@Biden Hates America there’s no need to be derogatory. Sometimes you gotta put up or shut up.
@SiliconBong Жыл бұрын
Australia and newZealand still have many of these items.
@steveperry3572 Жыл бұрын
It wouldn’t be bad to keep the old credit card swipers. Cause if the power goes out, you still have that method of payment by card.
@SiliconBong Жыл бұрын
@@steveperry3572 I miss the sound of authority those things had!
@davidplant6805 Жыл бұрын
@@steveperry3572 Actually, you would just plug in your Square credit card processor into your phone and swipe the card.
@davidgoodman6924 Жыл бұрын
Also, obsolete is the little horsey ride found outside of K Marts or grocery stores you had to put a quarter in and it would rock back and forth.
@Soxruleyanksdrool Жыл бұрын
As well as the KMart itself.
@TheLoneStranger213 Жыл бұрын
I live in a rural area and know of a grocery store that has one still in use. It's in pretty good shape!
@Greg-xv9qj Жыл бұрын
In the Chicago land area all of them little horsey rides and little 10 cent Kiddie rides we're all owned And controlled by the syndicate
@matrox Жыл бұрын
The weight scales are missing too.
@stphinkle Жыл бұрын
I have seen a few of these still in use at malls but there are far fewer of them than before.
@willgriffin3490 Жыл бұрын
The Sears catalog just in time for Christmas. I spent many hours looking at all the cool toys I'd never get.
@chrism3784 Жыл бұрын
yep, and never get was the truth.
@tuseroni6085 Жыл бұрын
i'm surprised that wasn't on the list. hell even sears itself isn't around anymore.
@willgriffin3490 Жыл бұрын
@@tuseroni6085 I was surprised as well. I know we (I have 7 siblings) fought to get the catalog first. And Sears is where we all got our school clothes for the new year as well.
@hommie789 Жыл бұрын
The Sears catalog was delivered in April and was the really thick one, the one delivered in time for Christmas was called Sears Wish book as in kids wishing, it wasn't just kids toys but very little else was looked at.
@tuseroni6085 Жыл бұрын
@@hommie789 that may be the official name but we just called it the sears catalog.
@KevinW3278 Жыл бұрын
Another one that should be on the list is music stores. They were everywhere when vinyl, tape and CD were the typical music formats.
@DardanellesBy108 Жыл бұрын
Yep! I remember going to Tower Records a few times a month to look for new cassettes. There was another music store, can’t remember the name, that would make custom mix tapes. Just take in a list of your favorite songs and for a reasonable price they’d make the tape.
@DUCKDUCKGOISMUCHBETTER Жыл бұрын
Many Walmarts now are carrying vinyl records again. And sometimes the selection is quite large. Like in the 80s.
@KevinW3278 Жыл бұрын
@@DardanellesBy108 I found this list looking around. 1. Camelot Music · 2. Coconuts · 3. Peaches Records & Tapes · 4. Strawberries · 5. Sam Goody · 6. Tape World · 7. Tower Records · 8. Turtle's. We had one, maybe more regional, that was record town or something close to that. It was in several malls.
@KevinW3278 Жыл бұрын
@@DUCKDUCKGOISMUCHBETTER Yeah it used to be every major store like Walmart or Kmart at least had a music section of CDs and tapes.
@Poundz978 Жыл бұрын
And movie rental stores
@mikefolkestad277 Жыл бұрын
The days take so long to get through. But the years just fly by.
@LTKK Жыл бұрын
There's a weird feeling of sadness that comes from this. Like the life you knew is over. I understand one day we'll look back at current items with that same feeling though. Everything is relative. Yet I can't help but reflect with a bit of sadness about days long gone. I'm only in my 30s, so I imagine someone older feels it even more.
@agomodern Жыл бұрын
That's why we collect things such as gas pumps, jukeboxes, vending machines, as adults that we couldn't have when we were kids or that are now obsolete. Brings back memories and preserves the past.
@PoesRaven73 Жыл бұрын
As a person who will be 68 in about a month, I can concur that we old shits feel that sadness even more!
@cattysplat Жыл бұрын
Who knows what crazy stuff we'll have in another 30 years. World is always changing in strange new ways.
@grantyentis5507 Жыл бұрын
I'm in my early fifties and I definitely feel the sadness. I miss flash cubes!
@TEXCAP Жыл бұрын
You have to keep in mind all the stuff we have left behind that very few of us alive remember. Horses for transportation, outdoor plumbing, home made ice cream machines, butter churns, just a few that I can think of off hand. It's always changing.
@lesliehoncharik1289 Жыл бұрын
I remember my mom buying the TV guide for the week when she did the weekly grocery shopping on Friday....I read it cover to cover and circled the "must see" shows for the upcoming week....did anyone else do that?
@geraldboykin6159 Жыл бұрын
TV Bible
@CandanceCommunity Жыл бұрын
Mine too my mom and granny would buy TV guide for the week lol on Saturday 😂😂😂😂❤❤❤❤
@lesliehoncharik1289 Жыл бұрын
It was one of the high points of my week as a kid...getting the guide, reading through the nightly TV schedules, looking for holiday special shows, beauty pageants, etc. and reading the descriptions for the weekly episode of your favorite shows, then circling them so you wouldn't miss anything( long before the days of vcr's and digital recorders; if you missed your favorite show, maybe you'd catch the rerun). Now with hundreds of channels, that charm and anticipation is gone (and half the time nothing good to watch)!
@epowell4211 Жыл бұрын
Absolutely!!
@craigstjohn4470 Жыл бұрын
we want the old size of,TV guide,NOT like now!/. looks like, regular magazine! 😔😠🙏
@Jimjolnir Жыл бұрын
Finding forgotten coins in telephone booths was like winning the lottery. Back when coins had real value.
@d.vaughn8990 Жыл бұрын
As a young child, I spent many nights, at a tavern, during the early 70's. Btw: there's a good reason. Anyway, there was a jukebox in the corner of the 'dining' area. I always inspected the coin return slot. It was usually empty. One night, I accidentally discovered an additional coin return on the side - towards the rear. It was stuffed full of coins! What a score! Honestly, it probably amounted to $1.50. But back in 1973, that could buy something!! I still don't understand why jukeboxes possessed those additional coin returns??
@ralphholiman7401 Жыл бұрын
Same thing with a vending machine! Finding forgotten change in the return slot. Another thing that could have added was all the glass bottles that you could return for a deposit.
@TranceGurl20 Жыл бұрын
Remember when pennies existed xD
@ImTheFatboy Жыл бұрын
Back when a stray quarter meant you could get yourself a small snack
@ralphholiman7401 Жыл бұрын
@@ImTheFatboy , Could get a McDonald's burger for $0.25 back when I was young.
@Jerryman1158 Жыл бұрын
Those old phones were so durable. You could slam them down as hard as you wanted when hanging up on someone ☎️
@Manuel-gv6qt Жыл бұрын
LOL
@richardresendez2325 Жыл бұрын
Yep
@patcurrie9888 Жыл бұрын
and they heard it too. I have one & love to slam it down on telemarketers
@howardsmith9342 Жыл бұрын
We still use the phrase "hang up the phone," but fewer and fewer people know where it came from.
@douglashogg4848 Жыл бұрын
I remember you leased them from the phone company and they easily last 20 years.
@portwills Жыл бұрын
I miss VHS cassettes and going to movie rentals.
@joeldukes303 Жыл бұрын
I miss buying cassette tapes to play on my Walkman
@kdub2229 Жыл бұрын
Browsing was the most fun , whether Blockbuster or Family Video .
@johntracy72 Жыл бұрын
@@kdub2229oh the nostalgia.
@zeroturn709110 ай бұрын
The heartbreak when a new release was out of stock, hard pass.
@solascripturamjc96814 ай бұрын
yep
@Nuggs1980 Жыл бұрын
Used to love getting the newspaper, especially on Sundays. Sunday funnies! Phone books would be delivered every year and had coupons for anything you were looking for and you would write numbers all over the cover of it. Good ol'days.
@22ergie Жыл бұрын
The 'Parade' magazine was my favorite inside the Sunday paper. Did you have that as well?
@johnmadow5331 Жыл бұрын
American made news paper disposal machine in public place that using honest system can not stay in business since people a free to taok more than one copy of news paper then most case, vandalized the machine to take the money!
@mercster Жыл бұрын
People still get newspapers all the time.
@usmale49 Жыл бұрын
@@22ergie We did get Parade every Sunday. My parents had a subscription to "The Rocky Mountain News"! Miss that little newspaper insert!!
@norwegianblue2017 Жыл бұрын
I think you can track the decline in informed voters with the decline in newspaper readers. Not only were newspapers more common back then, but they were also much more professionally written and had better journalistic standards. Not nearly as many snarky or sensationalistic headlines and partisan hackery. Just the fact, ma'am. And yes, the 'funny papers' as my grandfather called them, were a treat on Sundays.
@mersea.714 Жыл бұрын
I miss film the most. I managed a camera store from 1992-2013 and saw the emergence of digital. I do love that younger generations are shooting film again. Kodak can’t keep up with the demand and people are paying steep prices for this medium. It makes me happy to see the art continue. There’s nothing like film.
@deedoyle4069 Жыл бұрын
Yes, Agreed!
@fr2ncm9 Жыл бұрын
My first SLR was a Pentax ME Super. I had that camera for 30 years before the film rewind died. Now I have a Nikon D 90 and N90. The N90 is a film camera with a faster shutter speed than the digital version.
@thehighllama8101 Жыл бұрын
I used to work at CVS, back in the 90s. At the time, we had to send film out to the Kodak lab (and, later, the Fuji lab) to be processed. One thing I dreaded: dealing with missing film orders and mixed film orders (i.e., when a customer would get another customer's pictures). What a pain.
