Candlenights is a pan-religious, pansexual, personal pan pizza winter holiday celebrated by My Brother, My Brother and Me, first conceptualized in Episode 36. It has been described as being "basically Christmas, and dreidel and latkes, and Kwanza songs."[1] Candlenights starts and ends for each person at different times, is about different things for each person, and is celebrated differently by each person. People from all countries of all religions and those without religion alike can celebrate their own Candlenights in their own way. Candlenights is most famous for being a registered trademark of Big Giant Head, LLC. Every year since 2014 (with a few exceptions), the brothers have hosted a live Candlenights show in their hometown of Huntington.
Candlenights is the best holiday of all!
The Book of Candlenights[]
Cussing isn't allowed during Candlenights, and anyone who tries will be censored automagically with the sound of Candlenights bells.
The primary gift-giving figure of Candlenights is known as the Star King. The brothers don't necessarily want to exclude Santa from participating, but they only acknowledge Toronto Fashion Santa.[2] Other suggested Candlenights mascots include Rockin' Randy the Safe Sex Santa, Terry the Nondenominational Gift Delivery Dragon, and "the boy from the Christmas Shoes song."[3]
Candlenights (The Dark Unnamed, Far Far Below the Mantle of the Earth) is actually a sentient higher being that can only be kept appeased by eating lesser holidays.[4]
The official color of Candlenights is "fire," making it somewhat unsafe to decorate your house for Candlenights to the fullest. This may be part of why the holiday hasn't caught on as much as the brothers might hope.[5]
According to The Book of Candlenights, "the tenth Candlenights is to be observed digitally" and "before the tenth Candlenights, after the horn of Balthazer is blown, a terrible disease will be released upon the planet,"[6] referring to COVID-19, which was confirmed on December 1, 2019.[7]
History[]
- Candlenights is celebrated on other worlds besides just Earth, and it is mentioned several times in the McElroys' RPG podcast, The Adventure Zone.
- The very first Candlenights night was celebrated with a bris, followed the next night with Brisk iced tea for some much-needed refreshment. Santa visited on the sixth night.[8]
- In the early days of Candlenights, it was suggested that one decorate an Awesome Blossom and leave it to rot until its stench is unbearable.[9] These days, it is more common to decorate a "Candlenights bush."[5]
- In the Netherlands in the early 1600s, Candlenights would last 100 days, during which time parish priests would put troublemakers up on the roofs of buildings, leaving them there for the entire 100 days to appease the demons who might attack otherwise.[10]
- It was tradition for Victorian children to do a dance known as "the weasel wiggle" every morning during Candlenights, which comes from London's citizens having to walk in an odd fashion to avoid stepping on any weasels underfoot.[6]
- The first Candlenights celebrated in the United States took place in Carson City, Nevada.[11]
- Somewhere along the way, Candlenights absorbed Canadian Thanksgiving as part of its portfolio. It's presumably still working on absorbing American Thanksgiving.[12]
- A new tradition that is gaining hold is that of the "Sneakret Santa", in which you steal things from your loved ones' homes and give it back to them for Candlenights. If they notice its theft prior to Candlenights, you have to give it back and then spend real money on a real Candlenights gift for them instead.[12]
Food and Drink[]
- Prince Albert's favorite Candlenights treats were hot salt water and crackers with grapes and ketchup. Every year, Queen Victoria would make him six dozen, and he would try to eat them all in record time.[6]
- Mash-ed potatoes were traditionally eaten during Candlenights with mud, but Queen Victoria was the one who made mash-ed potatoes the official Candlenights food and also removed the mud from it.[6]
- Hot liquid cocoa is the normal winter drink of choice, but during Candlenights, hard, cold cocoa is eaten instead.[6]
- Barbara Dunkelman's family Candlenights treat consists of a powdered donut sandwiched inside an Oreo cookie, with a glob of peanut butter and honey on top. Before you eat, don't forget to say the classic Candlenights phrase, "May the odds be ever in your favor."[6]
- Melissa Fumero's favorite Candlenights tradition comes from Cuba, where they take a picture of a baby in its first year of life next to a pig that's been roasted for 15 hours. After that, you must eat some of its crispy skin to ward off bad luck.[6]
- Strong Bad celebrates by sitting next to the fakest, least sincere fire he can find and drinking a glass of mulled ones: 40oz of alcohol with the word "ice" in the name, a teaspoon of ground cloves, and a teaspoon of ground Clovis points.[6]
- B. Dave Walters' traditional Candlenights celebration involves grilling things over an open flame in "the biggest driveway of the widest cul-de-sac" in the neighborhood.[10]
- Sung Won Cho's Candlenights tradition requires setting aside 2 hours of time, during which you roll dice. Begin with one die, and whenever you roll a 2, add another die. At the end of the 2 hours, add up all the dice. The total is the number of Nacho Cheese Doritos you are allowed to eat after Candlenights dinner.[11]
- Those who cook a perfect personal pan pizza are anointed into the light of the Star King.[12]
- A variety of recipes and cocktails have been shared over the years, most or all of which are suitable for Candlenights if you so declare it.
