What I miss the most is not being bothered by the phone once leaving the house. Being UNPLUGGED WAS A WAY OF LIFE😂😂😂
@40yearoldninja6118 күн бұрын
Best part of the 80s is riding your bike to the hangout with 10-20 other kids, of varying ages, and playing unsupervised for hours. I wish my kids now could experience this.
@anderslundqvist925917 күн бұрын
Why can they not? Is there some US law?
@40yearoldninja6117 күн бұрын
@anderslundqvist9259 no, parents now are lame and over protective.
@audreytryba257516 күн бұрын
Oh the good old days. 😢 Miss them
@audreytryba257516 күн бұрын
I actually got my 19 year old daughter chalk and she made the whole driveway into Rapunzel sun and flowers❤❤😊 so nice, she loved it😁
@40yearoldninja6115 күн бұрын
@@audreytryba2575 my boys use sidewalk chalk on our driveway all the time.
@Jrand421115 күн бұрын
Some of those candy cigarettes had powdered sugar in them, and when you blew through them it looked like "smoke"... Ah, the good 'ole days!
@danielepps87293 ай бұрын
TV had to remind parents: It's 10pm do you know where your children are
@avionterria7855Ай бұрын
😂😂😂 yes! That literally used to appear in white on a black screen.
@kathystempek946415 күн бұрын
And they showed the empty swing.
@marlenefrazier18153 күн бұрын
ITS 10PM DO YOU KNOW WHERE YOUR KIDS ARE🤣🤣
@johnw85783 ай бұрын
The thing about GenX is even though we watched GenX current day media, we also watched and listened to media from the generations before us in the form of reruns. As a kid, I watched tv shows from the 50s and 60s in the form of reruns and movies from the 30s to the 60s. We only had so many channels so we were pretty much all watching the same thing. It drew us all together in culture in ways that the newer generations (who have so much choice and access to tons of current day media both good and bad) will never understand or appreciate.
@evawettergren74923 ай бұрын
This is soooo true. My dad was excited when The Macahans was shown as a rerun on TV, as he could share a show he liked from his younger days with us kids. And me and my sister loved stuff from the 70's. And all of the Elvis movies. At the same time our older brothers rented home videos with Alien and Ghostbusters. I think I got to experience the best of both old and new as a kid who grew up in the 80's. (And Thundercats, TMNT and He-Man are still unbeatable as early morning cartoons...)
@jimf28923 ай бұрын
YES! I used to watch Gilligan's Island, Dobby Gillas, Bewitched(in black and white and in color) I Dream of Jeanne...and probably many more that I can't quite remember lol. I also remember listening to 'oldies' back then, as we didn't have any say what played on the radio in the car and had to listen to whatever mom and dad wanted to, so we listened to the music they grew up on!
@misslora38963 ай бұрын
@@johnw8578 I think all the various entertainment on demand and having endless options (w/shopping as well), though it may seem nice, has actually been detrimental. People have become accustomed to instant gratification with so many things... It's had negative effects on all of us, but especially in the development of younger people. And the endless options in seemingly everything just makes it confusing and choices much more difficult. We spend much more time just trying to decide what to choose and we also usually end up with more than we planned to get because of it. Like TV... we were exposed to a lot of really great old shows and movies that we likely would have never chosen to watch given the option. There's a lot to be said for more limited choices and delayed gratification.
@kramermccabe86013 ай бұрын
@@jimf2892 Leave it to Beaver, Andy Griffith show, I love Lucy.
@ellie19813 ай бұрын
Definitely, and here in the UK we only had 3-4 channels. On a Sunday if you wanted entertainment on TV you were forced to watch Laurel and Hardy films, as the other channels were only showing dull sports for grandads or religious programming.
@Vkw-ld1ux3 ай бұрын
I’m a Gen X female and I was in the woods on bike trails all day unsupervised, just be back by dark. Road in the back of trucks. Never wore a seatbelt until they passed it into law. Definitely smoked a few packs of candy cigarettes. We had a smoking section in high school and a pay phone. And there was no such thing as a soft dodge ball, those things left a mark.
@allenfowler188614 күн бұрын
People had to talk to each other then. I was born in '79. Disco was dying out and rock started rolling. I missed "Night Tracks" music videos that aired years before MTV was a thing.
@grandy_rho3 ай бұрын
70s-80s childhood here. Rode in the very back, also rode in the back of the truck, and in the cabover camper while parents drove. It's a wonder any gen x-ers are still alive, but if you have one in your life, they are who you want on your side during the zombie apocalypse
@Woman_In_TX12062 ай бұрын
Lol. I told my kids about hiking in the mountains all day alone and they were stunned. I never really thought about it. Just the way it was. But I never allowed my kids to do such a thing. Different times 😢
@MegaMerlin201119 күн бұрын
@@Woman_In_TX1206 Only place I ever walked alone in a mountain was in China. Don't have mountains in the midwest, so when I was traveling/teaching abroad I went hiking in the mountains every so often. Nice thing about China is "majority" of China is safe in that the biggest thing out there that'll eat you is a rabbit at least from my experience.
@cubist2419 күн бұрын
Survive the Zombie Apocalypse? Heck, we used to play that as a neighbourhood game! 🤣🤣
@joquitasullivan635319 күн бұрын
Yep, we had 8 children in our Military family and drove all over these states in the back, in the floor board and on the dash without seatbelts while parents smoked in the front. We all lived. My favorite memories.
@mrt2this60718 күн бұрын
@@Woman_In_TX1206 yes, when camping was off by myself hiking up & down mountains all day. And with several hundred rounds of .22 ammunition and a pistol.
@paulad.457814 күн бұрын
Everyone talks about Dodge ball. Who remembers playing Red Rover?
@Forced2DoThis110 күн бұрын
FONDLY! Regularly played them both on the same days!
@NehnBellanaris5 күн бұрын
Rover, Red Rover, please send so-and-so right over. 😊
@paulad.45785 күн бұрын
Yep. We loved it, and the teachers always broke it up. That being said, now that I'm an adult, I do understand something called liability and how they had to break it up before someone got seriously hurt.
@NehnBellanaris5 күн бұрын
@paulad.4578 The only seriously hurt we ever got was skinned knees, but then again, we were also just playing on grass. And it was also at church, so....
@paulad.45784 күн бұрын
@NehnBellanaris Good points. However, I also heard there were a few broken arms and a dislocated shoulder or two. Hard to know. I just know it was a lot of fun.
@kramermccabe86013 ай бұрын
calling your crush and having to talk to her father first was so stress inducing
@TrineDaely3 ай бұрын
Not as nerve racking as meeting many of those dads. Mine is retired military, he would take my dates into the den, show off his gun collection, shot targets, military ribbons for marksmanship, and inform them what time I was to be returned.
@lynnw71553 ай бұрын
We had a cord on the phone long enough that you could squeeze yourself into the linen closet for privacy.
