Sooo many great memories feasting on the Sears Wish Book catalog!!!!!
@dougtripp24319 ай бұрын
Telephone operators were also the "911" people in an emergency.
@UnsaltedCracker2679 ай бұрын
Considering the popularity of the Sears Catalog, I have always been surprised that Sears did not jump on the internet when it became available. It would have been as big as Amazon became. I also miss telephone books especially the Yellow Pages.
@margaretgrace7139 ай бұрын
Rand McNally maps and street guides used to be in every car, home and gas station. The upper management couldn't and wouldn't accept the internet. "Everyone wants the map in their hands." I worked there and heard these sentiments often. The rapid changes in technology were beyond their understanding.
@cruisecrazy706626 күн бұрын
@@margaretgrace713 Old senior management minds embrace Old Technology.
@hearttoheart4me9 ай бұрын
I know it takes a lot of work, research and thoughtfulness to create this content. Thank you for your efforts.
@dorismikolajczyk38029 ай бұрын
My siblings and I were the remote controls!!! 😂
@MemoryMountain9 ай бұрын
Ha!
@jefski68399 ай бұрын
We had to go outside and turn the antenna until mom yelled out the window when it was good
@jenniferhansen36229 ай бұрын
We didn't have a remote control until 1991. 😊
@jchapman82489 ай бұрын
Us too! 🤣
@dorismikolajczyk38029 ай бұрын
😂 Lucy was hysterical!!!!
@tonycollazorappo9 ай бұрын
The funniest episode of Lucy was when she and Ethel worked at the chocolate candy factory, LMAO!!! I still life my head off at that episode no matter how many times I've watched it.
@jchapman82489 ай бұрын
@@tonycollazorappoThat episode and the one where Lucy was recording ads for Vita Meata Vegimen were memorable classics!
@mp5398 ай бұрын
Phone books. The before internet.
@Thomas-yr9ln9 ай бұрын
The worst part is your parents forever being gone 😢
@jenniferhansen36229 ай бұрын
Yes I was born in 1977, but my parents were born in the 1930s and they're both gone now. 😢
@thomasallen38189 ай бұрын
The National Anthem would always sign off the two stations we had, NBC and CBS until 1964 when the ABC affiliate began broadcasting in our area. Then in 1965 the local PBS station came on the air, but for only a few hours a day.
@tonycollazorappo9 ай бұрын
I'm always excited when a new Memory Mountain video comes out. Especially when a Baby Boomer one comes out! I was born in 1961. 😊
@MemoryMountain9 ай бұрын
Our pleasure!
@junebryant51599 ай бұрын
Thank you for the fond memories, I am a boomer born in 1956, one year my Mom ordered a new coat for my Pop, didn’t come in time, so she cut the picture out and wrapped it up, so he’d have it to open!?!! How much fun?!!?!
@dad4ever-c909 ай бұрын
Growing up, there were only three TV channels. But it seemed there was more quality programming than we have now with unlimited options. The "big" TV set only had a 19-inch screen. Getting up to change channels didn't seem inconvenient. My dad always yelled if he felt I was turning the knob TOO FAST, saying it would break the set, although I never knew anyone who had that happen. Having control of the channel selection, if my parents went out, felt like winning the lottery!
@jchapman82489 ай бұрын
We were fortunate to receive 11 of the 13 TV channels on our TV set, back in the 1960s. Dad installed a great aerial antenna and we lived in a great area (northern San Diego county) that picked up all those LA, SD and TJ channels. Oh and we also had a variety of remotes, me and my siblings standing by the set while Dad search the TV Guide for a good show! 😁
@lindac69199 ай бұрын
Oh, I forgot about turning the knob too fast. Dad...I think that he thought it would round out the parts too fast, or make things blow up with sparks! Don't sit too close, and let the set warm up!
@VickiCampbell-12169 ай бұрын
Thank you. 😊Regarding typewriters, one of my fondest memories as a child was getting to visit my grandmother, (a journalist/reporter for our local newspaper), in the newsroom. The collective rhythm of many journalists typing was just a special memory for me then.❤
@tonycollazorappo9 ай бұрын
I started driving in 1977, I was 16. Gas was soooo cheap back then. It was 62 cent a gallon, lol.
