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OT
April 16th, 2004, 17:45
"When I was a kid adults used to bore me to tears :bawl: with their tedious diatribes about how hard things were when they were growing up. :lecture:

What with walking twenty-five miles to school every morning uphill both ways through year 'round blizzards :yap: carrying their younger siblings on their backs to their one-room schoolhouse :yap: where they maintained a straight-A average despite their full-time after-school job at the local textile mill :yap: where they worked for 35 cents an hour just to help keep their family from starving to death!

And I remember promising myself that when I grew up there was no way I was going to lay that on kids :nono: about how hard I had it and how easy they've got it!

But....

Now that I've reached the ripe old age of thirty, I can't help but look around and notice the youth of today.

You've got it so easy! I mean, compared to my childhood, you live in a Utopia! And I hate to say it but you kids today don't know how good you've got it!

I mean, when I was a kid we didn't have the Internet. :geek: If we wanted to know something, we had to go to the library and look it up ourselves! :read:

And there was no email! We had to actually write somebody a letter, with a pen! And then you had to walk all the way across the street and put it in the mailbox and it would take like three days to get there! :dunno:

And there were no MP3s or Napsters! :music: If you wanted to steal music, you had to go to the record store and shoplift it yourself! :eyes: Or, we had to wait around all day to tape it off the radio and the DJ would usually talk over the beginning and mess it all up! :doh:

We didn't have fancy stuff like Call Waiting! If you were on the phone and somebody else called, they got a busy signal! :phone:

And we didn't have fancy Caller ID Boxes either! When the phone rang, you had no idea who it was, :dunno: it could be your boss, your Mom, a collections agent, you didn't know!!!

You just had to pick it up and take your chances, mister!

And we didn't have any fancy Sony Playstation videogames with high-resolution 3-D graphics! We had the Atari 2600! :geek: With games like "Space Invaders" and "Asteroids"! Your guy was a little square! You had to use your imagination! And there were no multiple levels or screens, it was just one screen forever!

And you could never win, the game just kept getting harder and faster until you died! :badpc:

Just like LIFE!

When you went to the movie theater, there was no such thing as stadium seating! All the seats were the same height! If a tall guy sat in front of you, you watched his hairstyle!

And sure, we had cable television, :tv: but back then that was only like 20 channels and there was no onscreen menu! You had to use a little book called a TV Guide to find out what was on!

And there was no Cartoon Network! You could only get cartoons on Saturday morning... D'ya hear what I'm saying!?! We had to wait ALL WEEK!

That's exactly what I'm talking about! You kids today have got it too easy. You're spoiled! :soapbox:

You guys wouldn't last five minutes back in 1984!"

......I'm not the author of this list of truths, but man, I might as well have been......

ChuckD
April 16th, 2004, 18:00
Word! :cool:

REDXJ4FUN
April 16th, 2004, 18:03
Oh you are soooooo true :viking: I remeber those times and you got me thinking about the game topic and I never can remeber any one actually beeting some of those games yet the games today seem easy.

OT
April 16th, 2004, 18:15
Oh you are soooooo true :viking: I remeber those times and you got me thinking about the game topic and I never can remeber any one actually beeting some of those games yet the games today seem easy.
Nope. Not with Atari, Coleco, Intellivision, or anything.

Then there came NINTENDO. It finally gave one hope of actually accomplishing something.

The first game I ever beat was "The Legend of Zelda". But hey, that was all the way into the early '90s.

Remember how the rubber covers used to come off of the Atari joysticks? And the only way to get a different screen was to switch from color to black&white.

poomba
April 16th, 2004, 18:17
30?!?! g'lord child, you still have milk on your breath... why if I were 30, I'd, I'd..um..what was the question again?
I actually beat one of those games, where it had 'if you get 1 million points, take a picture of the screen, and send it to us'...took me 3 days...did it, took the polaroid, shut off the game..and the polaroid didn't turn out..no proof....

Atl XJ
April 16th, 2004, 18:23
I'm only 26, but that is so true. Sooo much has changed since I was a kid.

