycles ended and started again.  Yippee.

Finally, I thought I had it dry enough, but after we stood to get on the train to Paris, I noticed yet another unsightly puddle where my bag had sat.  Happy Halloween.

Now we're leaving England and on our way to Paris.  The celebrity of this visit, sleeping next to Emily, is Battlestar Galactica's Katee Sackhoff.  I've never liked her or found her very attractive, but this look-alike is nice.

The ride was uneventful, but when we got to Paris rail station, I didn't know how to do things, and had a bit of an incident because of it.  So, in England they have these things called Oyster cards, where you put money on a card, and swipe the card going into and out of the Underground stations (it also works on the big double-decker buses too).  It is pretty brilliant, and supremely useful.  In Paris, you have to buy your ticket from a little kiosk, then feed that ticket (about the size of a movie stub back in the day) into a machine that eats it and spits it out at the top.  Emily explained it to me, but when we were going through a checkpoint, I expected the ticket to come out where I'd inserted it, not at the top, so while I looked for it, the five or six seconds they give you to get through the gate were counting down, so when I tried to go through, the doors closed on me.  Literally, I was stuck in there, with my shoulder, arm, and backpack on one side of the entrance and the rest of me on the other.

The offending ticket.

Now, thank God Jeff and Emily were there with me, because Jeff used his hands to pry the doors open again, while Emily pulled my backpack inside, or I would've been stuck there, calling for help in a language nobody around me understood.  It bothered me for, oh, the next hour, thinking about it.  And now it's bothered me again . . . just like those damned self-closing doors in Cloud City bothered me as a little kid, wondering what would happen if you waited just a second too long stepping through one of them.  Fudge, now I'm thinking of old people or fat people or little kids going through, not knowing you have a very short time limit to get through the gates, and getting stuck, caught, or smashed in there like a mouse in a trap.  Shudder.

Eventually, we took a subterranean train to take us to Chessy, which I believe was the city Disneyland is in.  It went fast, up and down, underground and over it.  I've been on more trains this week than I have my whole life leading up to this trip.  An old beggar lady (she might have been a nun, I'm not judging) approached me on the train for a hand-out, and it was the first time that had happened this trip.  I would be approached twice more on that same train (once by a child, once by a twenty-something kid), but I find it odd that there were only beggars in Paris, of all the places we went (there were bullshit artists in Venice, but that ain't the same thing).

We were staying in the Hotel New York, which Jeff had stayed in before and said I would like because it had--get this--a Marvel Comics theme.  And man, it was not subtle.  There were paintings everywhere, decor, memorabilia, and life-sized statues of Iron Man (three inside and one outside).  

We had to go through Security to get in the building (which was unusual), and our room was on the Captain America floor, with a huge mural outside the elevator doors (the floor above us was dedicated to Thor). 

This ain't a great picture (or even good), but the soap was molded into the shape of the Avengers logo.

There are two Disney parks, just like in Anaheim, and we had those tickets where you could go to either one.  They had been there a bunch of times, so the only thing they hadn't been on were the two Marvel rides, built since their last visit.


Before we went into the park, Jeff wanted to eat (pretty much the default mode for him), and proposed we go to the big steakhouse beside the park.  But I was worried about the prices, and Jeff said, "Don't worry, I got it."  That was super generous, in a week of unbelievable generosity, but man, when I saw the prices . . . I felt dirty about it.  I'm talking: putting on your big sister's bra and prancing around in front of her mirror-level dirty.*  This effing place was so expensive that when I asked for ketchup, they provided me with a little personal two Euro bottle, that was just for me.

The Disney parks were open, and the crowds were very, very large, which (it turned out) was due to it being a fall break at many schools in the European Union, and also Halloween Day.  When leaving London and entering Paris, I had waved at and/or congratulated anyone I saw wearing a costume, but by the time we'd walked through the strip mall of Disney shops outside the parks, I had stopped doing so--there were just too many.

I have to tip my hat to the thousands of European souls that liked Halloween enough to go somewhere to collectively celebrate it, but it did make for a lot of congestion, especially trying to get into the park's gates, and anywhere there were rides.  We went into Disneyland, and headed toward Phantom Manor, and just before we got there, a huge spider was crossing the cobblestone sidewalk, and the attendees were shrieking and pointing at it.  It was not quite tarantula-sized, but it was bigger than any spider I've run into outside of the desert.  I took it as a cool Halloween omen . . . until Jeff said that somebody was bound to stomp on it.

We made our way to the Phantom Manor, where the line was insanely long (understandably so, considering the date).  But that's what we were there for.

I had wanted to see Phantom Manor for years, and I had plenty of time to wait, as the line snaked all around the property, and we watched those with the new Fastpass-equivalents bypass all of us to go on ahead (this was a delightful scam wherein those willing to pay nine Euros FOR EACH RIDE could skip the line and enter on the other side, when, honestly, part of going to parks like this is standing in the line . . . heck, it may be an integral part).  It's very similar to Disneyland's The Haunted Mansion, but all in French--just like all the rides there--but with a more morbid, actively scary theme to it.

