A fireplace poker (also known as a "stoker") is a short, rigid rod, preferably of fireproof material, used to adjust coals and wood fuel burning in a fireplace. It is often metallic and has a point at one end for pushing burning materials (or a hook for pulling/raking, or a combination) and a handle at the opposite end, sometimes with an insulated grip. Iron is the most popular metal from which the pokers are wrought. Brass is a more expensive alternative for a home poker set.
Similar tools may be used (with care) in tending a wood or coal stove. Small pokers are okay for small fires, but with exceedingly greater pyres, significantly increased length and width are required to avoid radiation burns from the fire.
There are three types of tools commonly used to tend a small fire, such as a campfire, indoor fireplace fire, or yule log: the spade, the tongs and the poker itself. These tools make it possible to handle a fire without risk of burns or blisters. Many fireplace sets also include a small broom.
Large bonfires are not amenable to the use of tools of the size commonly used in an indoor fireplace. However some pyromaniacs have been known to weld rebar into clever shapes with which to move the wood in a moderately large bonfire.
There is evidence that fireplace pokers have been in use by humans since the paleolithic period. Theoretically, pokers were invented immediately after the discovery of fire. The earliest and most primitive pokers were likely made from the same material as the fuel (that is, wood in the form of a hefty branch). This ersatz wooden-type fire-tool may be called a poker or a "firestick" in colloquial terminology.
Fireplace pokers are frequently figured in crime fiction and are often revealed as the weapon of choice for villains as well as heroes. Fireplace pokers make frequent appearances in cinema in this role of weapon.
Susan Sto Helit, a character from Terry Pratchett's Discworld, uses a poker as a weapon against bogeymen that frighten the children she looks after in her job as a governess. Although the creatures are mythical, they appear real because the children believe in them, but as Susan says, they can also believe in the poker.
In Blackadder II the Baby-Eating-Bishop of Bath and Wells uses a hot fireplace poker to threaten Lord Blackadder for defaulting on a loan made to him by The Bank of the Black Monks ("Banking with a smile and a stab"). It is shown that this method is performed on defaulters by the line "Born in
In the 1992 film Whispers in the Dark, the character played by Alan Alda is finally killed by a blow of a fireplace poker to the head.
In the 1982 film Friday the 13th Part 3, one of the characters was impaled with a fireplace poker by Jason Voorhees.
At one point in Kill Bill Vol. 1, the character Vernita Green, played by Vivica A. Fox uses a fireplace poker to defend herself with during her fight with Beatrix, played by Uma Thurman.
Johnny Depp's character Mort Rainey uses a poker to defend himself against a possible intruder in Secret Window
Liev Schreiber's character Cotton Weary attempts to defend himself against the killer in Scream 3 with a fireplace poker.
Dan Aykroyd's character Roman in The Great Outdoors attempts to fend off the Bald Headed Bear with a poker.
Karen Allen's character Marion Ravenwood is threatened with a red hot poker in Raiders of the Lost Ark
Sarah Polley's character Ana dispatches a zombie by ramming a fireplace poker into it's skull in 2004's Dawn of the Dead.
John Turturro's character, Emilio, wails on Adam Sandler's frostbitten foot with a fireplace poker, and then proceeds to stab it and pin it to the floor.
A character is impaled with a fireplace poker by Kathleen Turner's character, Beverly, in John Waters's film, Serial Mom
Kevin Spacey smashes the Christmas Tree with a poker to get his family's attention in the 1993 film, The Ref.
Rebecca DeMornay's character Peyton uses a fireplace poker to escape from a locked room in the 1992 film, The Hand that Rocks the Cradle.
Tom Cruise's character, Jerry Maguire, uses a fireplace poker to accentuate his drunken ramblings in the 1996 film Jerry Maguire
At one point in Hot Shots Part Deux, The President and Saddam Hussein swordfight with fireplace pokers.
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