@sassykat20003 ай бұрын
And this built resilience to stress inducing situations we have to handle later.
@khatzeye3 ай бұрын
@@sassykat200080s kids ❤ We’re Ford tough 💪🏾
@dgeneeknapp31683 ай бұрын
I had a friend who's father was a Cobb county Ga sheriff's deputy..... he'd clean guns if he knew a boy was going to come see her😂. He'd keep a couple of weapons constantly disassembled for cleaning, in case a boy came over on short notice. They had escaped a serious gvt overthrow in Peru about 40+ years ago. He was a big guy too 😂.
@DOMINIKPAULSEN15 күн бұрын
In the 80s you knew who were your neighbors and most of the kids in the area you lived in if you needed ANYTHING you could go to a neighbor for help. You did not talk to strangers every one looked out for each other. And if you did something or been somewhere you were not supposed to be you can bet your mom would find out anyways because the neighbor 3 blocks down saw you and told your MOM. I really feel the kids now are lacking that feeling of freedom and being carefree. I would not change it for anything 70s to 90s the best times ever to be KID AND TEEN.
@w1975b2 ай бұрын
A great thing about the old phones with a landline, they didn't require electricity to work. So if your power was out, you could still make and receive phone calls.
@troymullican84562 ай бұрын
And the early touch tones you could click the receiver tabs to mimic the pulse of the rotary dial
@VincentVega--XD16 күн бұрын
When the internet came who remembers if someone picked up the phone and tried to make a call while you were on AOL it would kick you off the internet.
@w1975b16 күн бұрын
@@VincentVega--XD I didn't have to deal with that. I was an adult living on my own when I got my first computer with dialup.
@goobcutusofborg33578 күн бұрын
@@VincentVega--XDI remember that! And whomever was online would get pissed because it took so long to download anything. 😂
@marlenefrazier18153 күн бұрын
Still have one, and made sure my daughter got one in her first place to just in case
@baneblackguard5843 ай бұрын
I can't imagine what my early life would have been like if I wasn't free to just jump on the bike and go on an adventure. I think life as a kid would have felt like prison without that. A HUUUUGE one he didn't mention is arcades. they were everywhere, every mall had one (there were a lot of malls back then) many strip malls had one (usually next to a laundromat). Arcades and roller rinks were THE places to go. 90% of social life for kids in the 80's happened at an arcade or a roller rink.
@wishingb58593 ай бұрын
I feel the same way about the adventures and also about the arcades and roller rinks.
@joshuatmanion80102 ай бұрын
Real Talk
@scotmax84262 ай бұрын
agree. arcades were amazing.
@sharonrinkiewicz3940Ай бұрын
Every Saturday I went to the roller rink. We always had so much fun.
@wishingb5859Ай бұрын
@ That’s awesome!
@tammywebber27983 ай бұрын
I was a teen in the 80"s and I can tell you it was an amazing time to be a kid. I wouldn't have wanted to grow up in any other Era. We had a blast!!! We learned how to take care of ourselves and the others around us.
@scotmax84262 ай бұрын
Absolutely, if 8 of you were going up the hills and into the woods in the morning then 8 had to come back. no matter if there was fallouts or arguments, we all knew the base line was no one gets left alone.
@OtterMayhem3 ай бұрын
Waterbeds were much more durable than you would think. Leaks were usually slow and could be patched without draining it. Now when the heater went out during winter and your bed temp dropped to the 60's or 70's, that sucked.
@jayamilapersson40303 ай бұрын
I didnt have one but one time I was at a friend that had one so I layed in it it was an amazing feeling. I still remember it because I soo wanted one.
@Woman_In_TX12062 ай бұрын
Sooo cold!!!😂
@mitchalvin27 күн бұрын
Most waterbeds you could pull the fill plugs and then lay on it without water coming out, if fact laying on the bed with the plug out was the best way of burping the bed.
@angrydrunkengerman281921 күн бұрын
I had one up until about 2009. Man I miss that thing.
@historianKelly16 күн бұрын
My mom bought one in the early 2000s because she thought it'd help with some new back pain that turned out to be cancer 😢 After she had unrelated surgeries, we replaced the mattress with a pillow-top "insert" is what they call regular mattresses that replace waterbed mattresses. I still have that bed but it's used for storage.
@2strokinit5273 ай бұрын
The funniest thing about all of this is that he is worried about the pay phone being sanitary. I don't remember people being so incredibly worried about germs till around 1995 or so.
@scotmax84262 ай бұрын
sharing is caring ;)
@goobcutusofborg33578 күн бұрын
It was more into the late 2000’s that people really got bad with it. It’s like going to Subway back in the 90’s. They never wore gloves. They just washed their hands and had at it. Now everywhere you go, everyone e is wearing gloves.
@shawnkelly6953 күн бұрын
I wiped the ear part on my shirt sleeve and all was good lol. Used many pay phones when i drove semi long haul. Just wipe on shirt and make my call
@goobcutusofborg33573 күн бұрын
@@shawnkelly695 I remember those days riding with my dad and pawpaw. The good ole days of trucking.
@ashrak123 ай бұрын
In the 70s we could make prank phone calls with no worry about caller ID. People would hitchhike without worrying too much about being kidnapped. We would leave our front door unlocked when we went out to play with nobody home.
@sofakingimmature2 ай бұрын
@@karenbertke3149 Similar situation. My family lived in Atlanta during the child murders. My brothers, who were in that age range of the other victims, used to visit that area because our grandparents lived there. My father, who was mixed, was stopped a bunch by random people and it caused a lot of problems. He later took an order to move to Florida, he's military, and took our Grandma with him.
@CountryMouseCityCrimes21 күн бұрын
When you adjust for population disparity between the 1980s and the 2020s you will find out that people still go missing at the same rate. Now media just uses these things to stoke your fears. They want you to molly coddle your kids and treat them like they are incompetent. So when they're 30 they're incapable.
@cubist2419 күн бұрын
AND WE DRANK FROM THE HOSE! Wait, you left the door unlocked? We were just locked out of the house until parents got home unless, like I was, you were a Latch-Key Kid who got home after school and looked after yourself for 2 or 3 hours every day between when you got home from school and parents got home from work - heck, we even helped cook meals sometimes!
@paulad.457814 күн бұрын
@cubist24, And then there was the old Slip & Slide. Attach the hose on a hot summer day and it didn't matter so much if you didn't have a pool.
@corwyncorey37033 ай бұрын
The thing about us Gen X ers is simple... we learned that being stupid *hurt.* Consequences were an early part of our lives. So was accountability. They went hand in hand.
@davesnothere88592 ай бұрын
hand and ass so to speak.