RichP
April 16th, 2004, 19:22
Cable, you had CABLE, sheesh we had to put a antenna up on the roof and then only got channels 2, 4, 5, 7, 9, 11 all NY stations and THAT WAS IT. The TV stations stopped broadcasting after the tonight show and did not start again till 5am with a farmers show and 'The Big Picture' [military propaganda show], cartoons were B/W and Bettie Boop was a hot chick :heart: The ONLY one who showed cleavage... We had a TV, most did not and on sat morning all my buds would come over at 7am to watch cartoons for an hour and maybe Roy Rogers N dale evans. Then we got kicked out of the house to go play stick ball in the street with broom handles for bats...
Calculators were the size of a toaster oven or bigger if it did division and had to be plugged in.
Transistor radios were $50 and that was when the middle income average weekly check for a full time job was only $75...
We were lucky, we had a freezer on top of our refigerator, neighbors on the street used to get ice DELIVERED 2x a week.
More than two phones in a house was unheardof unless you worked for the phone company. There were only 48 or 49 area codes, one for each state.
Car phones cost $3000.00 and were $5 a minute, very rare.
Nobody had A/C in their house let alone their car...
Chinese food, HA, Chung king in a can with white rice was about as chinese as most people got.
NOTHING was open on ANY holidays, you filled up the car the day before for that trip to grandmas or you didn't go..
Street cars on tracks were common in NYC and Newark NJ, some areas in North jersey they were still pulled by horses.
You could go to Newark Airport and walk around with the pilot as he inspected the plane before takeoff and get your hat blown off when they turned it around for departure..
This was 1959 no less... ;)

And unlike a lot of others I CANT WAIT TO SEE WHAT NEW TOYS COME OUT NEXT :D :D :D :D

ChuckD
April 16th, 2004, 21:46
I think youngsters are just "Better Off Dead"




I want my two dollars!!!

Atl XJ
April 16th, 2004, 22:10
Thats a great movie. An 80's classic.

Urban Redneck
April 16th, 2004, 22:19
You forgot some. The remote control was your ol' man saying, "Go over there and change the channel". Even if you were in the other room. Music didn't come on CD. It was a record. You could actually see the detail in the picture on the jacket. It was 12" in diameter and used a needle to play.
Want to feel real old? I just got home from a concert. $35 bucks for a ticket. One ticket! And $45 for a tee shirt. $45 BUCKS!!! I can't believe it. And if my sister tried to get out of the house in what these girls are wearing these days...sheesh. And I'm only 37. My first concert was $10 and a shirt was $12.

Glenn B
April 16th, 2004, 22:19
Car phones cost $3000.00 and were $5 a minute, very rare.

Huh? In what year again? Motorola did Cell in 73/74 ish..... what the heck did they use back then? Long spools of copper wire? :D Seriously...point me to a link, would love to see the tech they used.... fun to see how stuff changes.
Glenn

Majo
April 16th, 2004, 22:46
haha, nice okie.

Even though I'm 20, I caught myself saying I didn't have that when I was a kid. I think there is a huge gap for people my age. I grew up with atari and nintendo. My lil brother grows up with PS2 and what not. That's a huge difference.

BrettM
April 16th, 2004, 22:56
"You guys wouldn't last five minutes back in 1984!"




:rolleyes: whatever :rolleyes: I lasted over 7 months in 1984

















though I did cry a lot and crap in my pants :laugh3:

OT
April 16th, 2004, 22:59
I remember when MTV 1st started and I used to set my ghetto blaster in front of the TV speaker to record the newest songs like "Rebel Yell" and "We Built This City (ON Rock and Roll)".

In the evenings, we used to watch "That's Incredible" and "Moonlighting".

Oh, man, parachute pants and zipper clothes.

At recess we would pull out the ghetto blaster and sheet of cardboard.

Remember Transformers and He-man? What about the hundreds of different G.I Joes.

Majo
April 16th, 2004, 23:01
don't get me started on he-man it's awesome.

best show ever

OT
April 16th, 2004, 23:05
'80s insider check: "Now we know!"

Finish it.

