It is the 4th night of 2020 when an ember of yesteryear's light returns for a visit. In the video for Airplanes by B.o.B in 2010 the spirit of Lunar Twilight is recognized. This song echoes the longing for the past, whence the memory of what was fades.
Aged for more than a decade, this song resonates with the spirit of Lunar Twilight. In the video you can see a letter D, which is represents officially a corporation, but it is also the icon of city in Michigan, Detroit.
Officially the European Biblical D represents a local baseball team. More so than a group of athletes, the 'D' also represents the a certain sector, feeling, and ethos for a community in Detroit.
Lunar Twilight is the kind of like a wake/celebration for the transition of 2020 to 2021. It is unique time when an afterglow of 2020 shines, after sunset for the first few weeks of the New Year. For the Moon was declared the ruler of the night, and the last Moon of yesteryear remains for just a bit into the new year. The current Moon will not fade until January 13, 2021. Until then, in a certain way the nights revert back to 2020, to honor the memory that was and allow for that transitioning serenity and hope for tomorrow.
Speaking of the time and the past, a seminal game that rode the mystic's adventure to the ancient world came into being in 2005—The Prince of Persia: The Two Thrones.
In the opening sequence, you can see the enchanted medallion that controls aspects of time. It is engraved with a Moon. In the Far West, we have forgotten to notice the clockwork magic of the Moon, that sets the months and counts the passing of time. It is no wonder that people of the clear desert skies would be more aware and take notice of the Moon's transition with the passage of time.
The Prince of Persia was something of an interactive dream, that had a particular spark on the history of time and its connection to the Moon. The ending credits song is thematic of the Lunar Twilight's passage of yesteryear's time.
As we begin 2021, people often expect and instant change of mood and being. However, this is rarely the case. Instead, there is a fading transition from year to year as it is with the decades. Did you ever notice that the 1970s bleed over into the early 1980s, as the 80s bled over into the 1990s, etc...
Alas, an echo of 2020 returns for the first 12 nights of 2021. Reason being, the cycle of the Moon started on December 15, 2020. It won't be until in January 13, 2021 that this last light of 2020 fades from the heavens.
So take time to reflect upon the beauty and peace of what once was. Things can always get worse, likewise the blessings of yesteryear are often overlooked, yet are always blessings, no matter when. The following song is thematic of this after hours party in remembrance of the gift of 2020. Indeed 2020 was a gift, contrary to the prevailing pessimistic views of 2020. This website is a single counterpoint to the positivity and joy presented by 2020, in remembrance of 2020's beauty.
Of vexillological interest is the lighting of lighters during the soft and serene melodies during a musical concert. Whenever a band or musician plays a touching song, many in the audience will ignite their lighters. In this case, we can see the lighters of the audience light up for Chris de Burgh's Lady in Red song, a timeless gem that has touched nations across the world as an anthem for winning Love's Grace.
The coston signals are an ancient kind of device. They have been used on battle fields since time began, in all cultures. There were even able to colourize some signals with red, green, and white patterns.
Anyone who has attended a concert will remember is this simple fire signal of serenity. This is, indeed, one form of vexillology where the signal and spirit communicate something beautiful.
It is here again, that after hour party of reflection upon 2020. For 12 more nights the last Moon of 2020 shines on. Although we are officially finished with the year of 2020. We still have a left over ember from 2020, that will shine on for 12 more evenings. Then within a fortnight, on January 14, 2021, finally will the nights and days of 2021 sync up.
Symbols are a part of vexillology, and there is one symbol that has two ways of being written: the dollar sign. It can have 1or 2 lines. For this font it usually has just one line $. But in the original Capcom's Duck Tales video game, 1989, the dollar sign had two lines. Another vexillological note is the medal one wins at the end of the game credits. Below the image of Scrooge McDuck is a medal.
It is funny how things work; who knew that a silly video game from Capcom would become the spark of a lunar lullaby. The original 8-bit Nintendo game is based upon Walt Disney's animated television series in the later 1980s Duck Tales. Somehow, a little diddy from Japan based upon an American franchise has become an Anthem for the Moon. The original score was written by Hiroshige Tonomura.
From America, to Japan, and back to the world, suspended in time for over 30 years, this is one theme song of the Moon that is appropriate to opening Lunar Twilight 2020! The original game of Capcom's Duck Tales was created 20 years after the first human landing on the Moon by the USA (1969-1989).
Lunar Twilight counts down the nights of the remainder of 2020, that kicks back only at night time. The first 12 days of 2021 are officially 2021, but at least at night when the Moon shines the nights revert back to 2020, in a spiritual sense, as the last Moon of 2020 fades from heavens. Lunar Twilight is an all inclusive celebration for everyone, no nation is left out, nor is any one race honored. Rather it is a celebration for all the colors of humanity. It recognizes our intimate and genuine connection to starlight afar and moonlight near.
Lunar Twilight officially starts after the first sunset of January 1, 2020. So at around 6pm on January 1, 2021 when the Sun disappears from the sky. The Lunar Twilight Candlemast should be lit with all the candles. Then until the first and shortest candle disappears, then they are all put out until next evening. Each successive night a candle burns out, to honor what was and remind us that our time is limited to make to most of each day for the New Year.
A unique golf course flag can be seen in the epitome 1990s movie, Space Jam. When Michael Jordan, Larry Bird, Bill Murray and Wayne Knight are playing golf. Jordan mysteriously gets a hole in one and they pose for a picture.
In 1996 the official Looney Tune flag was presented to the public in the epic movie of the 1990s, Space Jam. On the right side of the stage you can see a green and white flag. We can assume it represents the flag of Warner Brother's Toon Land. On the left side of the stage you can see the US Flag.
From a distance you can see that there is white area near the bottom. We never get to see the entire flag unfurled. A proper Roman vexillum would solve this issue, but cultures are adapted to seeing flags in this draped non-discernable mode.
In the 1996 the keystroke moment in culture and sports was a combo of Michael Jordan and Bugs Bunny. Jordan was the epitome athlete of the 1990s. He rounded out his dynamic persona in Space Jam that bleeds the spirit of zany 1990s.
In this cinematic wonder, Jordan is drafted into to save the Warner Brother's cartoon gang to fend off intergalactic slavery. The toon gang is challenged in a basketball game and they recruit Jordan, for to save their race.
The livery of the Tune Squad is blue, orange, and white. They have the circular bullseye WB cartoon logo with the word Tune Squad written upon it. It should read as Toon Squad, but it is a moot point.
Another 1990s decaderal institution is Wayne Knight, who played as the lovable pudgy sidekick. He was the 1990s King Fatman. Previously John Candy reigned as the Fatman in the 1980s, but Knight was the 90s' F-man of extra space, due to this presence on Seinfeld and Jurassic Park. On Knight's jacket, you can see the generic Toon Logo with a capital letter T. Jordan in the Tune Squad uniform. This was a unique movie that captured the zeitgeist of the 1990s. Space Jam was a movie for children, but it was a strange hybrid of cartoons and sports that gave way to the collective memory of America.
Jordan will always be remembered as a Bull, but he was also a Wizard, a Tar Heel, Olympian, Baron, and Buccaneer. Perhaps his highest note of fame for any child who grew up in the 1990s, was a his number as #23, for the Tune Squad.