@@KarlLaFong-v2q Your comments are irrelevant, no facts are in evidence, you are cautioned about "improper thinking", and all your comments will be stricken from the record, thanks for playing, you lose
Used to think that ws so cute when I was a kid. Part of Christmas back then. Along with the great Christmas specials on TV. Glad we had a color TV. Always RCA.
I had the Schwinn Stingray with the banana seat, wide slick on the back, 5 speed shifter on the frame and chopper style handlebars! Metal Flake purple, she was the envy of the neighborhood! Thanks Dad! Over a half century later, I still remember that magnificent bike!
@@domsalexa Jan 16, 1965 - I loved doing ceramics with my mom, but now I can't even find a place to do them. I was also a huge fan of bell bottoms lol I still have 2 pairs and wear them when the mood hits me😊
I took a high school class in typewriting and spent several years pounding those manual typewriter keys. What a joy when the electric typewriter came along!
Remember having to type out my senior term paper on a little manual typewriter…had to be very specific as to paper margins , footnotes etc. Took me longer to do the finished project than all the work I did with research and notes. Still I got one of the only 2 A’s in what was considered an accelerated class.
I took a semester of typing in my sophomore year of high school. I am still the world's worst typist! Now, however, I can correct my mistakes without an eraser or gallon of WiteOut. THANK GOODNESS for the 21st century!
I have over 10k in albums that I started when I was 12. I’m now 60 and the sound is so pure that no other platform comes close. Thanks for touching upon a lost art form. Your channel covers everything. Thank you for this channel. I wish you all the best.
Wow !! That is quite the album collection. I started collecting vintage table top radios back in the day. I'm now 70 and have about 50 real cool old time table top radios.
@@brianquilty687 I would love to see those radios. They must be collector items. Once again a dying art form. They are a an American art form. Hang on to them. I’m sure the Smithsonian would like to see them.
"Hitch-hiking". Dear Lord, astonishing that ANYONE survived! Remember the classic bumper sticker? A silhouette of a busty girl with her thumb out, and the timeless caption- "Gas, grass, or ass, NOBODY rides for free!"
The portable transistor radio was a great escape! CKLW out of Detroit had the best of music, then on Friday nights the scary movies played, which let your imagination run wild! Great times! The reel mower however, death on two wheels. I would spend hours picking up sticks in the yard before mowing, only to be abruptly stopped by the one stick I missed and have the mower handle smack me in the teeth!
I an not from your are but as I lived in the great Midwest many a night with my portable transistor or shortwave radio I would seek out stations just like this one. CKLW, WLS, KAAY, and a lot of other stations were each individually great stations. Many other stations also like WABC and my hometown KXOK. Different days. Awesome memories, at night I could pick them all up.
My wifes Grandfather gave me his collection of cameras and lenses he had. Some as old as the 60's. I was blown away and honestly I use the lenses now in 2024. But just the "family" history these lenses has seen is incredible.
Record players !! My grandparents had an old Victrola, a standing furniture box with the radio and 78 rpm record player, and a stand alone 33 rpm record player, that had the stub attachment for 45's. I got my first transistor radio when I was a little kid, with the "Single Ear Bud" line out. I had a Red View Master !! Yup, I had the Schwinn blue bike with the white banana seat. Pictured in this video. The day my father took off the training wheels and I began my first solo ride, I ran over one of the young girls who lived on my street, it was quite comical, but she was not happy about being run over !! My grandparents also had one of those manual lawn mowers, where I learned how to mow the lawn as a young boy. They later got a gas powered 1st generation lawn mower. Atari 1979 !!! Space Invaders, The shooting gallery, the race track. God Forbid a parent allowed their kids to drink from the hose in the back yard today. That gave us strength and helped us fight off bugs and other illnesses. My mother would send us outside and lock the door, and would not allow us back inside until dinner time. In Miami we skated at the Kendall Skating Rink. We had 2 Beta Max machines and movies we would trade between families to copy movies back and forth. Aw, you didn't mention the Tootsie Roll Tootsie Pop, How many licks does it take to get to the center of a Tootsie Roll Tootsie Pop?? One, Two, Three .... THREE !!!
Just ate a Tootsie roll now sitting in front of my stereo system with record player 33 and 78’s handed down through the family . I switch from iphone bluetooth music to records all works as new . The Atari is in storage getting ready to sell .
Cousin Eddie, in National Lampoon's Vacation, said it best. I don't know why they call this stuff Hamburger Helper. It does just fine by itself. Mmm Mmm! As a typical poor college student, that was about as GOURMET as meals got for me.
When, they finally added sour cream sauce to the Beef Stroganoff towards the late 80s, OMG, it was like about time! Even though, I learned to make my own homemade version of Stroganoff, I still like Hamburger Helper’s version and, I usually add a little extra sour cream in the mix, as well, as adding some chopped onions and, fresh mushrooms! 8:55
They are still available! I have one,.because I hate.the noise and stink of power mowers. The soft whirring is pleasant and this way I can mow early, while it's still cool outside, and not wake the neighbors.
@@peggyl2849 - On the West Coast we had 'Wolfman Jack' and 'Charlie Tuna' spinning the top 40's while you sipped your frosty cold glass mug of A&W root beer at the drive-in.