RichP
April 17th, 2004, 03:51
Huh? In what year again? Motorola did Cell in 73/74 ish..... what the heck did they use back then? Long spools of copper wire? :D Seriously...point me to a link, would love to see the tech they used.... fun to see how stuff changes.
Glenn
73' naw, thats too new, I'm talking 59-60's....
If you want to see the tech they used back then check out one of the old Dean Martin spy movies, I remember that his 64 T bird had one in it, it had a a DIAL and you had to go thru a mobil operator.

motorman
April 17th, 2004, 04:09
I can remember going over to my Aunts to watch their 12" Black and White TV to see some guy who wiggled his hips all over the place on the Ed Sullivan show. Was 6 at the time.

In Cleveland we had 3 channels. Anyone remember Goolardi? Best of the late night horror TV.

TC
April 17th, 2004, 05:05
Big freakin' deal. Hey Eagle, tell 'em about the Dinosaur petting Zoo you worked in as a kid. TC

ChuckD
April 17th, 2004, 06:42
Huh? In what year again? Motorola did Cell in 73/74 ish..... what the heck did they use back then? Long spools of copper wire? :D Seriously...point me to a link, would love to see the tech they used.... fun to see how stuff changes.
Glenn


Man Gelnn, even Barnaby Jones had a phone in his car. ;)

Matthew Currie
April 17th, 2004, 07:16
Cable, you had CABLE, sheesh we had to put a antenna up on the roof and then only got channels 2, 4, 5, 7, 9, 11 all NY stations and THAT WAS IT. The TV stations stopped broadcasting after the tonight show and did not start again till 5am with a farmers show and 'The Big Picture' [military propaganda show], cartoons were B/W and Bettie Boop was a hot chick :heart: The ONLY one who showed cleavage... We had a TV, most did not and on sat morning all my buds would come over at 7am to watch cartoons for an hour and maybe Roy Rogers N dale evans. Then we got kicked out of the house to go play stick ball in the street with broom handles for bats...
Calculators were the size of a toaster oven or bigger if it did division and had to be plugged in.
Transistor radios were $50 and that was when the middle income average weekly check for a full time job was only $75...
We were lucky, we had a freezer on top of our refigerator, neighbors on the street used to get ice DELIVERED 2x a week.
More than two phones in a house was unheardof unless you worked for the phone company. There were only 48 or 49 area codes, one for each state.
Car phones cost $3000.00 and were $5 a minute, very rare.
Nobody had A/C in their house let alone their car...
Chinese food, HA, Chung king in a can with white rice was about as chinese as most people got.
NOTHING was open on ANY holidays, you filled up the car the day before for that trip to grandmas or you didn't go..
Street cars on tracks were common in NYC and Newark NJ, some areas in North jersey they were still pulled by horses.
You could go to Newark Airport and walk around with the pilot as he inspected the plane before takeoff and get your hat blown off when they turned it around for departure..
This was 1959 no less... ;)

And unlike a lot of others I CANT WAIT TO SEE WHAT NEW TOYS COME OUT NEXT :D :D :D :D

CAble? I still can't get cable where I live.

Of course, when I was very little, I remember that watching TV was walking down the street to look in the window of a store where there was a real live one. When I was about six my dad finally bought a set, so we could watch the Army-McCarthy hearings. It was a Hallicrafters, with about 30 tubes, which seemed to blow at a rate of about one a month. Remember when you could snatch all the tubes out of your TV and take them down to the testing machine in the drugstore?

In western Mass, where I lived for a while after that, we still didn't have dial phones. We called the operator. Our number was "2234." Unfortunately, the Fire Department was "1234." So occasionally when the operator screwed up we'd get panicky calls from someone in the night saying "my house is burning down," and we'd have to say sorry, wrong number.

When we moved to CT in 1955, it was a technological adventure. We had a dial phone and a refrigerator with a freezer, and with our enormous "stacked-yagi" TV antenna, with a 3-way switch on the back of the set, we could actually get 3 channels, 4 when the sunspots cooperated.

And here I am now, sitting in that same living room (visiting) with my Pentium laptop, connecting to the far ends of the earth in seconds....suits me fine.

w_howey
April 17th, 2004, 12:38
I still want my MTV!


Hey anyone else have Boomerang???
We have it on Dish Network, and I watch it all the time with my kids. I remember most of the cartoons on it. My kids think Dad isn't so freaky anymore.


One of the houses we lived in had a number of 2600, the bank was 1600, we used to get calls for the bank all the time.

