Shopping at a mall in 1983

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Vampire Robot

Vampire Robot

7 ай бұрын

It's ladies' night out (kind of) at a busy local mall in upstate New York sometime in July.
But what will they buy?
Something radical for sure, but let's go to the video and find out just in case:
Shots of customers buying the latest fashions and employee processing transactions in what can only be a machine from the future.
Also, a fun ride down the escalators at the Bloomingdale's department store.
This video last around 10 minutes.
#bloomingdales
#christiandior
#bigbrownbag

Пікірлер: 2 400
@TMoody
@TMoody 7 ай бұрын
I never would have dreamed in a thousand years that I would rather be watching this than ANYTHING on TV here in 2023.
@vampirerobot
@vampirerobot 7 ай бұрын
🤣🤣🤣
@pmafterdark
@pmafterdark 7 ай бұрын
I'll second that!
@Purple_Revolution99
@Purple_Revolution99 6 ай бұрын
lol
@steelionx9255
@steelionx9255 6 ай бұрын
Anything my ass! There are still some good TV shows out there.
@steelionx9255
@steelionx9255 6 ай бұрын
Anything my ass! There are still some good TV shows out there!
@FarginBastiges
@FarginBastiges 7 ай бұрын
Look at how neatly people dressed, how politely they act and speak to each other. We have lost so much.
@milfordcivic6755
@milfordcivic6755 7 ай бұрын
Trump has been a cancer
@daniellewis5474
@daniellewis5474 7 ай бұрын
Thank racist Republicans for that
@Mark-yy2py
@Mark-yy2py 6 ай бұрын
@@daniellewis5474they are not the ones who love those who shoplift without impunity. Seems those who think like you are the problem as to why we have gone to the crapper.
@sunnyd4125
@sunnyd4125 6 ай бұрын
And how modestly women dressed compared to today.
@ItalicusHammer
@ItalicusHammer 6 ай бұрын
​@@daniellewis5474no weirdo they were all Reaganites back then and no normal person talked politics like the snowflake leftwing nutjobs. you are completely detached from reality and you are your own goofy dishonest strawman. typical liberal evil loving traitors to humanity. republicants are not great but anything is better than wacko looney space cadet narcissist fake race heroes liek you. 🤮
@evolunacy2
@evolunacy2 6 ай бұрын
1. Let’s consciously divest from Amazon. 2. Let’s put our phones away. 3. Let’s wear something nice. 4. Let’s cultivate an attitude of cheerfulness, despite our circumstances. 5. Let’s take our time and stop rushing ourselves and others. 6. Let’s get together with friends and family, while overlooking differences. 7. Let’s turn off divisive media. 8. Let’s give others the benefit of the doubt. 9. Let’s delete TikTok. 10. Let’s use our energy to set positive intentions for a better society/pray. 11. Let’s insist that businesses turn down intrusive music so we can hear ourselves think/converse with others. Any others?
@togek1ss
@togek1ss 6 ай бұрын
what do you count as divisive media? :0 (i've noticed ive been in a better mood since i stopped watching the news for anything but weather updates/world changing actually important news)
@rocsvidrock
@rocsvidrock 5 ай бұрын
C'mon man
@I_Fight_Instacart
@I_Fight_Instacart 2 ай бұрын
We could just move to Russia, which seems to be having a renaissance. They still have some values over there.
@salemdesigns65
@salemdesigns65 Ай бұрын
I do all this already!!! Hell, I still get dressed up, full makeup, flying somewhere! Haha..
@daysjours
@daysjours 21 күн бұрын
I like #11 -- the music is so that you do not think and just act like a mindless robot. There is actual science to this -- consultants advise businesses. The louder the music the more you seek relief in SPENDING
@chrisrcarraher8800
@chrisrcarraher8800 6 ай бұрын
The sound of those cash registers printing out the receipts are so satisfying for some reason.
@shawnaburns5158
@shawnaburns5158 5 ай бұрын
Yes they definitely are❤ would love to find one to own today and put it in my living room!!
@sosomelodies659
@sosomelodies659 2 ай бұрын
These registers are actually more hi-tech than what I was use to seeing in my town mall. I remember them pressing and sliding a carbon copy receipt for credit card purchases. LOL
@eyeseer1
@eyeseer1 2 ай бұрын
Nostalgia is awesome
@PraveenSriram
@PraveenSriram Ай бұрын
@@eyeseer1nostalgia is definitely awesome 👏
@r3tr0actiongamer24
@r3tr0actiongamer24 Ай бұрын
It's satisfying because you miss your childhood and this reminds you of it genius
@deaconbluezzz
@deaconbluezzz 7 ай бұрын
Seeing any group of people where you don't have 70% of them staring mindlessly at their phones is utterly heartwarming.
@ColtraneTaylor
@ColtraneTaylor 7 ай бұрын
Mindless shopping is so Buddhist and awesome.
@LostinMIA
@LostinMIA 7 ай бұрын
That was when people actually looked forward to socializing face to face. If I didn't answer the phone when you called me I wasn't home.
@cinderellacomplex7
@cinderellacomplex7 7 ай бұрын
Funny because people like you all say the exact same thing in these kinds of videos. Maybe y'all are the ones that are mindless.
@rollitupmars
@rollitupmars 7 ай бұрын
Do you even go to the malls anymore? No one does this wtf
@MrLyosea
@MrLyosea 7 ай бұрын
@@GremmPaltakin I never use "smart"phones. I only type from my computer and that's it. I find smartphones annoying and very distracting to the world around people.
@thefoxdoctor1072
@thefoxdoctor1072 7 ай бұрын
The 80's was such an awesome era!
@bobwreck3775
@bobwreck3775 7 ай бұрын
Much better than the 90's/
@user-ex5fx5jj7z
@user-ex5fx5jj7z 7 ай бұрын
@@bobwreck3775No, the 90’s were way better. Then murika ruined the world with 9/11.
@heathermanning5368
@heathermanning5368 7 ай бұрын
I remember working retail in the late 80’s where you had to manually enter in bar codes and stamp the charge cards and everything was gobs of paperwork! Lol! It was a pain in the neck but times were a lot more easier and people were more kind than people today!
@das4819
@das4819 7 ай бұрын
True 80s❤
@mark3464
@mark3464 7 ай бұрын
No lol
@toddforhetz
@toddforhetz 6 ай бұрын
I MISS Mall Shopping in the 80's ! It was a simpler time, less stress, and kinder people. I actually, got tears in my eyes watching this and remembering.... WHAT has happened to our world
@tammyscott3706
@tammyscott3706 6 ай бұрын
And God being removed from our schools and country in general. It's how the devil worked his way in and we can all see the destruction caused by Satan! We need GOD back and we need Trump back!!
@MikeAnthony1969
@MikeAnthony1969 6 ай бұрын
Please don't cry
@pegstervegas
@pegstervegas 6 ай бұрын
Same here😢
@kris78787
@kris78787 6 ай бұрын
@@tammyscott3706 best comment!
@lisakay1006
@lisakay1006 6 ай бұрын
I was 14 and back people gave eye contact and smiled!! But….. Now it’s all about divided us.
@elleo1864
@elleo1864 6 ай бұрын
I'm in my 50s now, was a teen in the '80s. Seeing this reminds me of how people dressed better back then to go shopping than they do now to go to a wedding or funeral. Man times have changed, in so many ways. And sadly not for the better.
@MorningMary67
@MorningMary67 7 ай бұрын
how many people want to go back to 1983? I was 16! Awesome times indeed!!!💕
@gardendormouse6479
@gardendormouse6479 6 ай бұрын
I'm about your age. I'd go back in a heartbeat, only not with the acne, LOL.
@MorningMary67
@MorningMary67 6 ай бұрын
It was so much fun to hang out at the mall. Everyone was so much happier back then and we all seemed to get along. @@jackdotblue
@michelle-zd2nc
@michelle-zd2nc 6 ай бұрын
Sure. I was still in the womb, growing. Then finally in 1984, I arrived.🥳🎂🎈. ..So proud of our generation.
@gardendormouse6479
@gardendormouse6479 6 ай бұрын
​@@michelle-zd2nc I remember when the millennials like yourself were being born. The media called it "the new baby boom". I was an unimpressed teen🙃. OK, people are having babies, who cares??
@nvs4u2
@nvs4u2 6 ай бұрын
I’m your age, would love to go back to those awesome times! We all would have our whole lives ahead of us again.