You know you're old when..............you see a 20 something person in a thrift store pick up a Viewmaster and say "What is this thing". As a teen boy in the 70s, I remember velour shirts, bell bottom pants, dingo boots, and feathered hair being all the rage in my high school. Also tricked out vans and sports coupes with shiny mag wheels and twice the size rear tires for extra grip when racing out in the boonies. And fro's. Lots of kids started perming their hair and many just flat out got fro's. And don't forget, the 70's is when you said everything on a Tshirt. And thats when marketing Tshirts came out.....companies had to gret a cut of the profits on putting stuff on Tshirts as well. Guys colognes: Old Spice, Musk, Polo, Hai Karate, and Paco Rabanne for those with cash burning a hole in their pocket. And for girls it was clogs, Candies, hot pants with colored tights, and frizzy hairstyles. Lip gloss was EVERYWHERE as well. And you either had to smell like Charlie, Shalimar, Loves Baby Soft, or if you had money.....Channel #5. And DON'T forget that hideous BLUE EYESHADOW you could see from space!!!
Yes, we were taught cursive and many of us developed the most beautiful script . . . now sadly lost to time. Recently though I've taken up learning Calligraphy using a fountain pen, just for fun. It is so very strange that after all these years, I've found the act of physically writing on paper to be actually relaxing.
Schools back then wouldn't have been the same without reel movie projectors that had to be set up and rewound at the end plus film strips with tape recorded narration! The thing about early home video games was that, although Atari had some great games it was actually ColecoVision Games that offered more of an arcade replication in the beginning! There was a really cute novelty song by the late, great British singer Alma Cogan called "Couldn't Resist her with her Pocket Transistor" in the 60s! Haha!
@@Ken-h5d yes they were! My brother - who lived at home forever and had a ton of disposable income - bought an Intellivision system after maxing out what could be purchased for the Atari 2600!
I had a blue Schwinn Stingray, with the ape hanger handlebars and a gold flecked banana seat. Some (explicitive deleted) cut the lock and stole it when I was seeing Star Wars. I didn't have a roller rink, but I did have a bowling alley with an arcade and a lunch counter that served, what I considered to be, the best greasy cheeseburger in existence My Dad was a gadget nut, so we had every gizmo you mentioned. I still have his instmatatic camera, and still prefer a typewriter over a computer for writing.
In 1959, when I graduated from Jr High, my parents gave me a "Shick 3 Speed Electric Shaver." I am Italian, so I hit adolescence early ! 😂😂😂 When I was in my single years I fixed many a "Hamber Helper" meal. It was easy and it was good ! 8 TRACK was a total thrill to have. I had one installed in my 1968 Buick GS400 convertable as a Birthday present.
With the manual law mowers there was a truck that used to come around in the 70s and sharpen the blades, hedge clippers and other stuff. We had the last of all the “good ole experiences” of the previous decades. One thing that I don’t miss… typing class!
Back in the 60s and 70s when we played our vinyl records we didn't really mind the pops and clicks from frequently playing the same records, but today in the digital age when I digitize those same vinyl records to same on my computer I spend more time finding all of the pops and clicks and wore vinyl record sounds than it took to record the vinyl records in the first place.
Such memories from watching this video. Hamburgers were about 15 cents, pop was a nickel, you could buy a small bag of sunflower seeds for 2 cents. I never had the cool bicycle but some of my friends did. I would trade everything I own now to go back to those sweet simple enjoyable times.
This was the perfect video at the right time. "Stingrays", bell bottoms, transistor radios, and Hamburger Helper. Oh, my! Just today, I found one of my Mom's boxes of old stuff. Old pictures, old school crafts, even my school report cards from the early '60s. Never knew she kept all that stuff. Now the job of separating out my things from my older brothers' and sending them theirs.
I still like hamburger helper. I remember moms would step out on the front porch and yell your name and saying dinner. If you passed a friend on your bicycle. They would tell you, your mom is hollering for you. Good times!
Re: Fountain pens- For the 1966-67 school year, our school decided fourth grade and up would use cartridge pens except for math. Cartridge pens were fountain pens, but used a cartridge of ink dropped into the barrel of the pen, instead of filling the pen from an ink bottle. It was going to make our penmanship beautiful! Instead, ink was everywhere! It was on shirts and blouses, trousers and skirts, in the wooden desks, leaking from pencil cases. It was especially fun on the playground for boys to somehow "accidentally" stomp ink cartridges. The next year, everybody in fourth grade up used Bic ballpoint pens, excepting with certain permission, when a Flair felt tip could be used. 😂
I'm left handed, and for a southpaw, cartridge pens were a disaster. The nuns cut me no slack at all, and I spent most.of third grade kneeling on gravel at the front of the room.
I had typing classes on manual typewriters in the 80s. Many of my homework assignments for other classes had to be typed. I was so excited when we got an electric one at home.
Yes, that was before they made the grid of bars covering the blades closer together. This fan in the picture kind of reminds me of an old noir detective movie.
The amount of different cigarette lighters produced back then is mind boggling. I collect them, and the best I'll ever do is maybe 10% of models ever produced. Same with table top lighters and ash trays, endless variations.
My grandparents had a lot of these things and I was always getting into their stuff and playing around with it but I was always careful. They bought me an Atari in my youth years and boy I had a time with Pac-Man but it was fun. I only wish those years could have stuck around a bit longer.