The first VCR we had, was the size of suitcase, weighed more than one, had a cable for the remote And was BETA!!

knifeboy2
April 17th, 2004, 13:44
I was 2 in 1984 and grew up with Atari, Nintendo, He Man, the Transformers (more than meets the eye!!!) and such. I actually brought my old Atari system to college with me freshman year cause it was cool. Pitfall is the best game ever!!!

As much as you all gripe about getting old cause you can't control it.....ya gotta admit all this new fangled technology is pretty darned cool. I can't wait to see what my kids will be playing with when that day comes.

Rob Mayercik
April 19th, 2004, 05:36
'80s insider check: "Now we know!"

Finish it.
"And knowing is half the battle! <insert chorus singing "G-I-Joe" here>"

Transformers? Definitely my favorite from my younger days.

Along the same lines:

A friend (a bit older than me) of mine is a elementary school music teacher in a district near where I work. She apparently took some of her Beatles 45's in for a unit she was doing on the group.

She held up the record in class, and some kid asked, "Mrs. ****, what the heck happened to your CD??"

Sigh. Kids.

Rob

ChEwBaCcA
April 19th, 2004, 06:29
Nope. Not with Atari, Coleco, Intellivision, or anything.

Then there came NINTENDO. It finally gave one hope of actually accomplishing something.

The first game I ever beat was "The Legend of Zelda". But hey, that was all the way into the early '90s.

Remember how the rubber covers used to come off of the Atari joysticks? And the only way to get a different screen was to switch from color to black&white.

Anyone ever have an Atari 5200 ? With the joysticks that would break after 2 weeks EVERYTIME! The membrane pads would go bad and there was no way to start the games! We had one of these....it was far better than 2600 but never really caught on....... Ahhhh the good ole days!

Atari is cool
Chewy

xjwoody
April 19th, 2004, 07:19
I grew up in an Intellevision family. After a while we got a Timex Sinclair 1000 computer. It was our first: black and white, goofy membrane keyboard... Then we had the Commodore 64. One of my faves was Beach Head. We also had Quantum Link, which was really something...

And let's not forget Voltron, in all it's forms.

You gotta watch "Freaks and Geeks".. That'll take you back.

OT
April 19th, 2004, 07:36
You gotta watch "Freaks and Geeks".. That'll take you back.
When and where is that show on?

xjwoody
April 19th, 2004, 07:39
Ahhh.. Therein lies the rub. You gotta buy it, or rent it.. Cuz it's been off the air for 2 or 3 years, now..

Freaks abd Geeks (http://www.freaksandgeeks.com/)

It's definately a worthwhile purchase.

XTrmXJ
April 19th, 2004, 08:16
Posted what was said before, I dont care what anyone says about this tread, as long as people keep getting older there will alway be someone saying " when I was growing up" or "You kids have it easy" Bla Bla Bla .. Like I said I dont care who you are, everyone wants to campare how hard they had it... But if you stop and think about it you were in the same position with the older generation saying the same dam thing, so in turn you are talking about yourself when You say a "Message For All You Youngsters".. Shit Im 24, It doesnt take Age to be wise, it take Heart and Mind.. Im not trying to be a dic or anything I just wanted to state my $.02....

seanR
April 19th, 2004, 08:28
I grew up in the seventies, I lived out in the country (I never had cable until last year when Laura moved in) I remember when the Pres. was on we were screwed for the night, no TV.

We got a TI99-4A computer around 1980, when I was in H.S. It could talk! I threw it out three years ago.

I paid $.75 for my first gallon of gas and $.95 for my first pack of smokes.

We also had a touch tone phone that had to "click" for each number you dialed, remember those? I clicked once for one, and twice fro two etc. ect. and ten times for 0.

I also remember driving to Texas to see my grandparents at the breakneck speed of 55 mph! Some times I drive on I-90 at 55 just to show my kids what it was like in the "good old days", Wow! what a difference between 55 and 70+ now you can drive.

I remember not having any cup holders in cars and you had to put your coffee cup on the dash and hope it didn't tip over and run down the defrost vent.

Eagle
April 19th, 2004, 09:49
Huh? In what year again? Motorola did Cell in 73/74 ish..... what the heck did they use back then? Long spools of copper wire? :D Seriously...point me to a link, would love to see the tech they used.... fun to see how stuff changes.
Glenn

Negatory. Motorola did mobile phones back then, but they didn't use cellular technology. That didn't arrive until the mid- to late 80s.