@PBryanMcMillin Жыл бұрын
I think the big difference with film photography is that we took time to plan our shot. We had a limited number of pictures a roll of film could take, so we didn't want to waste a shot. With digital you can take 100 pictures and hope that one or two are good enough to use, and delete the rest. Digital is great for its convenience, and affordability, but for many the trade-off was the skill it took to get a good picture. Now you just take pictures until, purely by luck, one satisfies you.
@mersea.714 Жыл бұрын
@@fr2ncm9 The ME Super is a classic! How amazing that it lasted 30 years! I shoot with a D90 too & my main film body is my N80. Cheers!
@jerrymartin3965 Жыл бұрын
Waking up in the morning before sunrise and reading my newspaper and having my coffee was the most peaceful part of my day years ago. It prepared me for the workday. I miss it. The Sunday paper was especially nice. The "funny papers" were my favorite.
@grandpavan8335 Жыл бұрын
I'm with you! Remember when the "paperboy" would come around to "collect" payment? I had a "paper route" for a few years as a kid. I knew everybody on my side of town! Our local paper stopped delivering them to your door and made you put a tube at the end of the driveway. At my age, I wasn't about to go out in the snow and ice at 5 AM. I sadly cancelled my subscription.
@brenthaymon280 Жыл бұрын
I can remember the photo booths they used to have at malls and amusement parks in the 70s, 80s and 90s.
@BOBXFILES2374a Жыл бұрын
And 1950s! Grandma Fay and me as a little kid together. !
@GrislyAtoms12 Жыл бұрын
I still see those photo booths sometimes. A mall in Saratoga NY had one as recently as 2017
@MsThebeMoon Жыл бұрын
Remember the drive-thru photo booths.
@caitlingill Жыл бұрын
And sometimes in the 2000s
@geraldboykin6159 Жыл бұрын
WOOLCO
@Porsche996driver Жыл бұрын
Anyone remember checkbooks and bank savings books?! The teller would add the interest and amounts manually in the book!
@arthas640 Жыл бұрын
checkbooks are still pretty common. I work construction where credit card payments cost a fortune (3% on a $50k remodel is $1,500) and even many younger people still have checks, bank will even send you a single check if you dont have a checkbook. I think something like 90% of our transactions are via check and most of the remaining being money orders, EFTs, and stuff like that.
@jamesstuart3346 Жыл бұрын
I don't miss standing in line for half an hour just to see how much is in my bank account
@kkarllwt Жыл бұрын
I opened my first savings account at age 12 . 1966. I can still visualize the passbook.
@MikeSmith-ir7xn10 ай бұрын
I still have one
@alansimmons77328 ай бұрын
How about s&h stamps
@Savage3OO6 Жыл бұрын
You didn't say it, but I miss having a phone hanging on the wall in my kitchen the most. I was at an indoor pool with my wife and kids last weekend and I saw approximately 25% of the adults with cell phones in a watertight case in the pool. It amazes me that when I was a kid, in the 80s, we could go on vacation for a week or two and leave our phone hanging on the wall in the kitchen. Now, we can't even go swimming without it.
@blueduck9409 Жыл бұрын
I feel your pain. Lol. I agree with you. I miss those days.
@REDPUMPERNICKEL Жыл бұрын
Back in the days when single celled organisms began to clump together they didn't know it but they were trading independence for security.
@McPatMan124 Жыл бұрын
Yeah, but your wall phone wasn't also a computer with access to the entirety of human knowledge.
@Savage3OO6 Жыл бұрын
@@McPatMan124 I'd happily give up the advantages of a smart phone in lieu of the advantages of human interaction.
@nuttybar9 Жыл бұрын
Do you miss the stretched out phone cords?
@bobdragon9869 Жыл бұрын
Here's another one -- Remember the S&H Green Stamps we always got at the grocery store with our purchase? It was a kind of rebate program (like cash-back programs on some credit cards). You could save a whole bunch of Green Stamps over time and then take them back to the store to get a few free grocery items.
@weswolever7477 Жыл бұрын
My family would sometimes spend the evening pasting the stamps into the booklets after dinner
@jb-qi8fz10 ай бұрын
I got a whole set of dishes that way.
@PhyllisJohnson-lr9bq7 ай бұрын
Yes and K savers
@arubaguy27332 ай бұрын
My Grandma let me have her Gold Bell gift stamps that were around back in the day when grocery shopping was a daily necessity. Took me all year to fill enough stamp books to get my own scooter (when scooters had big wheels and needed constant "pumping" to keep going, before razor scooters and motorized scoots). Probably my very first independent decision as a child. 50s and early 60s were better, simpler times.
@Indium111 Жыл бұрын
VCRs and cassette tapes immediately came to mind when I saw the title of this video. Neither were featured, so a "Part 2" is definitely required.
@lanceash Жыл бұрын
I remember having an argument in high school with another guy who claimed that CD's would make LP's obsolete. And now CD's are obsolete and LP's are highly collectible and often specially printed for new releases.
@Bernz66 Жыл бұрын
I just digitized all my home movies from VHS and Hi-8 tapes…..
@Bernz66 Жыл бұрын
@@lanceash I still have all my LPs and cassettes that I started buying back in 1974….
@lanceash Жыл бұрын
@@Bernz66 How did you do it? Because I've got a pile of home movies on camcorder tapes that I need transferred to digital.
@robertschmidt9296 Жыл бұрын
@@lanceash CDs are obsolete? I had planned on getting a player in the near future.
@riverraisin1 Жыл бұрын
Of all the things that have been lost over the years, it's my mind I miss the most!
@robertlange1772 Жыл бұрын
You ain't the only one
@jocko774 Жыл бұрын
Ozzy Osborne?
@nestorjrabalos1998 Жыл бұрын
I miss my virginity. Lost to a hooker on one drunken night.
@billhennessy511810 ай бұрын
Joe Biden
@evelynsaungikar3553 Жыл бұрын
I discovered a cache of old office supplies at work: adding machine paper, typewriter ribbons, stamps with date rolls ending in 99, fax paper. I had fun explaining to the young people what each thing was, I felt like an archeologist!
@anthonyrobertson2011 Жыл бұрын
Ha, I forgot about those stamps where you could change the date. Yeah played with one as a kid.
@S.B.inNOLA-qd5ii5zu2j Жыл бұрын
I miss catalogs, Sears, J.C. Penney, Spiegel, Victoria's Secret. Also really miss pay phones and the Sunday paper (printed on paper), sections scattered all over the house on Sunday.
@freedomrings1420 Жыл бұрын
I remember going to NYC on a train when I was around 13 in 73 with my father to watch a baseball game. I remember going through what seemed like hundreds of phones in the train station to see if there was change that someone forgot to grab.
@nomadbrad6391 Жыл бұрын
and????? did you find any?
@freedomrings1420 Жыл бұрын
@@nomadbrad6391 I believe so
@jamesmurray8558 Жыл бұрын
So did I.
@samanthab1923 Жыл бұрын
Phone banks
@ZoruaZorroark Жыл бұрын
reminds me of when i would do the same in the 90's for vending machines as a kid so i can get myself either a soda for "free" or even play a arcade game without begging my parents for change
@shannonnewman3091 Жыл бұрын
I grew up with all this , I miss the old world .....
@frankrizzo4460 Жыл бұрын
Yes me too, I'm so glad I got to grow up back in those days.
@elid3906 Жыл бұрын
RESIST AND RECLAIM THE GOOD OLD WORLD💯 HANDS DOWN A WAY BETTER PLACE ‼️
@brodriguez11000 Жыл бұрын
Bring back Columbus!
@tonycollazorappo Жыл бұрын
Same here @shannon newman. I grew up with all this and I miss the world back when and would go back in a heartbeat if I could.
@cindyobrien9270 Жыл бұрын
Me, too
@gulfgypsy Жыл бұрын
Sometimes I have to refrain from getting too lost in nostalgia for times gone by. But your videos allow me a quick trip down memory lane and I so appreciate them! Thank you!!
@413smr Жыл бұрын
It's barely worth it to indulge in nostalgia for a mythical good old days. Humans persist in believing that nothing changes, that everything that's here today will be here tomorrow. Everything changes, quickly, slowly or imperceptibly. Think about it - does it look like the 1950s now? Even the 199i0s? What's around today may well not be around in the future.
@glennso47 Жыл бұрын
@@413smr Unfortunately some things never change such as racism and hatred of one another. Actually the good old days were over when Adam and Eve were removed from the Garden.
@hoppas77 Жыл бұрын
@@glennso47 🙄
@Veteran007 Жыл бұрын
@@413smr Why are you here.
@redline1916 Жыл бұрын
@@413smr At least back then people had half of a brain and quality was used in most products. Now consumerism has completely ruined us as a whole. Not only that, but jobs paid a living wage when you could get it. I can't even afford an apartment while my mother at least had one when she was my age, and she was working one full time job. I can't afford that at 15 an hour even. There's clearly no such thing as the 'mythical good old days' when clearly us Gen Z knew they had it good, and we want a slice of it too.
@wendyh2708 Жыл бұрын
It's sad to see all of these things that I grew up with now noted as obsolete.
@howardsmith9342 Жыл бұрын
What's really bad is when the stuff you played with as a kid turns up on Antiques Roadshow. Sadly, I remember everything on this list.
@wendyh2708 Жыл бұрын
@@howardsmith9342 And then you REALLY feel as old as dirt :)
@thetruthandnothingbutthetr6484 Жыл бұрын
That means you are getting old and will soon also be obsolete
@greghomestead836610 ай бұрын
Your next. 🤪
@wendyh270810 ай бұрын
@@greghomestead8366 You already are.
@IamToniD Жыл бұрын
I don’t know if these really fit into this category or not but How about the weekly readers or the Highlights magazine we would get from school, i remember getting one every week from school these memories are priceless
@IamToniD Жыл бұрын
You know that lil pamphlet we would get every week at school where you could order books magazines and posters of your favorite characters but unfortunately, I never got to order not one thing, but ALWAYS wished I could😞
@marionpeebles3836 Жыл бұрын
I was just thinking about weekly readers and wondered if they were still around.