@Inaworldoflove
@Inaworldoflove 7 ай бұрын
Notice how much better people looked on average? Thinner, groomed hair, well dressed. These days some people really don't care how they look. It's like going to the movies, people used to dress up, guys would even wear a tie if it's a date night. Now people wear flip flops, put their feet all over the chair in front of them, it's like society has gone downhill. I guess in the 80s there was still that cultural thing from yesteryear where you actually make an effort.
@martina21953
@martina21953 Ай бұрын
Being really overweight in those days was unusual.
@scarlettyoungyt
@scarlettyoungyt Ай бұрын
people care so much about how they are perceived what do you mean? i’d say on an obsessive level nowadays
@michaelanthony508
@michaelanthony508 6 ай бұрын
Everyone is respectfully dressed. No one is wearing their pajamas & slippers.
@mattjones1378
@mattjones1378 6 ай бұрын
No one wearing those ugly slide slippers with socks
@ATLKing404
@ATLKing404 6 ай бұрын
Fashion changes and so do its arbitrary and subjective "rules"
@ellemjay
@ellemjay 5 ай бұрын
I think some of the women must have gone to the mall after work. I was a teenager in the 1980s and i dont remember anyone putting on dresses and pantyhose just to do shopping.
@omgjimmyboy
@omgjimmyboy 5 ай бұрын
No one wearing crocs
@songbirdy
@songbirdy 2 ай бұрын
​@@ellemjayI was 26 in 83 and I remember it just the opposite from you. We did dress nicely to go shopping, or to go anywhere publicly for that matter.
@hellodolly9879
@hellodolly9879 6 ай бұрын
What an eye opener. Born in 1960. So grateful to have grown up in more civilized times.
@Alleynetaylor
@Alleynetaylor Ай бұрын
I was born in the same year. So, so grateful.
@justme8837
@justme8837 Ай бұрын
me too, I wouldn't trade it for anything. I was born in 64.
@user-uo7fw5bo1o
@user-uo7fw5bo1o Ай бұрын
Same here, same year. I actually had time and money to keep in top physical shape which means I looked good in clothes and in a classic speedo swimsuit! 😊
@PraveenSriram
@PraveenSriram Ай бұрын
My mom was born in 1960 and I was born in October 1983 as an older millennial
@concernedcitizen6572
@concernedcitizen6572 Ай бұрын
Exatly the 1960s when certain skin colors couldnt vote. Certainly more civilized times. 😅😂
@benjammin7700
@benjammin7700 7 ай бұрын
Checkout was much slower then. But you don't see people getting impatient. It was just part of the shopping experience.
@mark3464
@mark3464 7 ай бұрын
People were just as impatient back then
@FreeportHometown
@FreeportHometown 7 ай бұрын
@@mark3464Yeah, nobody’s gonna act up when some guy is filming them.
@kaleendavis8427
@kaleendavis8427 7 ай бұрын
@@FreeportHometown you're wrong. You have no clue how those people in the video ( that you don't even know) are reacting to said situation. What an ignorant observation.
@kaleendavis8427
@kaleendavis8427 7 ай бұрын
@@mark3464 no , they most certainly were not. With the onset of more n more technology, the masses have become increasingly more impatient over time. And anyways, how would you know ? You seem to make comments on these posts just to be combative instead of thinking first.
@mark3464
@mark3464 7 ай бұрын
@@kaleendavis8427 what? It’s all relative. I was alive in the 80s. Just as impatient as now except everyone smoked then.
@DarkandTwisted
@DarkandTwisted 7 ай бұрын
It is crazy that this is actually more entertaining than movies and tv shows out today. 😍Where is my popcorn!🍿😂
@RapFanatic4ever
@RapFanatic4ever 7 ай бұрын
Sooooo true
@elliecherise1968
@elliecherise1968 6 ай бұрын
Watch Supernatural it's was pretty good, but at the last season they throw in an okay character that's a lesbian and/or disabled to be woke. The show is like the masculine version of the OG Charmed. Can you imagine them trying to make the OG Charmed a masculine show. Sigh! Or making the Cosby show white. They have to sell or the TV shows lose market share.
@ausis6214
@ausis6214 6 ай бұрын
@@elliecherise1968 "woke" a word that's lost all meaning.
@brooklynjames8124
@brooklynjames8124 6 ай бұрын
@@elliecherise1968 Yeah the woke mess is out of control and has ruined so many tv shows and movies. Look what happened in June.
@whosjonny8714
@whosjonny8714 6 ай бұрын
@@ausis6214 Nothing to see here, just a gay dude pissed at the word woke.
@micawheeler6907
@micawheeler6907 6 ай бұрын
The 80s. What a time to be alive! Take me back!! 😭❤
@YoYoMa23
@YoYoMa23 5 ай бұрын
The lack of majority obesity is stunning. STUNNING.
@user-xz4wp4vp1y
@user-xz4wp4vp1y 17 күн бұрын
Stunning x2
@danc1197
@danc1197 7 ай бұрын
The 80s were the best decade ever for malls, and arcades. What a time to be a high schooler. Class of 85 and loved every minute if it.
@a-a-ron9571
@a-a-ron9571 7 ай бұрын
would’ve loved to see what life was like then! i happened to be born in 2001 lol, good thing is i can always talk to tons of elders n ask all the questions ab the 80s 🤘🏽
@gardendormouse6479
@gardendormouse6479 6 ай бұрын
​@@a-a-ron9571I wouldn't trade my 80s youth and young adulthood for anything. I consider myself blessed😊. Even though I'm middle-aged now, LOL. Sometimes I think that some young people - anyone under 25 - don't appreciate all the technological miracles we have today. For me, sometimes it's like living in a sci-fi movie, no kidding.
@markbrower3543
@markbrower3543 6 ай бұрын
Class of 85 also, so many great memories!
@Whateva67
@Whateva67 6 ай бұрын
We used to go to the arcades at lunch time in high school,pockets full of quarters and always late getting back to class☺️
@jphwife
@jphwife 6 ай бұрын
Class of ‘84 here and I agree, it was a wonderful time to come of age.
@Crankerny58
@Crankerny58 7 ай бұрын
Life was so much different and enjoyable before social media!!
@serekithegreat
@serekithegreat 6 ай бұрын
I really miss that decade. I honestly feel like I live on another planet and that I was alive a thousand years ago somewhere else.
@notofthisworld5267
@notofthisworld5267 6 ай бұрын
Me too. This isn't my world anymore...ppl today aren't all there if ya know what I mean.
@I_Fight_Instacart
@I_Fight_Instacart 2 ай бұрын
There was no _🏳️‍🌈_ it was much safer for children
@cc967
@cc967 2 ай бұрын
I was 24 in 1983 and this brings back so many good memories. Everyone was so much more mannerly and civilized.
@UnitedStatesOfCoffee
@UnitedStatesOfCoffee 7 ай бұрын
I miss when people were normal. There was no second, sub-universe in everyone’s pockets.
@AdmiralBison
@AdmiralBison 6 ай бұрын
the irony is not lost that you're mentioning this on a social platform and possibly on a phone?
@LLS710
@LLS710 6 ай бұрын
Now it's like everyone is double agents; just waiting to film your humiliating demise from public life (supposedly).
@seekingtruth1110
@seekingtruth1110 6 ай бұрын
@@AdmiralBison this is a good thing about it. We get to watch what once was. There is good to many things and also bad.
@lastcall170
@lastcall170 6 ай бұрын
But theres a difference when you dont have to walk...shop....eat....sleep next to your phone. Maybe you missed the whole point. ​@AdmiralBison
@AdmiralBison
@AdmiralBison 6 ай бұрын
@@lastcall170 what point? All I see is nostalgia and rose-tinted glasses when it comes to things in the past.
@BionicAnimations
@BionicAnimations 7 ай бұрын
No face tattoos, bright-colored hair only if you were punk, no piercings all over the face. Everyone dressed respectfully, no one on their phones ignoring the world around them. There were no mall shootings, no school shootings, and the music was great. No one was arguing or fighting, and the food was great - no worries about gluten issues from eating it. Times were so good back then. I had such a great '80s childhood.