Basically, Phantom Manor has a story to it, about a beautiful young woman named Melanie, whose evil father (I didn't realize he was the father on the ride, I just figured he was basically me) keeps her from her interested male suitors, and locks her away in a haunted house until she gives in to despair and essentially becomes a ghost.  The Phantom is a very coolly-designed ghost that shows up multiple times during the ride, and was initially voiced by Vincent Price, only to have all that dropped when French officials insisted the dialogue be in French instead of English.

A couple of years ago, however, they came up with a way to have their gâteau and eat it too by having one line in English, followed by one line in French, and they restored Vincent Price's narration, at least in part.

It has a lot of the Anaheim park's charming characters, like the singing busts and Madame Leota, but at the beginning, you get this awesome scene of the broken-hearted bride standing by a huge window with a raging storm outside, and at the end, there are all these rotting corpses popping up and reaching for you in a delightfully non-kid-friendly way.

I've mentioned that I haven't written anything but this (damned) blog on my Eurotrip, but at the end of the ride, when the ghost of Melanie the Bride appeared and said (in English and French), "Will YOU marry me?" it really made me want to write a scary story where that exact thing happens.

I mentioned congestion in the park before, and while it did exist, it was in certain parts of the park, like where the parade or fireworks were, but in other spots, there was virtually nobody.  We went into the section where the Indiana Jones ride was, and the sign said the wait was thirty minutes, so we went inside.  The wait wasn't thirty minutes, though . . . it was nothing.  There was literally no line for Indiana Jones et le Temple du Peril, but there were also no lights once you got on it.  So, we went on an outdoor rollercoaster in the dark, cool night, and then got off, went around, and got on it again.  It's a fun coaster, but it didn't even have John Williams music playing on it, so it didn't feel like Indy Jones in any way to me.  We did it three times (still with zero line) until Jeff said he couldn't stand it anymore, then we walked through the COCO-decorated Mexican Afterlife portion of the park, and then . . . well, nothing.

They seemed to be closing early (to me, anyway, I don't know what was really going on), but while the fireworks went off over Sleeping Beauty's castle, a mass exodus out of the park was created by the employees, and oddly, instead of making everyone go out through the main gates, they opened the backstage portions of the park where only employees are allowed, and that's how we left Disneyland.**

The other park, Walt Disney Studios Park, was open an hour later, and we went inside, but only to look at the souvenir shops, which all had the same things for sale, and do battle with the crowds, all of whom had the same idea as us.

They had these big inflatable ghosts outside the park, and Emily wanted to take a picture with them, but the crowds were thick enough we told ourselves we'd hit it up the next day, when the crowds were thinner.  But the next day, they were gone.

Had they ever truly been there to begin with?

We made our way back to the New York Hotel, which was about a half mile away, but Jeff was grateful it wasn't the hotel he'd stayed in the first time, which was another mile down the road.

But wait, there's more!


*Jeff spent on this one meal what I spend in an entire week on food.

**It may sound cool that we got to go through a section nobody gets to go through, but it was just trailers and tables and the backs of attractions, and felt like we were walking behind a Walmart or something.


Rish Outcast 234: Murder Maze


In a surprise Halloween episode, Rish presents his short story "Murder Maze."  Of course, every day is Halloween in his world.

To download this be-otch, Right-Click HERE.

To support this be-astard on Patreon, click HERE.

Logo by Gino "Manslaughter Maze" Moretto.

Note: You're getting this episode early, because . . . well, beneficence, really.  You hardly deserve it.

Thursday, October 31, 2019

Rish Outcast 154: Touching the Other Side

This is my Halloween episode, and thanks to two mishaps, I'm lucky to have gotten it to you at all.

Mishap number one was that, due to my craptop living up to its name, I had to substitute "The Night Clerk" with "Touching The Other Side."  You'll meet Natalie Whitmore next Halloween.


The other mishap was that I had to run to the cabin today because it has been unseasonably cold, and my brother (who is out of town) was worried the pipes would freeze.  I drove down there with my brother-in-law, and we discovered the toilets and pipes filled with ice.  So, we underwent the lengthy process of thawing everything, flushing the water from said pipes, and putting anti-freeze in them.

When I got home again, it was time to take the kids trick or treating,  but now that that's done, I can finally get this show out there.*


So, "Touching the Other Side" is a new story concerning a certain haunted building in Idaho, and I hope you dig it.

Happy greatest day of the year!



Spookily download the episode by Right-Clicking HERE.

Creepily check out "True Ghost Encounter" HERE and/or HERE.

Unsettlingly become a patron on my Patreon HERE.

Terrifyingly thank Gino Moretto for the logo (and cover) HERE.

*Another reason to support me on Patreon . . . those guys got it days ago.

