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Link Posted: 12/7/2021 3:49:44 PM EST
[#1]
ha... I remember the first microwave we got... maybe around 83-ish.... my mom got it from her dad(like a hand-me-down)... it had no buttons, it had a dial to heat, and it was HUGE... like you could cook a turkey in it..
Link Posted: 12/7/2021 3:51:08 PM EST
[#2]
Every kid in class standing reciting the pledge of allegiance.

The Sears wishbook
Link Posted: 12/7/2021 3:52:07 PM EST
[#3]
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Quoted:

And nothing after 11:00
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You knew you were up late when the National Anthem came on.

"This concludes our programming day."
Link Posted: 12/7/2021 3:53:26 PM EST
[#4]
I recall most everything mentioned here, but I like to remember in context.

5$ Friday night. $2 gas, 99 cent 8 pack, a pack of Marlboro reds and $1.50 left for some 25 cent taps at the bar.

Dad going to the hardware store and buying dynamite to blow up a beaver damn.

Having the house wired prior to electricity being run ('67) in the rural electrification act. Each room had a single light hanging from the ceiling on an asbestos covered wire. The light had a rotation switch that had a "clack" you could hear throughout the house. We turned those switched for weeks before we actually had lights. One outlet in every room.

There was always a sears catalog in the bathroom in case toilet paper ran out. The one in the outhouse was kept in a tin box so the mice wouldn't get to it.
Link Posted: 12/7/2021 3:53:36 PM EST
[#5]
Discussion ForumsJump to Quoted PostQuote History

thta or remember when TV's that weren't consoles were always sitting on a little cart with wheels?... that'
s how our was
Link Posted: 12/7/2021 3:58:09 PM EST
[#6]
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Quoted:

@NAM

Holy shit! I had that exact radio for years!
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Quoted:
Quoted:
Dad had to take his '57 Ford to the dealer to have factory seat belts installed


@NAM

Holy shit! I had that exact radio for years!


It's my work clock; still runs 100%. Just gets a little noisy now and then; percussive maintenance works wonders.
Link Posted: 12/7/2021 3:59:52 PM EST
[#7]
Discussion ForumsJump to Quoted PostQuote History
Quoted:


It's my work clock; still runs 100%. Just gets a little noisy now and then; percussive maintenance works wonders.
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Discussion ForumsJump to Quoted PostQuote History
Quoted:
Quoted:
Quoted:
Dad had to take his '57 Ford to the dealer to have factory seat belts installed


@NAM

Holy shit! I had that exact radio for years!


It's my work clock; still runs 100%. Just gets a little noisy now and then; percussive maintenance works wonders.

Link Posted: 12/7/2021 4:01:26 PM EST
[#8]
Gold Circle coinpack fucking rubbers.

Playboy magazine

Reel push mowers.

Schlitz beer
Falstaff Beer
Pearl Beer
Fabacher beer

Cushman scooters
Cushman Eagle
Mustang motorcycles
Yamaguchi Motorsickles
Studebakers
Nash Ramblers
Kaiser cars
Nash Metropolitan
Western Auto Whizzer

Titties from the 50's and 60's
Cheerleaders

J3 Cubs
Aeronca Chiefs
Mooney Mites
Taylorcrafts
Funks
Stearmans

Waco's
Swifts
Ercoupes
Stinsons
$1500 AT-6's
$5000 P-51's
Fleet biplanes




Boss McKenzie in Mexia, TX whoop'n teenage boys that fucked up with his gun belt.  

Coaches and principals that could hit a boy's ass hard enough with a board to raise his feet off the ground.

Riding my bicycle through town carrying my Mossberg shotgun.



Link Posted: 12/7/2021 4:03:44 PM EST
[#9]
Discussion ForumsJump to Quoted PostQuote History
Quoted:
ha... I remember the first microwave we got... maybe around 83-ish.... my mom got it from her dad(like a hand-me-down)... it had no buttons, it had a dial to heat, and it was HUGE... like you could cook a turkey in it..
View Quote

Amana Radar Range ?
Link Posted: 12/7/2021 4:04:57 PM EST
[#10]
Discussion ForumsJump to Quoted PostQuote History
Quoted:

Schlitz beer
View Quote



You can still get Schlitz (and Blatz) in Wisconsin.