Yay top 141 comments. Thanks for making this video. Best to you and your family. Clicked on video 4 hours after it was posted. 10:33p.m., Friday, July 19th, 2024. Watching from maryland
I never had an electric razor till 1981 or 82. It was a Remington Microscreen. I guess I used it till it started having trouble cutting, and then I forgot about it and went back to conventional razors. Sometime in the mid 70s my grandmother gave me a little AM transistor radio that she had gotten as a bank premium. It's a GE P1758 that still works. I loved our Viewmasters. We actually had some old reels that were from when my mom was a kid in the 40s, I believe. We always drank from the hose out in the yard. We had our own well, and it was pretty deep. So our water tasted good and was nice and cold. I always enjoyed it. My parents had two classic station wagons in a row that they had bought new. Both were Chrysler Town and Countrys. The first was a `72, and the next was a `75. On the family road trips my brother and I always rode in the way back. We would make the arm motion to truckers to pull their air horns.
Hamburger Helper came out years earlier than the late 1970s! We ate tons of that stuff in college, because it was cheap and filling. I never could eat it again.
I'm 57 and remember taking typing lessons on manual typewriters. The teacher tortured us with rhythm drills on the keys with our fingers until they almost fell off and you had to hit the keys really hard for the letters to type out. I won't miss manual typewriters nor forget the enduring pain the typing teacher had us go thru. I forgot all about what that class taught and started typing with two fingers with each hand and I got pretty good at it.
4:25 we had the slideshow when I was little. Looking back, it’s gone full circle. My FireTV give us a slideshow from our phone photos! Nice! 12:23 used to have 8-track players but still weren’t as robust as cassette tapes.
@@swk38 Best show ever. I bought my first car, with my Army bonus money, because Rockford had one just like it. 1974 Pontiac Firebird. Bought it for $1,800.00😂 in ‘82.
You had me at the Schwinn Stingray bikes. A lot of kids, me included, bought the seats and handlebars to convert any 20" bike into a faux-Stringray. I made my sedate little Raleigh Record into a cool ride that way, back in the mid-60's. Thanks for the memories..
It's ironic that the vinyl record and record player has both a comeback. Along with the Polaroid camera I saw all three on sale at Walmart recently and had to laugh. What was once popular and useful years ago the younger generations have rediscovered. I still own a floor model stereo, record player and eight track system and it still plays and works fine. Love the Saturday morning cartoons and the old video games which have come back again. I still enjoy the blow pop lollipop once in a while. Thanks for the videos and memories.
I've seen everything your showing at the local goodwill..I go there not so much to buy something, but just to get "hands on" on the things we had back then,also fun to watch the younger folks there to try to figure out what some of those things are and were used for..take me back to those times!
grade school used blue black ink fountain pen mine was "modern" used an ink cartridge i didn't need an ink well like others much less mess but had to wait for my writing to dry used through 8th grade. instamatic had 12 exposure so expensive to process so we took group pictures 4 times a year major holidays then after a year we processed send in the mail took 2 weeks to get back
In the 1970s, I listened to my transistor radio for the station KRLA, for the early rock and roll songs, but every hour they would also play the recent 70s songs ( most of them were junk). But it was later, in the 1980s I needed that same radio - because the small TV then could get channel 6 in San Diego, over 50 miles away, it got the picture but no sound, my radio supplied the sound; it was showing the Jackie Gleason Show from the early and mid 1960s, having the American Scene Magazine; the programs were a half hour long, having the comedy only - and showing Joe the Bartender at the end with Crazy Guggenheim, this used to be on 5 days a week …😊
I love the elegant music in this🎩💎I remember pretending to shave as a child with the electric razor😃I remember having vinyl records on 45 rpm before graduating to full albums😁I had a am transistor radio with Fred Flintstone😆Zippo🚬I loved my View MasterI had a yellow Stingray BikeMy dad used a manual lawnmower, I wanted so bad to try itI rember my brother having the instamatic X-15 camera📷My friend had the Atari 800🕹We still use Hamburger Helper to this day7 cent coupon🤣I grew up wearing Hang Ten shirts👣I hated 8 Track Tapes, half way through a tune it would take it a moment to continue on the next track to continue that tune🙄I remember seeing a lot of hitch hikers in Southern California back in the day😳Our family had a Rambler Station Wagon and I loved siiting in the back facing the cars behind us😊I never liked roller skating😫Blow Pops RULED!!!!!!!🍭I remember having a Radio Shack Battery Club Card, after so many purchased you would get a free battery⚡Do you remember riding in the bed of pickup trucks back then😅Great video👍🏻ROCK ON!!!!!!!🤘🏻🤙🏻✌🏻
My brother had a bright yellow Stingray bike! It was his prized.possession. I still have a non-motorized lawn mower. And I still have the Royal manual typewriter on which I wrote every paper through my Masters thesis.
I remember lying on a cot in the summer of 1973. My parents had sent me and my brother to a sleepaway camp in Long Island. I stayed awake with my transistor radio pressed against my ear, listening to the great Jean Shepherd on WOR radio.
I was still fixing Hamburger Helper in the 90's. With a salad it was a fast complete meal to fix sometimes after getting home late from a bad day at work. Back then we couldn't afford to stop to get fast food like so many parents do today. If l still had family at home l would still keep a couple boxes in the cabinet, even though it is just full of junk manufactured ingredients.
Weekday afternoons were when I watched cartoons. I would get home from school and watch Captain Ernie or Grandpa Happy. They were local kids shows from the Quad Cities.
