
The usual collection of oddities is again found in this number. A natural lemonade spring, a private fire department in Connecticut, reviving lung fish shipped in mud from Africa and a ranger who shaves with an ax, among others.
United States

Is it worth the time? Honestly, only if you have five minutes to burn and a weird love for trivia that feels like it fell out of an old almanac. If you enjoy You Tell 'Em, Lions, I Roar for its sheer strangeness, you might find a kick here. But if you hate feeling like you're trapped in a 1930s classroom, avoid it like...


Comparing the cinematic DNA and archive impact of two defining moments in cult history.

Charles E. Ford

Frank Moser
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"Is it worth the time? Honestly, only if you have five minutes to burn and a weird love for trivia that feels like it fell out of an old almanac. If you enjoy You Tell 'Em, Lions, I Roar for its sheer strangeness, you might find a kick here. But if you hate feeling like you're trapped in a 1930s classroom, avoid it like the plague. There's this ranger who shaves with an ax. An actual ax. You watch him, and you just wait for his nose to fall off or something. It’s the kind of thing that makes you..."


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