@steveblythe354424 күн бұрын
Nailed it
@philiprowney22 күн бұрын
We were the crash-test-dummies for Health and Safety Executive only created in 1975 ;-). In the 70's on-site with my Irish dad was not a big deal. I started working at 14 kerbing the A17 in Kings Lynn at the weekends. [ we did £200 of work and my share was £60 in 1984 ]
@user-ot9tg1mr6u21 күн бұрын
Except 80’s kids are gen y or millennials
@corwyncorey370321 күн бұрын
@@user-ot9tg1mr6u 80's BABIES are Gen Y. as in born then. Gen X lived through and are old enough to *remember* the 80's as being formative.
@ericcaouette21663 ай бұрын
Gen x kids were responsible for their own safety like it should be. You had to be able to evaluate risk and lives with the consequence of your actions.
@rebeccarittenhouse220317 күн бұрын
No that is not the way it should be. Gen x kids had the laziest most self involved parents of any generation.
@ronaldnelson669224 күн бұрын
Adding to #25, we use to ride in the back of pickup trucks too. Another fun piece of playground equipment was the merry go round. It was a round platform with handles to hang onto while it was spun around. Most of us tried to make it go as fast as we could until people flew off.
@nonenone68843 ай бұрын
my mom put me out of the house after school. and told me to come home when the street lights came on.
@allenfowler188614 күн бұрын
They couldn't clean the house if you keep messing it up. Lol.
@annraines35738 күн бұрын
For us country kids it was when the porch light came on.
@nonenone68848 күн бұрын
@ it was always 6pm. thats what time all of us kids went in for diner and to stay
@AlbertErb-zv8hl6 күн бұрын
We were kicked out after dinner till dark.
@ingewulleman13 күн бұрын
Born in `75 in Belgium Europe : In summer you could stay outside `till 10PM with all the neighbourhood kids from different ages, around diner time (we had watches you know, LOL) you just popped in to eat and after diner of you went again. In winter you had to come in at 5 o`clock PM ..because of the summer/winter change in daylight. The sun goes down earlier in winter.
@TammyRogers-v6u16 күн бұрын
Late 60's, 70's and 80's here. Childhood and growing up was amazing.
@The_Winter_Raven3 ай бұрын
It is shame that kids today don't have as much chance to just hang out with a friend all day having to find stuff to do. We made forts from branches, just because it seemed fun. No reason, but we did learn along the way. Not sure what I learned from climbing onto the school roof, but that's another story... 😅 love your content! 😅
@johnw85783 ай бұрын
Yep. We built some tree forts that sort of fell apart. Luckily, I asked my father (who was an engineer) for some tips and we learned to build a long lasting, sturdy fort.
@PAL-uv1yl17 күн бұрын
I loved checking pay phones for quarters! I found two dollars from a row of them in Philly once. Also, Carmen Sandiego was a great show! I would shout at the tv when it was time to do the map part and go: “That marker goes there, not there!” “Come on, that’s an easy one!” And watching that show DID help me with learning geography.
@Destyn2B3 ай бұрын
I am genuinely enjoying these Gen X videos. Great memories. 😊
@TanyaMcCain15 күн бұрын
Our station wagon had a 3rd seat pulled up from floor. It looked backwards. You go in from tailgate.
@RosieRosepeddle16 күн бұрын
The cards for Valentines day I had to give one to everyone back in the 80s.
@Sullivanin12 күн бұрын
Even in the 70s
@Sinkingfurther12 күн бұрын
Weird. I never had to give to everyone, My sisters, 10 &15 years younger, though, had to. My mom was upset, not because of the cost, they were, what $1 a box or less, but because it was a "dumb concept" (I graduated in 97 for time reference & lived in the UP in Michigan & ohio)
@AntaresSelket3 ай бұрын
Instead of a stamp collection, 80s kids collected stickers. Puffy stickers, scratch 'n' sniff, and my sister even had "Where's the beef?" stickers. It was common to have colored strings safety pinned to your backpack so you could sit in class and braid friendship bracelets. In the 70s and 80s we had a lot of child serial killers, but in the 70s the kids were called runaways and by the 80s people couldn't ignore how many went missing. So they started putting missing children's faces on milk cartons and teaching children about "Stranger Danger."
@CelestialKitsune133 ай бұрын
All the adults when I was growing up always told us to get home before dark instead of before the lights came on. Not that even as kids we weren't aware that going outside after dark was the height of stupidity, since that's when the snakes and coyotes came out. 😅 And dude no, the original Teenager Mutant Ninja Turtles is so much different than what you got after Nickelodeon bought it.
@Liv-r1d3 ай бұрын
My father was a software engineer for IBM and was one of the pioneers for creating at home software for the PC. I used to go to work with him and he'd let me go into the giant computer room which had a very specific smell and was loud and contained huge machines. He'd let me watch their dot Matrix and tear the paper off. It was extremely satisfying.
@pinktastic61593 ай бұрын
Kids today: haha we have all these computers! Boomers and Gen X: who do you think invented that? Haha
@Bushokie-cx7ee2 ай бұрын
In 84 we got our first computer Commodore 64. My mom used it to do contracts and book keeping. We would spend hours typing programs from computer magazines just to play a game on it. It was the same OS on that Apple II e in the pic. in 3rd grade I got into trouble for making a rocket ship with USA printed on it go acrost my screen from bottom to top. and then had to show my computer teacher how I did it.
@kvbstudios31622 күн бұрын
There’s another one! We went to work with our parents!
@Jetz3163 ай бұрын
I was born in 1978. I literally grew up in the 1980’s and early 1990’s. I miss how simple life was. * I still have all my Garbage Pail Kids cards. Including first edition cards.
@NyxinOwl3 ай бұрын
Born in 1976 and same with the Garbage Pail Kids :)
@Ultima7423 ай бұрын
born 77 and still have my GPK stash
@TacomaGirl3 ай бұрын
1979 and same! I have James Flames on my fridge right now 😁
@pinktastic61593 ай бұрын
I loved those. I think they tried a comeback but people were offended lol
@lightsalt85303 ай бұрын
@@pinktastic6159of course they were lol
@MJOzzy7118 күн бұрын
I had a semi waveless waterbed when I was a kid. It was amazing. It had a heater to keep the water warm during winter. And in summer it was nice and cool. They are much harder to pop then you would think. My dog loved the bed as much as I did.
@Sinkingfurther12 күн бұрын
I got into the habit of moving my foot to Rock the bed slightly & rock myself to sleep with the waves lol. Now, over 2 decades later (with no waterbed 😢) I *still* move my foot the same way as I'm falling asleep.😂
@crytsanana35928 күн бұрын
When it snowed, my dad would clear the drive with his tractor. My brothers and I got to ride in the bucket a mile to my grandparents. So he could clear their driveway too. It’s definitely one of my favorite memories.
@lolahernandez687117 күн бұрын
Gen X motto: F*ck around and find out! 😂😂
@KrisThroughGlass3 ай бұрын
When we were kids in the 80s/90s we spend every free minute in the summer at the local public swimming pool. Without parents of course. We went there by bike and every group of friends had their favorite spot to have their base with the towels and bags, so you always found your friends.
