Pre'Ween is a sham.
Pre'Ween is a term I coined to describe the thirty day period preceding Halloween. Only this and nothing more. I programmed a weekend long horror movie festival for the proprietor of the real Dog Farm last October, and I referred to it in the schedules as The Movies At Dog Farm Pre'Ween Picture Show. The event took place on the weekend prior to Halloween. It was clearly in the
spirit of the approaching holiday, but it didn't actually
occur on the holiday.
Pre'Ween was born.
Pre'Ween is just a made up word.
. . . except it isn't . . .
Just for shits and giggles I vowed to promote the notion of
Pre'Ween. I decided it would be fun to see if I could get the term accepted into the local vernacular. Since I now have another platform in the form of this blog with which to propagate the notion of
Pre'Ween, I decided I would do so this October. I researched a bit just out of morbid curiosity to see if I could find evidence of the term being used anywhere else . . . and dammit, I did.
Pre'Ween wasn't my creation after all.
 |
Screamin' Jay Hawkins, not Gatorbait |
It turns out the term
Pre'Ween was first used way back in the sixties - 1965, to be exact. It was used by a local horror movie host in Gainesville, Florida who hosted under the
moniker Ghoulish Gary Gatorbait for the CBS affiliate WGFL-TV. Like
many local horror hosts, Gatorbait was actually a station employee
Monday through Friday (an accountant named - I shit you not - Gary
Numan), and he took on the role for WGFL's Friday night horror movie
broadcast. As was usually the case with these broadcasts, he hosted
movies from the
Shock Theater packages that were comprised primarily of old black and white Universal movies and sold to television stations nationwide. The character of Gatorbait was fashioned to resemble a swamp dwelling witch doctor - think Screamin' Jay Hawkins, except white and minus the nose bone. Ghoulish Gary Gatorbait is largely forgotten now, and he's almost never mentioned in books or documentaries about the horror host phenomena. You see, Gatorbait was abruptly pulled off the air in November of 1966, and it was
Pre'Ween that was responsible for the character's demise.

October of 1966 was actually the second year that Gatorbait used the term
Pre'Ween on air, but it was the first that the term turned up in print ads for the his show published in the Gainesville Sun newspaper. WGFL used the term in newspaper ads throughout the month as a marketing hook to lend a little extra pizazz to the ads and to milk Halloween for an entire month rather than just a single day. It's clear, though, that Gatorbait used the term on air in October of 1965, prior to its use in the station's marketing.
 |
The arrival of the Great Pumpkin, the end of Gatorbait |
All was well until the station attempted a cross promotion and requested that Gatorbait promote the upcoming premiere of a Halloween special called
It's The Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown on his own show. Presumably, the powers that be felt that the Monster Kids who were staying up late on Fridays to watch Frankenstein and Dracula would likely be interested in a Halloween themed animated special, as well. The special was set to air on Tuesday, October 27, and Gatorbait promoted its debut throughout the month. It was during his final broadcast before the premiere that he raised the ire of a local church affiliation by likening
Pre'Ween to the church's observance of Advent. Without realizing it beforehand, he had inadvertently equated the month of preparation before the celebration of the birth of Christ to the month of preparation before the celebration of the arrival of a cartoon pumpkin.
Public outcry was swift and merciless, and even though he apologized on air the following week, the damage had already been done. WGFL was anxious to quickly put the bad publicity to rest, and Gatorbait's show was replaced with reruns of
The Honeymooners. Ghoulish Gary Gatorbait vanished into obscurity, as did the notion of
Pre'Ween.
That, friends, is the horrible truth about
Pre'Ween. That's the whole story.
. . . except it isn't . . .
Carl at
The Info Zombie has discovered that the history of
Pre'Ween can
be traced back even further than this sad chapter. Click the
link for the rest of the story.
Also,
Warden Stokely Horrorzine offers up this
Pre'Ween Dispatch From Hell . . .
Posted by Brandon Early
1 comment:
This justifies me having my Halloween decor out early! Happy October, Brandon, and to everyone at the Dog Farm!
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