Random tentacle-related urges


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This is probably very immature, but for some reason I really want this toy. I shouldn’t argue with my inner child.



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I need to know: if I printed out this sign on heavy stock and mounted it just below the stop sign on my street corner, would I be violating some kind of law?

Comments

  1. says

    But think how bad you’d feel if someone was devoured by Cthulu on you’re street and you hadn’t done all you could to warn them. I think you should play it safe and put up the sign.

  2. Cathy in Seattle says

    John’s right; how could you live with yourself?

    I vote yes.

    aaaiiiiiaaaaiiaiiiiaiiaiiai….!!!!

  3. D Mitchell says

    Do you really think it would be fun to act out a gang assault on such a gorgeous creature? You need to spank your inner child.

  4. says

    If you decide against using the stop sign, that would also look good among the other campaign signs on your curb strip.

    As they say: Why settle for a lesser evil?

  5. BlueIndependent says

    It would be more fitting if it was afixed somewhere near an industrial park or something…you know, enough ominous scenery to match the notion instilled by the sign.

  6. llewelly says


    Do you really think it would be fun to act out a gang assault on such a gorgeous creature?

    It’s not a ‘gang assault’. It’s the arrival of helpless and unsuspecting prey. Do you really think a band of frogmen has any hope against that feared denizen of the deep, the Radioactive Octopus?

  7. Zarquon says

    If someone was taken by Cthukhu near your house then you’d be violating the LAWS OF CAUSALITY!! (void where prohibited)

  8. Mike Fox says

    I don’t know about Morris, but in the Twin Cities the laws regarding that would basically be that you couldn’t affix it to a utility pole or on a major road. HOWEVER, it may be seen as interrupting the flow of traffic or a public nuisance if it is attached to the stop sign pole. Your best bet to keepin’ it legal is to post it within someone’s property lines. Second to that, making it’s own pole to put it on. That said, you can always contact your local district attorney: http://www.co.clay.mn.us/Depts/Attorney/Attorney.htm or contact your own schools legal services.

  9. Steph says

    Dear PZ,

    I’m not sure about Twin Cities’ regs but you’d definitely be even more trouble if you also mounted “Ph’nglui mglw’nafh Cthulhu R’lyeh wgah’nagl fhtagn – repeat 3 times” along with it.

    (I’m also wondering whether you noticed my previous post in your going to NYC thread pointing out this ad on the NYC subways.)

  10. craig says

    Whenever Cthulhu-related stuff comes up in conversation I always feel kind of left in the dark. I don’t really know the reference, and I’m too lazy to research it.

  11. JohnJB says

    Whenever Cthulhu-related stuff comes up in conversation I always feel kind of left in the dark.

    Me too. I know the basic what, but don’t get the pop-culture aspect that I sense going on.

  12. guthrie says

    Maybe I can help….
    I only read Cthulu stuff for the first time last year, despite being 28 years old and into SF and some fantasy for 20 of those years.
    Essentially, if you know fo the Cthulkumythos, you’ll get the rough idea of what its about. OK, i dont understand why people find it so great, but in the past few decades there ahve been a lot of live role playing games set up based upon the Cthulu mythos. BAsically you get to scare yourself silly and play until your brain melts, its all a kind of horror oriented set up.
    Its a pop culture aspect predicated upon your membership of the loose group of people that edges upon geeks/ goths/ roleplayers/ computer obsessed almost-madmen.
    As written about by Charles Stross in his book “The atrocity archives”.

  13. David Harmon says

    Craig, JohnJB, Guthrie: To “get the spirit” of reading Lovecraft et seq, you mostly need to realize that in his time, most of his “foreign” locales were clear off the edge of the maps, well into “here be monsters” territory.

    The “inbred rural” areas were playing off a somewhat different set of anxieties. Sometimes these are dismissed as mere racism, but they also represented the current fears of his time…. Back before universal phone service (let alone cell phones) had taken hold, before satellites had mapped every isolated valley and lonely island… well, it was a lot more plausible for people venturing away from “civilized territory” to just disappear. This was so even in “modern” America, much less off at sea, or in “Antarctic wastes”!

    Likewise for space and time: The public was just becoming aware of how scarily big the sky was, and how many “strange aeons” had passed over the Earth before we petty humans had piled brick upon brick. And in a time when mental illness was still mostly “madness”, but new science kept getting weirder and weirder… indeed, “ultimate truth” might well be enough to shatter men’s minds!

  14. llewelly says


    Me too. I know the basic what, but don’t get the pop-culture aspect that I sense going on.

    You think Cthulhu is boring. Cthulhu thinks your brain is a juicy snack.

  15. Cathy in Seattle says

    >>Whenever Cthulhu-related stuff comes up in conversation I always feel kind of left in the dark. I don’t really know the reference, and I’m too lazy to research it.
    Posted by: craig | October 21, 2006 04:20 AM

    25 years ago my soon-to-be husband and I read HP Lovecraft stories to each other at night. We’re still married, so I recommend it.

    Here’s an interesting site:
    http://www.hello-cthulhu.com/?date=2003-12-01

  16. guthrie says

    Yes, tahts a point I am not so familiar with, DAvid. Being from the UK, where we had the country mapped in the 16th century, (OK, not very well, but still…) and trains everywhere by the end of the 19th century, its kind of hard to imagine how bad things were in the out of hte way bits of even Eastern USA.

  17. says

    Yeah, Archie McPhee has all sorts of cool stuff. My stated excuse for visiting Seattle last year was to make a pilgrimage to their store, much to the surprise of the lady next to me on the plane.

  18. says

    The joy of the Cthulhu Mythos, as presented by Lovecraft, is that it was more or less the antidote to the obsession in the teens and early 20s for world conquest, for exploration, for domination. Sure, Tut-ankh-ahmun had been dug up … but what else might be lurking in the dark and forgotten tombs of a mad king whose name had been carefully effaced from all records, from all memory? What unnatural, eldritch and arcane horrors lay in the forgotten vales of Appalachia? What hideous nightmares stalked human prey in the furthest reaches of the Tibetan plateau?

    Lovecraft dared to suggest something that most people still find inconceivable: That the human race is simply insignificant on a cosmic scale, that if there are other life forms out there, they may be so far beyond our comprehension that they wouldn’t even notice our world as they destroyed it in some casual cosmic tiff.

    That is pretty heady stuff.