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Etymologies
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Examples
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Perhaps it was at the back of my mind when William Joyce — as Lord Haw-Haw — came into focus.
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The real life William Joyce/Lord Haw-Haw had been a comic character in Radio Fun in the 1940s, so right there Horror had visual ancestry.
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Ten years after Haw-Haw, Luxemburg happened to be the station from where young cockney Gus Goodwin, the first English rock ‘n’ roll disc jockey, beamed out his loon-a-tickery to grateful teenagers.
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LORD HORROR was strong drink, to be sure: a hallucinated vision of Lord Haw-Haw, the English traitor who broadcast Nazi propaganda into Britain during World War 2.
Ballardian » “Driven by Anger”: An Interview with Michael Butterworth (the Savoy interviews, part 1) 2009
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It was a logical if deviant sideways step to have Haw-Haw by way of Horror broadcasting rock ‘n’ roll from Auschwitz into Albion.
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Mr Teen Spirit comes to Oldham, marching pie-eyed down Brompton Street, once the home of William Joyce/Lord Haw-Haw.
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Olly's Onions: Lord Haw-Haw: new broadcast skip to main | skip to sidebar
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One might as well have looked for factual reporting in Pravda or the radio broadcasts of Lord Haw-Haw.
Natural Disasters 2008
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(The fact that the title character of "Lord Horror" is based on the World War II British fascist William Joyce, popularly known as Lord Haw-Haw, apparently failed to strike the judge as relevant.)
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If they hadn't hung Lord Haw-Haw he'd be welcome at the BBC now.
On Thursday, the Legg report will be published along with... 2008
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