@tooldog5062 Жыл бұрын
yea i miss those little mags, i still try to get my wife to believe that readers in the 70s said the best ways to lose weight and get in shape was sex 3-5 times a day but she doesn't believe me
@diannelavoie5385 Жыл бұрын
"Highlights" is still available and has ones for different age groups. I gifted a subscription to my little granddaughters.
@eandatoo Жыл бұрын
I remember Weekly Readers in school. We could also order books from the back by filling out an order form and mailing it in with the payment. Miss those days.
@jwbjpb1338 Жыл бұрын
I feel so old since I remember EVERY one of these every objects. Time flies far too fast.
@revdan4853 Жыл бұрын
Same here. I'm nearly 60 and watching this video makes me feel old, as if I didn't already feel old enough! When I was a kid here in the UK, you had to purchase your bus ticket from a conductor who walked up and down the bus. Train carriages still had a corridor that ran along the side of the carriage, with separate compartments for passengers. Telephones still had rotary dials. The TV only had 2 or 3 channels and you had to get up and walk over to the TV to change the channel. I can remember when telephones first got buttons. I can remember when TVs first got remote controls. I can remember changing all my vinyl records and cassette tapes for CDs. Life back then was far simpler and in many ways more innocent.
@arthas640 Жыл бұрын
@@revdan4853 I cant imagine how my grandparents felt. Grandma was born in a North Dakota town so rural she grew up speaking Norwegian more than English since the tiny town was mostly immigrants. She didnt have indoor plumbing or electricity and traveled by horse drawn cart more than by truck. When she died it was in a house with an LED TV, smartphone, wifi, wireless security cameras connected to my phone so i could keep an eye on them, with a powered recliner that could stand her up for her.
@robertschmidt9296 Жыл бұрын
@@revdan4853 I remember when push button phones came out. I never did figure out how to press one for English on my rotary.
@marycanary Жыл бұрын
Absolutely 😊
@Clifford-yi3cj Жыл бұрын
If you give your life to Jesus, then you will have no ending of time.
@georgemcdowell8302 Жыл бұрын
During the '50's, my mom preferred using enclosed green phone booths in dept. stores with the attached stool inside & small counter to place her purse.
@blondy89 Жыл бұрын
I remember those at our local bowling alley ☺️
@samanthab1923 Жыл бұрын
I loved the old wooden ones you’d find in places some times.
@citrine65 Жыл бұрын
You gave me a nice memory image. 🙂
@HELENGodLoves Жыл бұрын
Trucking we had them in truck stops
@fjtalleyauthor2242 Жыл бұрын
I recall the banks of payphones at airports near baggage claim and ground transportation as well.
@gmac8586 Жыл бұрын
Does anyone remember when you had to get a paper bus ticket and they would punch a hole in it? I remember my mother getting tickets at the booth in perforated sheets. Also the card sleeve inside a book from the library. The librarian would stamp the due date on a card and slide it in the sleeve inside the book's cover. Card catalogues to help one locate a book in the library are obsolete too. Microfiche (I think that was the name) where you could look up some old paper or documents on a huge machine with a projector screen at the library! So many memories are coming back! Oh, and tv dinners when they were in aluminum foil before microwaves! They went in the oven. You had to peel the desert section back to brown it.
@lscorpio9129 Жыл бұрын
TV Guide was a NECESSITY for the fall and spring previews. Another awesome video.
@sdube001 Жыл бұрын
I looked forward every year for the fall preview guides!
@constancemiller3753 Жыл бұрын
I used to read TV Guide last pages about movies, directors and stars of cinema when I was too young to watch films like The Godfather or foreign arthouse films.
@kimmer6 Жыл бұрын
When our TV set would act up, my dad would remove some vacuum tubes and head down to the Piggly Wiggly grocery store and use the TV Tube tester just inside the store. If you found a weak tube, they had a replacement for sale right there.
@heidibonjour Жыл бұрын
Why is there not a store called Piggly Wiggly now?
@Abitibidoug Жыл бұрын
Good one! I completely forgot about those tube testers.
@Abitibidoug Жыл бұрын
@@heidibonjour I think they still exist in the Southern States, and have been around for many years.
@heidibonjour Жыл бұрын
@@Abitibidoug I LOVE that name! If there was one in my city I would shop there! "😂Piggly Wiggly!"
@Abitibidoug Жыл бұрын
@@heidibonjour I was at one in Myrtle Beach, SC in 1996 and another in Lafayette, LA in 2010 and possibly others.
@bl1506 Жыл бұрын
I remember all these things when I was a kid. Miss those days 😔
@tooldog5062 Жыл бұрын
me to people had imagination back then they had IQ's they knew the difference between someone lying and someone telling the truth, even a monster movie was meant to scare people not gross them out!
@judycriblear7615 Жыл бұрын
Those days were sooo much better and happier.
@domenicv7962 Жыл бұрын
Judy Judy Judy !!!
@Doodlebirds1 Жыл бұрын
If you were anything other than a middle - upper class white man sure. Lots of similar values and things we could appreciate more today sure. However, we forget about racism homophobia, the stigma around mental illness etc: Areas like medicine have advanced much further too now. We can’t look back with rose coloured glasses.
@domenicv7962 Жыл бұрын
@@Doodlebirds1 I think you are looking at today through those glasses. You have no idea what happened back then, because if you did, you would feel differently. Actually was quite the insult.
@joeldukes303 Жыл бұрын
@@Doodlebirds1 Judy and domenic are correct. You are woke. Cognitive dissonance is a helluva drug
@johnerwin9024 Жыл бұрын
@@domenicv7962have to have lived those days-
@honkytonkinson9787 Жыл бұрын
I remember the daily newspaper would have a section showing what would be on tv that day, for local broadcast and bigger cable channels, along with a few entertainment articles. If you got a Sunday paper it would have a book with everything to be on tv for the following week. My dad kept that on top of the tv and we’d use it to figure out if anything good would be on. Commercials and all.
@GrislyAtoms12 Жыл бұрын
"I remember the daily newspaper would have a section showing what would be on tv that day" Soon, the daily newspaper will belong in one of these videos.
@renmuffett Жыл бұрын
We still have the daily newspaper here in my area of Eastern Oregon.
@honkytonkinson9787 Жыл бұрын
@@renmuffett there’s a daily paper her in Chattanooga, TN. It’s the two big newspapers combined into one: The Chattanooga Times, and The Chattanooga Free-Press. They used to be the morning paper and the evening paper. Now it’s just the one a day, and a few people in my neighborhood still get them delivered. I haven’t read a newspaper since maybe 2009. I get everything online now
@GrislyAtoms12 Жыл бұрын
Love your user name, @ Honky Tonkinson
@Bernz66 Жыл бұрын
I used to spend hours going through every page of the Sunday paper after my dad was done with it
@genghispecan Жыл бұрын
I remember all of these - including the little post office stamp machines that looked like a letterbox. I particularly liked the sound the mechanical sound the cigarette and candy machines would make when you pulled the tab.
@csnide6702 Жыл бұрын
chunck- ka-shunk.....
@HELENGodLoves Жыл бұрын
In school we had a machine you put a few quarters in and get a decorative pencil or another had notebooks.
@nikkimcdonald4562 Жыл бұрын
I bought a Lance vending machine and love it so much 😍😍😍
@jjryan1352 Жыл бұрын
Those pulls on the cig machines was oddly satisfying and unnerving. The way the long shafts came out. Made you think are they supposed to do that? Will this even work or will it jam up?
@billrobertson5895 Жыл бұрын
@@jjryan1352 they were like pull chords on lawnmowers. Sometimes they would just decide nope I want to eff your arm up I’m only coming out 2 inches then I’m stopping
@willemslie Жыл бұрын
Anyone remember slide rules? They performed mathematical functions, including the calculation of trigonomic functions. Their use was tricky to master. Our year in school spent two years learning to use the damn things only for the rules to change allowing for what were called "scientific calculators" to be used in our GCE exams in 1979. Oh, and the calculator recommended by our school was made by an obscure electronics company called Commodore.
@dairyair5371 Жыл бұрын
I was so mad at them for not building a network of enthusiasts for the Commodore 64. Yes, the other computers had better graphics but the games were so much fun.
@howardsmith9342 Жыл бұрын
I still have a slide rule around someplace. We put men on the moon with slide rules.
@deanvinlove6095 Жыл бұрын
Sold by Radio Shack!
@kkarllwt Жыл бұрын
In 73 there was a freshman course on how to use one. By 76/77 they were almost gone. I still have a few, includuing a 4 foot training one.
@jasonfullerton7763 Жыл бұрын
I have a BS in Engineering, and I'm *just* old enough to have never used a slide rule. I did take a mechanical drawing class as a Freshman in 1992, using triangles, compass, and drafting paper.
@cessealbeach Жыл бұрын
Born in 79, I remember most of these stuff, I wish i could go back, I miss the payphone and pin ball machines
@frozenhouse5362 Жыл бұрын
I remember as a kid we use to go around checking payphones for left change, sometimes we would find a broken one full of change
@mikebutkevich8805 Жыл бұрын
I was playing pinball on the nes. It was 1983. My mom had it still and I got to borrow it
@dialysisnurse13 Жыл бұрын
One thing that wasn’t mentioned was the old ditto machines I used to love being the teachers helper smelling the ink and filling the warm papers right off the machine…….
@verak66 Жыл бұрын
Purple ditto ink got all over your hands, too
@Adogslife54 Жыл бұрын
Mimeograph.
@Icarus-81 Жыл бұрын
carbon copy haha@@Adogslife54
@bridgetmccracken1381 Жыл бұрын
I miss each and every one of these! Life didn't zip by, people were not in such a hurry. What I wouldn't give to go back!
@thecatatemyhomework Жыл бұрын
And people weren't nearly as crazy as they are now
@frankrizzo4460 Жыл бұрын
Yes me too, we were blessed to have experienced those days. I definitely would go back in a heartbeat.🤔
@elid3906 Жыл бұрын
WELCOME TO‼️YOUR‼️ DIGITAL PRISON⏰
@daveogarf Жыл бұрын
*@bridgetmccracken1381* - I second this!