@briankelley7918
@briankelley7918 7 ай бұрын
I don't see any Mallrats
@josebro352
@josebro352 6 ай бұрын
​@@briankelley7918that was the 90s. LOL. Kevin Smith film 😂
@briankelley7918
@briankelley7918 6 ай бұрын
@@josebro352 there were always mall rats. I was a mall rat in the mid 80s Seeing all the chicks with the Madonna look. Just saying that brings me back
@TC-tw5zk
@TC-tw5zk 6 ай бұрын
Also no flashmobs that's stealing everything not chained up
@gardendormouse6479
@gardendormouse6479 6 ай бұрын
I was a teenager, then young adult during the 1980s. I'm sorry for the people who didn't get to experience it. The 80s weren't perfect, but pop culture was slot better then, I think. People's standards were higher.
@nancy9478
@nancy9478 6 ай бұрын
This was the year before I got married. People had social skills, manners and spending money. We dressed nicely, ate better, had no cell phones to look for items, we actually shopped and if a chain store had no stock, they transferred in the item from another location. Salespeople were available. Its nice to remember when woman had class!
@Benice337
@Benice337 6 ай бұрын
That was the year I married too 😊. I sure miss those times!
@johnsmith-ug5tp
@johnsmith-ug5tp 6 ай бұрын
Yes the contrast of how women dress and act today and comparing it to back then is sickening and disturbing. Guys like me dressed nicely too and took pride in our appearance. We didn't look like bums and slobs that just crawled out of a goodwill box the night before. Back then, maybe 1 out of 500 young women were s**ts. Now it's 499 out of 500. Back then, Women had class, self respect and took pride in their appearance and acted like a lady and expected to be treated like a lady. I tell the young guys this all the time when they tell me how these young women behave these days.
@nancy9478
@nancy9478 6 ай бұрын
@@johnsmith-ug5tp I agree. The world has changed.
@nancy9478
@nancy9478 6 ай бұрын
@@Benice337 me too.
@ATLKing404
@ATLKing404 6 ай бұрын
@@johnsmith-ug5tp You can say the exact same thing about men
@scubachix4215
@scubachix4215 6 ай бұрын
This is my era and why I still dress up just to shop. I was taught to present your best in public and that has never left me. Also, you know this camera man stood out filming back then Finally, apparently the cashiers had much more to do in those days!
@pacificrules
@pacificrules 7 ай бұрын
I was 8yrs old in 1983. That year was the best Halloween trick-or-treating, haunted house, and scary movie night with friends/siblings EVER. It was the best feeling of a "kids being kids."❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
@ArcherHHS
@ArcherHHS 7 ай бұрын
What were you for Halloween? What scary movies did y'all watch do you remember?
@user-ex5fx5jj7z
@user-ex5fx5jj7z 7 ай бұрын
You don’t even remember 😂😂😂
@bardo0007
@bardo0007 7 ай бұрын
@@ArcherHHS Friday the 13th was a really scary movie I+II+III1980-1984
@heatherronan
@heatherronan 7 ай бұрын
I was eight in 1983 too and I agree that it was a great year. 1983-1986 were the best years for everything. Holidays, school, music, clothes, toys, movies etc. The 80s were the best time to be a kid.
@craigusselman546
@craigusselman546 7 ай бұрын
I was 3 then but I remember 1983 what a nostalgic slice this is
@borderlineguitarguy
@borderlineguitarguy 7 ай бұрын
Remember Layaway plans? I recall going with my mom to Sears to make a layaway payment each month. They also had a ticketmaster office located in there to buy concert tickets.
@Lulusvideos1
@Lulusvideos1 6 ай бұрын
We did too. The Sears on Olympic Blvd in LA was within walking distance from our home and we spent al lot of time there. My mom always put stuff on layaway, we went every payday to make a payment. It was always so exciting when we made the last payment and could bring our items home.
@avalondreaming1433
@avalondreaming1433 6 ай бұрын
And now Sears is gone! It lasted over 100 years and we killed it.
@lorraineb.4698
@lorraineb.4698 6 ай бұрын
Clearly summer shopping.
@tomodonovan5931
@tomodonovan5931 6 ай бұрын
You mentioned the ticket master office, and I worked at a retail store that had one in the early 80s. I went to work where I had to open our store. I arrived to see a small group of teens waiting. The more the time passed, the more the kids were showing up. I noticed they had Black Sabbath tee-shirts, and quickly figured out that they were there for concert tickets. The Black Sabbath, BOC show, or if you can remember, the Black and Blue tour. Mostly males, and looking to buy that extra ticket for a girl, or maybe a friend to go with. By the time the store was to open, there were at least a couple hundred kids. The venue was in another city, because the city I lived in was still pretty small to hold a major concert event. I put the key to lower the all glass door, and it was at least a good seventy feet long, and 12 feet high. It was hydraulic, and lowered into the ground. Once I turned the key, the kids pressed forward, and when there was space, started to climb over the wall as it was lowering. I immediately stopped the key, and shouted hold it!!. I told the kids, who were also my age, that I was not lowering the door until everyone climbed back down. Lucky for me they did so. I then proceeded to lower the door again until it was fully down. I then said go for it, and the race was on to get to the ticket office four floors above. Never saw anything like that in my life. It was a very dangerous event, and I always felt security should have been watching that door. They were trained better, and someone could have been crushed by that door, or ran over trying to get upstairs. Of course the store would get sued if that would have happened. That is a lot of responsibility for someone who was severely underpaid, and those who were trained and paid more were drinking coffee somewhere in the security office. But,that is how they did things.
@tomodonovan5931
@tomodonovan5931 6 ай бұрын
@@avalondreaming1433 But how? Technology? Human error? Economics?
@markdegrange6445
@markdegrange6445 6 ай бұрын
I’m 57 and I must say the 80s were the best years of my life. Our society still had morals and people weren’t glued to their phones. It was ok to say hello to a stranger !
@tstahler5420
@tstahler5420 5 ай бұрын
I'm 58, let's not go crazy. 😂 We weren't saints.
@lasondriawyatt2267
@lasondriawyatt2267 5 ай бұрын
Even with the crack era.... The crack heads even had morals.
@moisesperez4605
@moisesperez4605 5 ай бұрын
You’re right, I’m about your age, maybe a bit older than you, I graduated high school and 79
@miggans21012
@miggans21012 2 ай бұрын
​@@tstahler5420I was going to say the same thing. I hate when people try to make the 70s and 80s like the 50s.
@AvocadoRoyalty
@AvocadoRoyalty 6 ай бұрын
I must admit I have a tear in my eye watching this because I really miss the 80’s
@Free_Samples
@Free_Samples 7 ай бұрын
Can we please go back to these times 😞
@valfletcher9285
@valfletcher9285 7 ай бұрын
in dreams
@thingserik7269
@thingserik7269 7 ай бұрын
Crack cocaine and AIDS?
@MaxZomboni
@MaxZomboni 7 ай бұрын
​@@thingserik7269 I think in 1983 most people didn't know what crack was. Most people had probably heard of AIDS, but it was not something an average person worried much about. Those were developing problems, but we didn't know how much of a problem. The 1980s was a good time. Especially the first half of the decade.
@FreeportHometown
@FreeportHometown 7 ай бұрын
@@MaxZomboniyeah, all of the people who didn’t worry about it died in the late 80s-early 90s.
@MaxZomboni
@MaxZomboni 7 ай бұрын
@@FreeportHometown Yes, but we are not talking about late 80s-early 90s. We are talking about 1983. No AIDS deaths were recorded in 1983. Also the vast majority of people who didn't worry about it, didn't die. Like 99.99999999999999999%
@davidgoodman6924
@davidgoodman6924 7 ай бұрын
I was a teenager in 83 stomping around these Malls, you gave us a portal to relive these great times Vampire Robot! Thank you!! 👍
@bxpress6507
@bxpress6507 7 ай бұрын
Best part about malls of this Era is the REAL game rooms they had🥳🥳🥳pinballs and arcades..classic..nostalgic in todays world..was a different place when you were a teenager like I was back then😎
@I_Fight_Instacart
@I_Fight_Instacart 2 ай бұрын
We all must pass through the Gloomy Portal
@loribollinger2457
@loribollinger2457 6 ай бұрын
I graduated in 1983, now being 58 and lived thru several decades,it was a different time and I am fond of it,people from this time cannot understand ,yes life is more modern now,but less freedoms,different attitudes,being PC,seeing the escalators ,how everyone dressed,there behavior and communication,most were not overweight,l wish I could go back just for a short time to re live this decade .Thank you for posting this ❤️
@liesbethrobison
@liesbethrobison 6 ай бұрын
Me too. Class of 83😊
@tammyscott3706
@tammyscott3706 6 ай бұрын
Class of 83 as well and agree with everything you said! Simpler times, nicer people!! Our country really has lost a lot when you compare today to back then. Wish we had a time capsule! Miss it very much!!