Vinyl records have made a comeback recently in several years So have old fashioned typewriters I saw a video of a school teaching kids about the typewriter.
Growing up I remember old black and white cartoons like Deputy Dawg and the Flintstones sponsored by Salem or Winston cigarettes. How inappropriate is that now? And no, when I was born dirt hadn't been inverted yet!
I watch Recollection Road, and some days, I really wish I could go back. Even if just for a little while. They were the best of days.
@@wendyh2708 Take me with you when you go, Miss Wendy! Maybe we can hitchhike back.
Me, too! I grew up in the 60's and 70's...much better times!
Yeah, we all do. It would be so nice to have a do-over!😊
Sometimes I get sad watching these videos. I’d give anything to go back if only for a little while. 😔
@@thetruth7046don’t leave me.
Anyone remember the Norelco shaver ads at Christmas with the shaver sledding through the snow?
Wasn't Santa Clause sitting on it?
@@KarlLaFong-v2q Yo momma, was sitting, on Santa's face, Babyboy
@@saminaneen No, I believe it was your sister! Speaking of faces...... in your face!
@@KarlLaFong-v2q Your comments are irrelevant, no facts are in evidence, you are cautioned about "improper thinking", and all your comments will be stricken from the record, thanks for playing, you lose
Used to think that ws so cute when I was a kid. Part of Christmas back then. Along with the great Christmas specials on TV. Glad we had a color TV. Always RCA.
We lived on our bikes in the early 70's. Huffys and stingrays with banana seats. We went all over as carefree as could be. Those were great times.
And, then, we flipped it over when, we weren’t ride it, we would crank the peddles with our hands, we pretended we were the ice cream shop! 14:39
We did that in the 80s as well. My friends and I always flipped our bikes over too, and pretended we were making ice cream. 😊
I had the Schwinn Stingray with the banana seat, wide slick on the back, 5 speed shifter on the frame and chopper style handlebars! Metal Flake purple, she was the envy of the neighborhood! Thanks Dad! Over a half century later, I still remember that magnificent bike!
Mine was a Huffy, bright yellow.
In the mid 70's, I had a black Huffy. Can't tell you how many patches, tubes, and tires I went through. It was fantastic!
Thank you Recollection Road for your wonderful videos of yesteryear. I'm 74 yo and they always evoke such wonderful memories of days gone by.
It was such a great time to be young!! Thank you for this sweet look back 😊
Oh how i miss those saturday mornings with my bowl of cereal and bugs bunny, scooby and the jetsons
As a early gen z (2005) kid i agree wish i could go back it was a simpler time
O those csrtoons are on you tube and u can always buy a box of cereal
i loved the the show Dungeons and Dragons
Me too….
Johnny Quest was my favorite cartoon!
I'm 59 and I remember all of these thanks for the memories.🇺🇲🙋♂️🇺🇲
Ditto here. 59 too. Born in '65.
I also remember all these things! 😊
May 12, 1965 here! Lol
@@domsalexa Jan 16, 1965 - I loved doing ceramics with my mom, but now I can't even find a place to do them. I was also a huge fan of bell bottoms lol I still have 2 pairs and wear them when the mood hits me😊
@@domsalexa
You're 16 days younger than me!
@@PaulTesta Cool! 👌🏼
I took a high school class in typewriting and spent several years pounding those manual typewriter keys. What a joy when the electric typewriter came along!
Now you are either typing your entry on a computer keyboard or sending it via a smartphone.
Remember having to type out my senior term paper on a little manual typewriter…had to be very specific as to paper margins , footnotes etc. Took me longer to do the finished project than all the work I did with research and notes. Still I got one of the only 2 A’s in what was considered an accelerated class.
I took a semester of typing in my sophomore year of high school. I am still the world's worst typist! Now, however, I can correct my mistakes without an eraser or gallon of WiteOut. THANK GOODNESS for the 21st century!
And when they made the one with the correction ribbon......oh, baby...
Oh yes, the IBM Selectric with the 'ball' type unit.
Viewmasters were indeed a part of my life. Still have them with a box of vintage viewmaster slides packed away.😁
I wish i have mine still😢 I had the brown one during the early 70s and later on the red one in the late 70s/early 80s
The only one I kept was The Addams Family. Loved seeing that in color.
Playing with the View-Master when i was a kid made me love photography & travel later in life. One of my most beloved toys ever!!!
Same. It’s the only “toy” I have remaining from my childhood. Still have most of the original packages and slides.
I loved paper dolls as a kid. I didn't like Barbie.
I loved it when new albums came out from my favorite singers.
Paper dolls my sisters and mine favourite 1960 s 🇦🇺❤️💚❤️
@@juttadestiny6810The 60s was the same for me as well. I'm 66 years old.
They had adult Viewmaster reel sets. No, they weren't porn! They were generally glorified travel adventures.
Yes, the old flash bulb cubes.
Yep - I was maybe 10 and had that Kodak Instamatic 100. Cutting edge 😂
I remember in high school typing class. We all were typing in unison and then reached the end and the bells rung.
Yep. Can still hear the teacher calling out: J K L ; . . .F D S A, J K L; . . .F D S A. . .
I remember having to focus on margins and page #s.
Word is awesome!
your voice, the background music, and the subject, makes me just want to rip open space and time, and go back to those times
This was literally an almanac of what i've seen & what I had growing up in the 70's. ☺️
👍👍👍
One Sat a month we had slide night. My dad preferred slides to photographs. Great memories.