@Chris_at_Home9 ай бұрын
I got my license when I was 16 in 1969. The cheap gas was 23 cents a gallon. When I was 19 in 1972 I went to Dallas for a weekend and it was 17 cents as a gas war was going on.
@starmnsixty12099 ай бұрын
Yes, recall them at my family's gas ⛽ stations being, day 25 cents.
@lindac69199 ай бұрын
I used to make my friends throw gas money change in my ashtray when they'd get in. IT kept them from smoking in the car, too!
@dmunoz59995 ай бұрын
Me too!
@dougtripp24319 ай бұрын
I was 12 years old during the oil embargo. There was a gas station on the corner down the street. Every day I would wake up at 4:30 so I would be ready when the station opened at 5:00. I went up and down the street with my Radio Flyer wagon selling coffee, tea, hot chocolate, newspapers, bowls of cereal or hot instant oatmeal and other things. My family was poor, so I had to go to the bank and ask for a small loan to buy a couple large coffee makers. The bank manager just loaned me two the bank had. When it was all over, I returned the coffee makers. I had another $4000.00 in my bank account. A huge sum for me back then. I don't think I charged more than a quarter for anything. Got my picture on the front page of two newspapers and an award from our town Chamber of Commerce. The bank manager helped me invest the money and I was able to use it to be the first in my family to get a college education, a degree in Agricultural Engineering. I think I may be the only person that looks on those few months with happiness.
@jefffrayer82389 ай бұрын
Now that's pretty impressive. I hope you continued that spirit even into retirement. Great example for kids today.
@BeeFunKnee9 ай бұрын
You sold me with that comment right there! Got any iced tea or lemonade? I'll take a root beer if you got one too! Can you deliver to Maine? I got the correct change so you won't need to bring any. I'm a decent tipper, by the way!
@dougtripp24319 ай бұрын
@@BeeFunKnee I forgot about the tips. Many people tipped me more than what I charged. They often said they can't spend their money on gas so they may as well give it to me.
@BeeFunKnee9 ай бұрын
@@dougtripp2431 I wager you had some decent conversations with those people waiting in line. I loved talking with older people at age 12, and earlier. They'll try to say helpful, thoughtful things. They'll warn a child about mistakes they themselves made, too.
@lindac69199 ай бұрын
I freaking love this story.
@josephwarra50439 ай бұрын
Remember when "public" and "independent" TV stations were allowed to broadcast their shows? You could watch almost anything, and you often did, especially in large cities with dozens of new stations and new shows. Remember when there were only 2 or 3 TV stations? Maybe 5 if you lived in or near a large city. No nudity, sex, violence or gore, that would wait for the internet and home computers.
@nancybarta81679 ай бұрын
Loved the Sear catalog all year round!!!I loved how you could just plug a tv in and presto.............you have tv!!!!I remember my principal had a weekly schedule for the teachers to get gas..........mine was 10am and the sub would go to my room until i returned.Fortunately the lines during the day were much smaller then what you show.I was a trunk operator at The Whittier daily news when i was in college!
@KatieBreckenridge-y1i7 күн бұрын
These stories make me feel like I’m young again 😊 0:03
@pixel95489 ай бұрын
This little voice in my head said,: "I want to go home." I think I just connected with my past self.
@frankwafer69199 ай бұрын
Thanks for the special memories!😮💯💫👍!
@thomasallen38189 ай бұрын
Kids today have no clue what it was like to dog ear the pages and circle the items you were hoping to get for Christmas from the Sears Wish Book. Yeah computer screens can do similar things, but they’re cold and with the Wish Book, we could go back day after day, wishing, and anticipating what might come for Christmas.
@sallymiller13599 ай бұрын
Analog living was much more human scale than digital. What we gained in convenience, we lost in human interaction. Most Americans today are lonely. We have our iphones and text messages but they relate useless info, not heart felt caring. I miss those days and most of the people I knew then who are no longer with us. It was the best of times, best music, best prosperity for America when we had national pride. Glad to be a Baby Boomer.