@toddb2537 Жыл бұрын
I agree with you 100%. Would love to go back. Life was so much more enjoyable then for sure!
@allenatkins2263 Жыл бұрын
Imagine what Frank Costanza's collection of TV Guides is worth now!
@danklein8587 Жыл бұрын
The post office and stores at one time had postage stamp vending machines.
@garyfrancis6193 Жыл бұрын
Barney Fife refused to use them.
@richardharepax123 Жыл бұрын
I miss those because I didn't have to wait in line for stamps
@panatypical Жыл бұрын
@@garyfrancis6193 😄
@AbandonedMines11 Жыл бұрын
Out here in California, you can buy a postage stamp or multiple postage stamps at any 7-Eleven convenience store just by asking the cashier.
@davidmitchell6873 Жыл бұрын
Barney Fife was a man of principle.
@glennso47 Жыл бұрын
Phone booths were essential for Superman.
@ashextraordinaire Жыл бұрын
We still use fax and rolodex in the law office! Believe it or not, some clerk's offices don't accept documents via email, and a well-maintained rolodex is the easiest way for everybody in the office to have access to the same set of contacts. Funny how some of these objects still have their niches.
@kevinkent6351 Жыл бұрын
It’s crazy that some govt agencies require a fax for requests. Imagine these people running healthcare.
@jaystewart8757 Жыл бұрын
How about Wordperfect?
@lindasmith7875 Жыл бұрын
Haven't used my FAX in years (my neighbor use to come over & have me fax insurance claims for her). I still have & use my rolodex
@washkoskat Жыл бұрын
I had to contact the IRS and we can never get each other on the phone and there was no way to email her so I said faxes back and forth this was in 2021 and the IRS is still using fax machines to communicate I finally did get the person on the phone and she turned out to be quite nice but it was so silly that I had to fax things and wait for the confirmation and hope to God she got it
@Sacto1654 Жыл бұрын
Fax machines are still common in eastern Asia, because it's not easy to type out correspondence on a computer when you have thousands of characters to deal with in Chinese and Japanese.
@jsusna1972 Жыл бұрын
As for carbon paper, if I'm not mistaken, when we send someone an email and ":cc" someone, that refers to the old way of sending someone a "carbon copy." When actual paper was used, a piece of carbon paper (or sometimes more than one) was used to make a copy of the original document.
@richdorak1547 Жыл бұрын
c.c. is correct . Just explained that very concept to my 39 year old daughter last week . Ha ! She had no idea about this .
@jsusna19729 ай бұрын
@@zephyrcalm9717 I don't know if there was a blind carbon copy option in the old days. Good point. That hadn't occurred to me.
@mariongordon41999 ай бұрын
Typing any correspondence you’d use one piece of carbon paper between the original sheet and a second sheet, with the second sheet being your file copy. If your letter was going to Person A and you wanted Person B to get a copy of it, you’d add another piece of carbon paper and another sheet of paper. If Person B’s copy is going WITH Person A’s knowledge, you’d add a notation such as “cc: Person B” at the bottom of the letter. Everyone knows what’s going on. If Person B’s copy is going WITHOUT Person A’s knowledge, you wouldn’t add any notation when typing the original letter. When it was finished, you’d take the whole lot out of the typewriter, then put just Person B’s copy and the file copy back in. Now you add “bcc: Person B”. Thus Person B knows that they got the copy without Person A’s knowledge. And in both cases the notation is on the file copy.
@cgimovieman Жыл бұрын
I honestly miss all of these things. Seems like many of them the internet killed off, but having grown up throughout all of 80’s and 90’s, I was around to see both ways be the norm. Yes, the ways today are much more convenient overall. But I miss the world being more of a physical and tangible place with things like in this video. To me those things made it more interesting and colorful. Not just “in the ether” so to speak.
@davidmitchell6873 Жыл бұрын
Perfect comment. I have seen many changes in my 56 years, some things are better and some worse.
@thihal123 Жыл бұрын
Michael, you’re so right about the physicality of things. For example, going to the local video store was a common Friday activity and marked the beginning of a restful weekend. It was fun to browse through the collections and plan part of the weekend. That is gone. Now you just create a playlist and it’s not special.
@cgimovieman Жыл бұрын
@@thihal123 Agreed. Could tapes or discs at your local video store be out, or damaged when you got them? Yes. But you were out interacting with people. And you didn’t always have instant gratification if something was out that you wanted. When you did find it back in, it was more of a treat. Today we just sort of expect to have whatever we want, whenever we want it. And I admit, I’ve gotten used to that myself, from streaming content to Amazon deliveries sometimes within the same day you order them. But things feel a little less special today to me than they used to.
@Mike1064ab Жыл бұрын
The internet is a disease. It’s amazing how once it’s gone and run it’s course how quickly all this stuff will come back. :)
@cgimovieman Жыл бұрын
@@Mike1064ab The internet is not a “disease”. In the grand scheme of things for human existence though it’s still just a baby. The same even more so with social media. We just haven’t yet learned how to use it like adults on so many levels, control what’s out there, or understand some of its psychological implications. It may have temporarily caused us to lose our way in terms of some physicality, but it’s completely opened up the world to so many people, and has the potential to be an even more powerful and legitimate learning tool once we can filter out the fallacies from the truths. Sure at times I miss the simplicity of when I was growing up without it. But just the same I sure wish I had had it as a resource growing up. Using a 10-20 year old set of dated encyclopedias or old school books as opposed to say current accurate scientific knowledge? Or having online access to things like the National Archives, Smithsonian, Louvre, or even government court reports? I’ll take online resources any day.
@valeries7524 Жыл бұрын
I miss the phone number you could call for time and temperature. And alerting your parents to pick you up at the library by calling home collect and them refusing the call so it was free!
@Tom-ok2rh Жыл бұрын
You sneaky little devil…😀😀
@susanbender2953 Жыл бұрын
As a little kid I remember sitting on the phone book as a booster chair at the dining room table. In Chicago the phone books were VERY thick.
@pamelabrown7204 Жыл бұрын
I remember that; I also remember my West Virginian mother-in-law laughing at the very idea. Her "big" phone book was barely as thick as the Detroit Free Press Sunday edition. 😁. Thanks for the fun reminder!
@RegularSlice1 Жыл бұрын
my sister was 5'0" and drove a 69 Dodge Charger back in the day. She used a phone book to sit on so she could see over the dashboard. Not sure if it was a Brooklyn or Manhattan phone book....LoL
@gailmrutland6508 Жыл бұрын
*LOL! I got such a kick out of this. I remember as a kid on vacation on Lake Sebec in Maine, the town of Bowerbank ( population 17) two spinster sisters were the post office, town clerk, tax collector , Magistrate and phone switchboard operators. Our cabin on the lake had a hand crank wall phone, our phone number was "7". Those were the days.*
@joyfulsongstress3238 Жыл бұрын
I miss public telephones. If someone doesn't have a cell phone, or is in an area without service and needs to make a call urgently, public telephones including payphones are a literal godsend. Imagine being trapped somewhere with no car, no bus service, nobody else around and its -20C or colder outside!
@climeaware4814 Жыл бұрын
That is why you need to wear clothing that can withstand that cold! always plan your trips eliminate your single point of failure.
@FelisTerras Жыл бұрын
I agree; especially when in remote areas, where there are no cell phone towers, a payphone would be literally lifesaving. Or imagine you get robbed. Making an emergency call via a phone booth costed nothing(where I live). Some places still have emergency phones, clearly signaled as such, but they too keep on disappearing
@cattysplat Жыл бұрын
Since everyone carries cell phones now, you could always ask someone. Especially since most calls are cheap/free now.
@joyfulsongstress3238 Жыл бұрын
@@cattysplat Not everyone carries cell phones. Not everyone can afford them. Cell phones and cell service where I am are very expensive. It can happen quite easily that there is simply nobody around when you really need to use a phone. Seriously, would you let a random stranger in a slightly sketchy area of town use your cell phone?
@j.andrewk.327 Жыл бұрын
A crazy location for pay phones was on the platforms in the NYC subway system. The noise was incredible. Those old ones had separate slots for different coins.
@kaykiekid Жыл бұрын
When I was a kid, I couldn't wait for the new fall TV guide schedule. Looking for the new shows and reading the latest in news about what is next up for television and programming. 😊❤️
@kevinhanz4894 Жыл бұрын
One thing that I miss from the past are pin-ball machines.
@hyena131 Жыл бұрын
@Kevin Hanz Pinball machines are alive and well at the myriad old time amusement arcades throughout the country.
@bobsmoth-iv3sp Жыл бұрын
tilt
@Savage3OO6 Жыл бұрын
There's a pinball machine at my family's favorite restaurant. Ironically, it's "Back to the Future" themed. My kids (7 & 9) love it. It makes me happy to see them playing it.
@peterbell8019 Жыл бұрын
Next time you're in Vegas, go to the Pinball Hall of Fame.
@Workdove Жыл бұрын
Yes and video arcades too
@kb1kos Жыл бұрын
A Yellow Pages phone book was delivered to me in late 2022. Within 5 minutes, I found a listing for a business that closed 5 years ago. A restaurant opened there 4 years ago and is not listed there. That book landed in the recycle bin immediately.
@zyxw2000 Жыл бұрын
But the online listings are inaccurate even more commonly.
@ralphholiman7401 Жыл бұрын
I'm 65 and I remember all these things. I took typing in the 10th grade, and when computers came, that turned out to be the best skill I ever acquired from high school.
@heidibonjour Жыл бұрын
My dad said to me in grade 9, why are you taking typing? You will never be a secretary! And then just a decade later when we had those first Macintosh computers, he said, you were smart to learn to type!! LOL
@heidibonjour Жыл бұрын
@@susanfaulkner2304 I was a late computer adopter myself, but use youtube a lot to trouble shoot the numerous problems I encounter so I don't have to ask others for help all the time! :)
@kingfunk9336 Жыл бұрын
I'm 76 and I took typing in 9th grade. It's served me well all my life.
