“Crabs for Christmas” Music Video

Once upon a time Maryland Public Television was a fountain of creativity that focused on original programming instead of non-stop pledge programming based around self-help gurus… Merry Xmas to us.


“David DeBoy’s classic Balmmer song was the big finish to the Christmas 1984 episode of CRABS, the live comedy series produced at Md Public TV from 1984-1991. This piece features David and the entire cast, and includes credits.”

David DeBoy celebrates 30 years of ‘Crabs for Christmas’

In 1981, musician combined Baltimore’s love of Christmas and crustaceans into a song that’s become a holiday staple

By Chris Kaltenbach (The Baltimore Sun, 11/25/2011)

crabsCDCrabs for Christmas? Yes, please.

For three decades, David DeBoy has been singing his sad tale of an expatriate Baltimorean stuck in Houston on Christmas Eve, sadly lamenting to Santa that the only present he really wants is a big bucket of steamed crustaceans. That’s a sentiment any local resident should be able to appreciate, and it’s made the singer-songwriter responsible for “Crabs for Christmas” something of a hometown hero.

“I’m just so incredibly touched that people like it as much as they do, that they sing it as much as they do,” says DeBoy, who is celebrating the song’s 30th anniversary with a new CD featuring his signature song and an 12 similarly Baltimore-centric tunes. “How many people get a chance to touch people like that?”

Continue reading “David DeBoy celebrates 30 years of ‘Crabs for Christmas’” at The Baltimore Sun.

“Oh, I want crabs for Christmas
Oh, only crabs will do
Oh, ho, with crabs for Christmas
My Christmas wish’ll come true.”

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Posted in 1980s, Baltimore Songs, Baltimorons, Christmas, Crabs, Music | Tagged , | 1 Comment

John Waters Reads About Moby Dick’s Dick

In This audio chapter from the “Moby Dick Big Read,” John Waters reads the shortest chapter of “Moby Dick,” Chapter 95, “The Cassock,” which is about how the whaling crew cuts off and skins a whale’s giant jet-black penis and turns it into a sleeveless robe for the “mincer” to wear while he slices blubber for the pots.

“Not the wondrous cistern in the whale’s huge head; not the prodigy of his unhinged lower jaw; not the miracle of his symmetrical tail; none of these would so surprise you, as half a glimpse of that unaccountable cone, — longer than a Kentuckian is tall …”

[soundcloud url=”http://api.soundcloud.com/tracks/71784035″ params=”show_artwork=false” width=”100%” height=”166″ iframe=”true” /]

‘Moby Dick’ Project Brings Book Into 21st Century
(NPR, All Things Considered, 9/19/2012)

Writer Philip Hoare talks about his new project, the “Moby Dick Big Read.” From now until late January, a chapter of Herman Melville’s classic whale-hunting epic will be available for download each day. Each is read by the likes of Tilda Swinton, John Waters and Stephen Fry.

Click to listen to story and excerpt read by John Waters.

New Audio Project Offers Four Months of ‘Moby-Dick’

 By John Williams (The New York Times, 9/18/2012)

The actress Tilda Swinton and 134 other readers are lending their voices to the “Moby-Dick Big Read,” an online audio version of Herman Melville’s epic novel.

The chapters will be available as free downloads, a new one appearing on the Web site each day until mid-January alongside a related image by a contemporary artist.

The author Philip Hoare and the artist Angela Cockayne came up with the idea, having previously teamed up in 2011 to present a whale symposium and exhibition at Peninsula Arts, a public arts program at Britain’s Plymouth University. Mr. Hoare’s book “The Whale,” a wide-ranging cultural and natural history of the animal, won the BBC’s Samuel Johnson Prize for Non-Fiction in 2009.

“The digressive nature of ‘Moby-Dick’ really suits the medium of going online,” Mr. Hoare said. “The book was never edited. It’s quite analogous to a kind of blog, really.”

The democratic list of readers includes celebrities like Ms. Swinton, John Waters and Stephen Fry as well as fishermen, schoolchildren and a vicar. The youngest is Cyrus Larcombe-Moore, a 12-year-old who contributes a few lines of dialogue to a chapter read by his teacher, Tom Thoroughgood.

Continue reading “New Audio Project Offers Four Months of ‘Moby-Dick’” at The New York Times.

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This is Christmas!, Essex, Maryland, 1997

An oldie but goodie from the Baltimore Or Less Christmas archives. Happy Holidays!

This is Christmas! Photo by Scott Huffines, 2007

Christmas window display in Essex, Maryland.