@pegstervegas
@pegstervegas 6 ай бұрын
Class of 82 and thinking the same as you!
@kris78787
@kris78787 6 ай бұрын
Class of 99 here and I agree with you totally even the 90s was better than now
@1teamski
@1teamski 6 ай бұрын
Boy, I miss those days! Great music, great movies, great malls with great arcades and no social media!
@JF-co8wj
@JF-co8wj 7 ай бұрын
Look at all these civilized people, well dressed, actually working, having conversations with one another. In 1997 I worked at Lord & Taylor, it was just like this video. Miss these times.
@jennifer7330
@jennifer7330 7 ай бұрын
Remember when Lord and Taylor had no registers..you had to add up the purchases on a pad and actually count the money owed back to them with no calculator..😂😂 can you even imagine that now 😂😂 Some people can't even count to 20 😂😂
@heathermanning5368
@heathermanning5368 7 ай бұрын
@@jennifer7330Lol! So true!
@josebro352
@josebro352 6 ай бұрын
​@@veganhigler6541"Nothing comes closer to home." 😂
@josebro352
@josebro352 6 ай бұрын
@@veganhigler6541 No that was the song from the 90s commercial remember?
@josebro352
@josebro352 6 ай бұрын
Stouffer's Nothing Comes Closer To Home 1993 / William Thompson kzbin.info/www/bejne/pJ7QomyFi79nkKc
@landmarkcreations1183
@landmarkcreations1183 7 ай бұрын
I was only 1 in 1983. That being said it’s strange to think most the folks in this video are either in their 60’s-80’s now if they are still living. Enjoy everyday. Life goes by fast
@AntipodianMusic
@AntipodianMusic 7 ай бұрын
I was 20 in 1983. After 20 your life skips by so fast. So yeah live every minute.
@jamesrecknor6752
@jamesrecknor6752 6 ай бұрын
Forty years just vanished @@AntipodianMusic
@franceslarsen4037
@franceslarsen4037 6 ай бұрын
I was 21 in 1983 (turned 22 in October) I remember everything clearly:). It doesn't seem that far back....
@gardendormouse6479
@gardendormouse6479 6 ай бұрын
That's exactly what I was thinking - how many of these people have since passed on. In one sense, I know it was a long time ago, 40 years. But, in another way, it seems like it was just yesterday😢
@danielthrasher7052
@danielthrasher7052 6 ай бұрын
Yes sir I was 16 back in 1983 now nocking on 57 boy the time just flys doint it.🤠
@marilyn6556
@marilyn6556 5 ай бұрын
I miss those days! We didn’t leave the house without hair and makeup done, and we dressed much nicer. Unfortunately, it’s hard to find decent clothing anywhere, everything is shredded like jeans. I realize from watching this that my standards have slipped, and it’s a nice reminder to step it up!
@scottworley1479
@scottworley1479 6 ай бұрын
Malls in the 80s were where all the teenagers hung out. No guns, no cell phones, just innocent fun. I met my wife at four seasons mall in Greensboro NC in March of 1986. We've been together for 37 years. We just walked around and went to Spencer gifts, the arcade, or shared some fries at McDonald's. Mostly just walked and talked to other people our age. You never knew who you were gonna see at the mall. Some of the best times of my life. We would usually catch a ride with someone and head to putt putt on the main strip, High Point road. Everyone cruised high point road. There would be bumper to bumper cars from stop light to stop light sometimes. Nothing but teens hot rods and 80s music blaring everywhere. Hanging out with my gf cruising the strip, and smooching a kiss from her on a Friday night was beautiful memories.
@cgimovieman
@cgimovieman 7 ай бұрын
Ah, before all of the headache, constant rush, and distraction of today. When people actually talked with each other, you could get high quality products, and customer service wasn’t a joke, or just handled by a recording or a bot. I was only 4 at the time of this, but I still have so many awesome memories of the mall from around 1983 to 1989.
@MrDirkles
@MrDirkles 7 ай бұрын
+1 regarding high quality products. Now it's just all shit no matter how much you pay
@robroy6374
@robroy6374 7 ай бұрын
1981 to 1989 were great years
@justagirlnamedshawn
@justagirlnamedshawn 6 ай бұрын
And if workers were rude they got fired. Now workers can be rude and it's normal, heck can barely find people to work!
@mattf.1233
@mattf.1233 7 ай бұрын
No ripped jeans,sagging pants,pink hair or tattoos. People sure dressed much better . Our standards have sure slipped in 40 years.😢
@innocente7795
@innocente7795 6 ай бұрын
The ripped jeans come about 4 or 5 years later at least for myself as I sought to look like my favorite band at the time: Def Leppard. Also take note that it’s mostly women shopping. For the most part men worked and women were wives and moms and homemakers. Great time to be a kid. I was 11 in ‘83
@sgtmomOK
@sgtmomOK 6 ай бұрын
@@innocente7795 ummmm…ripped jeans was a hippie era thing, the 60s and 70s.
@johnsmith-ug5tp
@johnsmith-ug5tp 6 ай бұрын
Started with the loser bum grunge and hiphop in 93.
@sgtmomOK
@sgtmomOK 6 ай бұрын
@@johnsmith-ug5tp Sorry. You’re late for the party. Waaay late. It started in the 60s. “Transitions Through The 60s, 70s, and 80s With the ’60s and the hippie culture, we had a new evolution, the ripped jeans stabilized their idea everywhere and became, “officially”, a status symbol. With the ’70s and the change of generations, this trend became more and more popular, especially among the younger generations. The ’80s witnessed a huge number of subcultures embracing this trend after which, its acceptance increased year after year arriving at the peak with the grunge culture at the end of the 80’s/beginning of the ’90s”.
@Earth1218
@Earth1218 6 ай бұрын
1. This was shot inside a Bloomingdale’s store in 1983. At that time they were a higher-end department store that attracted older and generally more affluent shoppers who would be more likely to dress conservatively. 2. Pink/green/purple hair, Mohawks, tattoos, ripped jeans, army jackets, combat boots, and piercings very much existed then. In the early 80’s if you were walking around malls and other public spaces (mostly in large cities), you would see young people wearing this style. They were usually called punkers from the punk rock style popularized in Western Europe in the late 70’s. Admittedly, the look was not as widespread as it is today, but it did exist along with the preps, the jocks, the geeks, etc… I was alive and well at that time. There were plenty of older people from the 50’s and 60’s griping about what “the kids were wearing” back then, as well.
@bonniedicostanzo7117
@bonniedicostanzo7117 6 ай бұрын
I was 13 years old back in 1983, and going to the mall was one of my favorite things to do. Parents didn’t need to worry so much back then. Times were different. My friends, and I would get dropped off at the mall, and stay for hours. This video brings back so many memories. Thank you
@SpongeBobfan3646
@SpongeBobfan3646 6 ай бұрын
God I miss going to the mall in the 80's and even 90's. Now I have to do all my shopping online. But the real point is that going to the mall on Saturday's with my parents and grandparents and brother was the highlight of my weekend. As a teen I lived at the bookstore or music stores. I miss those days.
@shawnaburns5158
@shawnaburns5158 5 ай бұрын
Same here,,,I can't stand going out dealing with the rap music on the store speakers people wanting to fight you for glancing at them,,,I shop online too and stay home in my made time capsule of my own
@barbrajones349
@barbrajones349 7 ай бұрын
There is a comforting familiarity in this video. I was seven years old in 1983. Going to the mall was a special treat because we didn't have one in our small town and would have to drive into the city which usually meant making a day of it. My mom loved Bloomingdales. I could picture myself following her around in there, feeling bored and trying to wait patiently for my chance to go to the toy store. Everything in this video makes me feel so happy...the clothes, the hair, the cash registers, the lack of cell phones. I love how people randomly look at the camera like "what are you doing?" lol I know the world wasn't perfect, it never has been, but the 80s was absolutely the best time to grow up.
@gardendormouse6479
@gardendormouse6479 6 ай бұрын
Yes, we didn't get an indoor mall in our town until 1991. So, going to any mall in the 80s was kind of a treat. I was a teenager in '83. The things I really liked in the mall were the record store, Radio Shack, and Spencer's Gifts. And, there was a clothing store called The Weathervane I liked.