@GoldAndSilver988 Жыл бұрын
I'm 59. Lol, I took typing in the 10th grade also. The typing skill I learned in that class has actually stayed with me all these years, as I've probably typed 10 million words since. My teacher's name was Mrs. Wadsworth. Every time she wanted to test our speed, she'd have us place our fingers on the correct keys and then she'd say, "Alright students. Eyes on copy." Then she'd tell us to start. I also remember that dangerous paper cutter at the side of the room. We'd use it whenever we needed to turn in a smaller sheet of paper. I'm surprised no kid ever chopped a finger off using that thing.
@josephhaddakin70959 ай бұрын
I'm 59 also & took typing in 10th grade. I worked on Computers in the 80s & was glad I learned to type. The class had 2 electric typewriters & the rest were manuals.
@Maki-00 Жыл бұрын
I stayed in a hostel a few years ago and they had a repurposed cigarette machine that sold toiletries for people staying there. It was so cool!
@tooldog5062 Жыл бұрын
in the 70s a few states if you knew where to look had vending machines that sold pot nothing great every label different yet in reality you were paying 50-100 for the name and maybe $5 for the weed!
@epowell4211 Жыл бұрын
that's awesome! They were so much cooler looking than regular vending machines - guess because they never got updated after the 60s lol
@jenniferburchill3658 Жыл бұрын
I once saw a cigarette vending machine repurposed to sell mini works of art!
@tooldog5062 Жыл бұрын
@@jenniferburchill3658 back in 73 cigs were .60 a pack and a carton was $3-$5.00 depending on where you were, went the lawsuits started is when the jacked the prices, so instead of the manufacturers paying up to this day the smokers are the ones actually paying for the lawsuits! as for the manufacturers they haven't paid out one blood covered penny, yet they profit each time a pack is bought, before i quit 30 years ago i was a 4 pkg aday smoker, i knew a distributor who would give me box's of outdated brands most of which were stale but smoke able, that is until i found out he was a thief and i turned him in,
@jenniferburchill3658 Жыл бұрын
@@tooldog5062 FOUR packs a day????? DAMN! 🤯
@FromSagansStardust Жыл бұрын
As a cashier in a mall in the '70s all through college, one thing I do NOT miss is the credit card imprinter. If you didn't get the 3-part charge slip in there just right and really lean into it pushing the roller bar across, the slip would get all wadded up/folded/torn! I could check out 10 cash customers in the time it took to run 1 or 2 charge sales.
@just-dl Жыл бұрын
I burned through a pack of those damn things, just to practice. My boss though it was a good idea. His boss…not so understanding….
@globalfamily8172 Жыл бұрын
Nah, it was easy.
@RKingis Жыл бұрын
Knuckle knockers!!!!!!
@jerryleroy9187 Жыл бұрын
The local gas station down the street still uses the old credit card imprinter. The gas boy and owner is about 80 years old. He asks if you want your oil checked every time and he always washes your window. It almost brings a tear to my eye when I visit. This old man is one of the last vestiges of a bygone era. I give him my business when I can. And I always tip.
@Vagabond_Etranger Жыл бұрын
We still use those in the Air Force in the 90's. Whenever any organization requested fuel, they would pay with their organization CC. If it didn't imprint thru all the 3 papers, I just keep going back n forth until everything is embossed.
@bruce8808 Жыл бұрын
Things I miss are taking a date to a Drive In movie like back in 70s & 80s. The walk in phone booths that were at every grocery store or shopping center complex. I also remember cigarette vending machines in bowling alleys. Rotary Telephones.
@ReallifeBambiDeerattheFarm111 ай бұрын
I still use a rotary phone. Got a yellow one on the wall in the Kitchen, and the other in my computer room. Both work great! They still have cigarette vending machines in casinos, but they look like a regular vending machine so not as cool as a old timey one.
@giovannivelasquez4592 Жыл бұрын
Just wanted to say thank u for having this channel cus it brings me so many memories ❤
@footballlvnlady Жыл бұрын
I used all the office stuff…typewriter, carbon paper, Rolodex, fax machine etc. Used many vending machines and jukeboxes in the past. I was walking through my granddaughters high school a couple years ago. Their vending machines that once had soda in are now all Gatorade, bottled water, Powerade and vitamin water.
@samanthab1923 Жыл бұрын
That last job I worked had a huge office supply closet. I hated having to buy scissors or Post its the first time years later.
@Nitephall Жыл бұрын
And energy drinks, which are just as unhealthy as soda.
@redred222 Жыл бұрын
@@Nitephall those are not energy drinks there sports drinks energy drinks have a lot of caffeine in them sports drinks have no caffeine in them
@johnmadow5331 Жыл бұрын
I remember in 1940 the government used Remington Manual Typewriter to type desecration of War! In 1993 my ex-employer in Waltham, MA use IBM-Selected II to type a laid off notice for long term employee!
@martiniangoldberg Жыл бұрын
@@johnmadow5331 desecration or declaration of war? 😉
@MrEnoBeano Жыл бұрын
I am 70 years old so I remember using shoe polish to shine my shoes. Can’t remember the last time I did that.
@samanthab1923 Жыл бұрын
Growing up my dad had a wooden shoe shine kit. Loved watching him take care of his shoes.
@shiroibasketshoes9 ай бұрын
Boys on street corners and in train stations and airports used to chirp, "Shine Your Shoes, Mister?" The "shoeshine boys" of yore.
@aeray35814 ай бұрын
I just shined my shoes last week!
@jujubee2141 Жыл бұрын
I miss drive-in movie theaters. They were fun and you could go with the whole family.
@grandpavan8335 Жыл бұрын
I worked at one in the 70's. The indoor concession stand was very bright, and all the stoned people would be squinting and grinning as they ordered their treats. It was SO obvious and funny!
@user-nd3tg5zn1b Жыл бұрын
Yes, but you would probably get robbed at a drive in these days 😢
@jameshazen16798 ай бұрын
I live in a small East central Illinois community and we have a twin screen dive -in, they play first run movie, digital, with 2 separate FM 's for the sound. Have been busy for years!
@just-dl Жыл бұрын
I miss them all. I miss the world I grew up in. It was safer, saner and seems to me a lot happier.
@jamesp13152 Жыл бұрын
I was born in 1962. It was a much better place growing up then. It's gotten so bad, I tell people, I'm happy I'm getting old. That's sad.
@notjimpickens7928 Жыл бұрын
@@jamesp13152 my dad was born in 69 and said he hated growing up during that time due to the all the terrorist attacks,bank robberies, plane hijackings, and constant mass poisonings in toys due to lead paint, im not sure how it was ever "Safer".
@jamesp13152 Жыл бұрын
@@notjimpickens7928 Things like what are happening right now in Nashville didn't happen growing up. at least 3 grade school children dead! Buildings weren't hit by jets killing thousands in an instant. Never had to worry about being shot going to school. Believe what you want, I know. Your Daddy is delusional.
@princybella6 Жыл бұрын
@@notjimpickens7928 I was born in 1963 and I didn't experience any of that where I live it was a lot safer then
@jeffbrown2982 Жыл бұрын
@@notjimpickens7928 When I grew up in the '60s, I don't recall ever having to be instructed in grade school about what to do if someone started firing an AK-47 on the playground.
@gdownz1044 Жыл бұрын
I loved using the old indoor wooden phone booths with the chair inside. The light and fan would go on when you closed the door. It's been at least 30 years or more since I've seen one. 📞
@Demy1970 Жыл бұрын
Man I forgot about them they were so private
@bethclark9319 Жыл бұрын
Those where my favorites.
@shelbynamels973 Жыл бұрын
@@Demy1970 They needed to be, for Superman to change in and out of his costume.
@mr.b3168 Жыл бұрын
Saw these in my early life. I feel the world changed the most for millennials. Everything went from being physical to digital by the time I got out of high school. Those before me was all physical. Those after me is all digital. I was the inbetween.
@GeneralChangFromDanang Жыл бұрын
I'll agree with that. I was born in the mid 80's and it seemed like the mid 2000's got to be a really confusing time. I had just finished school in a world that barely knew the internet and then all of a sudden, everything was online. I just stopped trying to keep up with it.
@chrism3784 Жыл бұрын
@@GeneralChangFromDanang me to, 1984, we saw the physical to digital change the most
@ledhed5717 Жыл бұрын
I am not so sure about that, to me Gen X are the ones who saw the most change. I was a kid in the 1970’s (born in ‘72), teenager in the 80’s and young adult through the 90’s. We saw a TON of changes- video games, home computers, using old rotary phones to digital to the first bag phone and Motorola 8000 “cell” phones, the list goes on and on. We not only remember them but we used a lot of analogs before the digitals. I was sophomore and taking typing but my Junior year we had “office of the future” with Apple Macintosh computers. Bare bones cars with manual everything and 8 track to cassette players if you were lucky to CD players in cars and all electric windows and door locks by the time I graduated high school. You sound like an early Millennial so yes we have both lived through some incredible times and changes.
@Betobilletes Жыл бұрын
I was born in 2000. I’m gen Z. The first 8 years of my life there wasn’t that much technology. There was but not as exaggerated as now. But now that I’m 23 everything is technology it’s crazy.
@Tokamak3.1415 Жыл бұрын
@@ledhed5717 I would agree. Us Gen Xers saw a lot of things that were non digital go full digital. I don't remember 8 tracks but I certainly bought vinyl records and cassettes, then CDs, then converted my CDs to MP3s stored on my computer, and now everything is streamed. I remember my parents paying with credit card and the carbon paper and now I see people walking out of Amazon Fresh stores without having to use a checkout isle. The biggest single change is the internet though. My parents bought me a World Book encyclopedia set in the mid 80s. I lived through the online BBS days, AOL, Netscape browser vs IE war, and now the current dumpster fire that is social media. I can see it in my own kids that the Gen Z don't have a concept of patience when a 3 second wait for Google to populate your search results is "tedious". I don't long for the days of having to walk or drive to the library, check out a book and look up info to learn something vs watching a 5 min KZbin video about how to apply thermal paste to a CPU, but the kids of today really won't have any idea of previous life unless we have a significant CME (solar flare). I've lived without electricity for weeks at a time so I know what my parents went through.