Thursday, November 01, 2018

Nothing Can Stop The . . . Wait, Who?

Years ago, my nephew used to ask me questions about Marvel comics characters.  For some reason, he really fixated on the Juggernaut, and ever since he was five or so, he's wanted to be the Juggernaut for Halloween.

If you're not familiar with the Unstoppable Juggernaut, here's an image:


But nobody makes a Juggernaut costume.  And after his appearance in DEADPOOL 2, they never will.

(Not the worst image that came up, but...)

But when the boy brought it up again this past summer, I started thinking about it, about how we might pull off a homemade version of that costume.

I figured you buy a muscle suit, at any old costume or online store, and put brown faux-leather on it.  Not bad.  But the helmet, the most iconic part of the character . . .


. . . how would we manage that?

My first thought was to get a mixing bowl that was exactly the right size, then (somehow) cut eye holes and a mouth hole in it.  Then we'd cover it with the same brown fabric, or spray paint it brown, or, if we were extremely lucky, we'd find a BROWN mixing bowl to do it with.  But no luck.

Next, we went to the craft store and found these cool foam half-balls.  They looked EXACTLY like what I had in mind, and were sort of hollowed out:


But they were unbelievably expensive (literally.  I still cannot believe they dared charge that much for just one), and were only fifty cents cheaper on Amazon.  I still considered it, but the problem was, what if it didn't fit, or broke trying to carve out eye-holes?  Then the foam investment was ruined, and for what?

I went to Walgreens after that, and saw a bunch of their huge inflatable rubber balls.  Ah ha! I said, this is the perfect size and shape!  We'll have no trouble cutting eye-holes for this!  I can cover the rubber with the faux-leather, and if we ruin one, well, it's not a huge expense like the foam.


I bought one, cut it open, and immediately realized my folly.


It became, much like my soul, a deflated shapeless void once there was no air in it, and though it was the right size to fit over my nephew's head, it would not keep any shape, let alone the iconic supervillain helmet one.

It wouldn't work, not as a costume, and now, certainly, as for a ball.

My sister mentioned papier-mache, and I sort of wish that's the way we had gone, but I worried that a) it would look crappy, and 2) that it would fall apart the second he took it off and put it on again.  I still wonder if that might've been a better way to go.

I kept looking for mixing bowls, going to the thrift shop down the road.  And that's when I passed the lamp section.


Hey, a couple of these didn't look half bad.  They came in varying sizes, different materials, wide ones, squat ones, and, if I squinted, they kind of looked like the Juggernaut's helmet.  Cool.

So I bought one, trying it on myself to see if it would be the right size.  I purposely picked one up that was a little too deep, knowing I could cut material off the top and/or bottom to get it the right size for a ten year old's head.

I was aware that the top of it would be a challenge (this one had a metal lid that I could easily slice off and throw off a busy overpass), but I figured that would not be an insurmountable problem.

No, my chief worry was that, even if we covered it with pleather, the boy would look ridiculous.  That it would obviously be what it was...
Right?


But I was committed.  I was gonna be a cool uncle--maybe not as cool as that video of Patton Oswalt making his son a Doctor Octopus costume (seriously, check that out if you want to feel deficient as a parent . . . AND a man), but one who at least put in a little effort.

So, first thing I did was cut off the top of the lampshade (and throw it into rush hour traffic), then sliced openings for the eyes and mouth.


We made a sort of "roof" of the helmet out of cotton gauze so his hair didn't stick out the top.


I went to Walmart and got a yard of leathery fabric, which we wrapped the helmet in.  My first idea was to have my mom sew it, but the lampshade was too breakable, so we used one of those hot glue guns to attach the material.

 
I used the same material to put on the chest of the muscle-suit we got him.  I forgot to take a picture of that step, and also the brown pants we got him to wear (he didn't own any brown pants--who does?--so we went to the thrift store and scooped some up).
 
The "helmet" was way too wide on my nephew's head, so we encased it with gauze/cotton padding so it would sort of huge his head and face more.
 
 
Lastly, to look (sorta) like rivets, I hot-glued metal buttons to the helmet, then painted them brown.


We cut off a few strips of the material to go on his arms and knuckles.  I hoped we'd find some moonboots we could also cover with the material, but had no luck, and he just wore tennis shoes.


I recognize it didn't come out great, but I thought it came out fairly well, at least.

 
And that was it.
 
During our trick or treating, ONE guy (that I saw) called out, "Hey, it's the Juggernaut!"  But that was all (my nephew said there was another dude [a grown man, like I'm supposed to be] who thought the costume was cool and took a selfie with him, but I didn't witness that).

Later, I heard that my nephew wasn't entirely thrilled with the costume (I choose to believe that it's because it was awkward and heavy), but I told him we could improve it for the next comic con we go to.  Maybe we'll try the papier-mache.

Maybe we'll try the Colossus version.

 
Nahh.