Link Posted: 12/7/2021 4:07:38 PM EST
[#11]
Discussion ForumsJump to Quoted PostQuote History
Quoted:



You can still get Schlitz (and Blatz) in Wisconsin.


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In steel cans?
Link Posted: 12/7/2021 4:09:04 PM EST
[#12]
Link Posted: 12/7/2021 4:12:37 PM EST
[#13]
Quisp and Quake
Link Posted: 12/7/2021 4:14:10 PM EST
[#14]
When playing war games with your friends entailed actually going outside with  [fake for the most part but often with BB guns] your friends and having a war. You got hit, skinned your knees and elbows, ripped clothing, got in a few fights and in general, had one hell of a good time until everyone was exhausted.
Link Posted: 12/7/2021 4:16:21 PM EST
[#15]
Discussion ForumsJump to Quoted PostQuote History
Quoted:
$79 SKS
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and M1 Carbine
Link Posted: 12/7/2021 4:16:58 PM EST
[#16]
Discussion ForumsJump to Quoted PostQuote History
Quoted:


In steel cans?
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Quoted:
Quoted:



You can still get Schlitz (and Blatz) in Wisconsin.




In steel cans?



No, standard aluminum.

Side note: When I was in Iraq/Qatar, our soda came with pull tabs (aluminum).
Link Posted: 12/7/2021 4:17:11 PM EST
[#17]
Discussion ForumsJump to Quoted PostQuote History
Quoted:
Fuel cap behind the license plate on the back of the car
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Fuel cap behind the tail light.
Link Posted: 12/7/2021 4:21:18 PM EST
[#18]
Link Posted: 12/7/2021 4:22:32 PM EST
[#19]
400 dollar full auto M16's at the gun shows.
Link Posted: 12/7/2021 4:23:50 PM EST
[#20]
Discussion ForumsJump to Quoted PostQuote History


Dimmer switch .. hated replacing them half the time the screws were rusted solid
Link Posted: 12/7/2021 4:24:43 PM EST
[#21]
Discussion ForumsJump to Quoted PostQuote History
Quoted:
candy cigarettes in packs designed to look like the real thing (i remember salem and marlboro in particular)
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MLB candy snuff packets.
Link Posted: 12/7/2021 4:25:26 PM EST
[#22]
Charles chips

Link Posted: 12/7/2021 4:25:28 PM EST
[#23]
Link Posted: 12/7/2021 4:25:29 PM EST
[#24]
Discussion ForumsJump to Quoted PostQuote History
Quoted:
Dad had to take his '57 Ford to the dealer to have factory seat belts installed

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My 1975 Blazer the lap belts were just that, belts bolted to the frame through the floor with large bolt.

Remember in the 80's when some dodge cars had automatic seat belts. Most annoying shit int he world. Work to even get in the car without the seat belt on.
Link Posted: 12/7/2021 4:27:29 PM EST
[#25]
Discussion ForumsJump to Quoted PostQuote History
Quoted:


That makes you a straddler of the big shift.

When you were a kid-
You parents, grand parents, and great grand parents all likely
Lived in a home with a wall mounted phone
Had a TV with limited channels,and  not 24/7/265 broadcasts
Had a record player/tape player/radio
Didn’t have a VCR
Didn’t have a computer
Took trips using a map
With figuring out where to get gas or stay on the fly, and limited 24 hour gas stations
Had to use a pay phone
Wrote checks
Did not have or had very limited credit card use

The majority of guys our age graduated high school -
And then  made the shift from checks to ATM to credit cards
Bought a VCR
Switched to CDs
Got cable
When we deployed we brought a book, and had no contact with home.
Got a computer
Got email
Got a cell phone, etc.
Over a ten year period or so

Then we bought our first stuff off of Amazon and EBay.
We switched to DVDs and Blue rays.
We got onboard with mp3s and a iTunes
We stopped going to get movies at blockbuster
We had cars with nav
We can look up anything anytime from just about anywhere
Got rid of cable
Got streaming
It got so When we deployed we could video call home from a mature theatre or make a sat phone call to home off the coast of Somalia or whatever
Over the next ten years

Even if you had kids in 1985 or so, they grew up in a very different world than someone that was born 1975 or earlier.  Let alone kids born 1995 and later.

The life of an American born in 1965 was not very different than that of someone born in 55, 45, 35.

Someone born in 95 had a different life than someone born in 85, and vastly different than 75, 65.
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Quoted:
Quoted:
How old do you have to be to be considered an old timer? I remember all of these I and don't really consider myself old at 55.


