randall146
Footballguy
Looks like someone threw away some perfectly good white boys.Your boys have probably banged at least 3 of their teachers by now.
Throw them away already
Looks like someone threw away some perfectly good white boys.Your boys have probably banged at least 3 of their teachers by now.
Throw them away already
I remember the title sequence “making of” video. So cool.I remember seeing HBO for the first time.
The opening HBO title sequence used to be a big deal. The big letters over a city or the letters themselves being a futuristic building of some kind. When it changed it was a big deal. HBO would actually run 30 or 60 minute specials on the making of their opening title sequence.
Thursday mail at college meant I was getting the stats and standings from our league. Always a good day.When I was in college fantasy sports scoring was done by hand from a newspaper
We had to use a Game Genie for cheat codes. It's hard to remember how I even passed the time without the internet. I know it sucked having to actually look up directions before GPS etc. Information was so hard to come by, people actually paid money for encyclopedias and Nintendo hotlines. Arcades were so dope before home tech caught up with them. I miss a lot about the 90's.How was life different before the internet? Im a “ millennial “ and am curious how did you guys stay in touch? How did you find out where to meet people? What did you do at night without a TV to watch? How did you get around the city in which you lived? What kinds of clothes did they wear? What kind of food did they eat? Basically, how did you live?
Fraggle fracking Rock.I remember the title sequence “making of” video. So cool.
When we first got HBO it was pretty limited. I must have watched The Music Man 50 times. And Fraggle Rock.
OMG.... waiting for it on the radio..... my lord I remember that.If you are in your mid 40’s you are the lone generation who made “mixtapes” as a sign of love and affection. Mixtapes were a BIG deal
No cd’s or mp3s. If you wanted a particular song you had to buy it (expensive, and then you needed a double cassette player) or wait for it to play in the radio and hope to press record quickly enough. A good mixtape took a lot of thought and work and time
“Record” is a little red button nestled in with the “play” button.
ah, yes. Road maps.We had to use a Game Genie for cheat codes. It's hard to remember how I even passed the time without the internet. I know it sucked having to actually look up directions before GPS etc. Information was so hard to come by, people actually paid money for encyclopedias and Nintendo hotlines. Arcades were so dope before home tech caught up with them. I miss a lot about the 90's.
Well since I have cameras. Yep lolHosting a party when your parents are out of town these days must be a truly terrifying experience. Impossible to keep one somewhat under wraps/under control.
Lordy there used to be tapesOMG.... waiting for it on the radio..... my lord I remember that.
And you get pissed when the DJ talked over the introIf you are in your mid 40’s you are the lone generation who made “mixtapes” as a sign of love and affection. Mixtapes were a BIG deal
No cd’s or mp3s. If you wanted a particular song you had to buy it (expensive, and then you needed a double cassette player) or wait for it to play in the radio and hope to press record quickly enough. A good mixtape took a lot of thought and work and time
“Record” is a little red button nestled in with the “play” button.
Back when the yellowpages weren't a total waste of a tree.ah, yes. Road maps.
Had to have a road map in the glovebox at all times.
... and if you drove beyond your map, better stop and buy another map for THAT area. The convenience stores would always have them at or near the checkout as they were very popular.
which they ALWAYS did. So frustrating.And you get pissed when the DJ talked over the intro
I am still so old school with directions. Map store near me just went out of business. I was sad.ah, yes. Road maps.
Had to have a road map in the glovebox at all times.
... and if you drove beyond your map, better stop and buy another map for THAT area. The convenience stores would always have them at or near the checkout as they were very popular.
We used whole words.People actually had better communication skills.
I agree. Even my typing is much worse now with autocorrect.People actually had better communication skills.
My Dad had the Vic-20 .. I worked the summer after 8th grade as a "Corn Detasseler" to save up enough money to buy the Commodore 64.Forget buying video games, we have to make them ourselves!
I had a Commodore Vic-20. You had to buy these magazines that had code in them for different games. You would have to type pages and pages of code like this.
