• Flying Squid
    link
    161 year ago

    “Come on, kids! Let’s go door to door asking for help celebrating a guy burning to death!”

    • @Viking_Hippie
      link
      111 year ago

      To be fair, burning to death is probably marginally less excruciating than crucifixion and people who claim to LIKE that Jezza guy can’t get enough of celebrating THAT happening to him every spring 🤷

      • Flying Squid
        link
        161 year ago

        Yeah, but this is celebrating the execution of a terrorist. It would be like if the U.S. had Bin Laden Day. It’s tasteless if you think about it.

        • @Viking_Hippie
          link
          61 year ago

          I’m pretty sure that, had he been real, the Romans would have considered that Jess character a terrorist too, though.

          But yeah, it IS all tasteless lol

    • @Z3k3
      link
      English
      51 year ago

      Not sure if your conflating Halloween or talking about the way we nicked asked if we could have any 8nused wood for the bonfire

        • @Z3k3
          link
          English
          91 year ago

          As a kid in the UK in the 80s we never did the penny for the guy thing. No one ever gave us anything

          • Flying Squid
            link
            31 year ago

            Not surprised. What was a penny worth in the 80s? My dad and Grandmother were English and they told me about doing it when they were kids in the 1910s and the 1930s.

            • @Z3k3
              link
              English
              41 year ago

              While the phrase was penny for the guy that was not the expectation.

              Might be geographical I was out Glasgow way back then

              • IndiBrony
                link
                English
                31 year ago

                In 1910??! You’re doing well, I have to say!

              • Flying Squid
                link
                01 year ago

                It was definitely a penny when they were kids. That link said it started dying out by the mid-20th century. I thought people just went around asking for bonfire wood after that.

                • @Z3k3
                  link
                  English
                  41 year ago

                  That’s what we did. To the point about August the adults would start hording scrap wood rather than binning it. That was until the bigger kids started lighting it early so. This resulted in us only having 1 day to build it

          • @Raxiel
            link
            21 year ago

            no one ever gave us anything

            Well, they won’t of you don’t ask!
            Perhaps it was regional. I was also a kid in the UK (midlands) in the 80’s and I, my brother and a few of the other lads from the estate went door to door with “penny for the guy” not everyone answered, but we got enough change to buy sweets.
            Didn’t trick or treat back then though.