@lynettenasseri753 Жыл бұрын
I miss cameras that used film, dropping the film rolls off to be developed at a store and picking up the photos. It was fun to look forward to seeing the photos. Was special.
@eendagepic Жыл бұрын
True but it wasn't that much fun when you needed a photo you had just taken for an event and then either had to waste the rest of the film or wait for another two years for the film to be full before you'd have it.
@earthhippie Жыл бұрын
The Dry Dock bar in Algiers, Louisiana had a cigarette vending machine around 2006. I used to go and get cigarettes before I was old enough to buy them at a store. The barkeep never questioned me. I just walked in and straight to the machine. I would quickly be in and out. It was a few bucks more in the machine than in the store but not having to beg someone to pick me up a pack was well worth it.
@wizardmix Жыл бұрын
I feel like the 50 years span between the mid 40s and into the mid 90s, the general way the world was navigable changed very little. Certainly social issues and values have evolved greatly in that span but the technology we relied on to get through it was fairly constant. Newspapers were just as valid in 1945 as they were in 1995. Radio, TV and Movies evolved but how we participated in those medias remained constant. Phonebooks, libraries and encyclopedias were still the primary way people got their information. Film photography changed very little. Pay phones evolved but we still needed them, very few people had portable phones . Born in the late 70s, I think I'll be the last generation to make into adulthood who will remember how that world worked and the first generation to readily embrace the big shift we're all a part of today. My childhood was much closer to my parent's childhood than it was to those born a decade or two after me. If I live a while yet, I'll be one of the last living generations to have had a first-hand account of it all. I'm someone comforted to know that if all the technology stopped working, I'd know how to function in the world that came before it. Having those instincts have helped me more than hurt me I'd say.
@paulteller8383 Жыл бұрын
Agreed. Everything changed when computers became commonplace, then the internet.
@billybassman21 Жыл бұрын
Gen X and Millennials questioned all the norms and started changing them when we had the power to do so. It was so frustrating trying to explain to Boomers and the silent generation that there were better ways to do things. Look how Boomer Steve Jobs was treated when he was fired from his own company. They were okay with the status quo. Computers and smartphones were the game changers, but early on boomers were trying to incorporate outdated ideology. Things really started to change in the 2000s when Gen X got in power. You think a Boomer would ever offer a street view of almost every street in the world for free?!?
@wizardmix Жыл бұрын
@@billybassman21I personally view it less of a generational divide and more of a natural evolution in technology. I wouldn't presume to blame a generation. That's too broad a judgement for me to make. Regardless of generation, there are always individuals that are more progressive than others but no individual is without their flaws. I'd offer the perspective that street view is the illusion of free. Street view and google maps in general is subsidized by the businesses to benefit from its existence and the data that we feed back to it is sold/used as a very lucrative commodity. I'd offer the perspective that all technologies evolve from earlier more familiar forms. The first steam ships looked like (and were) hybridized sailing vessels. The first automobiles were built like horse carriages (a form better suited to the dirt roads of the time). The first personal computers resembled digital typewriters. When a friend's father first showed me Mapquest in 1996 (what became google maps) all I knew prior to that moment was paper maps. Mapquest looked just a digital paper map. That evolved into point by point directions you could print out. Then we had various portable GPS devices. Then those devices migrated to our phones and our phones would talk to us and now they're just systems we take for granted. I'd offer the perspective that in 1996 fast internet was 56KB/second where one low resolution porn picture (yeah I said it) took 20 seconds or more to pop up on a screen. Just as highways needed to be built for those horseless carriages to resemble modern automobiles, "highways" of infrastructure, processing power, bandwidth, servers, hardware and software needed to be built to support the reality that is google maps today. I apologize that this is getting to be a long diatribe on my part but I'd conclude with this: While generations are not all one thing, I have lived long enough to know that there can be an overall mindset, a vibration in each point in time. In the world right now there feels to be this (often desperate) search, this need for purity but the truth is oh so messy. I believe that we're more puritanical now than ever but here is no immaculate conception. Many of us would like to (rightly) plug our ears and sing loudly rather than hear the truth about our heroes; the truth of who our real innovators were and how we got here - present GenX innovators included. What troubles me greatly is that rather than weighing the good from the bad and taking a really sober look at it all, being able to recognize the good from the not so good, there seems to be this need to segment everything into 1s and 0s because the ugly nuances are unpleasant and take too much time to sift through. I personally live for nuance and find them fascinating. The little ironies and paradoxes of our existence are and will forever be amazing to me.
@Argonaut121 Жыл бұрын
I beg to differ. I was born in the early 50s. I think about the changes that occurred in the 50 years leading to say, 1970, and those that had happened in the 50+ years since. Sure computers and the internet have been massive changes, but what about: rock music, talking and color movies, TV (B&W, then color), air travel, jeans, freeways, shopping malls, space travel, fast food restaurants, nuclear power and nuclear weapons, recreational drugs, the rise and fall of global communism, the widespread acceptance of premarital sex? All of that took place from my parents generation to mine.
@wizardmix Жыл бұрын
@@Argonaut121 To make my point more clear, I'm not speaking to the way values and pop culture changed in that 50 years span, nor am I speaking about any politics or social revolutions. I'm speaking to the consistency and familiarity of the technology that allowed us to get through our day to day. I maintain that if someone from 1945 were transported 50 years into the future, they would certainly marvel at all the social changes, value changes, fashions (or lack of), differences and subtle advancements that took place BUT the way they navigated that world would largely remain familiar and understandable. In fact, I'd argue with all the sci-fi radio shows and films that a person consumed by 1945, someone from 1945 would be probably disappointed in 1995. Substance to back my rational: In 1995 your main source of information would still be centralized to newspapers, radio and television (which would replace newsreels). TV was a rich man's toy in 1945 but it certainly existed and millions knew it existed from the several worlds fairs that took place in the late 30s. You're right in that color TV wouldn't be invented for another 7 years but that was hardly a paradigm shift. We still went to the movies in 1995 much as we did in 1945. The first color film was in 1902. The first movie with sound was The Jazz Singer in 1927, the first movie with color and sound was Snow White in 1937. If you wanted to learn about anything, you still went to a library in 1995. Books were still the best resource for information in 1995. Right up into my high school years, most of my education was from textbooks, film strips, projectors and overhead projectors. Certainly TVs came into the mix but again, that's hardly a paradigm shift. Computers were present but at that time, they functioned most commonly as word processors and rudimentary electronic encyclopedias. The bulk of how I was educated and expected to perform resembled the way my parents and grandparents were educated. If you wanted to find something or someone in 1995, the most reliable source was still a phonebook. Going to a store or a large department store or a shopping plaza was still the most common way to shop in 1995. Mail order and phone order catalogs were still the way people shopped from home in 1945 and 1995. You could dial an operator in 1995 the same way you could in 1945. If you needed to contact someone while traveling, pay phones were still the most common option in 1995. The first marketable car phone was invented in 1946 incidentally. A person from 1945 would have little problem driving/using any automobile built in 1995 and all the similar features would be there. The basic technology changed very little in 50 years. High speed long distance roads would have just began (Pasadena Freeway, 1939 /Pennsylvania Turnpike 1940). Trains, busses and taxis would be very similar as would the way you called for them or bought tickets. The jet age started in the late 1930s, the first Jet airliner debuted in 1946 but the concept of air travel would have been very similar as would have the methods of acquiring airline tickets. Fast food was optimized in the 50s and 60s but it certainly wasn't a foreign concept in 1945. By then drive-in and drive-up restaurants were common as were automats and diners. With the exception of MTV which was a short-lived visual extension of the radio DJ, we heard and consumed music much in 1995 as was done in 1945. Certainly the technology improved but the concept would not be foreign to someone from 1945. Jukeboxes were still popular in 1995 and well after. People have been using drugs recreationally since before written history. Cannabis, cocaine, heroine, morphine and of course psychedelics all existed in 1945 and well before though it's true, the mass value change they caused didn't occur until the 50s and 60s, but again, that's not my point. Bluejeans were invented in 1873 and were certainly present in 1945. The first nuclear reactor was invented in 1942 and the whole world certainly knew about nuclear weapons by 1945 seeing as the US detonated two of them over two different Japanese cities that year. The idea of a space rocket began with the German V2 in 1942. I will certainly concede that space travel and more importantly, the communications satellite would bring significant advancements that would not be present or understood in 1945. Computers existed in 1945, it's how the British cracked the German codes but I will concede the supercomputers would have been 3 decades off. That said, the application of information that I am using this very minute to communicate back to you took hold after 1995. Bring someone from the 40s into the early to mid 90s, they'd be entering a world they could function in. Bring them into 2010, only 15 years later and things start to become very confusing.
@gmpny3945 Жыл бұрын
These items brought back alot of good memories. Some of them came and went just in my lifetime.
@coloradostrong Жыл бұрын
_Alot_ is a town in India. _A lot_ is more than one of something; multiples of.
@johnfish1194 Жыл бұрын
I miss the old (in line) coke machine that you had to pull a bottle out of a hole. Very retro, and very cool, you never see them anywhere.
@janetclaxton21710 ай бұрын
Coke in a glass bottle taste much better than Coke in a can.
@essaboselin5252 Жыл бұрын
The decline of the $2 bill had zero to do with digital currency. Cash drawers didn't have a spot for them, so businesses did not like to receive them. Some down right refused to accept them, despite it being illegal to do so. There was no way to redesign the cash drawer to fit another bill without having to build new cash registers.