This was by far one of my favorite "toys" as a kid.
yep... and we went one better... Hooked up our TV to a Recorder and would record the Music from MTV (back in the day when they played Music Videos) onto cassettes.OMG.... waiting for it on the radio..... my lord I remember that.If you are in your mid 40’s you are the lone generation who made “mixtapes” as a sign of love and affection. Mixtapes were a BIG deal
No cd’s or mp3s. If you wanted a particular song you had to buy it (expensive, and then you needed a double cassette player) or wait for it to play in the radio and hope to press record quickly enough. A good mixtape took a lot of thought and work and time
“Record” is a little red button nestled in with the “play” button.
YES! The long cord was money.I remember thinking we had moved up a little in class when mom found/bought one of the new long phone cords for our lone house phone in the kitchen. You could get on the phone and take it into another room for a little privacy instead of standing there in the kitchen talking like a doofus. Course your brother would just pull the other end of the cord out of the phone base.
Good one. I wish they still allowed this.Going to the airport to pick somebody up and waiting at the gate to see them come off the plane.
Plus... any number that didn't share your area code and exchange (the 3 numbers after the area code) was "long distance" and you would be charged for calls to those numbers.Land line phones were our main source of contact ... other than just knocking on somebodys door to see if they were home and wanted to do something.
It was a major deal when the phone rang. Since the whole family shared the one phone, siblings would stop what they were doing and race for it when it rang ... hoping it was for THEM. "Dang, it's just grand-ma.", "yes, grandma, I'm fine, here's mom".
Now the few of us that still have a land line just ignore it (telemarketers).
I remember getting major nerves calling a girl for the first time to ask her out. Wasn't so easy like texting or snapface or whatever the teens are doing now.
Homer to Bart: Boy, you have to learn how to read. Otherwise you will never know what's on TV.Who used to get the TV Guide? That was the only way to know what would come on TV.
I'd study it every week to see what movies might be on that I could watch.
Great one! Not sure why, but I used to collect them. I also liked doing the crossword puzzle in the back of each one because they were TV related (i.e. easy)... sometimes they'd have a jumble puzzle too!)Who used to get the TV Guide? That was the only way to know what would come on TV.
I'd study it every week to see what movies might be on that I could watch.
Before the internet and file sharing, if you wanted music from live shows, you had to trade people. I would get someone's mailing address, dub one of my shows on my dual cassette player and send to them, and vice versa.If you are in your mid 40’s you are the lone generation who made “mixtapes” as a sign of love and affection. Mixtapes were a BIG deal
No cd’s or mp3s. If you wanted a particular song you had to buy it (expensive, and then you needed a double cassette player) or wait for it to play in the radio and hope to press record quickly enough. A good mixtape took a lot of thought and work and time
“Record” is a little red button nestled in with the “play” button.
GPS is the greatest thing since sliced bread. I hated looking at maps.I am still so old school with directions. Map store near me just went out of business. I was sad.
Not a great moment for me. Just the Sunday paper in general. It provided hours of entertainment. It was the main source of sports news. Even as a young internet-free adult I could spend a Sunday morning drinking coffee and reading the paper.RE: TV guide. I always loved the Sunday paper because the complete TV guide for the week was included. Sunday after church I'd get it (dad got it first thing in the morning) and look through the enter week to see what shows were coming on and when. I liked that guide better than TV guide.
You're the reason they started sealing all the good stuff in plastic.There was one grocery store that used to put its Playboys next to all the magazines on one of the aisles. My friends and I had ridden our bikes to this store from my house because I had told them about this goldmine. We came up with the plan to casually place the Playboy in between a Sports Illustrated and casually browse in the aisle. We must have been pretty obvious because within a couple of minutes an employee came over and told us to never come back in the store. My Mom would always wonder why I chose to stay in the car when she went to that store.
We had bussing but sometimes I would ride my bike a few miles to school when I was in 6th or 7th grade because it just made me feel free.The other funny thing is how much we just wandered around town on our own or were able to bike to work compared to how people react to that now. Biked everywhere - including a couple miles to work when I was 14 and weather allowed. Now it feels like you are a bad parent if you let your kid walk more than 3 blocks because of the boogeyman and kidnappings and sex rings and stuff.