Showing posts with label wizard of oz. Show all posts
Showing posts with label wizard of oz. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 10, 2018

2018 Hallmark Halloween Ornaments

Every year Hallmark makes Halloween ornaments and some Christmas ornaments that could go on your Halloween tree. Here's this year's selection. I'm kinda disappointed they don't have any classic monsters. Anyone getting any of these?

Mini Peanuts Trick or Treat Snoopy

Bewitching Bat

Disney Junior Vampirina

Ghostly Mausoleum

Happy Halloween Werewolf

Mini Bitty Bat
Mini Sugar Skull Gal

Mini Sugar Skull Guy

A Clue for Scooby Doo

The Many Faces of Jack Skellington

The Peanuts Gang Spooky Snoopy

The Walking Dead Daryl Rides Again

The Walking Dead Merle Dixon Walker

The Wizard of Oz Monkey Business

Jack vs the One Armed Bandit

Sunday, May 10, 2015

My Adventures On Free Comic Book Day

Well, better late than never. Here's how I spent my Free Comic Book Day 2015.

 The nerdiness actually started the night before. I saw Avengers: Age of Ultron.
I highly recommend seeing it!

 Here's all of the free comic books I got.

 Other free stuff I picked up.

 First stop was JC Comics & Cards.

 I was greeted by Batman and a small Power Ranger.

 I spent over an hour in line.

 Some of the books on the wall. I have those two Hulk comics!

 John, the owner, dresses up as the Joker each year.

 I bought these four books from his quarter box.

 Second stop was Books-A-Million!

 Avengers Assemble!

 The cashier was dressed up as Emma Frost, The White Queen.

 I bought a Funko Marvel Mystery Mini and got Deadpool.

 Lunch time at Fred's Diner!

 I had the bacon cheeseburger, my wife had a patty melt.

 The third comic shop was the Quaker Square News Stand.
They just changed their name to Quaker Square Comics after FCBD.

 The building was the original Quaker Oats Company and has tons of memorabilia.

 I bought a Hulk magnet.

 The fourth and final comic shop was Kenmore Komics & Games.
I love the metal Spider-Man on the side of his building.
This is my regular comic shop that I go to every two weeks.

 I bought one book from the quarter box and five packs of Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. trading cards.

 The day didn't end there. We stopped at the Goodwill and I bought a Garfield book and a shot glass from the local defunct amusement park Geauga Lake.

 We then went to the race track track/casino where they were celebrating the Kentucky Derby by holding a funny hat contest.

 I "won" an old generic Iron Man 2 cup.

I played The Wizard of Oz Haunted Forest slot machine.

 I didn't win anything, but it was fun.

We ended the day at Five Below where I bought this Infinity Gauntlet t-shirt.

It was a really fun day!
On Sunday I went to Oddmall.
But, that will have to wait for another post.

Wednesday, April 30, 2014

Books From Goodwill

A week or two ago I went to my local Goodwill. I didn't find anything interesting until I hit the book section. Their book prices are: hardback $1.50, paperback $1.00, and children's 50¢. I got all of these at the children's price even though one of them is definitely not a kids book! :)

All of these Peanuts books were printed between 1968 and 1972. I always pick up these books when I find them cheap. Gotta love good ol' Charlie Brown.


A Hulk Junior Novel from 2003. Spider-Man: Secret of The Sinister Six novel from 2003. The Official Polish/Italian Joke Book by Larry Wilde ©1973, 23rd printing, November 1978. I know this is very unPC. But, I've been getting these joke books since I was a kid in the 70s. And The Wizard of Oz published by Scholastic in 1968.


Friday, April 09, 2010

Meinhardt Raabe, R.I.P.

From the Florida Times-Union --

Meinhardt Raabe, who played the Munchkin coroner in the 1939 film "The Wizard of Oz," is dead at 94.

Mr. Raabe died Friday at his home in Penney Farms, a Clay County retirement community where he had lived since 1986, said Bob Rigel, president of the Penney Retirement Community.

He had one speech in "The Wizard of Oz," pronouncing the Wicked Witch of the East dead: "I thoroughly examined her. And she's not merely dead. She's really, most sincerely dead!"

It was brief but it opened doors, he told The Times-Union in 2007.

"Twelve seconds and I made a living at it ever since," he said.

He was referring to his three decades working as a spokesman and salesman for Oscar Mayer, where he was known as "Little Oscar, World's Smallest Chef." In that job, Mr Raabe frequently traveled in the Weinermobile.

After moving to Northeast Florida with his wife, Marie, who died in a 1997 automobile accident, Mr. Raabe made frequent appearances at "Wizard of Oz" festivals and events.

"He just loved being around children," said Cindy Bosnyak, a long-time friend and travel companion in recent years.

He also liked being around other "little people," such as his fellow Munchkins, and hoped he was an inspiration to them, Bosnyak said.

In 2007 he was one of six Munchkins who went to Los Angeles to be honored with a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. Last September he was one of five Munchkins who went to New York for a 70th anniversary celebration of the beloved movie.

Mr. Raabe was born and raised in Watertown, Wis., the grandson of German immigrants.

As a young man, he put himself through college by working at the Chicago Fair and developed the habit of reading constantly, he told Bosnyak.

"He was a man with a head full of hair and he had everything upstairs," she said. "... He was a walking history book."

Mr. Raabe earned master's degrees in horticulture and in accounting, taught German as a substitute teacher and was a pilot with the Civil Air Patrol during World War II, she said.

Bosnyak said Mr. Raabe's remains will be cremated and returned to Watertown where his only surviving relative, a sister, Marion Ziegelman, lives.

A memorial service will be in Clay County May 1 at a time and place to be determined.