The AW-WAD for Day 2 is:

hubble-bubble (HUB-buhl-BUB-buhl) noun

1. A form of hookah: a smoking device in which the smoke is passed through a bowl of water, making a bubbling noise, before being drawn through a long pipe.

2. Commotion, uproar, turmoil.

[Reduplication of the word bubble.]


Can "hurly-burly" be far behind?

Here's a review of the movie "Hurlyburly" with Sean Penn which mined some of its deepest psychological insights from Shakespeare's "Macbeth".

Extract:

The story's most obvious allusion is to Shakespeare's "Macbeth": "When shall we three meet again in thunder, lightning, or in rain? When the hurlyburly's done, when the battle's lost and won." The movie's opening shot is of thunder and lightning (on a TV screen), and, certainly, Eddie is fighting an uphill battle with life; like Shakespeare's protagonist he is constantly railing against his plight. At one point Eddie says, "We're all just background in each other's life, ...cardboard cutouts bumping around in a vague spin-off of...life." Compare that to Macbeth's despair at the end of his career: "Life's but a walking shadow, a poor player that struts and frets his hour upon the stage and then is heard no more: It is a tale told by an idiot, full of sound and fury, signifying nothing."

http://www.dvdtown.com/review/hurlyburly/2171/304/