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the moonlight shining off the snow, resting on the trees. He was enamored by the beauty and wanted to share this sensation with his family. He decided the best way to do so was to place lit candles on his Christmas tree to give off the appearance of snow dancing in the moonlight. Some sources state that Martin Luther may have been the first to use a fir tree to decorate his home for Christmas. When people first started decorating their homes with Christmas trees, they used various items to act as ornaments. Paper flowers, cookies, and nuts showed that spring and new life would return in the upcoming months. Other baubles were hung simply to add color to the decoration. Traditional ornaments gained popularity in the 1800s after a depiction was released of Queen Victoria celebrating the holiday with her family around a decorated evergreen tree. From that point on, Christmas ball ornaments were the most sought-after Christmas decoration. By the 1890s, Woolworth’s Department Store had sold American shoppers $25 million worth of German-imported ornaments made of lead and hand- blown glass. Since then, ornaments have been released in all shapes and sizes. For many families, it’s become a Christmas tradition to pick out a new ornament for each family member every year. If you want to do
something really special for your kids that will create lasting memories and treasured keepsakes, try to make your ornaments each year. You can design them from scratch or buy a pack of plain Christmas ball ornaments and paint them with whatever you like. Make an event out of it, and your entire family will surely have the time of their lives.
I hope you all have a wonderful holiday season and a very merry Christmas!
TOO HOT TO HANDLE The Celebrity-Ridden History of Parental Advisory Labels
Besides ’80s hair, it’s hard to imagine what Prince, Dee Snider, and Tipper Gore have in common. But they all played a pivotal role in the parental advisory stickers that eventually dotted CDs for decades. Parents once had to listen to their children’s preferred music to determine whether or not it was objectionable — but that all began to change in 1985. The star-studded saga started when then-Sen. Al Gore’s wife gave her daughter a copy of Prince’s smash-hit album “Purple Rain.” But she was shocked by the lyrics of one song, “Darling Nikki.” Unlike most parents, Tipper Gore had the political connections to take action. She co-founded Parents Music Resource Center (PMRC) with other so-called Washington wives. They promptly began a crusade to put warning labels on explicit record albums. The PMRC contacted individual record labels and requested a classification system with different markers for violence, profane language, and sexually explicit content. The Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) extended an olive branch by suggesting a generic one-size-fits-all advisory label. But PMRC refused and used their connections to secure a hearing in Congress instead. The goal of the hearing was not to pass any law; it was to put pressure on the RIAA to change its tune. But the event became a televised spectacle
when musicians appeared on Capitol Hill
to defend free speech. Avant-garde rocker Frank Zappa declared the hearings a waste of time and that politicians’ wives abused their power. Meanwhile, Daniel “Dee” Snider, lead singer of the heavy metal band Twisted Sister, arrived sans lipstick to speak eloquently about how lyrics are open to interpretation and often impossible to classify. But the star witness of the hearings turned out to be the mellow singer-songwriter John Denver. With his clean-cut image, Congress had assumed he would support the PMRC’s demands. Instead, he presented an impassioned monologue about differing opinions on what can be considered offensive and warned Congress of the dangers of censorship. Ultimately, neither side got what they wanted. The RIAA moved forward with an industry system of generic warning labels that read “Parental Advisory: Explicit Content.” Ironically, the prominent sticker became a badge of honor among many music fans and an effective marketing tool for record labels. These days, warnings still appear on streaming services, but with CD sales at rock bottom, those infamous parental advisory labels are essentially a relic.
2 • www.lawyersreadytofight.com
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