"Anyone who grew up in the Eighties with a 20-sided die in their Dungeons & Dragons
fist or an interest in heavy metal and horror films will remember the
bizarre “satanic panic” that swept the country during that era. Set ablaze by the book Michelle Remembers and the infamous
McMartin preschool trial – which alleged that the family-run daycare was
instead a seething nest of unspeakably vile Satanic sexual abuse – this
literal witch hunt continued for decades. Fueled by hysterical media coverage, overzealous law enforcement
agencies, evangelical Christian radio host Bob Larson, and even core
members of the Church of Satan and the Temple of Set, whose
intellectually measured responses only served to fan the cultural
conflagration, the virulent panic even spread into otherwise placid
Austin: The satanic ritual abuse trial of Oak Hill daycare owners Dan and Fran Keller in 1991 landed the pair in prison for 22 years. (The Travis County district attorney’s office released the Kellers in 2013.) Why all the crazy? Kier-La Janisse, original Alamo Drafthouse programmer, author (House of Psychotic Women: An Autobiographical Topography of Female Neurosis in Horror and Exploitation Films),
and all-around badass took the FF stage on Wednesday night to offer
some insight and explanation. Coupled with the release of her new book
(co-edited with Paul Corupe) Satanic Panic: Pop Cultural Paranoia in the 1980s and a screening of 1981’s Evilspeak, it all made for a helluva show. ”This was a topic that was very close to our hearts,” said Janisse,
“because we grew up in that time, the late Seventies, early Eighties,
which was a hellacious time to be a teenager. [Corupe and I] didn’t
realize just how heavy this book would be, because there’s so many
stories and people’s lives that were affected by the satanic panic of
the Eighties.”......... How did Janisse first learn about the evil that was, supposedly, lurking everywhere in the early Eighties? ”I first heard about it because I wanted Crest gel toothpaste,” she
explained, “and my mother was convinced that Procter & Gamble, who
made Crest toothpaste, was a satanic company. I found out much later
that this was actually a real belief. People thought that Procter &
Gamble were satanists, and my mother was one of those people who believed that.” ”The satanic panic that we tend to remember started with the publication of Michelle Remembers,
a Canadian book that came out in 1980,” Janisse said. “Michelle Smith
and her psychiatrist Lawrence Pazder … came out with these regressive
memories of Michelle being in a very long satanic ritual in the Fifties
when she was 5 years old. This paperback is just the most lurid, weird,
sleazy thing you can imagine. It’s got this 5-year-old kid who’s getting
a tail surgically attached to her, people are shitting on her, she’s
eating babies, all this kind of stuff. And of course, as with this book
and later books like Lauren Stratford’s [Satan’s Underground: The Extraordinary Story of One Woman’s Escape], this was all fraudulent, they’re total bullshit, and they’re made up. ”But it kicked off this fear, in the early Eighties, when you had the
disappearance of Adam Walsh in 1983 and then the same year as that you
have the McMartin preschool trial. And so these events, all based around
young children, were actually what kicked off the satanic panic, even
though we tend to think of it as something associated with teenagers and
heavy metal and Dungeons & Dragons.”"
http://www.austinchronicle.com/daily/screens/2015-10-01/fantastic-fest-2015-satanic-panic-evilspeak/