@johnp139 Жыл бұрын
The only way that could have been fixed would have been to eliminate $1 bills and make dollar coins. Then also eliminate pennies.
@ablemagawitch Жыл бұрын
@@johnp139 they got rid of half pennies, the 1 cent penny days are numbered but the USA's tax racket of percentages that the decimals matter as the cost goes up means we'll still have the coins, even though a penny barely has any copper in it. Even then it still costs more than it is worth.
@JustMe99999 Жыл бұрын
@@johnp139 There are dollar coins...
@RottenRogerDM Жыл бұрын
ha. $1, $2, $5, $10, $20. With the $50 or higher being under the drawer. Once the $2 bill went out style the $2 slot was used by what was most convenient for the location.
@ablemagawitch Жыл бұрын
@@RottenRogerDM "ha. $1, $2, $5, $10, $20. With the $50 or higher being under the drawer. Once the $2 bill went out style the $2 slot was used by what was most convenient for the location." Usually Paper Checks, and those carbon Charge Slips.
@jeremyhodge6216 Жыл бұрын
I miss the Phone Booths, the Juke Box and the Phone Books a lot 😔
@NinjaZXRR Жыл бұрын
Cops still use phone books for confessions
@ant-1382 Жыл бұрын
Remember when there was a little personal juke box in every diner booth. You could have your lunch and listen to your favorite song for a nickel.
@Icarus-81 Жыл бұрын
Phone book delivery trucks.
@AbandonedMines11 Жыл бұрын
Full-service gas stations are obsolete! I remember as late as 1986 or so pulling into a gas station and telling the attendant to fill up the tank. Then you would simply hand them the money through the window, and they would provide change if needed. Sometimes they would even lift the hood and check your oil and other essential components for you for free. Or even clean your windshield!
@Jeff-uj8xi Жыл бұрын
We still have full-service gas stations in New Jersey.
@johnyoung9874 Жыл бұрын
. Isn't it against the law to pump your own gas in NJ ?
@williejaster6 ай бұрын
@@johnyoung9874 Also in Oregon.
@edl6398 Жыл бұрын
I just remember the cigarettes in vending machines often being stale but I remember the feeling of pulling the knob and hearing the sound.
@jec1ny Жыл бұрын
This brought back a lot of memories. Incredibly many of the things you covered that were once so commonplace are now considered collectible. Even phone books!
@redred222 Жыл бұрын
they are wrong about vending machines even in my small town there is four places that have them and you go to big towns they are all over, in fact there are a lot of small business owners that own them and make extra money off them
@deedoyle4069 Жыл бұрын
I still miss the phone books !!!
@cujoedaman Жыл бұрын
Phone books were getting so big around the early 2000's that they were nearly the size of a couple of encyclopedia's. Now they're barely the size of a magazine IF they're still out there. We still get one about once a year now, I just don't understand why they waste the money. I guess some people just can't let go.
@stevenlitvintchouk3131 Жыл бұрын
Thanks!
@sharhune2735 Жыл бұрын
You know why the candy vending machines had a mirror on the front? So you could see the look on your face when the candy didn't come out.
@brodriguez11000 Жыл бұрын
Ah the days of rocking the machine.
@thaddeusmcgrath Жыл бұрын
When the snack vending machine took your money you lean it forward to get what you paid for and maybe a few extra for the next customer. You only took what you paid for, all else was the price unpaid that accidently fell for the failures of dispensing what is owed.
@jamesweaver9494 Жыл бұрын
I think of the days when I bugged my parents for change $$ to play those great tunes back in the late 70's and early 80's.... more often it seems these days. I thank God my mom is still here to reminisce about those days with me 😊🙏
@dairyair5371 Жыл бұрын
My older sister would buy a forty five every Saturday for a dollar. She had quite the collection.
@JuSdObEfReE Жыл бұрын
As a kid in the 70's and 80's, saw the transition from black and white tv to color, the cellphone, the personal computer, and in highschool in the 90's the birth of the internet. A huge jump from being born in 76 to today.
@aakar88 Жыл бұрын
Yeah, but todays kids will see robots taking over most jobs, will see AI thinking for all, will have a leisurely, no work life, will be able to continue life with replacement parts and most importantly will see their TV sets replaced with hologram theaters and will finally meet beings from other planets. All energy requirements will be met with personal nuclear devices and cars will drive for themselves And there will be no Democrats or Republicans only intelligent AI's to control us and make us happy (@ least until they decide we are a virus) and finally get rid of us to save the planet
@robertschmidt9296 Жыл бұрын
Even bigger jump from 61
@robertklund8931 Жыл бұрын
I remember reading Dick Tracy where he wore a wrist watch that had live audio and video features.… similar to today's smart phones and Apple watches.
@williamwilson6499 Жыл бұрын
TV went color before the 70s. Your family may have a black and white set, but the only shows in B&W were reruns.
@aakar88 Жыл бұрын
@@williamwilson6499 Correct, black and white would be what you had if you didn’t have a color set. LOL! Impressive knowledge!
@19Ter67 Жыл бұрын
This was great! So many items I remember and/or used. The younger generation has no clue what this meant to us older people who remember.
@Lenioogami Жыл бұрын
There are still pay phones in hawaii
@KKEM641 Жыл бұрын
One very important one you missed, were things found in the library. The card file, microfilm, microfiche, and even the large selection of books. The last time I went to my local library, it had less than half of the books that it used to have. Even the little pencils and scrap paper to write down the books number are nolonger provided. Another is paper maps.
@KyraWS Жыл бұрын
Stamp with roll dates. A library I used to go have one
@Blendeture Жыл бұрын
Ah yes, the microfiche. And I remember being about 6 and learning the Dewey decimal system. Then the next year being told something to the effect of, "Okay forget all of that. Here are these computer terminals to search everything now."
@retnavybrat Жыл бұрын
@@KyraWS I worked at a community college library a few years ago and it used one of those to stamp the due dates.
@SmartDave60 Жыл бұрын
Paper maps is a good one. I was a pizza delivery guy before GPS.
@KKEM641 Жыл бұрын
@David Harper, as was I. I remember having a big book (that I had put together) of all of the apartment complexes. As for maps, we had a wall map of the delivery area, but most of the time I went by address and knew my area.
@mikehughes4969 Жыл бұрын
Cigarette machines were the illicit underage smokers best resource when I was a teenager. I also was required by my parents to have a pocketful of change for the phone before I left the house. I can't remember how many times my Mom would ask if I had enough change for the phone.
@josebro352 Жыл бұрын
Yes! I remember that. I quit smoking a long time ago but when I was a teenager in the 80s I bought my first pack of cigarettes out of a vending machine. It was in the doorway of a bar which was across the street from the roller rink. I remember putting the quarters in and grabbing the cigarettes as soon as they fell out and then running out the door. I was terrified someone saw me. LOL. I think I was twelve or thirteen at the time. I remember all my friends over at the rink were like 'oh cool how did you get the cigarettes?' LOL. It was fun being a kid in the 80s. Everything seemed more relaxed and chill. People actually did things together instead of online. I miss riding my BMX bike, roller skating, climbing trees, and all of that. Better times for sure.
@elid3906 Жыл бұрын
I Remember them too, As Teens we just bought our smokes from the corner store no problem 😁👍🏼
@dennishough3709 Жыл бұрын
@@josebro352 I graduated in 81’ good times!!
@samanthab1923 Жыл бұрын
A pack of Marlboro Lights cost $15 a pack. Imagine all the change you would need 😆
@theotakux5959 Жыл бұрын
I remember my parents used to take me to some club in town when I was a kid. There were sometimes other kids to play with, but usually I ended up reading or playing with toys I brought with me. But one thing I remember about the place is it had a cigarette vending machine right by the entrance. Can't remember if I ever used a payphone, though. I turned 16 in 2003, and my family replaced our landline with cell phones the previous fall, so by the time I was old enough to drive, I had a cell phone.
@jessep6330 Жыл бұрын
Small town living provides most of these "lost/forgotten" items fairly easily. Some places are so isolated that getting rid of these items would actually make things more difficult than modernizing everything.
@Daehawk Жыл бұрын
I miss pay phones. They were part of the best times in my life.
@johnerwin9024 Жыл бұрын
Smart phones now unfortunately a real necessity ✔
@paulsolfelt8452 Жыл бұрын
The old quarter on a string worked great on those old phones but there was a easy way to get free local calls without them as well,lol ! The quarter was required for long distance!
@musicnerd72 Жыл бұрын
I remember every one of these! Rockola still makes jukeboxes in California. I bought one of their 7" vinyl players a couple years ago. 👍
@brodriguez11000 Жыл бұрын
Funny thing vinyl is making a comeback.
@DUCKDUCKGOISMUCHBETTER Жыл бұрын
Vinyl records are again outselling, and providing more dollar volume than CDs.
@ManicEightBall Жыл бұрын
Notice how the phone book only shows 7 digits for the numbers. You didn't have to dial the area code if a number was in your area code, and for some states, that could be the entire state.
@Rockhound6165 Жыл бұрын
Up until the late 90's, NJ had 2 area codes: 609(south) and 201(north). By the time I moved to Arizona(1998) 856(south/south) and 732(middle of the state) were implemented. When I lived in Tucson, AZ 90% of the state was 520 with Phoenix being 602.
@N_Georgia_Trout Жыл бұрын
Back in the day, the first two numbers were often designated by letters (and names) as well. 774 was referred to as PRescott 4.
@azwizeguy Жыл бұрын
In AZ You have to dial the area code to call next door
@Rockhound6165 Жыл бұрын
@@azwizeguy same in Jersey.
@satoshinigamoto1608 Жыл бұрын
@@N_Georgia_Trout I always thought that was a sitcom thing to prevent from using real phone numbers. On Seinfeld, he said his phone number was like Klondike 5 or something. Weird how much things change.
@aztekspirit Жыл бұрын
It's amazing to see how practically all of these obsolete objects have been condensed into one little cell phone...
@larrybe2900 Жыл бұрын
And then some others to boot.