God I love this channel ............memories of good times ....sigh.
I have over 10k in albums that I started when I was 12. I’m now 60 and the sound is so pure that no other platform comes close. Thanks for touching upon a lost art form. Your channel covers everything. Thank you for this channel. I wish you all the best.
Wow !! That is quite the album collection. I started collecting vintage table top radios back in the day. I'm now 70 and have about 50 real cool old time table top radios.
@@brianquilty687 I would love to see those radios. They must be collector items. Once again a dying art form. They are a an American art form. Hang on to them. I’m sure the Smithsonian would like to see them.
It's always a good day whenever Recollection Road uploads
Yes, just wish they participated in these Comments.
@@allan9603Yes, it definitely bothers me that he never answers questions or participates with us.
@@jenniferhansen3622 , It should be a requirement once you get a channel on YT.
They're too busy putting together their next video, to reply to thousands of commenters.
@@joequillun7790 Other RUclipsrs do it, and they're busy too.
Being born in 1968 I remember all of this! Best time to grow up ever! Thanks for taking me back! ❤
How different things look through the lens of time. Thanks for the video!
That GE oscillating fan was a great rapid learning educational toy.
"Hitch-hiking". Dear Lord, astonishing that ANYONE survived! Remember the classic bumper sticker? A silhouette of a busty girl with her thumb out, and the timeless caption- "Gas, grass, or ass, NOBODY rides for free!"
If you were a dude, 'spare change' and a little smoke are helpful then. Chicks? Heehee...
maybe there weren't as many psychos on the roads then...
The portable transistor radio was a great escape! CKLW out of Detroit had the best of music, then on Friday nights the scary movies played, which let your imagination run wild! Great times!
The reel mower however, death on two wheels. I would spend hours picking up sticks in the yard before mowing, only to be abruptly stopped by the one stick I missed and have the mower handle smack me in the teeth!
I still have some “ solid gold “ lps from cklw , Detroit
CKLW was before my time, but I’m from Detroit as well and have very fond memories of the radio stations I did grow up with
@@willswords7373 I was a country kid, so much so that our neighbors were the Ingalls, and the Waltons.😁 CKLW was our lifeline to the “real” world.
The push mower was yet another rapid learning educational device.
I an not from your are but as I lived in the great Midwest many a night with my portable transistor or shortwave radio I would seek out stations just like this one. CKLW, WLS, KAAY, and a lot of other stations were each individually great stations. Many other stations also like WABC and my hometown KXOK. Different days. Awesome memories, at night I could pick them all up.
My wifes Grandfather gave me his collection of cameras and lenses he had. Some as old as the 60's. I was blown away and honestly I use the lenses now in 2024. But just the "family" history these lenses has seen is incredible.
A great feeling channel.
Great Memories...Thanks Recollection Road!
Record players !! My grandparents had an old Victrola, a standing furniture box with the radio and 78 rpm record player, and a stand alone 33 rpm record player, that had the stub attachment for 45's. I got my first transistor radio when I was a little kid, with the "Single Ear Bud" line out.
I had a Red View Master !!
Yup, I had the Schwinn blue bike with the white banana seat. Pictured in this video. The day my father took off the training wheels and I began my first solo ride, I ran over one of the young girls who lived on my street, it was quite comical, but she was not happy about being run over !!
My grandparents also had one of those manual lawn mowers, where I learned how to mow the lawn as a young boy. They later got a gas powered 1st generation lawn mower.
Atari 1979 !!! Space Invaders, The shooting gallery, the race track.
God Forbid a parent allowed their kids to drink from the hose in the back yard today. That gave us strength and helped us fight off bugs and other illnesses. My mother would send us outside and lock the door, and would not allow us back inside until dinner time.
In Miami we skated at the Kendall Skating Rink.
We had 2 Beta Max machines and movies we would trade between families to copy movies back and forth.
Aw, you didn't mention the Tootsie Roll Tootsie Pop, How many licks does it take to get to the center of a Tootsie Roll Tootsie Pop?? One, Two, Three .... THREE !!!
Just ate a Tootsie roll now sitting in front of my stereo system with record player 33 and 78’s handed down through the family . I switch from iphone bluetooth music to records all works as new .
The Atari is in storage getting ready to sell .
I finally sold my Betamax in 2014….
Who could forget the family station wagon for vacations … in Avocado green here 😂
Ours was red.
@@loriloristuff I loved the red ones ❤️
yes, and with fake wood trim down the sides and across the back
@@coldlakealta4043 yes a lot of them had the fake wood trim. And some had yacht deck paneling on top 😃
I never got to ride in a station wagon in the 60s or 70s. We had pickup trucks with a cab. Got to ride back there once awhile.
Those were the best days ever 👍😎
Cousin Eddie, in National Lampoon's Vacation, said it best. I don't know why they call this stuff Hamburger Helper. It does just fine by itself. Mmm Mmm! As a typical poor college student, that was about as GOURMET as meals got for me.
With Tabasco on top it was a 10 out of 10!
When, they finally added sour cream sauce to the Beef Stroganoff towards the late 80s, OMG, it was like about time! Even though, I learned to make my own homemade version of Stroganoff, I still like Hamburger Helper’s version and, I usually add a little extra sour cream in the mix, as well, as adding some chopped onions and, fresh mushrooms! 8:55
Love that cousin Eddy
I love those National Lampoons Vacation movies they amazing ❤
I still eat it about once per week !