RichP
April 19th, 2004, 12:35
Posted what was said before, I dont care what anyone says about this tread, as long as people keep getting older there will alway be someone saying " when I was growing up" or "You kids have it easy" Bla Bla Bla .. Like I said I dont care who you are, everyone wants to campare how hard they had it... But if you stop and think about it you were in the same position with the older generation saying the same dam thing, so in turn you are talking about yourself when You say a "Message For All You Youngsters".. Shit Im 24, It doesnt take Age to be wise, it take Heart and Mind.. Im not trying to be a dic or anything I just wanted to state my $.02....

Never said I had it hard, would not want to be growing up in this day and age. The upcoming generation are going to be used to the govt controls that are being put in place, loss of rights and privacy, every law enforcement organization wanting to be in your face knowing what you are doing. Can't carry a pocket knife on an airplane, up close and personal searches cause you set off a metal detector, having a medal of honor confiscated because it 'Looks Dangerous' by airport security, pulled over by police for 'suspicion of something unspecified'. Thats just wrong but kids today are being taught that it is OK if uncle sam wants to check out your colon for smuggled drugs and you must be a terrorist if you object to the latex glove treatment. After all, it's for the children... Nope, not me. the only real regret that I may have is that long range common everyday space travel will never be a reality in my lifetime. :patriot:

ryurabbit
April 19th, 2004, 12:45
Hey, I did that too!!! It was pitfall and you could win a t-shirt or a $100.00 gift certificate. Sent in the poloroid and they siad that my score wasn't high enough and they had run out of t-shirts! My first major LIFES DISSAPPONTMENT!.

Rabbit



30?!?! g'lord child, you still have milk on your breath... why if I were 30, I'd, I'd..um..what was the question again?
I actually beat one of those games, where it had 'if you get 1 million points, take a picture of the screen, and send it to us'...took me 3 days...did it, took the polaroid, shut off the game..and the polaroid didn't turn out..no proof....

5-90
April 19th, 2004, 12:48
"When positive ID is required at all times it is time to go elsewhere. The nice thing about space travel is that it makes it possible to go elsewhere." Robert Anson Heinlein.

Yeah - I object to the filmy illusion of security that is being thrust upon me, and object further to the fact that it is not an illusion for so many. I was taught that if you want to be secure it is YOUR job and YOURS ALONE to make that happen!

I really like when I hear that "I don't have to protect myself, the police will do that for me." There are two fatal flaws - one moral and one legal.

Morally, one cannot expect another to do something that one is not oneself willing to do to one's own benefit. Someone who benefits from the action of another is just as morally responsible for that action as the actor.

Legally, the police and the government have a responsibility to the body politic AT LARGE, but no responsibility or duty to the individual members. This is a legal principle that goes back about four hundred years into English Common Law, and it is that system from which much of American jurisprudence is derived. The police are largely historians, and their responsibility it to enforce the decisions and will of the state. Any protection directly extended to individuals is not in the interest of the individual, but in the interest of the state. "To Protect and to Serve" is the wool pulled over the eyes of the public. (Nothing against any serving or former cops we have here, but none of this is your fault anyhow.)

"What about Witness Protection Programme?" What about it? Its history and success rate is really quite depressing - I'd sooner keep my own moniker and take my chances, as they are probably better that way.

I'm not as old as RichP (I'm quite certain...) but I remember a time when a pocketknife was not a problem anywhere, and one could still take a .22 to school so you could hunt small game on the way home. What happened to that? Of course, that was still when public schools were still producting functional adults, so there's probably a correlation...

I guess I'm starting to rant, so I'll switch off now.

5-90

Glenn B
April 19th, 2004, 14:37
Negatory. Motorola did mobile phones back then, but they didn't use cellular technology. That didn't arrive until the mid- to late 80s.
Hmm, guess I should contact all of the sites that gave me the information I posted. Will tell them "Eagle said so" and let you guys argue. I will get some popcorn.... as I bet it would never end. :D

Lou
April 19th, 2004, 16:23
Hmm, guess I should contact all of the sites that gave me the information I posted. Will tell them "Eagle said so" and let you guys argue. I will get some popcorn.... as I bet it would never end. :D

The mobile telephone technology that existed prior to that period was 'cellular' (due to antenna pattern?), but it was much less ssophisticated than what we know cellular today.