@nickm5419 Жыл бұрын
not if you dont have one ;)
@ianstuart5660 Жыл бұрын
Yep, the list is very long!
@jb-qi8fz10 ай бұрын
And most peoples brains condensed into a Thimble.
@Saboteur7099 ай бұрын
It's kinda why Radio Shack went out of business.
@marlysmith7 Жыл бұрын
Ahhh, memories. I was waiting to see the library card catalog, too.
@tron3entertainment Жыл бұрын
Remember NCR paper? It was "carbonless" carbon paper. A receipt was printed with each sheet of having a pressure sensitive chemical, usually blue. Writing on it left an image on the bottom sheet. Pretty cool stuff back in the day!
@daffers2345 Жыл бұрын
Some places still use that, but rarely. I worked for a bit at a print shop where we printed things on them for a business. You had to set the digital press to print on the special paper and load it in the drawer.
@hughjass1044 Жыл бұрын
I remember all of these well. I always liked to get my mother's cigarettes (35 cents!) out of the vending machine or a bottle of soda (10 cents!) out of the old chest freezer style vending machines.
@Goldengrammy3366 Жыл бұрын
Yes and now cigarettes are $10 for a pack😱 and soda Pop $2 & 3 for a bottle. Lawd have mercy 🤣 the good Old days. I would love to go back for just one day.
@eddieboggs8306 Жыл бұрын
Remember when soft drinks were as powerful as moonshine? Not to get drunk but so powerful you could only take 3 swallows befor stopping to let your mouth stop burning?
@hughjass1044 Жыл бұрын
@@eddieboggs8306 You bet! Back home, we had two private soda companies who made their own flavors and formulas. One was famous for orange, the other for lime and each one had a real kick to them.
@2catsonboat Жыл бұрын
You were using silver coins. A silver dime is about $2.50, a silver quarter is about $6.50 - today. The pack of thirty-five cent cigarettes in today's silver coins is about nine dollars. The ten cent Coke is $2.50 in silver coins. Inflation is not prices going up, it's the fiat paper debt notes losing value. Silver is money.
@picklerix6162 Жыл бұрын
Most candy bars were 10 cents when I was 7 years old. I was excited when I found a machine that sold candy for 5 cents.
@warp9p659 Жыл бұрын
I still have an electric typewriter in my office and use it occasionally to fill out paper forms and documents. It looks better than writing by hand, and it's fast and easy.
@craiglittle7367 Жыл бұрын
If only I knew back then that those days would be the good old days.
@josebro352 Жыл бұрын
Me too Craig. I remember being twelve and skating at the roller rink with my friends and thinking wow when I grow up it's gonna be so awesome!! The world is gonna be so cool like something out of Star Wars or The Jetsons. Little did I know how bad it would be and how I'd be longing to return to those times.
@brodriguez11000 Жыл бұрын
This channel is good at making us feel our ages.
@craiglittle7367 Жыл бұрын
@@josebro352 Those days were better in almost every way.
@Gaia_Gaistar Жыл бұрын
The past is a home you can never return to.
@panatypical Жыл бұрын
@@Gaia_Gaistar Ain't that the truth.
@BearInTheWoods931 Жыл бұрын
Fax machines are often combined into office and home printers, but they are far from obsolete. They are commonly used for medical and insurance documents.
@lucianprescott8357 Жыл бұрын
Correct Mr. Bear. Especially in the Legal field and Real Estate fields. They still require a “faxed” copy of many documents. Software can be altered and is often not recognized by the courts. Purchase a piece of real estate in one state and you live in another…you better have a fax machine nearby because you’ll be faxing bank documents and signatures quite a bit.
@davinp Жыл бұрын
true, some offices still use fax machines. We now have MFD or Multi-factor devices which are printer, fax and scan all in one device
@onefatstratcat Жыл бұрын
I have an old fax machine sitting up on a bookshelf..lol
@nanabutner Жыл бұрын
I USE MY FAX MACHINE EVERY SINGLE TIME I HAVE TO SEND PAPERWORK TO MY BANK!
@RedSiegfried Жыл бұрын
As someone who works in IT, I wish all FAX machines would be rounded up and systematically destroyed. I love old technology, but FAX is just one of those pieces of tech that has been replaced by better stuff and literally has no benefits over the new stuff.
@ShawnRavenfire Жыл бұрын
I was just talking about this stuff the other day. A few other things we don't see anymore: Ashtrays in restaurants, pocket pagers, black chalkboards, television antennas, fallout shelters, arcades, and mail drop-off boxes on every corner.
@robertschmidt9296 Жыл бұрын
Ah yes, television antennas. Made out of clothes hangers.
@dairyair5371 Жыл бұрын
@@robertschmidt9296 Sometimes tin foil added to boost reception.
@domenicv7962 Жыл бұрын
fallout shelters.....coming back for sure.
@BoratWanksta Жыл бұрын
Don't forget matchbooks with a restaurant or bar's name, on it. There are a few rare restaurants/bars that still have matchbooks, like Gale Street Inn in Chicago.
@KingCobbones Жыл бұрын
I still have "rabbit ears" for each of my TVs.
@patricialong2803 Жыл бұрын
Oh how i would love to go back into time of the 70s and 80s the good ole days.😢
@thegrays3303 Жыл бұрын
What I really miss from that time with the '80s arcades in the malls. A pocketful of quarters would go a long way back then in the arcade.
@montaguewithnail637211 ай бұрын
Little did we realize that the "good ole days" of Thatcher and Reagan were actually good. How things have changed for the worse.
@joeheid2776 Жыл бұрын
I had thought 2 dollar bills were only printed in 1976 as part of the bicentennial. Guess I was wrong. Anybody remember the Susan B Anthony dollar coins? They were far to often mistaken for quarters.
@samanthab1923 Жыл бұрын
As kids growing up we would come down every morning to $2 bills for our lunch money. My dad worked at the Meadowlands race track so had access to plenty of them. Susan B Anthony & Sacagawea dollars were both small & off color.
@jeank5410 Жыл бұрын
I remember the Susan B Anthony coins - they never caught on I guess. Anyone remember the Kennedy half dollar coins? I found a bunch when cleaning out my parents house and I guess there are lots of other people who have some laying around.
@ablemagawitch Жыл бұрын
THE USA's Mint has spent 100's of millionns of dollars trying to get Americans to accept and use $1 coins to save on replacements costs. They keep trying release a new design, o many failed $1 coins over the years, at least 1 every decade. Each cost costing us taxpayers millions in design of the coin, making the special special dies to produce the abominations, , to only fail and have to destroy all the coins. They also have to destroy all the minting equipment less than 2-3 years old that cans several 10's of millions . Because no bank wants them, as customers don't want the shitty $1 coins that are difficult to use, stores don't want them as customers don't want them as change. When someone gets screwed into having one, they have hard time getting any business to accept it as legal tender. So the only way to get rid(use is too nice of word for these crap product that keeps trying to get forced on us) yourself of possession of these $1 coins often to dump into a tip jar and/or leave on table for the service industry folk. Who try in vain to get someone to take this worthless coin, as most machines that you insert change into won't recognize them. The USA Government have failed so bad launching the $1 coins that not even their own Post Office stamp vending machines would accept them. When the Government won't take their crap new currency, no private industry is going to spend 100's of millions to retrofit machines for them. If they did it before, they learned to wait out at least 5 years, so they don't get burned. Only some dweebs at the USA mint who has hard one for $1 coins and numismatologist (money collectors) want these, the later just getting them for their limited time in currency and the bank has uncirculated examples they'll gladly give them in exchange of real money.. The USA MInt can and does make special USA mint runs of "Legal Tender" coins that the value is more in the special coin. Every time you hear of new $1 dollar coin know we just ate 10+ million is boondoogle failed pork project from government. What good could 10, 15 20+ million have done elsewhere. The old 50 cent coins at least served a real purpose.
@timsmith2525 Жыл бұрын
@@jeank5410 I completely forgot about Kennedy half dollars! They were rare, but I still saw some from time to time when I was a kid. How about Eisenhower dollars?
@joeheid2776 Жыл бұрын
@@samanthab1923 Meadowlands in PA?
@beckymigdal3140 Жыл бұрын
I miss phone books. I like to see all the businesses for a certain category all at once.
@ieast007 Жыл бұрын
I remember when looking for pizza delivery, there would be like 10 pages of pizza place ads.
@blueduck9409 Жыл бұрын
Phone books were great for looking at local dining options in remote areas where cell phone reception might be less than good.
@epowell4211 Жыл бұрын
seeing them in alphabetical order instead of who is paying most for advertising was great, and sometimes there were even coupons in the book
@nuttybar9 Жыл бұрын
We still receive them where I live.
@trilbywilby7826 Жыл бұрын
Me too. I hate that you can only see as far as the edge of whatever screen you're on.
@JWTX Жыл бұрын
How well I remember, some wonderful memories of days gone by, never to be again. Sad but true. Thanks for the trip back in time. More simple times i.may add....... Jeff
@luvnalaska44 Жыл бұрын
These videos really bring to light the vast amount of change that has happened just in the last 60 years. It’s astonishing.
@frankmenchaca9993 Жыл бұрын
In large towns and cities a corner newsstand was a place you could get out of town news papers and magazines. The people that ran them were out in all weathers pretty much from before dawn and into the evening. They often developed a bond with their customers.
@j.s.matlock1456 Жыл бұрын
Thanks so much for making me feel positively ancient.
@Manuel-gv6qt Жыл бұрын
LOL
@hiimmisa Жыл бұрын
Being born in the 80s and 90s... we've seen so much change. Such a weird, exciting, and sad time. Miss how things were and excited for the future with technology.
@larrybe2900 Жыл бұрын
The Greatest Generation saw the most dramatic change to everyday life that any generation ever will. They were born as horses were being replaced by automobiles and an average life would see a man on the moon. An execptional life would afford one the opportunity to use a cell phone and the introduction of the computer age among the masses.