Imagine gen z trying to use a manual typewriter😯 No delete, no spelling/grammar correction, no preview, no emoji’s😂😂😂
And no abbreviations allowed! Every word had to be typed out in its entirety.
Bro, they don't even type, they twitter flick the letters.
😅👍
I’m not sure they have the strength to strike the keys.
No plagiarism
Tootsie Roll Pops were a great treat. They have tootsie roll candy in the center of the pops.
Remember the Tootsie Roll Owl? Guess we'll never know how many licks it'd have taken to reach the center...
Manual lawn mowers were excellent exercise.
They are still available! I have one,.because I hate.the noise and stink of power mowers. The soft whirring is pleasant and this way I can mow early, while it's still cool outside, and not wake the neighbors.
Cartoons were awesome. Pink Panther was the best.
Fond memory….received my first little transistor radio when I was in my tweens. After forced into bedtime I would pull my covers up and listen to WLS.
Got my first one for Christmas 1963. 6 transistors! Rich kids got one with 7!
Later on there was the 'WLS/WCFL battle' - Bob Sirott vs. Larry Lujack
@@peggyl2849 - On the West Coast we had 'Wolfman Jack' and 'Charlie Tuna' spinning the top 40's while you sipped your frosty cold glass mug of A&W root beer at the drive-in.
You know you're old when..............you see a 20 something person in a thrift store pick up a Viewmaster and say "What is this thing".
As a teen boy in the 70s, I remember velour shirts, bell bottom pants, dingo boots, and feathered hair being all the rage in my high school.
Also tricked out vans and sports coupes with shiny mag wheels and twice the size rear tires for extra grip when racing out in the boonies.
And fro's. Lots of kids started perming their hair and many just flat out got fro's. And don't forget, the 70's is when you said everything on a Tshirt. And thats when marketing Tshirts came out.....companies had to gret a cut of the profits on putting stuff on Tshirts as well.
Guys colognes: Old Spice, Musk, Polo, Hai Karate, and Paco Rabanne for those with cash burning a hole in their pocket.
And for girls it was clogs, Candies, hot pants with colored tights, and frizzy hairstyles. Lip gloss was EVERYWHERE as well. And you either had to smell like Charlie, Shalimar, Loves Baby Soft, or if you had money.....Channel #5. And DON'T forget that hideous BLUE EYESHADOW you could see from space!!!
Sweet Honesty from Avon.
Me being a true 70’s girl I could not live without my hip hugger blue jeans and the best music ever! ❤
Yes!
Nice Video. Thank You
Did you watch all of it when you commented? The time stamp doesn't look like it.
In grade school in the early 1970s, I was taught how to do fine cursive script using a fountain pen. I haven't used it since.
The cursive or the fountain pen?
@@laurafranich4807 I haven't touched a fountain pen in 50 years.
@@richardthunderbay8364I had the most GORGEOUS penmanship until texting came along
Yes, we were taught cursive and many of us developed the most beautiful script . . . now sadly lost to time. Recently though I've taken up learning Calligraphy using a fountain pen, just for fun. It is so very strange that after all these years, I've found the act of physically writing on paper to be actually relaxing.
Schools back then wouldn't have been the same without reel movie projectors that had to be set up and rewound at the end plus film strips with tape recorded narration! The thing about early home video games was that, although Atari had some great games it was actually ColecoVision Games that offered more of an arcade replication in the beginning! There was a really cute novelty song by the late, great British singer Alma Cogan called "Couldn't Resist her with her Pocket Transistor" in the 60s! Haha!
I remember a friend had the Mattel "Intellivision". Great graphics for the time.
I never could understand the student who knew how to thread that thing.
@@Ken-h5d yes they were! My brother - who lived at home forever and had a ton of disposable income - bought an Intellivision system after maxing out what could be purchased for the Atari 2600!
I had a blue Schwinn Stingray, with the ape hanger handlebars and a gold flecked banana seat. Some (explicitive deleted) cut the lock and stole it when I was seeing Star Wars. I didn't have a roller rink, but I did have a bowling alley with an arcade and a lunch counter that served, what I considered to be, the best greasy cheeseburger in existence My Dad was a gadget nut, so we had every gizmo you mentioned. I still have his instmatatic camera, and still prefer a typewriter over a computer for writing.
In 1959, when I graduated from Jr High, my parents gave me a "Shick 3 Speed Electric Shaver." I am Italian, so I hit adolescence early ! 😂😂😂 When I was in my single years I fixed many a "Hamber Helper" meal. It was easy and it was good ! 8 TRACK was a total thrill to have. I had one installed in my 1968 Buick GS400 convertable as a Birthday present.
Thank you.
It's that time again, let's check it out y'all
Thanks for the memories;
OH MY ACHIN' BACK. This takes me so much back to my young adulthood and early parenthood. Those were the days.
With the manual law mowers there was a truck that used to come around in the 70s and sharpen the blades, hedge clippers and other stuff. We had the last of all the “good ole experiences” of the previous decades. One thing that I don’t miss… typing class!
Back in the 60s and 70s when we played our vinyl records we didn't really mind the pops and clicks from frequently playing the same records, but today in the digital age when I digitize those same vinyl records to same on my computer I spend more time finding all of the pops and clicks and wore vinyl record sounds than it took to record the vinyl records in the first place.