There were cells, but automatic transitioning from one cell to another did not exist. As I understand it, it required manual switching at the cell base. And switching was not always possible.

Scott Mac.
April 19th, 2004, 17:05
I remember the predecessor to cable, HBO, and not 5 HBO's, just one. This was before remote controls. If you wanted to watch it you had to get up and switch a box that hung from the back of the TV. It was right next to the box that turned on the Intellivision.

I remember a buddy of mine had cable too. But they called it ON TV.

Urban Redneck
April 19th, 2004, 17:27
ONTV was a microwave signal sent out. I remember having a small tiny antenna on the roof. Small is relative, considering that the "regular" antenna was about 6' long. Used to be able to catch the picture scrambled on my tv in my room. Turn up the sound on the radio and "watch" a scrambled picture of the Blackhawks games. Since Chicago never broadcast their home games, you had to pay for Sportsvision on ONTv.

OT
April 19th, 2004, 17:49
Posted what was said before, I dont care what anyone says about this tread, as long as people keep getting older there will alway be someone saying " when I was growing up" or "You kids have it easy" Bla Bla Bla .. Like I said I dont care who you are, everyone wants to campare how hard they had it... But if you stop and think about it you were in the same position with the older generation saying the same dam thing, so in turn you are talking about yourself when You say a "Message For All You Youngsters".. Shit Im 24, It doesnt take Age to be wise, it take Heart and Mind.. Im not trying to be a dic or anything I just wanted to state my $.02....
Sheesh. Cool it, man.

I never said I wasn't a youngster at the old age of 30.

Even a 100 year old man is a youngster to a 110 year old man.

I was referring to the 18 to 20s. Guess I shoulda added that, huh? Then maybe y'all anal types can find another thread to nitpick on. This thread was intended for entertainment value only.

I suppose "youngster" is a relative term. I look at it as, by the time you graduated high school, I had already been in 20 different countries and had earned the right to be a member of my local VFW.

2offroad
April 19th, 2004, 18:44
the good old days of the '80s. 150hp was alot of power, most econo boxes have more now. i like seeing what is around the corner.
okie terry is right this has been entertaining.

Tom R.
April 20th, 2004, 10:43
Huh? In what year again? Motorola did Cell in 73/74 ish..... what the heck did they use back then? Long spools of copper wire? :D Seriously...point me to a link, would love to see the tech they used.... fun to see how stuff changes.
Glenn
I remember in the early '80s visiting the best hi-fi car stereo shop in my area and the cell phones were priced on average around $3500. Big ol, hardwired bricks they were. Of course, Glenn, I think you were old enough to remember these, right? :roflmao:

I wasn't a kid during the '80s, but I still think that decade sucked. MTV? Sucked then, sucks now. I'll take the '70s over the '80s any day. We didn't have the toys in the '60s & '70s, but in my mind those times were simpler, happier, and not so rat-raced.

Cheropair
April 20th, 2004, 11:19
Thanks, guys, make me feel old.
Typewriters had no spell check, right hand to slam the carriage back. First electric I saw was in Dad's office, for the "secretary" to transribe from the Dict-a-phone. Wanna know how to spell, look it up in the dictionary.
8-track tapes were all the rage, you could even tape off your vinyl albums so that you could play them in the car. First color TV I watched was bought by my father, just so that we could watch the Apollo moon landing (and that was in B&W). Got to see it live, Mom let us stay home from school, as the school didn't have a color TV, and the one at home was bigger, at 17".
No electronic toys, first calculator cost Dad $180, and it ran on 4 C cells. Dang thing still works, only 4 functions, Dad used it again to do his taxes this year. We rode bicycles, w/o helmets, played with lawn darts, and spent time on playgrounds that had jungle gyms and swings with chains, all over an asphalt base. Made swords and knives in metal shop class. Learned about construction design by building treehouses (and having them fall out of the trees with us in them). Streaking in the woods with the girls (look out for sticker patches). Still remember Grandpa's old phone # - TUxedo8-2874!
Visit relatives, learned about party lines on the phone - Uncle Roy was 2 short and a long, Uncle Louie was 1 short, 1 long - don't answer anything else, it might be for a neighbor.
We survived, maybe a few broken bones and scars. We even used to have dirt clod wars, not quite as hard as a rock for throwing at each other.