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Hampden Christmas Parade 2006

An oldie but goodie from the Baltimore Or Less Christmas archives. Happy Holidays!

The Spirit of Christmas Past
Sunday, Dec. 3, 2006

“Man About Town” Tom Warner and “Underdog” Suzanne Muldowney send you tidings of comfort and joy.

It’s that time again…time for the Mayor’s Annual Christmas Parade in Hampden and once again the true reason for the holiday season is to see Suzanne Muldowney (pictured left, next to my Cherubic mug), the dancer/choreagrapher who has appeared in the parade as the cartoon character Underdog for most of the past 24 years. This year, the 54-year old native of Delran, N.J. introduced a new character, her “Fairy of the Golden Snow.”

Suzanne Muldowney’s appearances as Underdog have become a parade tradition, no doubt boosted by her frequent appearances on Atomic TV‘s annual holiday specials (not to mention her numerous appearances on Howard Stern’s TV and radio show) and this year’s appearance was even ballyhooed by an article in the Baltimore Messenger: “No need to fear as long as ‘Underdog’ is here.”

Suzanne’s clearly been riding a media juggernaut, as a documentary about her, My Life as An Underdog, was recently screened at Baltimore’s MicroCineFest film festival, where it won the Audience Choice Best Feature and Grand Jury Best Feature awards.

So it was no surprise to see MicroCineFest programmer Skizz Cyzyk and Scott Wallace Brown, who perform as the ukelele and melodica duo The Awkward Sounds of Scott and Skizz (“2 guys playing little music on little instruments”), on hand to jam with the diva fairy.

Skizz, Scott & Suze Have Themselves a Very Awkward Christmas

See “Silent Night” sung in Latin and English!

Lost In Translation?

As you can see from the clip posted by Scott Huffines above, Suzanne sang two versions of “Silent Night” with The Awkward Sounds of Scott & Skizz, first singing the verses in Latin and English, then following up the next two verses in Latin. Apparently her use of Latin lyrics caused Suzanne to lose some sleep, for the very next night she left a message on my answering machine, expressing her concern that Atomic TV might air her “Silent Night” performance and confuse viewers unfamiliar with Latin. (Doesn’t she know that Atomic TV is as just dead a communications medium as the Latin language? We’re living in YouTube Times, Suze!) Anyway, she suggested that, since most people were not familiar with Latin, we air her Awkward/Fairy version with subtitles. Like the Baker-Hamilton Iraq Study Group recommendations, we’ll take it under serious advisement.

Big Santa Is Watching

Suzanne, as per usual, railed against the secularization of Christmas, especially against her nemesis Santa Claus – the Great Deceiver. This year she pointed out the Orwellian aspects of Santa’s surveillance powers (I think his “making a list/checking it twice” powers were recently expanded under the new Patriot Act to now include wiretapping), especially regarding the fact that “He knows when you’ve been naughty, he knows when you’ve been nice.” She even branded Santa Claus “The Unseen but Ominipresent Record-keeping Behavior Monitor.” Now stick that in your chimney and smoke it, Herr Claus! Later, Suzanne confided to her friend Violet Glaze that if Santa had to be included in a holiday parade at all, at least he could be made more palatable by being dressed as an authentic Greek Orthodox bishop. (Now that I’d like to see!)

More Suzanne Pix

OK, here’s the rest of my pix of Suzanne and her fans and minions.

Scott, Skizz & Suze Jam Out, Latin-style

Suzanne Keeps the Beat with her Fairy Wand

Skizz Backs Off from the Fairy Wand

Scott Huffines and Violet Glaze Escort the Fairy of the Golden Snow

She Stoops To Conquer (Mmmm…Candy!)

Fairy of Golden Snow Prepares for Takeoff

Other Parade Highlights

OK, as much as I love Suzanne Muldowney and her grand Golden Snow costume, I have to admit my favorite moment of the day was watching the South American parade formations in their more revealing garb – especially the the Bolivian babes and the Mayan mamacitas!

South of the Border: Bolivia Has Back!

Bolivia, Land of Simon Bolivar & Bountiful Backsides

Senoritas Shakin’ Their Aztecs

New Homeland Security Formation

Scott & Skizz, Ready To Invoke Their Muse

Rocker Eric Plys Soft Cutie with Hard Cider

Fez and Fido

Joe Cameltoe the Shriner

Hampden Hons Looking Rather Stilted

Posted in 2000s, Atomic TV, Baltimorons, Christmas, Hampden, Holidays, Neighborhoods | Tagged , , , , , | 1 Comment