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Signboard inside The Thing roadside attraction

The Thing is an Arizona roadside attraction hyped by signs along Interstate 10 between El Paso, Texas, and Tucson, Arizona. Teaser ads, such as The Thing What is it? and Mystery of the Desert, entice travelers along this sparse stretch of desert highway to stop, just to find out what the mysterious Thing might be. Such billboards are similar to signage seen in the South as drivers approach the South of the Border near Dillon, South Carolina and Rock City near Chattanooga, Tennessee. It is believed to have been made by a creator of exhibits for sideshows named Homer Tate.

Contents

Location [link]

The Thing is located at {{#invoke:Coordinates|coord}}{{#coordinates:32|05|N|110|03|W||| |primary |name= }} just off I-10 at Exit 322 on a hilltop between Benson and Willcox, near Texas Canyon, at 2631 North Johnson Road, Dragoon, Arizona.

What is it? [link]

The Thing

The Thing rates an entry in Doug Kirby's New Roadside America (1992), and it once was featured in a Jane Pauley television special on NBC. For $1 fee, one can enter a small outside courtyard leading to three prefabricated corrugated steel sheds. Inside are a variety of exhibits, including odd wood carvings of tortured souls (by "Ralph Gallagher, artist"), the "wooden fantasy" of painted driftwood (from an Alamogordo collector), framed lithographs, saddles, rifles, a covered wagon and several vintage automobiles. A sign by a 1937 Rolls-Royce makes the claim that it once belonged to Adolf Hitler. Winding corridors and exhibit halls eventually lead to The Thing, a mummified mother-and-child tableau encased in a glass-covered coffin.

Origins [link]

The step-great-great-grandson of Homer Tate and the curator of the Arizona Historical Society-Pioneer Museum in Flagstaff have said that this was created by Homer Tate.[1][2]

The roadside area was the creation of attorney Thomas Binkley Prince, who was born in Texas in 1913. In the 1950s, Prince and his wife Janet opened their first Thing roadside attraction and curio shop on Highway 91 between Barstow and Baker, until the expansion of the road into an interstate highway brought about the loss of the building. In 1965 the Prince family packed up The Thing and moved to the current location in Arizona. A heart condition and several strokes led to Prince's death in 1969 at the age of 56.

Syndicated columnist Stan Delaplane traced The Thing back to 1950. Janet Prince, who later moved to Baltimore, Maryland, was interviewed by Delaplane in 1956 and told him, "[A] man came through here about six years ago. He had three of them he got somewhere. He was selling them for $50." Today, the attraction is operated by an Albuquerque-based company, Bowlins, Inc., which owns several roadside trading posts throughout the Southwest.

References [link]

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  2. {{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=news }}

External links [link]


https://wn.com/The_Thing_(roadside_attraction)

The Thing!

The Thing! is an American horror comic book published by Charlton Comics that ran 17 issues from 1952 to 1954. Its tagline was "Weird tales of suspense and horror!" After the 17th issue it was cancelled and the series' numbering continued as Blue Beetle vol. 2.

Artist Steve Ditko provided the covers for #12-15 and 17. He also illustrated stories in issues #12-15. The cover of #12 marks this industry notable's first comic-book cover art.

In 2006, Pure Imagination released the trade paperback Steve Ditko's The Thing! that reprinted all of Ditko's stories from this title, and used the cover of #15 for its cover. The back cover shows the covers from The Thing #12, 13 and 14 and Strange Suspense Stories #22. It also included Ditko stories from Charlton's Mysteries of Unexplored Worlds #5 and #11, Do You Believe In Nightmares #1, Strange Suspense Stories #36, and Unusual Tales #25.

In 2014, UK publisher PS Artbooks reprinted the entire series in a deluxe two volume hardcover collection.

The Thing (1982 film)

The Thing (also known as John Carpenter's The Thing) is a 1982 American science fiction horror film directed by John Carpenter, written by Bill Lancaster, and starring Kurt Russell. The film's title refers to its primary antagonist: a parasitic extraterrestrial lifeform that assimilates other organisms and in turn imitates them. The Thing infiltrates an Antarctic research station, taking the appearance of the researchers that it absorbs, and paranoia develops within the group.

The film is based on John W. Campbell, Jr.'s novella Who Goes There?, which was more loosely adapted by Howard Hawks and Christian Nyby as the 1951 film The Thing from Another World. Carpenter considers The Thing to be the first part of his Apocalypse Trilogy, followed by Prince of Darkness and In the Mouth of Madness. Although the films are narratively unrelated, each features a potentially apocalyptic scenario; should "The Thing" ever reach civilization, it would be only a matter of time before it consumes humanity.