@danielthrasher7052
@danielthrasher7052 6 ай бұрын
Noticed that to but the camers back in the day were so big you could not help but see people useing them.🤠
@shawnaburns5158
@shawnaburns5158 5 ай бұрын
Miss those registers too❤
@foreignparticle1320
@foreignparticle1320 2 ай бұрын
Same for me! It was so exciting going to the city and to the mall. I can still remember the smell of it - a unique and pleasant mingling of perfume, coffee, and new shoes. The hum and pulse of activity. Everything tangible, sensory, and immediate. It really was a communal experience. The internet and cellphones have given great things with one hand... and stripped us of great things with the other.
@c.eb.1216
@c.eb.1216 7 ай бұрын
I so want to go back in time and exchange pleasanties with these people as I buy a striped polo.
@joany11swatch14
@joany11swatch14 6 ай бұрын
Oh yes my too! A striped polo...love it ❤!
@coloradosage2682
@coloradosage2682 Ай бұрын
It's almost a supernatural notion, today.
@billmelater655
@billmelater655 6 ай бұрын
The women were awesome back then! No purple or green hair. No stupid nose rings or studs. No nipple or belly button jewelry. No hideously ugly tattoos up and down their arms and/or legs. Just natural beauty. Women, please return to those days! You were so gorgeously beautiful just being yourselves without all that extra garbage.
@wickidpissafilms
@wickidpissafilms 6 ай бұрын
Everyone is so patient and nice - these are all mostly ladies working, shopping, it's so quiet.., that one old lady in the carnival blouse on the keypad, so careful ringing it all up..that was fantastic. I love her!! 💗 I was 9 at this time in 83 And this week we were waiting in line outside of a Bradlees with Mum for a chance to get Cabbage Patch Kid for my sister - it was peaceful everyone got a ticket in line for the ammount of Cabbage Patch Kids they had in the store.
@gardendormouse6479
@gardendormouse6479 6 ай бұрын
My future husband worked for a department store during the cabbage patch craze. He thought they were ugly. He did see an elderly man snatch a cabbage patch doll out of a little girl's hands. So obnoxious.
@JennasMusic76
@JennasMusic76 7 ай бұрын
Being a child of the 70's and 80's this is so wonderful to look back on, it was in my mind the finest time to be a child, and it is bittersweet to look back on and think how many people in this video who were thriving have since passed on, time sure goes so fast, and it just shows us all to really cherish each day Thank you for sharing these amazing videos. 💖💖💖💖💖
@lisalisa13
@lisalisa13 6 ай бұрын
You took the words right out of my mouth, all of it. And I was 13 in 1983 and it definitely was the best time to grow up. My teenage son even wishes he'd grown up when I did. I just wish we had taken more pictures and videos of everyday life back then.
@gardendormouse6479
@gardendormouse6479 6 ай бұрын
​@@lisalisa13Yes, I agree about taking more pictures. I have so few from those days.
@jenniferthomas999
@jenniferthomas999 6 ай бұрын
​@@lisalisa13Born in 1970 also.
@CTladiesman
@CTladiesman Ай бұрын
Nice,this year is 9 years before I was born.
@neilgorsuch5302
@neilgorsuch5302 7 ай бұрын
lots of great style then. The clothes were really nice back in those days and more selection.
@sandratucker8917
@sandratucker8917 6 ай бұрын
Wish the world was still like this. It was the best time ever. Miss these days ❤
@nellena7777
@nellena7777 7 ай бұрын
COLOR ! COLOR EVERYWHERE!! people were not afraid of wearing something not black or neutral it made for an overall uplifting mood it seems.
@jukio02
@jukio02 7 ай бұрын
I think it's because people like keeping it simple nowadays. The past 10 years or so, the whole minimalist movement has taken place, and it emphasizes neutral colors when it comes to clothing. Having neutral or darker tone clothing also makes you look smarter, more classy, etc. Colorful clothing gives off the impression that this person is lower class, has lower intelligence, etc. This goes all the way back in the days, it's not a new thing. The 60s was the start of the rebellion age, where the norms started to break apart. That's when you started to see culture change, women started wearing pants in the 70s, teens rebelled against their parents, rock n roll, so on and so forth.
@mrs.chaffee3517
@mrs.chaffee3517 7 ай бұрын
People are far more lifeless and vibrant now then they were then. It makes sense to me that they would wear more colorful clothing then. Today even people's voices are monotone with little difference inflection. It is unfortunate that drab is the current lifestyle choice.
@mrs.chaffee3517
@mrs.chaffee3517 7 ай бұрын
Color has nothing to so with how classy a person looks. Just look at the Amish! The drab lifeless colors people wear today reflect the times we live in. The vast majority of people now being chronically depressed and morose lines up perfectly with today's style choices. @@jukio02
@nellena7777
@nellena7777 7 ай бұрын
@@mrs.chaffee3517 yes, for fear of being labeled "cringe" many are afraid to say or do anything that might stand out.
@mrs.chaffee3517
@mrs.chaffee3517 7 ай бұрын
Yep! Very little originality today. @@nellena7777
@MrJestyler
@MrJestyler 7 ай бұрын
Before Amazon and internet. Social media was called the telephone or Face to face. No smart phones. People paid with cash, credit cards or checks. Made in USA was still prevalent and stores and malls all over were thriving. Cost of things was a little higher than today but Consumer goods were made to last longer versus cheap and throwaway now. The media just reported the news not opinion. Better times Could go on ………… 😞
@billbixby7877
@billbixby7877 7 ай бұрын
Credit cards, aka bank loans were only available to upper class. Working middle class or working poor were not allowed to have Credit cards. Working middle class and working poor could only purchase items by cash or store layaway.
@daved1535
@daved1535 7 ай бұрын
My mom and Grandma had a credit card back then, and they definitely were not upper class
@matthewvoss7365
@matthewvoss7365 6 ай бұрын
The technology we have today is great. It's the philosophy of 1983 we need to bring back. Everyone wasn't offended by everything. You could fight back in self defense. We did not have school uniform requirements in public schools. Your safe space was your private bedroom. Oh yes and kids bedrooms doors had locks built into them like every other room in a fucking house and you didn't hear anyone scream "kids have too many rights!" Oh and when a kid used a phone in 1983 nobody screamed "kids under 18 should be banned from using phones."
@MrJestyler
@MrJestyler 6 ай бұрын
@@matthewvoss7365 you got that right 👍
@MyCharlestonLife
@MyCharlestonLife 5 ай бұрын
I just told someone the other day how i miss the mall at Christmas. It got you in the spirit. All the decorations & music. And back then they weren't afraid to play Christmas music and say Merry Christmas. Miss those days.
@jessezass
@jessezass 7 ай бұрын
You know you're getting old when a normal part of your youth is seen as historical footage now. I remember seeing Darth Vader at the mall in the late 70's and even Alphonso Ribeiro (Carlton from the Fresh Prince) signing autographs at Sears in the 90's. It's weird how quickly things change and for the worst. As a kid you went to the mall with your mom and sisters and sometimes your grandparents. As a teenager you went to the mall to hang out with friends, you got good-n-high, wandered around the stores and ate enough pizza in the food court to make yourself sick. Then you get in a Silly String fight and mall security kicks y'all out. Now everyone including myself sits in front of a screen reading reviews and trying to decide what's worth buying.
@tomodonovan5931
@tomodonovan5931 6 ай бұрын
The mall I worked had Ed McMahon showing up. Richard Simmons did a workout there, met him. All the security team got dressed up for him, like it was the Oscars. I was laughing. They never met him. He was snuck in under their noses. lol! His limo driver was interesting. He was an old timer who drove for Gina Lollobrigida. She was telling him to drive faster on the freeway, but in America, they have speed limits. lol! She did not know that. Best place to get high were the fire exits. Nobody used them of course. And all the phone numbers from the countless, and now faceless girls. I can't remember most of them. Just a few who I ended up dating, and breaking up with. Great to be young then. Kids today just try to grow up too fast. Stand in line at Starbucks waiting with their friends, or mom while they spend dad's money. Nothing has changed! Except what you said about screens, and reading reviews.
@jessezass
@jessezass 6 ай бұрын
@@tomodonovan5931 I did see Richard Simmons once in person because my mom worked out at one of his Jazzercise places outside of Denver and he made a public appearance to promote it.
@BeckVMH
@BeckVMH 6 ай бұрын
And some of us watch KZbin… a lot.
@elliecherise1968
@elliecherise1968 7 ай бұрын
At 6:18 everyone is well dressed and the mall decor is warm and welcoming.