@johnw85783 ай бұрын
That or the mall! We would spend the whole day at the mall -- movie theater, food court, water slide, arcade, skating rink, hide-n-seek in and amongst the stores and sneak into the tunnels underneath until someone chased us out. Summers would fly by!
@SteelCurtain0243 ай бұрын
6:19 fair question, “How did we, 80s kids, survive?” A lot of luck 🍀😉🤘🏻my father always said, “It’s better to be lucky than good.” Garbage Pale kids were cards you collected. Cabbage Patch Kids were dolls you collected. You mixed up the two. FYI mate. I miss my water bed. They were temperature regulated. They were great for the changing temperature outside.
@pinktastic61593 ай бұрын
I got stickers with my Garbage Pail kids and put them all over my notebooks. Trapper Keepers ftw!
@rhiannasanford616016 күн бұрын
I miss my Cabbage Patch doll! I asked for a whole years before I finally got one for Christmas! 😅
@Forced2DoThis110 күн бұрын
Most of us learned to be just damn good! 🤘🏿👍🏿💪🏿😆
@JulieFox-h3w3 ай бұрын
Gen X here. Loved putting blankets down and napping in the back of the station wagon! Scooby Doo and Pink Panther were my favorite cartoons. We only had three channels because we had an antenna and no cable.
@brianm2217 күн бұрын
Yeah, teenage mutant ninja turtles was 80’s. But, where I lived it wasn’t a Saturday morning cartoon, it came on in the late afternoon. Ahhhh, he never mentioned that on weekdays cartoons would not play on tv until 2pm. 2pm to 5pm was the primetime of cartoons. After 5pm all cartoons stopped.
@kchris532617 күн бұрын
When I was 14, me and my friend rode our bicycles to the beach, 10 hours away, and camped for a week. We could only afford the frozen microwave burritos we bought at a local store and called the parents collect every couple days. Also, violent crime was worse back then than it is now, we were just less aware of it because of the lack of nation wide communication.
@amystahl49773 ай бұрын
The mid to late 80's is when stranger danger became a thing. I remember Adam Walsh was kidnapped in a mall while there with family. After that, there were other child abductions. The change in the freedom kids had happened slowly. I graduated high school in 1992, and I was still pretty free then, but my mom began to worry more and always had me call if I was going to change my plans after I left the house.
@VincentVega--XD16 күн бұрын
Who remembers rescue 911 and unsolved mysteries?
@jasonjackson738916 күн бұрын
Kids could play unsupervised in the 80s because we all knew each other and your parents would know everything you did . If you did something wrong your parents would get calls telling on you .
@TrineDaely3 ай бұрын
If you think making ashtrays in art is wild, the guys in wood-shop class almost always made rifle racks as their first project. In high school a lot of kids who had trucks had rifle racks mounted in the rear window, and almost all of us, guys and gals, carried a pocket knife (yes, even to school).
@TheMrGreen283 ай бұрын
Yep, those racks weren't empty at school either.
@johnw85783 ай бұрын
How do kids today survive without a pocket knife?
@johnw85783 ай бұрын
@@TheMrGreen28 Yet no school "incidents". What changed?
@TheMrGreen283 ай бұрын
@johnw8578 Colombine, making schools gun free zones. And I think the over prescription of SSRIs and other antidepressants. I started taking them when I was 26 by 27. I stopped because the only emotion I could feel was anger, and they removed any give a f I had about anything. From what I understand, that happens more the younger you are also. Plus, most of them state in the possible side-effects are homicidal thoughts or actions.
@oppNaryo_Slay8 күн бұрын
I remember that on school! Trip I bought a pocket knife from a stand and no one thought it is wrong. Also staying outside even after dark was ok if you were with your friends. And when we were a bit older like sixteen it was a dare to play basketball or soccer at midnight
@karend157721 күн бұрын
Those high metal pipe monkey bars were fun! We had it in school and the public playground. In elementary, my siblings and I played on it. There was the 'monster' who would walk like a zombie on the ground and try to catch us (on the bars.). We played the game IT on the bars. Automatically touching the ground, you were 'out'. The last man standing was the winner. We pretended it was a pirate ship and moved around on the outside and going inside, etc... The imaginations we had to make that monkey bars fun!
@patriciacanadiansenior81303 ай бұрын
I wandered all over the place alone when I was 4-5 years old. But then again, I was born in 1947. I still have a landline with coil wire. I also have my smartphone.💙
@johnw85783 ай бұрын
The thing with GenX and older generations, we lived in both pre-internet and post-internet worlds. We know both.
@patriciacanadiansenior81303 ай бұрын
@@johnw8578 Yes, we've seen a lot of change. The young people now wouldn't know how to survive if a major world occurrence happened. No electricity, planting/growing food, making clothing, keeping warm, no fuel for cars......
@katrinalarsen40483 ай бұрын
BOOMERS LOL
@pinktastic61593 ай бұрын
My mom did that in the 30s.she could take the trolley all over town. She'd go watch movies for a whole day.
@autodogdact331315 күн бұрын
@@katrinalarsen4048If there is an EMP you might need some boomers around.
@mandywalker33933 ай бұрын
We did more than play in the front yard. We roamed the neighborhood.
@jenniferlucas354023 күн бұрын
Or even the next 2 towns over. I regularly hopped the train in CT and go in to NYC for the day.
@rhiannasanford616016 күн бұрын
TMNT on Nickelodeon was NOT the same as the OG TMNT!
@davidburney846310 күн бұрын
Dodgeball was my favorite anger management class😂😂
@misslora38963 ай бұрын
I almost think the playgrounds and toys of Gen X'ers and older were deliberately designed in an effort to "thin the heard". Fortunately, kids turned out to be much more resilient than they expected. Something that's since been forgotten.
@jimf28923 ай бұрын
Oh, most definitely! I had remarked in my own post about the metal strip in the slap bracelets. But I also remember Tonka trucks were made with metal and functioned just like the real vehicles they were modeled after, not some Little Tikes plastic with barely any moving parts!
@VincentVega--XD16 күн бұрын
All kids quickly learned metal slides were off limits on sunny summer days.
@misslora389616 күн бұрын
@@jimf2892 Yes, 2 things I distinctly remember due to injuries. 1: I don't recall if they were made this way or maybe edges would get bent out of their original shape, but there could be sharp edges along where the stamped out sheets of metal were bent into shape. 2: The back of the dump truck could smash tiny hands and fingers. My brother was standing in this knees, lost his balance, and when he went to catch himself he came down onto the back of the truck and my hand happened to be in between the body and the raised back end. Ouch!!!
@misslora389616 күн бұрын
@@VincentVega--XD Oh yeah. We were pretty quick learners. However, it wasn't often we learned from seeing others get hurt, we usually had to do it ourselves before the lesson stuck. I learned not to go down the metal slide in shorts on warm sunny days, but oftentimes when there's the will, we found a way... When I could remember to, I'd bring a hand towel to sit on.