That makes you a straddler of the big shift.

When you were a kid-
You parents, grand parents, and great grand parents all likely
Lived in a home with a wall mounted phone
Had a TV with limited channels,and  not 24/7/265 broadcasts
Had a record player/tape player/radio
Didn’t have a VCR
Didn’t have a computer
Took trips using a map
With figuring out where to get gas or stay on the fly, and limited 24 hour gas stations
Had to use a pay phone
Wrote checks
Did not have or had very limited credit card use

The majority of guys our age graduated high school -
And then  made the shift from checks to ATM to credit cards
Bought a VCR
Switched to CDs
Got cable
When we deployed we brought a book, and had no contact with home.
Got a computer
Got email
Got a cell phone, etc.
Over a ten year period or so

Then we bought our first stuff off of Amazon and EBay.
We switched to DVDs and Blue rays.
We got onboard with mp3s and a iTunes
We stopped going to get movies at blockbuster
We had cars with nav
We can look up anything anytime from just about anywhere
Got rid of cable
Got streaming
It got so When we deployed we could video call home from a mature theatre or make a sat phone call to home off the coast of Somalia or whatever
Over the next ten years

Even if you had kids in 1985 or so, they grew up in a very different world than someone that was born 1975 or earlier.  Let alone kids born 1995 and later.

The life of an American born in 1965 was not very different than that of someone born in 55, 45, 35.

Someone born in 95 had a different life than someone born in 85, and vastly different than 75, 65.

The tail end seems to be the very end of the 70s.

You can find them by asking if they didn't get their first cell phone till after high school and if they have a hotmail email address (from before it was bought by MS) that's a dead giveaway.
Link Posted: 12/7/2021 4:30:58 PM EST
[#26]
Link Posted: 12/7/2021 4:32:11 PM EST
[#27]
Discussion ForumsJump to Quoted PostQuote History
Quoted:



I remember NOT having smoking sections
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Discussion ForumsJump to Quoted PostQuote History
Quoted:
Quoted:
I remember smoking sections



I remember NOT having smoking sections

You might have to explain that one!
Link Posted: 12/7/2021 4:34:02 PM EST
[#28]
Sitting around after supper reading and listening to the radio because there was no TV.
That faint buzz you heard when you turned on the car radio during the half-minute wait while the tubes warmed up.
Vent wings
Manual chokes
Kendall bragging about their two-thousand-mile motor oil.
Picking up the handset and telling "Central" the number you wanted to call. The handset was held against the ear and one spoke into the microphone atop the "candlestick".
Link Posted: 12/7/2021 4:35:27 PM EST
[#29]
Discussion ForumsJump to Quoted PostQuote History
Quoted:
ha... I remember the first microwave we got... maybe around 83-ish.... my mom got it from her dad(like a hand-me-down)... it had no buttons, it had a dial to heat, and it was HUGE... like you could cook a turkey in it..
View Quote

Remember seeing the warning signs everywhere?
Link Posted: 12/7/2021 4:40:13 PM EST
[#30]
Link Posted: 12/7/2021 4:40:44 PM EST
[#31]
Jax beer and Cream of Kentucky bourbon.
Link Posted: 12/7/2021 4:44:33 PM EST
[#32]



Stag and Hanley beer.  Doubt anyone here has tried it unless you are from the mid-west in the 50s - early 70s.  Hanley might have been the worst I have ever had in my life.




Link Posted: 12/7/2021 4:44:59 PM EST
[#33]
Discussion ForumsJump to Quoted PostQuote History
Quoted:


TV repair men would come out on house calls to fix an ailing TV. It was usually a bad vacuum tube or two.
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You could call up the local TV store and they would bring one out for you to try. If you didn't like it you could try another one. "Entertainment Centers" with the record player on one end, TV in the middle and radio on the other. (Western Auto would do the same thing if you wanted a new mower).  Crystal radios because no one knew what a transistor was, listened to KOMA, '100,000 watts of AM power".  $.17 gas at the cheap 'You Pump' station. Only having to dial the last 4 digits of the phone number.
Link Posted: 12/7/2021 4:46:39 PM EST
[#34]
Discussion ForumsJump to Quoted PostQuote History
Quoted:


Dimmer switch .. hated replacing them half the time the screws were rusted solid
View Quote

Road salt from your boots seemed to be the main cause of failure .
Link Posted: 12/7/2021 4:46:51 PM EST
[#35]
Link Posted: 12/7/2021 4:50:26 PM EST
[#36]
Discussion ForumsJump to Quoted PostQuote History
Quoted:

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I look for one of those anytime I'm in some antique type shop.
Link Posted: 12/7/2021 4:58:31 PM EST
[#37]
Link Posted: 12/7/2021 5:05:07 PM EST
[#38]
Christmas morning getting up and seeing the 'long box' under the tree knowing that Santa brought either a new rifle or shotgun.