@lindac69199 ай бұрын
Oh, I like your comment about the scale of living. I don't know HOW MANY times I look around and feel that the world is on a larger-than-human scale these days. "Larger-than-life" is how I feel about so many elements in today's world. Sometimes I'm overwhelmed.
@Noname-v2w5w9 ай бұрын
There were two payphones in our high school lunchroom.... I still remember using one to call my best friend at lunch whenever she was home sick-she would do the same for me. We had to catch each other up on the latest happenings at school -you couldn't miss out on the day's gossip just because you were sick-(or pretending to be sick!)
@thomasallen38189 ай бұрын
The 1973 gas shortage was something that I was lucky to have never suffered through. My parents owned a large chain of grocery stores with gas pumps, and he was partners with our gasoline supplier and refinery, plus we had private company only pumps at our central offices for family and employees. There were only a handful of times that an individual store would be out of fuel for a day at most. We were blessed, with parents who had foresight and excellent planning for the future of our business.
@10speed49 ай бұрын
Sears catalog was our Internet.
@starmnsixty12099 ай бұрын
Those TV sets are classics themselves. I think we owned one of those models at least. One can still obtain typing ribbons, although typewriters which work are more difficult it seems.👍
@thomasallen38189 ай бұрын
I remember using a rotary dial phone years before push buttons came along. And calling the operator to make your connection. And when I built my first home on our ranch, I had to have a three way party line that I shared with two different old busy bodies, who would sit and listen in on conversations, until I would make an embarrassing remark then click. Thank goodness it only lasted a couple of months before AT&T put in my private lines.
@mikeywid49549 ай бұрын
I was actually working at a service station when the oil embargo hit. Exciting, memorable times.
@Jimfrenchde9 ай бұрын
The most important skill that I learned was from the old fashioned typewriter. I make do data entry as a living and learning this skill was a life saver.
@tonycollazorappo9 ай бұрын
Can't stand cell phones and all those apps! I miss the pay phones =(
@msnell3269 ай бұрын
If your car broke down and you had to walk a long way to find a pay phone then you appreciate cellphones.
@Dadsezso9 ай бұрын
Being a kid from the 50s/60s, the Christmas catalogs were always a fight over who was going to get their hands on it first. As for all the catalogs, the ladies lingerie sections were popular, a friend once told me.🤫
@jchow59669 ай бұрын
Rxcellent episode! Great review od cultural history!!!!!
@jchapman82489 ай бұрын
Before voicemail there was the answering machine and before that there was the note pad and pencil!
@wmbeam2119 ай бұрын
I rember when at 11 o'clock p.m. there was a message it is now 11 o'clock do you know where your children are ?
@SuperChicken6669 ай бұрын
Sears catalog: I still remember the smell. It was a good smell. After watching this video, I feel like a dinosaur.😊
@samiam6199 ай бұрын
WHERE’S the Indian Chief test pattern?
@tonycollazorappo9 ай бұрын
I remember that! 👍🏻😊
@Starphot9 ай бұрын
Also, the clergyman with the daily devotional after that with Captain Kangaroo coming on.
@jchapman82489 ай бұрын
And just before that popped up there was the national anthem signing off that channel.
@mp5398 ай бұрын
Smith-Corona. Took it to college with me.
@cyclenut8 ай бұрын
Typewriters - In the 78-79 school year I was in 10th grade. A women in office hated me (ling story) She put me in typing class, which was all girl class.. Computers were just about to come out and has keyboard like typewriters. So, I was lucky.
@RichardNickels-ot6iq9 ай бұрын
Yes I Remember that 😀😂
@woodsofthewoods7 ай бұрын
Few know that the innovative ideas in I Love Lucy were dreamed up by Desi Arnaz.🎉❤
@kirkstinson73169 ай бұрын
You start out with a 1974 sears catalog. That's gen X! Not boomers. Actually all of this was our life as kids and we arent boomers