@jimf289215 күн бұрын
@@misslora3896 I just felt that pain while reading your reply...Y'ouch!
@tinakeith58223 ай бұрын
As an 80s kid… We got to experience disappointment we actually got hurt. We fell down and we busted an arm or leg and It was cool. not everybody won an award you just had to suck it up buttercup. Just made us want to be better. 💙
@EyeKahnography3 ай бұрын
the slap bracelet had a laterally curve to the metal inside the satin bracelet so it's hold it's shape rigid until slapped against the arm inverting that bend and it'd wrap around. iirc there were a few accidents and lacerations it was metal. also the Garbage Pail Kids were a satire of the popular wholesome Cabbage Patch Kids toys. The Garbage Pail Kids cards would be a card set with a stick of awful gum having rhyming names like RV Stevie and the kid on the card might be part television. it capitalized on the kid mentality that gross can be funny. I think it had a movie
@milissasilks21743 ай бұрын
I loved the back of station wagons! I was a kid in the 70's. We didn't even have seatbelts until I was older. Candy cigarettes were NOT good. Slides were metal. Imagine burning all the skin off your legs. Thank goodness the Dewie Decimal system was replaced. That shyt was CONFUSING! I was in highschool in the 80's. I took a computer class. I learned how to program a computer to count from 1 to infinity (or whatever number it managed to get to by the end of class.) Yay! 😂 I can still hear the sound a dot matrix printer made. They took literally FOREVER to print a whole page, and we would print banners out on them. Sipping adult beverages as a child... Yep. Guilty. 😅 The sound of a dodgeball is SO nostalgic. I wish I currently had one of those red rubber balls just to bounce it and hear it's familiar almost metallic sound, or smell the distinctive rubber smell of the gymnasium cart they were stored on. We didn't use them only for dodgeball, they got used for so many different games. Slap bracelets were metal wrapped in fabric We didn't have streaming services or cable, so Saturday mornings were THE time to get our cartoon fix. I had a waterbed in the 90's. Didn't like it. When the power went out the bed got cold! We went SO far on our bikes! He didn't mention the secret code we had to call our parents on a payphone, collect, to get our parents to pick us up from the mall or the movies or the roller-rink without having to pay for a call... Operator to parent: You have a collect call from: Child: The movie's over come get us Operator: Do you accept the charges. Parent: click 10-15 minutes later, here comes the station wagon!
@SassyIndian3 ай бұрын
GenX, the free range children 😂😂😂
@scotmax84262 ай бұрын
lol some might say feral ;)
@dannycarlow820420 күн бұрын
@@scotmax8426We definitely had a few of those. It was like Lord of the Flies out there some days.
@keikonooner37563 ай бұрын
I miss those parks. They were so fun. You could go so high on the swing. Seesaws would go way, high! I miss the fairy go rounds! Everybody would gather in the center and one of your parents would spin it and you'd try to stay on it without flying off! It was great. Climbing on top of the monkey bars was great! Trying to get to the highest part of the playground was fun. I don't miss the metal slides. Those hurt a lot in the summer. Not a good idea but the slides used to be way higher and way more fun.
@pipermoonshine3 ай бұрын
highlight of breaking an arm or leg... you get a cool cast that all your friends can write there well wishes on..
@VincentVega--XD16 күн бұрын
Or that one person who would write in the binding of your yearbook "glad I was the first one to sign your crack"
@leeci33Ай бұрын
I HAD A WATERBED until I was old enough to decide I was too old for a waterbed and got a traditional one. I still miss it! It was warm in the winter and cool in the summer. You learned early not to leave anything sharp. If you found something slipped under your sheets and popped it there were “reinforcement tapes” that you cut to patch the hole. Wow… your channel is nostalgia central.
@leeci33Ай бұрын
Also there were different levels. I grew up in a family of 6. 3 of us had one. There was a like a Goldilocks level of “wave”. No wave, it’s a waterbed…but mostly cushion.. you’re not going to move around much. Midwave- when you move it will move a bit but not much. Free wave- you move and the whole bed moves like you’ve got a small ocean in your bed. My siblings and I had the mid and freewave, I had an aunt and uncle with the midwave and then they changed it to the No Wave. They were a hassle to refill. (If you did pop your bed you need to put the water back in) They were a hassle to empty out…. You couldn’t move it or rearrange your room. It was a fixed piece. Obvious flooding/leak concerns…But I still miss it. 😂😂😂it was so warm and comfortable. You could adjust the temperature…. Worth every penny.
@robynhurley51193 ай бұрын
Im gen x. 57 this month. The eighties ruled!!!
@kitharley61593 ай бұрын
I was a kid in the '70s. Unsupervised in the front yard? Amateurs! We had the whole neighborhood...which meant as far as we could reach by bike and still make it home for dinner.
@Danceofmasks3 ай бұрын
Bold of you to assume that in 30 years, humans will even have feelings.
@kerriniemi95253 ай бұрын
😂😂😂
@baneblackguard5843 ай бұрын
humans will have feelings, it will be mandated, you'll have to schedule a weekly feelings exposure session with a licensed emotional support officer. It will only be the feelings you are authorized for, of course, and only for the half hour session... but humans will still have feelings in 30 years. The complete ban on feelings doesn't happen until 2093.
@kerriniemi95253 ай бұрын
@@baneblackguard584 🙊🙈🙉
@Shr00mz4u220 күн бұрын
I feel you my masked member! Oh shit -----wrong video!
@leeci33Ай бұрын
11:22 hahaha now the ashtrays are coasters or just decorative items. they still glaze them and make them look pretty. I didn’t know this is how it started! 🤣🤣 I probably made one and didn’t realize.
@DaveCrokaert3 ай бұрын
Seatbelts weren't even mandatory in the back when I was a kid ...
@Sullivanin12 күн бұрын
A lot of our cars didn’t have seatbelts
@helenblakovich16223 ай бұрын
We still buy chalk for the kids in our family. They do drawings on the sidewalk or driveway, lol. My parents definitely cared about sugar in cereals. We ate Rice Crispies, Chex or Raisin Bran. Or if mom was feeling nice, Golden Grahams. We didn't wear neon all the time. Just occasionally. Usually it was jeans and simple t-shirts. Or Cosby style sweaters, lol.
