So enjoy this one from my personal collection. It is a vintage signed photo of Margaret Hamilton (1902-1985) as the Wicked Witch of the West, inscribed, “Help, Bill, bring me a blotter! Oh dear me
here I – go – Best Wishes, Margaret Hamilton”

I was finally able to acquire this from a fellow collector in California (along with another item). Behold the 1939 hardback first edition of The Wizard of Oz tied to the film’s release on August 25, 1939. The dust jacket is in near-mint condition, and the book, binding, and pages are also in mint condition; it is a choice example, the best I have ever seen. Not pictured is that the edition is inscribed and signed by Margaret Hamilton (1902-1985) on a blank page, the actress who portrayed the Wicked Witch of the West. One will notice that the price of the book in 1939 was $1.19 (as indicated on the interior of the dust jacket), which is 9/11 backward, as demons often communicate in reverse, anticipating and announcing the Crowleyan OZ-Rainbow death curse.

The teaser trailer even has the Twin Towers – uncanny.
The Goat of Mendes wrote, produced, and directed the 847th episode of Sesame Street, debuting February 10th, 1976, with Margaret Hamilton (1902-1985) reprising her role as the green-skinned Wicked Witch of the West, featuring a segment wherein the green-colored Oscar qua OZcar the Grouch falls in love with her. However, parents protested, believing the installment was designed to terrify children, not entertain or educate them; hence, it never re-aired and was considered lost until it was leaked online on June 18th, 2022. The episode was the 52nd show of Sesame Street’s seventh season, 5 + 2 = 7, 77, and 847 = 77 x 11 or 7 x 112. Additionally, there appears to be a Baphometic influence since the show’s beginning; according to the U.S. Department of Education, during Sesame Street’s first ten years (1969-1979), 77% of preschoolers watched it once a week. In 2008, it was estimated that 77 million Americans had watched the series as youngsters.