Other Traditions[]
- At least in Erika Ishii's family, "Escape (The Piña Colada Song)" is a traditional Candlenights story about love, communication, and not being a total dill weed.[6]
- Ben Schwartz's personal Candlenights tradition is to pop out six of your favorite ice cubes, knock away five, and then put one in the center of an empty dining room. He gathers his friends over to sing around the ice cube, and cry as it melts in remembrance of things that are melting away. Then, the ice cube stops melting as a reminder to everyone to be steadfast. Finally, everyone "chomp chomps" away at the ice cube until they're all touching teeth, and that's how you know the tradition is alive.[6]
- Rob Corddry has convinced his children that Terry the Nondenominational Gift Delivery Dragon is not real, but he and his wife are dragons. Aside from that, they celebrate Candlenights in a very normal way, with a piñata full of bread and a tobacco ceremony.[6]
- Krystina Arielle's favorite Candlenights tradition is crying. After all, it's a free action.[6]
- Mara Wilson's cats celebrate Candlenights by wrapping presents, unwrapping presents, eating some turkey, helping out in the kitchen, trying on seasonally festive clothing, stopping other people from exercising, eating snacks like fish yogurt tubes, trying on seasonally-inappropriate festive clothing, yelling at people from the toilet, scaring people by going outside when they know they're not supposed to but they want to anyway.[6]
- Felicia Day celebrates Candlenights with her childhood dolls. Some of them are missing shoes and eyelashes, but they appreciate being taken out of storage and snuggled with enough to stop whispering when Felicia sleeps.[6]
- Jean Grae notes a traditional Candlenights activity is throwing kiwi seeds and babies' feet.[10]
- Aparna Nancherla bemoans the loss of the traditional Candlenights pissing contest, in which two competitors are judged based on "length, strength, clarity, and texture of stream."[10]
- Chris Gethard's family had a tradition that he thought all families celebrated at Candlenights, and which he didn't realize until later wasn't nearly as common: Taking a trip to a cabin in Maine, baking a giant cake, dumping a bunch of ping pong balls on the floor, then taking whoever's ping pong ball ended up in a certain divot on the floor and dressing that person in a Geico Gecko costume and giving them one hour to hide in the woods. Whoever find the Gecko first would get to eat the cake with the Gecko.[11]
Carols[]
- "Margaritaville" by Jimmy Buffett[5][13]
- "Have an Awkward Conversation for Me" by Rileigh Smirl[6]
- "Mr. Mothman" by Teylor Smirl[6]
- "Fairytale of Huntington" by Justin and Sydnee McElroy[6]
- "Candlenight" by Jeremiah Watkins and Ron Funches[6]
- "Candlenight" by Lin-Manuel Miranda[6]
- "A Choose-Your-Own Candlenights Carol" by The Doubleclicks[6]
- "Candlenights" by Krystina Arielle[6]
References[]
- ↑ Episode 179: Tuesdays with Luncho
- ↑ Episode 335: Rise of the Star King (Candlenights 2016)
- ↑ Episode 386: Candlenights 2017
- ↑ Episode 231: Candlenights 2014
- ↑ 5.0 5.1 5.2 Episode 282: Candlenights 2015
- ↑ 6.00 6.01 6.02 6.03 6.04 6.05 6.06 6.07 6.08 6.09 6.10 6.11 6.12 6.13 6.14 6.15 6.16 6.17 6.18 6.19 6.20 Candlenights 2020
- ↑ https://journals.lww.com/jcma/fulltext/2020/03000/the_outbreak_of_covid_19__an_overview.3.aspx
- ↑ Episode 36: Candlenights
- ↑ Episode 133: Candlenights the IIIrd
- ↑ 10.0 10.1 10.2 10.3 Candlenights 2021
- ↑ 11.0 11.1 11.2 Candlenights 2022
- ↑ 12.0 12.1 12.2 Candlenights 2023
- ↑ Episode 491: Face2Face; Candlenights 2019
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