@carlacarla33843 ай бұрын
You do know that 40-50 years from now, the 20 yr olds will think the same way about YOU. They'll be amazed at how backwards and crazy your younger life was. You know that, right? Every new generation thinks that of their parents/grandparents. What amazes me is that y'all think you're different. 😂😂😂
@telisaluther66023 ай бұрын
1. My uncle put a play pin in the back of his full sized van and placed my cousin in it while driving. 2. I broke my collarbone in a accident as I was standing behind the front seat of the driver's side. 3. Garbage Pail Kids were a trading card/sticker spoof of the insanely popular Cabbage Patch Kids dolls. 4. I used gasoline to wash the oil off my hands when helping my dad work on the car. 5. I walked and bought my mom her cigarettes. 6. I was given brandy as a gum numbing when I was teething. 7. Had my first beer/wine cooler at 10. 8. The computer when it first came out they said oh 250 gb hard drive was enough space for a lifetime lol... now we have TB HDs. 9. DOT Matrix came in two versions plan and green/white stripes. 10. Lit my mom and aunts cigarettes for them. 11. Dodge ball was a slaughter. 12.Slap bracelets were fabric covered medal that when it started to cut through they were sharp. 13. The zip zip zip sound of some of the fabric like corduroy and the old wind breaker fabric would give you away in hide and seek. 14. Water Beds are still sold and the material they made the mattress out of was pretty thick. 15. late 80's early 90s. The show America's Most Wanted was hosted by a guy who's son was kidnapped and gruesomely SAed and murdered and that was the reason for him to host the show. 16. We didn't have participation awards or all or none Valentines cards. 17. Lawn Darts. metal tipped short arrows that you were supposed to throw in the air aimed at the circle laid on the lawn... we threw them at each other lol.
@blechtic20 күн бұрын
250 GB is only a quarter of 1 TB. So, that's like one or half a HDD generation. I think you meant MB.
@evangelinebelami8716Ай бұрын
Ol' boy should have said 70s kids!! No one ever thought about a wreck.... What's a seat belt? NOTHING protects a pack of front seat kids like a parent's swing arm😂😂😂😂
@mrrajsingh2 ай бұрын
Haven’t you had a corded phone at work? You have never had a clear phone conversation, cellphones still have trash reception. The best iPhone is not as clear as a random corded phone.
@Bella_Obscura2 күн бұрын
Pulling the ends off of Dot matrix paper!!!! Who knew I’d be looking back on that one day as such a fond memory!!! 😂
@justanotherwhitegirla70933 ай бұрын
As far as the computer went nobody had a PC at home but the school had them. You either played Number Munchers or Oregon Trail. When I was 5 my mom let me sip her Bartles & James wine coolers and my dad would let me sip his Colt 45. Yeah, everything he said is as real as a heart attack. Fun times
@jimf28923 ай бұрын
For my group of friends, it was Zork! Nothing better than a text based game where you would have to input what you wanted to do but didn't always know how to word it so the game understood what you wanted!
@VincentVega--XD16 күн бұрын
If you havnt died of dysentery in your life you didnt know what a great childhood was. hahahaha
@sharonellis877618 күн бұрын
I grew up during the 70's & 80's. Have rode in the back of my Dad's Ford Transit van when we went karting ! It was bumpy but fun xx
@belkyhernandez82813 ай бұрын
It's actually safer today than in the 80s. Parents need to chill. If your child isn't a toddler and knows traffic rules, it's gonna be fine.
@flemingmarshall85603 ай бұрын
The problem is their parents don't even know the traffic rules. I mean look at the way they drive and it is so rare for me to see somebody actually ride a bicycle correctly. I mean we were taught as kids. Hey you ride on this side of the road. You do this. You do that you know. Yeah we may not have done it in our neighborhoods as much but when we went out onto a road that was going a little further than our neighborhood. We tended to follow the bicycle rules better kids today. Don't even know the damn rules
@melissamonroe5616 күн бұрын
💙 I was born in 1967 & graduated High School in 1985! My husband of 34+ years (High School Sweetheart) & I bought a house last January & found an original floppy disk computer upstairs in a closet! Brought back memories of Senior year when computers were introduced in our school, in the fall of 1984, for the 1st time!
@alexandradeheus3 ай бұрын
I was the one that did not get many cards but life is not fair and I learned early. not a bad thing to learn
@johnw85783 ай бұрын
I was always told that "fair" was where you go to play games and eat pie -- that's the only "fair" in life.
@justincase38283 ай бұрын
60's childhood here. Those long stretchy cords on the phone were the upgraded new thing in the 70's. 60's kids had very short black cords on the phone. The phone was in the living room on a small stand. Mom would put a comfortable chair next to the stand. You either stood next to the phone to take your call or sat down in the chair. When we got the new longer cords, we could answer the phone and then walk into the kitchen. Any person walking from kitchen to living room or vice versa had to duck or step over the long phone cord. Occasionally you'd be talking on the phone in the kitchen and hear a loud thump only to discover your parent or sibling had tripped over the cord. Then you'd get yelled at by one of the parents who wondered what the hell you were doing dragging the phone into the kitchen. Some good teen conversations were cut short that way. Imagine that.
@krystleklearcentral3 ай бұрын
16:45 #6 Waterbeds didn't just 'pop'. Occasionally, there would be a leak (really small), but they came with a repair kit (kind of like a tyre repair kit), but even if you didn't have that, a bit of duct tape would do the trick. I guess if you didn't put the cover on, leaks would be more frequent, but i can only remember one on mine, and I had it for years,... Who is taking knives or scissors to bed?
@LimegreenLlama9 күн бұрын
My favourite was when my parents would take my cousins and I to the drive-in, 17 of us kids in total, all pile into the back of their ford gremlin. We all sat in front of the car with our blankets and pillows and a boom box tuned to the correct station. Mismatched tupperaware full of spaghetti bolognaise and enjoyed the show 😋
@TrineDaely3 ай бұрын
I pity the fool who doesn't get this reference 😉 I still smoke cigarettes. Not the candy ones or electronic ones.
@TacomaGirl3 ай бұрын
How much is it for a pack these days? 😬
@AgnesMariaL9 күн бұрын
@@TacomaGirlWe're paying less than what they were back when I started in the early 90's 😁
@hugh_jasso20 күн бұрын
70's baby.. me and my friends used to play in the local dump salvaging parts to build Voltron. We drew dials and knobs like a control panel inside of cardboard boxes that became out cockpits for whatever we're flying/driving. We could go to any playground in the neighborhood and play and there were often water fountains and payphones everywhere. Pre-cell phones, EVERY phone number you needed was memorized. I fell running one time and deeply gashed my knee and definitely needed stitches, but it was the 80's so pops poured some peroxide on it and covered the gushing wound with a band-aid so i could keep playing. i loved my childhood!!
@krystleklearcentral3 ай бұрын
#13 yes we we offered a sip of beer, but i think it was because our parents knew we wouldn't like it.
@johnw85783 ай бұрын
True.
@TacomaGirl3 ай бұрын
My grandma would pour me a little juice glass of beer and water it down 😂 I hated it but I always asked her for some
@jimf28923 ай бұрын
I remember when my sister was teething, mom would put brandy on her gums to alleviate the pain. Imagine doing that now, you'd have CPS knocking at your door faster than you could screw the top back on the bottle!
@VincentVega--XD16 күн бұрын
That or they knew the small amount of alcohol you drank would make us sleepy so the parents at the party could really get into the degenerate things they wanted to get into.