I continued that with my kid. Most every Christmas had a new gun under the tree. Do that for an 8, 9, or 10 year old kid today and expect a visit from a County Karen.
Link Posted: 12/7/2021 5:08:56 PM EST
[#39]

Link Posted: 12/7/2021 5:13:10 PM EST
[#40]
Link Posted: 12/7/2021 5:18:11 PM EST
[#41]
Waiting for the tubes to warm up.
Link Posted: 12/7/2021 5:20:18 PM EST
[#42]
Discussion ForumsJump to Quoted PostQuote History
Quoted:
Gold Circle coinpack fucking rubbers.





View Quote
Holy fuck that takes me back. They came stacked 3 in a pack.
@ElSupremo
Link Posted: 12/7/2021 5:22:26 PM EST
[#43]
No shit.......I grew up using one.

Link Posted: 12/7/2021 5:25:20 PM EST
[#44]
The family watching Let's Go To The Races on Friday evening with their tickets from the grocery store to see if we hit it rich.
Link Posted: 12/7/2021 5:25:42 PM EST
[#45]
Discussion ForumsJump to Quoted PostQuote History
Quoted:


For some reason I loved the chemical smell from the mimeograph machine.
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Me too.  It’s just a very distinctive smell, which is what my memory thought of first, before any “visual” memory. Hell, I can smell it through that picture.
Link Posted: 12/7/2021 5:30:43 PM EST
[#46]
Discussion ForumsJump to Quoted PostQuote History
Quoted:

Amana Radar Range ?
View Quote View All Quotes
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Discussion ForumsJump to Quoted PostQuote History
Quoted:
Quoted:
ha... I remember the first microwave we got... maybe around 83-ish.... my mom got it from her dad(like a hand-me-down)... it had no buttons, it had a dial to heat, and it was HUGE... like you could cook a turkey in it..

Amana Radar Range ?

I can't remember... I don't think I paid much attention... I think it was wood grained, or at least brown.

hey, do you guys remember those "Mark-it" grocery stores where you go in with a grease pencil, all the cans and stuff are in bins and you write the price on top and put it in your basket?
Link Posted: 12/7/2021 5:32:40 PM EST
[#47]
Link Posted: 12/7/2021 5:33:44 PM EST
[#48]
Discussion ForumsJump to Quoted PostQuote History
Quoted:
High beam switch on the floor.

View Quote


In 1972, I was in Augusta, GA for 3 months.  While there, I bought a 1972 Corvette and had to go to Atlanta to pick it up.  While driving back, then on 2 lane highways, it became dark so I switched on the headlights.  They came on on high beams and I could not find the dimmer switch with my foot.  I drove back the entire way on high and likely pissed off a lot of on coming drivers.  The next day, I discovered that Chevrolet had placed the switch under the floor mat.

Link Posted: 12/7/2021 5:37:01 PM EST
[#49]
Buying a god set of used G78-14s for my '71 Maverick.
Link Posted: 12/7/2021 5:38:15 PM EST
[#50]
Discussion ForumsJump to Quoted PostQuote History
Quoted:


In 1972, I was in Augusta, GA for 3 months.  While there, I bought a 1972 Corvette and had to go to Atlanta to pick it up.  While driving back, then on 2 lane highways, it became dark so I switched on the headlights.  They came on on high beams and I could not find the dimmer switch with my foot.  I drove back the entire way on high and likely pissed off a lot of on coming drivers.  The next day, I discovered that Chevrolet had placed the switch under the floor mat.

https://photos.smugmug.com/photos/i-zxf9GDV/0/9d4d6c8a/L/i-zxf9GDV-L.jpg
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Was your picture taken when Harry Truman died?

Flags at half staff and I can't think of another major public figure to go that year.

@keiswa
Page / 38
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