@chalklounge
@chalklounge 6 ай бұрын
Not a mall. This is Bloomingdale’s in the heart of Manhattan.
@elliecherise1968
@elliecherise1968 6 ай бұрын
​@@chalkloungeYes, but it's the same difference there's still that mellow 80s lighting instead of the interrogation led lighting we have now.
@elliecherise1968
@elliecherise1968 6 ай бұрын
​@@chalkloungeSome old people are famous now.🤭
@Lisa-fe5uh
@Lisa-fe5uh 6 ай бұрын
I miss my mall days., I loved the book stores , Walden books , I used to shop there for hours then lunch in the food court after.
@terribellettini450
@terribellettini450 6 ай бұрын
The year I graduated high school. I worked retail all through high school and college, the cash registers brought back so many memories. I forgot how we never left the house without our hair done, makeup and dressed up no sweats, yoga pants or cell phones.
@sara31773
@sara31773 7 ай бұрын
This is when shopping was fun. My mom and I would go shopping when I was a kid. Lots of stores to browse.
@xevvy6857
@xevvy6857 7 ай бұрын
Spectacular! Need a VR version of this so we can walk the mall, shopping alongside these pleasant 80’s people and surroundings☺️ Thanks for these awesome videos!
@matthiasheppe
@matthiasheppe 7 ай бұрын
Is there a VR that allows you to taste food? Because I swear the food was better back then.
@missmia196
@missmia196 7 ай бұрын
​@@matthiasheppeyeah, it might have been closer to real food than the processed product we eat now
@maxmulsanne7054
@maxmulsanne7054 6 ай бұрын
​@@missmia196 Lab-grown hamburgers nowadays. Or since the 2010s at least.
@ezerlenewatkins9644
@ezerlenewatkins9644 6 ай бұрын
​@@matthiasheppeyes it was better. It was real food then.
@harpiessnow
@harpiessnow 6 ай бұрын
​@@matthiasheppe It's cause everything these days are cooked in seed, and vegetable oils while stuff back then used ingredients such as beef tallow. It's the explicit reason why McDonalds fries and food changed so much in flavor due to their change from the use of tallow to oil. It's likely also why people always feel like shit because any oils other than Avocado, Olive, and Coconut are linked to inflammation of the gut and intestinal tract which can result in higher occurrence of cancer cells developing due to intestinal and stomach cells frequently being damaged through the inflammation process. But, hey, at least you wont have a heart attack eating McDonalds every day while they use oils, as said by Phil Sokolof, who funded the studies that linked oils to being better for consumption than tallow (doubt).
@LiLgPnoy15
@LiLgPnoy15 6 ай бұрын
I love watching these type of videos! I can instantly recall the sound of the cash register when it prints the receipts!
@joyslove3858
@joyslove3858 6 ай бұрын
I loved that sound then and now...instantly relaxes me
@shawnaburns5158
@shawnaburns5158 5 ай бұрын
Yes I love that too,,, and the different indicator lights on the board above her fingers( for bank check info)?would love to have one of those registers today but cannot find one 😢those were real cash registers 💯
@markstein1916
@markstein1916 2 ай бұрын
No gross tattoos or weird piercings to be found. No furries, sexually confused or perverted people. Thanks for posting a glimpse of better days. We never knew how good we had it.
@PraveenSriram
@PraveenSriram Ай бұрын
They actually had very healthy relationships back then in the 80s and all of the 99s. Things really declined after September 11th
@ELTONCARLOSDS
@ELTONCARLOSDS Ай бұрын
I read your comment, and I realized that it's not just in my country that people notice how life in the past was calmer, and there weren't so many strange things. I think it's a perception across the world.
@courtnayj4990
@courtnayj4990 7 ай бұрын
The care with which those ladies were selecting a tie for someone!
@guliegirl
@guliegirl 6 ай бұрын
Back then I remember making careful decisions in what to buy. Every purchase seemed special. 🙂
@appalachianwoman561
@appalachianwoman561 7 ай бұрын
Back when malls allowed smoking, and everything was there and relatively new still. Ah how much I miss the 80s. If they ever make time machines a real thing, I'd disappear back to the 80s and just live there forever. I remember in elementary school in the 80s when cans of coke were just 50 cents and anything in the vending machines snack/candy bar wise was 50 cents or less as well. So for $1 you could get yourself a soda and a candy bar.
@c.eb.1216
@c.eb.1216 7 ай бұрын
Like Sylvie living in the 80s McDonald's in Loki to escape apocalypse. Can't say I haven't had that thought before seeing footage of them. Those skylights! Sure they were typically greasy, but if you worked there you could fix that.
@BenChod3
@BenChod3 7 ай бұрын
It was a better time things made sense. If I had the ability to go back in time to 1983 empty handed or stay here with all I earned, I’d genuinely leave here empty handed and start over in 1983.
@billschlafly4107
@billschlafly4107 7 ай бұрын
And the kids of today who spend $3 for a plastic bottle of Coke will think back...to the good ole days...when dollars were a thing.
@josebro352
@josebro352 6 ай бұрын
I believe malls allowed smoking throughout the 90s as well. In certain designated areas of course. I know that the Cambridgeside Galleria in Cambridge, Massachusetts did anyway.
@chalklounge
@chalklounge 6 ай бұрын
The description is wrong. This is not a shopping mall. It’s Bloomingdale’s in Manhattan.
@damin9913
@damin9913 5 ай бұрын
Look at all the beautiful ladies dress so well in those times
@user-zu3md5qz8y
@user-zu3md5qz8y 5 ай бұрын
the 90's a re better
@Jojo01171
@Jojo01171 5 ай бұрын
@@user-zu3md5qz8yTechnically 80s was the beginning of the exotic fashion era, 90s had something of their own.
@joellechiara
@joellechiara 5 ай бұрын
lovely - I was 17 in 1983. What a time. :)
@Jojo01171
@Jojo01171 5 ай бұрын
My mom was 16
@thunderbolt2145
@thunderbolt2145 2 ай бұрын
I was 14
@DarkandTwisted
@DarkandTwisted 7 ай бұрын
Proud 80s kid here. I turned 12 that year. The 80s was the best time to be a kid. Thriller was released in 1982, so this was the year Michael Jackson ruled. At our malls, everyone was dressed like MJ. I looked a lot like him back then so I had all of the girls, and the boys were jealous of me. They all called me MJ lol.😂 You could not go to a mall without seeing MJ merchandise. I remember the entire Sears Department Store upstairs was MJ merchandise, and they even had The Making Of Thriller playing on loop. What a magical era that was. I really miss those days, and I feel so sorry for the kids today. They will never know how it was living in the greatest era. 🥰
@mrobertson188
@mrobertson188 7 ай бұрын
I was 12 in 1980, so was a teen all thru the 80,s No one who didn't live it would believe how awesome the 80s were
@rebeccaa2433
@rebeccaa2433 7 ай бұрын
Thriller came out in 1984
@robroy6374
@robroy6374 7 ай бұрын
@@rebeccaa2433 Thriller album was released on 11/29/1982, and the single was released on 1/23/1984.
@GabrielOsiuhwu
@GabrielOsiuhwu 5 ай бұрын
You're both a 70s and an 80s kids if you were 12 in 1983.
@RazorFriendly
@RazorFriendly 7 ай бұрын
It's a given that because of the time frame that we wouldn't see people on cell phones. What stands out the most is not just how quiet the store is without some loud, braying pop star being blasted over the speakers, but also how much pride in appearance the people have. They not only look clean and nicely dressed, but actually fashionable. The majority seen here are also not morbidly obese and poured into yoga pants. I'm a man who just turned 50. I remember these times, and this isn't some one-off that the people seen here look and act the way they do. We had higher standards then. Now, if the bar for what is considered a standard for personal hygiene, conduct, and dress were set any lower, one could step over it. We've regressed as a society.
@laurenchristianna2092
@laurenchristianna2092 7 ай бұрын
Yes. That's what happens at the end of an empire. So be it.
@dawgwiddaglasses
@dawgwiddaglasses 7 ай бұрын
That’s what happens when you throw away the future for short-term profit.
@squidward66
@squidward66 7 ай бұрын
No one slathered in ugly tattoos either. I can't understand how it became popular to look like I drew all over myself with permanent markers.
@j.sony.
@j.sony. 7 ай бұрын
Lmao "morbidly obese poured into yoga pants" 🤣🤣🤣
@Moneymagi
@Moneymagi 7 ай бұрын
​@@j.sony.^ and this, ladies and gentlemen, is how dress styles change over time lol
@mandya.8203
@mandya.8203 5 ай бұрын
Back when people had class and took pride in the way they dressed along with the way they looked.