Cable, Dish? Still don't have it! Spend too much time watching TV with the free stations as it is. Best thing ever invented was the Microwave and frozen pizza....anyone remember the first TV dinners? No flavor, no texture, but they were "quick" to fix - about 40 minutes in the OVEN!

God, I feel old.......

Urban Redneck
April 20th, 2004, 11:47
Lawn Darts! I totally forgot about those. To add to your list of "Activities That Would Make Parents Pass Out Today", when it would be raining out, we would ride cardboard down a flight of stairs with metal reinforced edging at my friend's house. Also, skitching in the winter. Wait for it to snow. Have someone cross the street in front of a car so they slow down or stop. 3 or 4 kids run low behind the car, squat down and grab onto the bumper and get pulled down the street. Hours of fun and excitement!

lesslimited
April 20th, 2004, 12:14
Also, skitching in the winter. Wait for it to snow. Have someone cross the street in front of a car so they slow down or stop. 3 or 4 kids run low behind the car, squat down and grab onto the bumper and get pulled down the street. Hours of fun and excitement!

Glad to see someone else call it that. Must have been before you got to Gil's BBQ, but I was trying to tell a story about it, and Beezil insisted it was called something else entirely? Anyway, blizzard of '79, about 5 of us were skitching off our buddy's dad's Ford wagon with studded snow tires. The bumper was full so I hung on to the driver's side rear door handle. Great fun until my buddy made a fast left turn and my feet went straight. B-bump right over my legs- about gave him a heart attack. Between thick clothing, thick snow, and a high level of intoxication, I was fine... but that was the last time I participated in that sport :dunce:

XTrmXJ
April 20th, 2004, 13:05
Quote:
Originally Posted by XTrmXJ
Posted what was said before, I dont care what anyone says about this tread, as long as people keep getting older there will alway be someone saying " when I was growing up" or "You kids have it easy" Bla Bla Bla .. Like I said I dont care who you are, everyone wants to campare how hard they had it... But if you stop and think about it you were in the same position with the older generation saying the same dam thing, so in turn you are talking about yourself when You say a "Message For All You Youngsters".. Shit Im 24, It doesnt take Age to be wise, it take Heart and Mind.. Im not trying to be a dic or anything I just wanted to state my $.02....

Sheesh. Cool it, man.

I never said I wasn't a youngster at the old age of 30.

Even a 100 year old man is a youngster to a 110 year old man.

I was referring to the 18 to 20s. Guess I shoulda added that, huh? Then maybe y'all anal types can find another thread to nitpick on. This thread was intended for entertainment value only.

I suppose "youngster" is a relative term. I look at it as, by the time you graduated high school, I had already been in 20 different countries and had earned the right to be a member of my local VFW.
__________________
Terry



I sorry if I came over rude... Its just almost like somebody saying "I would have done it this way" ... I just seem to hear "you youngsters have it easy" comming from people that dont deserve to say those things (Im not implying it to anyone, I hear it everytime I go home on leave with friends and others) and it just gets on my nerves... Everyone has always had it easier than the previos generations in my eyes, and some truely make it bad to others.. I was at least raised good to apreciate what I had and nothing else, I didnt have alot of equidities that others had growing up (close to being modernised amish, but not) on the Farm.... But now Im 24yrs old E-5 in the Air Force and I have been to every country in the world like you also mentioned and was involved in Search and Resue during Iraqy Freedom (not fun getting shot at)... After reading the thread it did make me thiink back on alot of the other things mentioned, and alot that I never had... I do in a way agree with the statment, but its not the persons fault that they have it easy, its there parents that make it that way... So the way I look at it is that when you tell you children they have it easy, stop and think of the reason why.....