@Ash.Crow.Goddess3 ай бұрын
Of these, I definitely miss being a kid in a neighborhood full of best friends running around all day on bikes and having all that freedom. Even our parents were all best friends and all the social parties were fuggin epic! They were garage central, but some roamed indoors, and all roamed outdoors. Man, our parents were friends with ranch owners. We got horses and ponies to right every big party day. God, I miss those days.
@adventuresinmusic24873 ай бұрын
Crime rates and kid kidnapping stats are way overblown. Crime is lower than it has been in 50yrs. Radically lower than the 90s. Almost all kidnapping is done by a parent. A childs chance of kidnapping is a million to one. The safety thing is ruining our kids. A lack of confidence. Fear of everything. Young people are getting out of college totally unprepared. For instance... I had a job when I was 10. Two hours, after school. I was paying social security at 16. Holding full time jobs during summer. I left home the day after high school graduation. None of this was odd amongst my peers. I worked a couple years and put myself thru college, working full time to do so.
@johnw85783 ай бұрын
So true! I know some younger people who have major anxiety issues because they are afraid of everything.
@markuskruger21027 күн бұрын
From 75, i often drove behind the rear seat row in the VW Beetle............my uncles 1975 VW Dasher Station Wagon had no backseat belts, my Cousins( 3 girls ) and me had so much fun on the Autobahn....
@khatzeye3 ай бұрын
Real talk, they beat the competition out of Gen Z 😂 I had to troll my son relentlessly to finally get him to be competitive. It so weird. And that it’s all or none? Kids were left out, it happened. We didn’t make a big deal about it. Quite frankly I blame the schools for undermining how us as parents. Telling kids the will get in trouble for defending themselves against bullying especially.
@Vkw-ld1ux3 ай бұрын
I agree with you totally. We had a way of working things out without having weapons. I also think it was far more normal for other people to step in and stop bullying. These days kids walk by, stand and watch, or make sure they get it on video. It’s a different world.
@peoplenoodlesoup8 күн бұрын
The first one always makes me think of mad max when the baby has his ice cream crying getting thrown around in the boot of the car 😂😂😂
@supahbadd332 ай бұрын
Waterbeds came with patches in case you got a hole. They were hell to move if you moved.
@vikkibuchan34503 ай бұрын
I was born in 78, grew up in the 80's, at the park we used to swing as high as possible and then jump off to see where you landed, provided you didn't get caught on the swings chain, I do remember having the garbage pale kids in the UK in the 80s. I recently found the movie on Prime it wasn't as funny as I thought as a kid🤔, we played dodgeball outside of school, we also used to play kerbie where you and a friend stood at opposite sides of the road from each other and threw a ball to try and hit the pavement (sidewalk edge) kerb so it bounced back and the person who got moved forward and got an extra throw. I remember the Mr T cartoon along with the Ewoks/Pole Position /Dogtanain / Willy Fog / Silverhawks /Dark Wing Duck and the other cartoons mentioned along with the Rackoons/ Moomins and Willow the Wisp, then shows like The A-Team/Airwolf/Knight Rider / Streethawk/ Fall Guy/ Dukes Of Hazzard. We never called our friends, we used to just go round and see if they were coming out, and we we're alway's told to be back by a certain time or supper (dinner) would be in the dog, then the introduction to the Nes and for me it was the Sega Master System before the Sega Mega Drive I could never beat that Bonanza Brothers game
@DoktorLorenz3 ай бұрын
Jesus yeah I had cigarette sweets in the early 80s in the UK. Playgrounds had real tarmac, none of this bouncy rubber or wood chips for soft landings. I was lucky to have a ZX Spectrum 48k, when the cassette tapes used to take from 5-15 mins to load, if it loaded properly. Those of us in the know used to use a jewelers screwdriver to adjust the mechanism to adjust the position and tone. Chalk erasers were full of dust and hurt if you threw it at someone. Smoking amongst parents was just normal and I hated the smell even back then. Making huge home made BMX ramps and the best huge jumps had an old soggy wet mattress at the end. Rope swings hung on trees that always were made of the worst fraying rope that's ready to snap and you were scared you'd fall but making the swing was awesome. Your coming Home time was either dinner or when the street lights all came on, no phones for parents to call us on lol.
@krystleklearcentral3 ай бұрын
#2 I LOVED Where in the world is Carmen Sandiego. It was a great game. They even made a TV based on the game in the early to mid 90's (in the US)
@jimf28923 ай бұрын
Cartoon AND kids game show if I recall correctly!
@Jtr_ceral_killer3 ай бұрын
if you want to see how the kids in america lived in the 80s, research how kids in japan live today. some differences, but not much. the rearward facing seat in the family station wagon was great. i used to pretend i was a tail gunner in ww2.
@Buggins20003 ай бұрын
A dirt lot near us had the front of a ship in it. We were always playing World War with someone. We didn't care about rattlesnakes or bees nests. It was the best.
@lauralackner685618 күн бұрын
💙 Totally had a water bed as a teen as a Gen Xer. They were always heated, because sleeping on a cold waterbed was impossible! The linings were thicker than you think, but yes, punctures and leaks still happened. The stores sold kits to put "patches" over pin hole leaks. I always sent Valentines cards to all classmates as a kid because it was considered impolite to leave anyone out, but maybe that was just me. Great video 👏
@Sullivanin12 күн бұрын
I turned 13 in 1980 so I was a little kid in the 70s. We definitely gave a valentine to every kid in the class.
@wishingb58593 ай бұрын
In the USA, the first missing child panic actually occurred in the 1980s with a few cases and kids on milk cartons - but, generally, there were so few cases back then that most people didn't take it seriously unless they lived in an unsafe area. The next missing child panic came in 2002 with some more famous cases happening then. That is when society started shifting.
@voodooacidman17 күн бұрын
i was born in 1971 in n-e england. had an outdoor toilet until i was 6, went camping ,aged 14, unsupervised, with 4 schoolfriends for a week, no mobile phones or any contact at all to home. leave home at dark o'clock in the morning and return at bedtime. knock on strangers doors to ask for a drink ( water ) or to use the toilet. great times! :)
@silentrage54253 ай бұрын
I have a few opinions about this video, but I'll try to keep it short. "play in the front yard." Who ever stayed in the front yard? Maybe the front yard of my friend's house three blocks away. "Ride in the back of the car." Yeah, we had a pickup truck, try that at 70 mph on the highway. Playing unsupervised, yeah it was early Gen X parents that stopped that in the mid 90's. We know what kind of things we did unsupervised. I'm not so sure stopping it was a good thing. I mean look at what we did to the generations after us.
@johnw85783 ай бұрын
I know young folks filled with anxiety because they are scared of everything and are not confident in their decisions.