@ashantisamuels6602
@ashantisamuels6602 4 ай бұрын
Yep people in this generation the women dress like they just came out the shower
@tonycombo
@tonycombo 19 күн бұрын
I remember a store in our mall called Bergner's that was very nice. Escalators and glass elevators. I'm glad I was able to experience this in the 80s as a kid. The customer service and one-on-one interaction is so strange now. We came from much better days...❤
@LookAtYouNowBoyHuh
@LookAtYouNowBoyHuh 7 ай бұрын
i was born in the early 90's but for whatever reason i always get nostalgic & instant goosebumps running all over my body when i watch vintage videos like this from the 80's & beyond ❤️🥺 thank you vampire robot for this one keep em coming!
@valfletcher9285
@valfletcher9285 7 ай бұрын
I experience the same exhilaration about the decade before I eas born- for many reasons I can identify and many I can not. (1964 here :) )
@DarkandTwisted
@DarkandTwisted 7 ай бұрын
Yeah, the 80s was the best. I'm lucky to have been 12 during the filming of this video.🥰
@ChristysChannelYall
@ChristysChannelYall 7 ай бұрын
I was 11 in 1983. To quote Eddie Money, “I wanna go back, go back and do it all over, but I can’t go back I know” ❤ I’m 51 now and waiting on the time machine to be invented (it probably is, we serfs probably just don’t get to have access).
@dm95422
@dm95422 2 ай бұрын
I was told "wormholes" in the deep woods would also do the trick of going back in time.
@ColossalMcBuzz
@ColossalMcBuzz Ай бұрын
You really need to educate yourself if you actually believe time machines have been, or will be, invented. 😂
@dm95422
@dm95422 Ай бұрын
@@ColossalMcBuzz I heard it only works when wearing a tin foil hat wired to a flux capacitor. 😝😝😝🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
@avenginggoddess
@avenginggoddess 6 ай бұрын
Things I noticed--there's not loud music pounding. There aren't mirrors everywhere, like the store decorators are attempting to disorient you and keep you from finding the exit. Even though it's busy, I didn't hear any screaming or other loudness. I can't even go in places like Macy's today because it literally causes severe anxiety--too many mirrors, loud music, loud people, too many signs, maze-like layout/can't find anything. Also, I remember the rigamarole we used to go through to use a credit card to pay. Those old cash registers are hilarious!
@hormelinc
@hormelinc 6 ай бұрын
Ugh! I was 23 in 1983, hanging out at the video games in the Sherman Oaks Galleria in Los Angeles. That's the interior of the mall in "Fast Times at Ridgemont High," and also "Commando." Watching this I feel really old now 😅
@lanacastillo49
@lanacastillo49 6 ай бұрын
Well you are old but its okay, u lived a good life
@WeSRT4
@WeSRT4 7 ай бұрын
Back before the uncivilized took over. One of the major reasons malls died.
@Dollsteak69
@Dollsteak69 6 ай бұрын
Yup.
@agomodern
@agomodern 6 ай бұрын
Our mall in Abilene TX is still busy, but not much going on in department stores except for JC Penny’s. We have a used music, dvd and game store that always has a lot of shoppers whenever I go. Physical media is alive and kicking but corporate America is trying to kill it.
@johnf5245
@johnf5245 7 ай бұрын
I could watch this for hours. I wanna go back so badly!
@alkohalak8199
@alkohalak8199 6 ай бұрын
You and me both.
@cakebakerish
@cakebakerish 6 ай бұрын
Me too
@kris78787
@kris78787 6 ай бұрын
me too just not with the smoking indoors everywhere. I'm glad weve gotten rid of that at least
@dennythomas8887
@dennythomas8887 6 ай бұрын
in 83 I had been married 5 years (we're still marred 45+ years later.). My two oldest would have been 3 and 4. We lived in L.A. and actually went to the malls (there were a bunch) quite a bit to shop, eat or just window shop and people watch. It was a totally different time and culture back then. They were great times and I would go back in a flash
@candysmith8724
@candysmith8724 6 ай бұрын
Coming here to watch how polite society used to be. I was 12 years old in '83...I sure miss how America used to be. I remember how the department store employees were very professional and classy. Today, half of them I can't even understand.
@metallus2
@metallus2 7 ай бұрын
This is great. One thing I noticed, no one is wearing pajamas! Yeah people didn't go out looking like slobs back then, they tried to have some class.
@MorningMary67
@MorningMary67 7 ай бұрын
Ain't that the truth! I was eating at Cracker Barrel a couple of days ago and three teens or maybe early 20 somethings came in with their flannel pj's on!! That's just gross in my opinion.
@agomodern
@agomodern 6 ай бұрын
As a teenager, not a good idea to wear pajamas looking for a chick.
@savy473
@savy473 20 күн бұрын
more like, they cared TOO much. everyone dresses "crazy" now because no one cares what anyone else thinks and i think thats amazing! theres room for creativity, and in the end its all made of fabric so why should you care? they are limits to it though, like a wedding party or a funeral, obviously you need to dress nice! but if im going to the store to grab a carton of milk im not walking outside like im going to be a model for vogue.
@sara31773
@sara31773 7 ай бұрын
Does anyone remember the ring tones that you would hear in the department stores? Like a bell sound? I worked for Macys in the 90’s and learned that these bells were how we summoned a specific manager. Sort of like morse code… depending on the sequence of the bells a manager would know if it was for them.
@cindyp5703
@cindyp5703 Ай бұрын
Yes! I remember in Gimbels Department Stores, the sound was sort of a bink, bink, bink. Good 'ole days!
@mrs.chaffee3517
@mrs.chaffee3517 Ай бұрын
Yes, and also a bell sometimes to signal the store was closing soon.
@rockinsteady406
@rockinsteady406 6 ай бұрын
This is literally the year id want to go back in time to and start over.
@SpatialSpandex
@SpatialSpandex 2 ай бұрын
You mean to tell me that people had respect for each other in public places and no one was freaking out and destroying a store fronts for being labeled incorrectly? Wow, I'm impressed.
@awilliams4543
@awilliams4543 7 ай бұрын
eat your heart out gen Z you missed the party
@beverlycrowell_
@beverlycrowell_ 6 ай бұрын
I feel sorry for them.
@Incognitofrito1
@Incognitofrito1 5 ай бұрын
​@beverlycrowell_ Me too, it's very sad how they've been conditioned to live. Even sadder that their Grandkids & especially GreatGrandkids will be totally F-ed & suffering greatly because our species has destroyed our habitat beyond repair. Along with Global Warming. 2023 has officially been declared the hottest year temperature-wise in the history of human kind. People think having babies these days is making them an "immortal" person. No, your bloodline's gonna go 100% kaput to the wayside sooner than later. Just like the Dinosaurs. I guess just enjoy life while ya can. I graduated class of 1988, & feel SO lucky to have been a pre-teen, teenager, then very young lady all through the 80's. It was truly a BLAST!!!!!
@Lexster918
@Lexster918 3 ай бұрын
Millennials missed the party too. 😢
@danee9647
@danee9647 2 ай бұрын
they prefer to have pity parties anyway, and film themselves crying
@salemdesigns65
@salemdesigns65 Ай бұрын
They surely missed it!!
@nerdbamarich2063
@nerdbamarich2063 7 ай бұрын
Thank you for the wonderful footage my friend. Many blessings.
@vampirerobot
@vampirerobot 7 ай бұрын
Thank you!! It's so weird how this happened. Always love your comments.
@nerdbamarich2063
@nerdbamarich2063 7 ай бұрын
@@vampirerobot you're more than welcome my friend 😊😊
@Rinkydinkydoo
@Rinkydinkydoo 6 ай бұрын
All the dresses and skirts! I was only 6 in 83, but I didn't remember that aspect at all until watching this.
@alexsmith5621
@alexsmith5621 3 ай бұрын
This is exactly as I remember it as a toddler, dark and boring. Thank God for the present day!
@isabelbeckerman9226
@isabelbeckerman9226 7 ай бұрын
Watching this 1983 vintage video of a busy shopping mall forty years ago breaks my heart. It's not because of the ecstatic and timeless experiences I spent in malls lovingly in New Jersey years ago, but that in time, these plazas will soon torn down for commercial properties and will be remembered as engaging pleasure grounds of the past, thanks to online shopping that makes it happen. It's astounding a convenient buying trend can eradicate these complexes that were once our spending and fun-filled sanctuaries.