Digitizing vinyl is blasphemy!
Such memories from watching this video. Hamburgers were about 15 cents, pop was a nickel, you could buy a small bag of sunflower seeds for 2 cents. I never had the cool bicycle but some of my friends did. I would trade everything I own now to go back to those sweet simple enjoyable times.
This was the perfect video at the right time. "Stingrays", bell bottoms, transistor radios, and Hamburger Helper. Oh, my! Just today, I found one of my Mom's boxes of old stuff. Old pictures, old school crafts, even my school report cards from the early '60s. Never knew she kept all that stuff. Now the job of separating out my things from my older brothers' and sending them theirs.
I was born in 1946, so i remember all of these, except the magazines.
I still like hamburger helper. I remember moms would step out on the front porch and yell your name and saying dinner. If you passed a friend on your bicycle. They would tell you, your mom is hollering for you. Good times!
Hamburger Helper helps her hamburger help her, make a great meal. 🎶
3:07 baby and a metal fan.What more can you ask for.We did experiment when we were young and thank goodness we were alright
Us cousins would stick our fingers in, knuckles first to try to stop the blades. 😂. I can still hear that sound to this day.
Live and learn.
I used to like to talk into the electric fan and it sounded like I was under water.
Re: Fountain pens- For the 1966-67 school year, our school decided fourth grade and up would use cartridge pens except for math. Cartridge pens were fountain pens, but used a cartridge of ink dropped into the barrel of the pen, instead of filling the pen from an ink bottle. It was going to make our penmanship beautiful!
Instead, ink was everywhere! It was on shirts and blouses, trousers and skirts, in the wooden desks, leaking from pencil cases. It was especially fun on the playground for boys to somehow "accidentally" stomp ink cartridges.
The next year, everybody in fourth grade up used Bic ballpoint pens, excepting with certain permission, when a Flair felt tip could be used. 😂
I'm left handed, and for a southpaw, cartridge pens were a disaster. The nuns cut me no slack at all, and I spent most.of third grade kneeling on gravel at the front of the room.
@ 11:00 The model in rhe middle looks like Nick Nolte. 😊
THAT IS HIM. HE MODELED A LOT BEFORE ACTING
Gotta love the Hamburger Helper coupon, save 7 cents😂
I had typing classes on manual typewriters in the 80s. Many of my homework assignments for other classes had to be typed. I was so excited when we got an electric one at home.
I Hitch hiked all the time in the 70s before getting a car.
Loved all of these had them remember hanging my transistor radio hanging on my bike Handles AM of course 😊
3:00 That was the EXACT moment that that kid learned not to put his fingers into a fan. Childhood was magical in the pre-nerfed days.
I looked. The cord was wrapped around the base.
Yes, that was before they made the grid of bars covering the blades closer together. This fan in the picture kind of reminds me of an old noir detective movie.
The amount of different cigarette lighters produced back then is mind boggling. I collect them, and the best I'll ever do is maybe 10% of models ever produced. Same with table top lighters and ash trays, endless variations.
We had a remington typewriter exactly like the one shown!
My grandparents had a lot of these things and I was always getting into their stuff and playing around with it but I was always careful. They bought me an Atari in my youth years and boy I had a time with Pac-Man but it was fun. I only wish those years could have stuck around a bit longer.
Yay top 141 comments. Thanks for making this video. Best to you and your family. Clicked on video 4 hours after it was posted. 10:33p.m., Friday, July 19th, 2024. Watching from maryland
Elvis made a huge impact on the 1970s
I never had an electric razor till 1981 or 82. It was a Remington Microscreen. I guess I used it till it started having trouble cutting, and then I forgot about it and went back to conventional razors. Sometime in the mid 70s my grandmother gave me a little AM transistor radio that she had gotten as a bank premium. It's a GE P1758 that still works. I loved our Viewmasters. We actually had some old reels that were from when my mom was a kid in the 40s, I believe. We always drank from the hose out in the yard. We had our own well, and it was pretty deep. So our water tasted good and was nice and cold. I always enjoyed it. My parents had two classic station wagons in a row that they had bought new. Both were Chrysler Town and Countrys. The first was a `72, and the next was a `75. On the family road trips my brother and I always rode in the way back. We would make the arm motion to truckers to pull their air horns.
Thanks, Recollection Road, for providing these splendid glimpses of the past, a past that grows more distant with each tick of the ( analogue ) clock.
Hamburger Helper came out years earlier than the late 1970s! We ate tons of that stuff in college, because it was cheap and filling. I never could eat it again.
I'm 57 and remember taking typing lessons on manual typewriters. The teacher tortured us with rhythm drills on the keys with our fingers until they almost fell off and you had to hit the keys really hard for the letters to type out. I won't miss manual typewriters nor forget the enduring pain the typing teacher had us go thru. I forgot all about what that class taught and started typing with two fingers with each hand and I got pretty good at it.
I loved my olivetti typewriter circa 1974 at awa ashfield 🇦🇺
The three male models the one in the middle look like Nick nolte
4:25 we had the slideshow when I was little. Looking back, it’s gone full circle. My FireTV give us a slideshow from our phone photos! Nice! 12:23 used to have 8-track players but still weren’t as robust as cassette tapes.
rockford files was a big promoter of answering machines
@@swk38 Best show ever. I bought my first car, with my Army bonus money, because Rockford had one just like it. 1974 Pontiac Firebird. Bought it for $1,800.00😂 in ‘82.
