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‘Tis the season to be unholy, Tra La La La: A Million Lonely Acres

“They say it has a horse's head, long legs with hooves, two short front legs, and a bat's wings. No one knows how tall it is. Some people think it's six feet tall, others think it's only three or four feet tall. The Devil has glowing red eyes and makes loud screeching sounds.” - description of the Jersey Devil from the State of New Jersey’s official website.

Being an avid Fortean, I knew of the Jersey Devil even before The Last Broadcast, a found footage horror mockumentary which used the legend and the eerie vastness of the Barrens to good effect a whole year before Blair Witch stole its shaky-cam thunder, and of course there was that memorable Sopranos episode too… The abandoned pitch-pine ghost towns, the legends, not only of the Devil, but the Black Doctor and others, meant this haunted landscape was long on my bucket list of US locales to visit. Sadly, I’m pretty sure now that I’ll never be going back to the US since it became weird in a wholly unentertaining way for trans folk, but I can still dream of glowing red eyes and unholy screeching, can’t I? :) (sounds like me after a heavy night.)

So: a drone track built out of Thermo, DroneLab, and a few other bits and pieces cobbled together in appropriately Frankensteinian fashion inside AUM. To you, it’s (almost) Halloween. To me, unholy screeching is just another Friday. Compliments of the season to you all!

Comments

  • I’m pleased as punch to see you reference The Last Broadcast, which preceded Blair Witch but is mostly forgotten as seminal in the (unfortunate) explosion of found footage genre.

  • @garden said:
    I’m pleased as punch to see you reference The Last Broadcast, which preceded Blair Witch but is mostly forgotten as seminal in the (unfortunate) explosion of found footage genre.

    I consider Orson Welles’ “War of the Worlds” radio broadcast the first of that genre.

  • edited October 2024

    @NeuM said:

    @garden said:
    I’m pleased as punch to see you reference The Last Broadcast, which preceded Blair Witch but is mostly forgotten as seminal in the (unfortunate) explosion of found footage genre.

    I consider Orson Welles’ “War of the Worlds” radio broadcast the first of that genre.

    If we’re going to shift media, how about Dracula, which was an assemblage of documentary records made by participants and observers of the events of the time?

  • edited October 2024

    Well, if we are talking epistolary novels, ( Which, fortunately, we aren’t. )… How about Aphra Benn’s 1684 Love Letters Between A Nobleman And His Sister? Or Laurence Sterne’s shaggy dog story (black page included) assemblage The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy (1759)? Or Defoe’s spurious, salacious ‘autobiography’ of Moll Flanders (1722)? (…and still a rattling good read, btw). Damn - knew that English degree would come in handy one day. :)

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