@ColtraneTaylor
@ColtraneTaylor 7 ай бұрын
A mall is a commercial property...
@isabelbeckerman9226
@isabelbeckerman9226 7 ай бұрын
​@@ColtraneTaylorI meant other commercial replacements like medical facilities and high-rise condos to replace these soon-to-be mall demolitions. Monmouth Mall in Eatontown, NJ, will face the wrecking ball next year.
@ColtraneTaylor
@ColtraneTaylor 7 ай бұрын
@@isabelbeckerman9226 Righto. I think the malls worth keeping are those which kept their older design.
@agomodern
@agomodern 6 ай бұрын
Our Sears has completely been turned into a medical equipment store by the monopolized hospital system here.
@reesedaniel5835
@reesedaniel5835 6 ай бұрын
Black Rock corporation is turning the malls into housing for all the illegals they are purposely flooding the country with to destroy us (and replace us).
@QuadirBrown-lf9rg
@QuadirBrown-lf9rg 7 ай бұрын
Bring back the days!
@agomodern
@agomodern 6 ай бұрын
Go visit a mall.
@markaruski
@markaruski 2 ай бұрын
Amazing, the stores are clean and organized, and have both staff there to help, as well as products in stock to sell! What a concept! Some stores now look like a hurricane blew through them and there are 2 people working the whole store.
@lynn9176
@lynn9176 6 ай бұрын
I was 21 back in 1983 and I remember shopping and everyone dressed so nice. I miss the 70 and 80's
@Watercolor9941
@Watercolor9941 Ай бұрын
Yes...same age. It was very much a social outing and we dressed up not only because we did back then, but also because you didn't know who you might meet there that day.
@andrewwilks5155
@andrewwilks5155 7 ай бұрын
Just like when I was a child when going shopping with my parents at our once active local mall back in 1983 here in NW PA shopping at Hills, Sears, JCPenney, Bon Ton, etc... I remember just before school going to back to school shopping at these stores and trying clothes out in fitting rooms with my Mom complimenting me as to how handsome I was in the new clothing. And when checking out, grabbing her check book and pen writing and signing checks as the cashiers at the stores we shopped at used these same machines as well. Love the childhood memories of shopping like this with Mom that this video brings back!
@kellter70
@kellter70 7 ай бұрын
i was 13 in '83. the mall was my babysitter. so nice to reflect back at a more simpler time when amazon wasn't killing the malls. p.s. shop local people!
@goodbro7846
@goodbro7846 6 ай бұрын
Amazon didn't kill the malls. The culture of the new America did. Just thugs and punks. Mall thrive in places where that hasn't seeped in fully.
@raviramroop5820
@raviramroop5820 5 ай бұрын
Legend!...fond memories baby..the 80's whatta decade...glad to have experience it.
@teresapflaumer5717
@teresapflaumer5717 Ай бұрын
1983, age 11. By this time, my beloved Burlington Center Mall in NJ was a year old and had incredible stores...The Space Port Arcade, Kay Bee Toys, Heaven, Spencers, Pier One Imports, JCPenney, Strawbridge & Clothier, Farrington Music Store, Musicland, Sam Goody, Sears, Friendly's ice cream, Chik-Fil-A. People looked beautiful and had better manners. 1983 was a great time for me.
@kimwarner1681
@kimwarner1681 Ай бұрын
Short Hills mall, there was one off of rte 46, I forget the name, it was good and then later on Bridgewater mall.
@johnsmith2046
@johnsmith2046 7 ай бұрын
I turned 10 that year, and I love watching this. Thanks, and cheers from northeast Ohio! :)
@marcusmaximus.
@marcusmaximus. 7 ай бұрын
Belden village mall!
@barbara8802
@barbara8802 7 ай бұрын
Great Lakes Mall
@johnsmith2046
@johnsmith2046 7 ай бұрын
@@marcusmaximus. , yep, I went there a lot!
@johnsmith2046
@johnsmith2046 7 ай бұрын
@@barbara8802 , good to hear it!
@anibalbabilonia1867
@anibalbabilonia1867 7 ай бұрын
Man what a time capsule! I was 20 years old in 83! Yikes 😳 how times fly!!
@guerralg63
@guerralg63 7 ай бұрын
I turned 20 in November of 1983. I'm 60 now. Inside I don't feel any older, but outside that's a different story 😮
@anibalbabilonia1867
@anibalbabilonia1867 6 ай бұрын
@@guerralg63 same here🙏
@franceslarsen4037
@franceslarsen4037 6 ай бұрын
​@@guerralg63I know what you mean about not feeling older inside (compared to the outside!!!). Turned 22 in October of that year:)
@JohnWilson-wg4gk
@JohnWilson-wg4gk 6 ай бұрын
​@@guerralg63 I turned 21 in March of 1983 and you are exactly right ! I was crestfallen when I discovered Minoxidil wouldn't work for me...
@AR-nk8sy
@AR-nk8sy 5 ай бұрын
I love the old registers and credit card sliders. Shopping at Mervyn’s and Montgomery Wards as a kid with mom, watching those gals ring us up all their jewelry dangling and fingernails clacking on the machines. I wanted to be a department store cashier so bad!! I finally fulfilled the dream as a side gig in my early 20s at Dillard’s and hated it.
@shawnaburns5158
@shawnaburns5158 5 ай бұрын
I ❤those old dot matrix printer sounds and the check bank indicator lights too ❤would love to find a register like these but sadly can't 😢
@alw5101
@alw5101 6 ай бұрын
The good old days are long gone but not forgotten…the classy dresses are now replaced by dirty slippers and pajamas
@davek5027
@davek5027 7 ай бұрын
I can’t get over how Crowded that mall was. Unbelievable
@gardendormouse6479
@gardendormouse6479 6 ай бұрын
Yes, I know. I remember, during the Christmas shopping season in 1980 in a mall in Wayne NJ, the mall I was in was so crowded, that I can't believe the occupancy laws weren't being broken. You almost couldn't walk.
@johnsmith-ug5tp
@johnsmith-ug5tp 6 ай бұрын
I grew up in CT. and when the new malls were completed by 1977 they were so packed Friday nights and the weekend it was shoulder to shoulder and bumping into people in front of you and people bumping into you from behind. It was crazy.
@Thewolfguys.cartoons2000
@Thewolfguys.cartoons2000 6 ай бұрын
Nowadays it feels kinda empty
@johnsmith-ug5tp
@johnsmith-ug5tp 6 ай бұрын
ha@@Thewolfguys.cartoons2000
@YeshuaKingMessiah
@YeshuaKingMessiah 6 ай бұрын
It’s just one store I guess Prob on a Sat too lol
@wendykaramanis5414
@wendykaramanis5414 7 ай бұрын
I was 23 yrs old then and pregnant with my son who’s 40 yrs old now. What a different time we lived in then I miss it
@charlottesmom
@charlottesmom 5 ай бұрын
We lived at the mall in the 80's! 👍🏻👍🏻💕
@drdanr
@drdanr 6 ай бұрын
In 1983 someone was asking “why the hell are you filming this”? Now we know why. This is great
@horizonchaser6030
@horizonchaser6030 5 ай бұрын
I was going to watch this but it would be TOO PAINFUL. lol....Damn a Great Era I had the pleasure to live through!!
@bd764
@bd764 7 ай бұрын
Ahhh,When folks were aware of their surroundings,and not LOST in a dam smart phone.
@Some571
@Some571 7 ай бұрын
But later you would be like, oh what happened to smart phone days. So take a look around an take one step at a time, you don't know what you are missing. Am I right? 👥🤳 😢
@UGC4life
@UGC4life 6 ай бұрын
I get tired of these old fogies complaining about technology and can’t move on. Get over it. If you want to stay stuck in the Stone Age go right ahead but not everyone wants to remain that way.
@guerralg63
@guerralg63 6 ай бұрын
@user-14t50u4 Why do you get so offended when people point out how enslaved everyone is to their devices? Truth hurts? How social media has made everyone antisocial, even hostile and overly aggressive. It has nothing to do with the technology and everything to do with the sad people who have become unaware of their surroundings.
@KyleEvra
@KyleEvra 5 ай бұрын
​Old farts complaining about technology is always funny. 🤣
@KyleEvra
@KyleEvra 5 ай бұрын
Old farts complaining about technology is always funny. 🤣
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