@Mishyme-qy4vqКүн бұрын
The ashtrays were a useful project. My mother smoked, and she used our ashtrays for years. Then when my sister and I became young adults, we also used the project ashtrays when we smoked. I haven’t smoked for many years, and we no longer have those ashtrays. They were very useful! Thanks for reminder. Oh yes as kids we ran around the neighborhood at night in our pajamas with our friends and family. And we drank wine and beer. My favorite mixed drink was beer, RC Cola, and orange juice. I’d put it in the freezer until it became somewhat of a slushy drink. I think I was about 10 y/o. That drink was delicious! I don’t drink anymore either.
@jhood7583 ай бұрын
We had fun, lots of kids and lots of wonderful memories. I wouldn’t trade my life for anything. I can look back at the great times and still have most of my friends today. A couple have passed on but they will never be forgotten.
@Gulicktheemu20 күн бұрын
As a 60’s kid, we had dirt clod fights at school, during recess and the teachers never stopped us. The only rule we had, when playing outside, was we had to come in when the streetlights came on. Early 60’s, cars had no seatbelts. We always waited in the car when mom went grocery shopping.
@rono7763 ай бұрын
#24: We didn’t really wear seatbelts ever back then. #22: You could typically hear when someone picked up the phone. The main issue was determining which house had the annoying little sibling trying to listen the convo. 😂 What was also annoying was hearing someone dial a number before verifying whether the line was free or not. #19: Merry-go-rounds FTW lol. #12: Adam Bomb! Bruised Lee! New Wave Dave! … loved the names. #10: no no no… but 1-3 Swatches on each wrist-absolutely. #7: Saturday morning cartoons were the best. #3: We sometimes made collect calls with devised code names to convey messages. The person being called would “not accept the charges” but would know the intended message by the name used-a perfect way to save a quarter haha.
@jimf28923 ай бұрын
We had a merry-go-round at our middle school that we called 'The Puker' it was your typical merry-go-round, but with one big difference, it was just a skeleton, it had the wooden seats still, but the center where the wood would've been was completely gone, so we could throw 6 kids in the middle to push! It was like a very low tech carnival ride lol. There would be kids that would hold onto the bump between the benches and kick their legs out and go till they couldn't hold on any more. It was a great time!
@w1975b2 ай бұрын
I still miss Saturday morning cartoons. Occasionally I'll watch some of them, like The Smurfs or Dungeons & Dragons. I mentioned in another comment that He-Man and Thundercats were afternoon cartoons for me, after school.
@jengsci826829 күн бұрын
The plastic waterbeds were made of was super thick. Also you needed a heater under the mattress as the water would otherwise be room temperature. 75F is warm for air, but not when it's basically a solid right against your skin all night. If you got a leak in the mattress, there were patch kits available.
@DreidMusicalX3 ай бұрын
We were actually free. One thing, we were in a 1983 Datsun pickup truck riding in the back of the truck. My mother was driving god rest her lovely soul. We pull into Thomas and Mac Center for Van Halen concert and out in the parking lot. David Lee Roth was out riding his 10 Speed before the concert. My friends and I went flying when she stomped on the brakes because she almost ran him over. This was Van Halens 1984 tour in Las Vegas NV. But I can tell you some killer stuff that we did as kids. Riding our bikes all over the country. The drugs as pre teens, most teens were having sex at age 11 - 13 was the common starting age. Ive personally lived at least 6 lives before 1990. I was born in 1968 and my era has experienced nearly everything. Drinking smoking , weed, acid, hash, pills, you name it we all did it. And don't think that you know more about technology then we do. Gen X are not Boomers. I used to put computers together back in the late 1990's. I was building custom PC towers and selling them. We are still on the computer. Most 80's kids that would wear Neon were either poser kids, girls, and later Gen X of little kids. Not the old Gen X born to lat 60's early 70's. We were into Rock N Roll, concert shirts, half shirts, cut off jeans and flip flops, Vans, or OP shorts. Then came ADIDAS which stood for All Day I Dream About Sex shoes. yeah corny, but it was a saying on the west coast.
@departmentofredundancydept41213 ай бұрын
We had to program our computer, typing in code, debugging it. They didn't come setup out of the box. But these kids think we don't know anything about computers 😂👍
@misslora38963 ай бұрын
You aren't kidding one bit about sex... I swear Nikes, "Just do it" campaign was a nod to us. That's all we heard from our peers in Middle/Jr.High School. "You should just do it and get it over with". The pressure was intense. That culture that developed during the 60's, but especially the 70's with younger and younger kids was awful. I think of movies like 1973's Jeremy with Robby Benson. Or the 1979 made for TV movie Sooner or Later with Rex Smith and Denise Miller (I was only 10, but watched with my older sister)... Both were packaged and sold as young love stories, but ultimately they were meant to normalize the idea of having sex to their young pre-teen and teen female audience. Entertainment has been used to drive culture for decades... it's far worse and MUCH more direct now than EVER before. It was still at least somewhat subtle and often even romanticized when we were kids.
@misslora38963 ай бұрын
@@noself7889 My 1st concert was in 1983. But it was Van Halens future lead singer, Sammy Hagar on his "I can't drive 55" tour. Would have loved seeing VH with Davis Lee Roth.
@DreidMusicalX3 ай бұрын
@@misslora3896 I as under 15 so my mom took me at the time to all these concerts. I started in 1978 Van Halen and seen them every year and twice in 83 with US Festival. My mother was really cool and concerts was my friends and my moms thing to do for all of us. Ive been to a concert every week from 1978 to around 1986 with her, then I was going myself with friends if she didn't want to come. My mom was a hard core rocker.
@Sullivanin12 күн бұрын
I turned 13 in 1980. I only remember little kids and kids on tv wearing neon. The 80s to me was waiting with hordes of other teenagers to get the best spots at a Ratt concert when festival seating was still a thing. And I probably paid $11 for the ticket.
@twinbot.13 күн бұрын
I love that you had to carry a 35mm camera or polaroid to document your life. Usually it was a parent taking the picture. So the majority of your childhood is undocumented. What a relief I don't have to look back on 80s hair styles I had.
@richardbast72433 ай бұрын
Those edges could be used for making things. Most common for me was to fold two of them together hole to hole over and over until I had a long springy thing.
@quicksilver2123 ай бұрын
Also, I distinctly remember my aunt and mom at a cookout drinking something called Malt Duck, which was a grape beer or something. One of them gave my four-year-old cousin a sip. She kept grabbing it, taking swigs and they were just laughing. Everyone just thought it was funny as hell. 😄
@faithfullyfaded16 күн бұрын
Until about 6 months ago, I still owned a waterbed (courtesy of my Mamaw)! It was a California King which means it was a small island. As an adult, I could lay sideways in it and not touch either side. U determine firmness by how much water u put in them and they're heated with an adjustable thermostat. I miss it every night - especially now in these winter months. 🖤
@jwrow3503 ай бұрын
Adam Walsh disappeared in 81 since John Walsh was a meteorologist it was a big deal it slowly started changing after that.