Star Wars Day and more pseudo-holidays we like
Date:
Origin: Credit for this day to celebrate the six
Pictured: “Star Wars” stormtroopers at the Rose Parade. (Anne Cusack / Los Angeles Times)
By Patrick Kevin Day
Date: Dec. 23
Origin: Reader’s Digest editor and writer Dan O’Keefe created the secular holiday in 1966 to mark his first date with his wife. Years later, his son Daniel gave the holiday national attention when he worked it into a 1997 episode of the sitcom he wrote for, “Seinfeld.”
Date: June 16
Origin: The celebration of the works of Irish writer
Pictured: A statue of James Joyce in Dublin. (Fran Caffrey / AFP / Getty Images)
Date: January 31
Origin: Mad Magazine artist Don Martin created the idea of National Gorilla Suit Day for a 1963 comic strip in which a character mocks the holiday and is then assaulted by gorillas and people in gorilla suits. Since that time, the holiday has been semi-celebrated every year by fans of Mad Magazine and Don Martin by dressing up in a gorilla suit. In 2007, Martin’s widow asked one of the holiday’s biggest cheerleaders, writer Mark Evanier, to cease promoting it and to remove all mentions of Gorilla Suit Day from his website.
Pictured: An Oakland Raiders fan dressed as a gorilla stands on the field. (Stephen Dunn / Getty Images)
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Date: Sept. 19
Origin: Oregonian friends John Baur and Mark Summers came up with the idea of a holiday dedicated to piratical speak in 1995, but they couldn’t get much interest outside their circle of friends. But in 2002, the friends sent their idea to syndicated humor columnist