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Monday, April 13, 2015

Can you think of any garbage in pop culture?

You know, I mean actual garbage, trash, waste, not pop culture that is garbage.

This is the first example I could think of: the Death Star Garbage Compactor, in the first Star Wars * (1977).

"What an incredible smell you've discovered."
--Han Solo, having just fallen into the soon-to-start-compacting compactor


The Star Wars wiki informs us that it is Garbage Compactor 3263827 (that's it's hatch number)
. . . and it also notes that in the "New Hope novel and Star Wars 4: In Battle with Darth Vader, this Garbage Compactor is incorrectly numbered as 366117891").

I love fans.

* So, OK, properly it's the fourth episode, Star Wars: Episode IV A New Hope.
But I saw it when it came out and there weren't no others, so it's the first. I never watched the movie for again for about thirty years, but I remembered this scene vividly.

7 comments:

  1. Ralph Cramden of the Honeymooners? Or was that the sewers he worked in? Does Sanford and Son count? Wall-e of course, but you got him already. The garbage men on Sesame Street? Or Oscar, who lived in a garbage can?

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  2. Quark, and I was thinking about this last night.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quark_(TV_series)

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  3. Yep, I also thought of Oscar the Grouch, who sings "I Love Trash." And weren't there some cartoon characters called the Garbage Pail Kids?

    In a movie whose name I'm blanking on, Amy Adams and Emily Blunt clean up crime scenes, so they have lots of things like bloody mattresses to dispose of. Sunshine Cleaning, I think it's called.

    Are we just idly musing, or is this helpful for your book?

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  4. CROW: Yeah, that was sewers, and it was Cramden's friend Ed Norton (Art Carney)_--I quoted him in the Toilets book! Cramden was a bus driver, right?

    Golly, I totally forgot about Sanford and Son, which I used to watch!
    Looking it up, I see it was based on a British show from the 60s, Steptoe and Son---looking up that show got me rummaging for more about the history of salvage and rag-and-bone men.
    Thanks!

    ZHOEN: I don't even remember Quark! Drove an space garbage truck, huh...

    THAT got me looking at Space Trash---a big issue:
    NASA has to time launches around the possibility of running into loose screws up there, and ISS has to steer around them!

    LADY C: Oscar's song--I didn't know it! Thanks.

    I actually remember Garbage Pail kids--looking at them again just today, god! they're still shockingly gross!

    What I didn't know at the time was that Art Spiegelman was their creator---he of Pulitzer Prize-winning Maus fame.

    Sunshine Cleaning--yeah, I saw that and liked it a lot.
    I actually studied to be a funeral director for one semester (!), so it was familiar ground. I decided not to pursue that job because it's a whole lot of bureaucracy---handling insurance details and the like
    (families + finances = bad equation).

    It's fun to idly muse, yes, but actually it truly helps me---when I'm working on a project, I ask everyone, because people come up with amazing stuff I might miss.

    It gives me leads, but it also helps me to gauge people's associations with the topic...
    It's helpful to get a feel for what people already know, or don't know (teens won't have memories of, say, Sanford and Son.)

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  5. Dirty Jobs did several episodes on garbage and recycling places.

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  6. Would ancient middens count for garbage?

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  7. ZHOEN: I've got that on hold at the library, thanks!

    CROW: Definitely! But I have to limit history---the publisher wants me to focus mostly on contemporary environmental stuff.

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