You had me at the Schwinn Stingray bikes. A lot of kids, me included, bought the seats and handlebars to convert any 20" bike into a faux-Stringray. I made my sedate little Raleigh Record into a cool ride that way, back in the mid-60's. Thanks for the memories..
It's ironic that the vinyl record and record player has both a comeback. Along with the Polaroid camera I saw all three on sale at Walmart recently and had to laugh. What was once popular and useful years ago the younger generations have rediscovered. I still own a floor model stereo, record player and eight track system and it still plays and works fine. Love the Saturday morning cartoons and the old video games which have come back again. I still enjoy the blow pop lollipop once in a while. Thanks for the videos and memories.
I've seen everything your showing at the local goodwill..I go there not so much to buy something, but just to get "hands on" on the things we had back then,also fun to watch the younger folks there to try to figure out what some of those things are and were used for..take me back to those times!
grade school used blue black ink fountain pen mine was "modern" used an ink cartridge i didn't need an ink well like others much less mess but had to wait for my writing to dry used through 8th grade. instamatic had 12 exposure so expensive to process so we took group pictures 4 times a year major holidays then after a year we processed send in the mail took 2 weeks to get back
When I was in kindergarten in 1964, I made an ash tray for my Father.
In the 1970s, I listened to my transistor radio for the station KRLA, for the early rock and roll songs, but every hour they would also play the recent 70s songs ( most of them were
junk).
But it was later, in the 1980s I needed that same radio - because the small TV then could
get channel 6 in San Diego, over 50 miles away, it got the picture but no sound, my radio
supplied the sound; it was showing the Jackie Gleason Show from the early and mid 1960s, having the American Scene Magazine; the programs were a half hour long, having the comedy only - and showing Joe the Bartender at the end with Crazy Guggenheim, this used to be on 5 days a week …😊
I shipped my dad's electric typewriter to the states for him. We still listen to tapes and records at home.😊
What a great video! Loved the stroll down Memory Lane, the pleasant background music, and wonderful narrator. I’m a new subscriber.
I love the elegant music in this🎩💎I remember pretending to shave as a child with the electric razor😃I remember having vinyl records on 45 rpm before graduating to full albums😁I had a am transistor radio with Fred Flintstone😆Zippo🚬I loved my View MasterI had a yellow Stingray BikeMy dad used a manual lawnmower, I wanted so bad to try itI rember my brother having the instamatic X-15 camera📷My friend had the Atari 800🕹We still use Hamburger Helper to this day7 cent coupon🤣I grew up wearing Hang Ten shirts👣I hated 8 Track Tapes, half way through a tune it would take it a moment to continue on the next track to continue that tune🙄I remember seeing a lot of hitch hikers in Southern California back in the day😳Our family had a Rambler Station Wagon and I loved siiting in the back facing the cars behind us😊I never liked roller skating😫Blow Pops RULED!!!!!!!🍭I remember having a Radio Shack Battery Club Card, after so many purchased you would get a free battery⚡Do you remember riding in the bed of pickup trucks back then😅Great video👍🏻ROCK ON!!!!!!!🤘🏻🤙🏻✌🏻
3:00 - Back when toys were functional appliances, too.
My brother had a bright yellow Stingray bike! It was his prized.possession.
I still have a non-motorized lawn mower. And I still have the Royal manual typewriter on which I wrote every paper through my Masters thesis.
I still use a hamburger helper to make 4 cheese lasagna. One of my favorites.
I remember lying on a cot in the summer of 1973. My parents had sent me and my brother to a sleepaway camp in Long Island. I stayed awake with my transistor radio pressed against my ear, listening to the great Jean Shepherd on WOR radio.
@fr2ncm9, You just listened, to FAKE NEWS, and were brainwashed, by it, like YOU are TODAY.
I was still fixing Hamburger Helper in the 90's. With a salad it was a fast complete meal to fix sometimes after getting home late from a bad day at work. Back then we couldn't afford to stop to get fast food like so many parents do today. If l still had family at home l would still keep a couple boxes in the cabinet, even though it is just full of junk manufactured ingredients.
2:54 The ones with the steel blades made the coolest noise when you stuck a piece paper in them when they were running...
Weekday afternoons were when I watched cartoons. I would get home from school and watch Captain Ernie or Grandpa Happy. They were local kids shows from the Quad Cities.
I remember Captain Ernie. Burlington Iowa.
Vinyl records have made a comeback recently in several years
So have old fashioned typewriters
I saw a video of a school teaching kids about the typewriter.
Couldn’t live without them great station wagons with roll down back window and fold out back seat!!
Hamburger Helper, Mac N Cheese, TV dinners, hotdogs and hamburgers…those were the days…pre-microwave or cell phones 😊❤
Wait! Is that Nick Nolte? 11:02 Those other two guys look familiar, too.
Yep, that’s him.
I couldn't have lived without my Schwinn stingray :) I'd like to know how many miles I put on that thing!
always a goodun !
Growing up I remember old black and white cartoons like Deputy Dawg and the Flintstones sponsored by Salem or Winston cigarettes. How inappropriate is that now?
And no, when I was born dirt hadn't been inverted yet!
I liked the Remington MicroScreen so much, I bought the company...
Love this!
If you didn't wait after you took a picture. You'd burn your fingers on the flash cubes. I speak from experience.