XTrmXJ
April 20th, 2004, 13:06
Posted what was said before, I dont care what anyone says about this tread, as long as people keep getting older there will alway be someone saying " when I was growing up" or "You kids have it easy" Bla Bla Bla .. Like I said I dont care who you are, everyone wants to campare how hard they had it... But if you stop and think about it you were in the same position with the older generation saying the same dam thing, so in turn you are talking about yourself when You say a "Message For All You Youngsters".. Shit Im 24, It doesnt take Age to be wise, it take Heart and Mind.. Im not trying to be a dic or anything I just wanted to state my $.02

Sheesh. Cool it, man.
I never said I wasn't a youngster at the old age of 30.
Even a 100 year old man is a youngster to a 110 year old man.
I was referring to the 18 to 20s. Guess I shoulda added that, huh? Then maybe y'all anal types can find another thread to nitpick on. This thread was intended for entertainment value only.
I suppose "youngster" is a relative term. I look at it as, by the time you graduated high school, I had already been in 20 different countries and had earned the right to be a member of my local VFW.



I sorry if I came over rude... Its just almost like somebody saying "I would have done it this way" ... I just seem to hear "you youngsters have it easy" comming from people that dont deserve to say those things (Im not implying it to anyone, I hear it everytime I go home on leave with friends and others) and it just gets on my nerves... Everyone has always had it easier than the previos generations in my eyes, and some truely make it bad to others.. I was at least raised good to apreciate what I had and nothing else, I didnt have alot of equidities that others had growing up (close to being modernised amish, but not) on the Farm.... But now Im 24yrs old E-5 in the Air Force and I have been to every country in the world like you also mentioned and was involved in Search and Resue during Iraqy Freedom (not fun getting shot at)... After reading the thread it did make me thiink back on alot of the other things mentioned, and alot that I never had... I do in a way agree with the statment, but its not the persons fault that they have it easy, its there parents that make it that way... So the way I look at it is that when you tell you children they have it easy, stop and think of the reason why.....

xjblue
April 20th, 2004, 13:47
yeah, okie terry, entertainment value on this thread is high. Good job.

As a young lad of 8 or so I remember waking up early to watch Starblazers before school. Funny thing is I always rememberd it in color but we only had a small B&W TV. When Robotech came out it was the closest thing to Starblazers for a long time so that was a favorite. The old green Plymouth Duster was infamous for delivering a bump on the noggin from the rear quarter glass latch while we bounced around in the back seat. Tonka trucks could take a beating in those days so some things have degressed.

Scott Mac.
April 20th, 2004, 15:02
ONTV was a microwave signal sent out. I remember having a small tiny antenna on the roof. Small is relative, considering that the "regular" antenna was about 6' long. Used to be able to catch the picture scrambled on my tv in my room. Turn up the sound on the radio and "watch" a scrambled picture of the Blackhawks games. Since Chicago never broadcast their home games, you had to pay for Sportsvision on ONTv.


When I was 14 years old and watching scrambled pay TV it damn sure wasn't hockey.

OT
April 20th, 2004, 18:28
Tonka trucks could take a beating in those days .

This is sooo true. My two sons (4&5) play with the same Tonka dump truck and frontend loader that I played with when I was their age. The also play with a Nylent pick-up truck that I had. Man those are tough.

seanR
April 20th, 2004, 18:34
When I was 14 years old and watching scrambled pay TV it damn sure wasn't hockey.

Yea what was that station out of Chi. that was scrambled, 60, 50, don't remember. I had a friend who lived the other side of Rockford and we used to sit up late at night just waiting for something "recognizable" to show up.

Urban Redneck
April 20th, 2004, 18:53
When I was 14 years old and watching scrambled pay TV it damn sure wasn't hockey.

Yeah, well I was trying to keep it clean! :wave:

churky89
April 21st, 2004, 02:44
Gonna show some age here...
I remember when:
We only had 1 TV station when I was @ 8yrs old ..
American Bandstand,Dick Clark hadn't had any facial surgery ...YET
Coca Cola was .05 and only came in the greenish colored bottles
You didn't have to lock your doors,everybody was your friend..
The day"The Music Died"the plane crash that killed,Buddy Holly,Richie Valens
and "The Big Bopper"
Elvis,on The Ed Sullivan show,only shown from the waist up
EVERYBODY had fireworks on the 4th of July
I could go on but I hafta go to work...
Those were some cood days.....but time marches on,and all we can do is think back and remember...."THE GOOD OLE DAYS"