Thing

Thing or The Thing may refer to:

Philosophy

  • An object, being, or entity
  • Thing-in-itself (or noumenon), the reality that underlies perceptions, a term coined by Immanuel Kant
  • History

  • Thing (assembly), also transliterated as ting or þing, a historical Germanic governing assembly
  • Thing (listening device), a Soviet bug used during the Cold War for eavesdropping on the ambassador to the Soviet Union
  • The Thing (art project)
  • Film and television

  • The Thing from Another World, often referred to as The Thing, 1951 science fiction film based on the novella Who Goes There?
  • The Thing (1982 film), a remake of the 1951 film, directed by John Carpenter, more closely following the original novella Who Goes There
  • The Thing (2011 film), a prequel to the 1982 film
  • Thing (The Addams Family), television series character
  • Comics

  • Thing (comics), a superhero in the Marvel Universe and member of the Fantastic Four
  • The Thing!, a 1950s comic book series from Charlton Comics
  • Video games

  • The Thing (video game), a 2002 video game sequel based after the events of the 1982 film
  • The Thing (jazz band)

    The Thing is a Norwegian/Swedish jazz trio, consisting of Mats Gustafsson (saxophones), Ingebrigt Håker Flaten (double bass), and Paal Nilssen-Love (drums).

    Name

    The Thing took their name from a track on Don Cherry's 1966 album Where Is Brooklyn?

    Performances and recordings

    The band was established in February 2000 to play a series of concerts in Stockholm and a recording of Don Cherry compositions that was released in Sweden by the label Crazy Wisdom/Universal. Melding German, British and American traditions of free music, their repertoire has later been collected from various sources such as James Blood Ulmer, Frank Lowe, PJ Harvey, White Stripes and Joe McPhee. McPhee was also a participating musician on the She Knows... album (2001). Other guests who have joined The Thing for recording and performances include Ken Vandermark, Otomo Yoshihide, Thurston Moore, Jim O'Rourke and Jeb Bishop.

    Garage was released on the Smalltown Superjazzz label in 2004. An EP of live material performed with Joe McPhee and Cato Salsa Experience was released in 2005, as well as a live album. 2006 saw the release of Action Jazz, also on Smalltown Superjazz. The group covers material from Ornette Coleman, Lightning Bolt, Yosuke Yamashita and others in addition to original material. The group are the only free jazz ensemble working today who wear stage uniforms. They perform clad in t-shirts from Ruby's Barbecue Restaurant in Austin, Texas.

    The Thing (listening device)

    The Thing, also known as the Great Seal bug, was one of the first covert listening devices (or "bugs") to use passive techniques to transmit an audio signal. It was concealed inside a gift given by the Soviets to the US Ambassador to Moscow on August 4, 1945. Because it was passive, being energized and activated by electromagnetic energy from an outside source, it is considered a predecessor of RFID technology.

    Creation

    The Thing was designed by Soviet Russian inventor Léon Theremin, whose best-known invention is the electronic musical instrument the theremin.

    The principle used by The Thing, of a resonant cavity microphone, had been patented by Winfield R. Koch of the Radio Corporation of America (RCA) in 1941. In US patent 2,238,117 he describes the principle of a sound-modulated resonant cavity. High-frequency energy is inductively coupled to the cavity. The resonant frequency is varied by the change in capacitance resulting from the displacement of the acoustic diaphragm.

    Podcasts:

    The Thing

    ALBUMS

    The Thing

    ALBUMS

    Immediate Sound

    Released 2007
    PLAYLIST TIME:

    The Thing

    by: Atumpan

    CHORUS
    Small girl, you don't know the thing
    I am teaching you the thing
    You are playing with the thing 2x
    I say push it up, push it up
    Move am, move am
    Wind am wind am slow
    Make you no dey rush am
    Move am move am
    Aso we go
    VERSE
    Take it slow baby and wind for me
    Move it closer and do let me see
    You want to know the thing, you for be humble
    Make you no dey take am dey gamble
    Ino be gidigidi ibe simple
    Make you no dey rush am so you no go fumble
    Y[de agorT yi reba wo fie [de[n ne amirikatuo yi
    I can give to you all nite long
    If you feel it sing the song
    Y[b[hyeea hyeea ay[ sono
    Y[b[hye soa hye so a agye s[ anTpa nTn krono
    (Gye s[ anTpa nTn krono) ansaana y[bie y[n pono yeaa
    P wizzle tell al di likkle gal dem
    CHORUS
    2ND VERSE (BRADEZ)
    I be king, I treat you like queen
    Take a ring, before we do a thing
    You be the reason why everyday, I love to sing
    Shake ma me ma me, wind again again and again
    Y[ ne nt[mt[m, [ny[ slow lyrics from museke.com
    S[ wogyaee a [ny[ buoo
    Abrante[ hw[ m'ani nsuo
    Y[ny[ mmTfra so y[bT nkuro
    †nye babTne na mmom Thye s[ tamale
    So sweet like a freezy lemonade
    S[ wose wodT me a, saman me
    She be hot like some body
    Wei de[ samale kora nhu nea mahu yi
    (Atumpan) ibe we wey dey run the game
    We dey do am not only for fame
    We get love for it all the same
    Atumpan, talking drum, the name
    You be the apprentice wey ibe master
    If I dey call you say yes master
    I go show you make you learn am faster
    I be your teacher I no be your pastor
    Teacher Atumpan, teaching chemistry and physics
    I be you get the line, touch ma body make we start with kisses
    I be your teacher teaching you chemistry and physics
    If you do am well, you go fi end up being ma Mrs.




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