I was only a gayling, but I miss guys wearing cutoff jean shorts in Jesus sandals. I miss thin men. I miss Carole King Tapestry. Hell, I even miss Earth Shoes.
Things you miss from the 70’s
by Anonymous | reply 325 | April 5, 2024 3:44 AM |
I miss people who understand the possessive and who know how to properly use an apostrophe.
by Anonymous | reply 1 | March 25, 2024 10:18 PM |
Mood rings were so cool. Loved mine.
by Anonymous | reply 2 | March 25, 2024 10:21 PM |
Gritty sitcoms dealing with Issurs; TV movies; shopping malls; riding bicycles everywhere; 15-cent Hershey bars; blizzards
by Anonymous | reply 3 | March 25, 2024 10:25 PM |
Oh dear, now I know why so many hate Greg.
by Anonymous | reply 4 | March 25, 2024 10:26 PM |
I miss Match Game. And Movies of the Week.
by Anonymous | reply 5 | March 25, 2024 10:27 PM |
I miss Rula Lenska.
by Anonymous | reply 6 | March 25, 2024 10:27 PM |
macramé
by Anonymous | reply 7 | March 25, 2024 10:29 PM |
God’s eyes
by Anonymous | reply 8 | March 25, 2024 10:29 PM |
Fern bars
by Anonymous | reply 9 | March 25, 2024 10:29 PM |
muffin baskets as a novelty
by Anonymous | reply 10 | March 25, 2024 10:30 PM |
Farah Fawcett hair
by Anonymous | reply 11 | March 25, 2024 10:30 PM |
I miss the Magic Pan restaurants. Crepes for lunch, crepes for dinner, crepes for dessert.
by Anonymous | reply 12 | March 25, 2024 10:35 PM |
The music. The movies. Most of the fashion.
by Anonymous | reply 13 | March 25, 2024 10:35 PM |
[quote] Oh dear, now I know why so many hate Greg.
And you’re just now figuring that out?
by Anonymous | reply 14 | March 25, 2024 10:40 PM |
Blaxploitation movies.
by Anonymous | reply 15 | March 25, 2024 10:42 PM |
My grandmother.
by Anonymous | reply 16 | March 25, 2024 10:43 PM |
Hanging out with friends just listening to albums
by Anonymous | reply 17 | March 25, 2024 11:55 PM |
Black lights and posters, head shops with bongs
by Anonymous | reply 18 | March 26, 2024 12:05 AM |
There are certainly thin men around, especially in the gay community
by Anonymous | reply 19 | March 26, 2024 12:06 AM |
Beaded curtains, conversation pits, muscle cars, glass grapes, velvet paintings, discotheques, and quaaludes.
by Anonymous | reply 20 | March 26, 2024 12:09 AM |
Join us again tomorrow for the continuing story of “Another World”.
by Anonymous | reply 21 | March 26, 2024 12:13 AM |
I wouldn't mind having a 1971 Buick Riviera GS.
by Anonymous | reply 22 | March 26, 2024 12:15 AM |
Yes Quaaludes, Seconal, white cross speed, LSD (windowpane especially) - Wow those were the days!
by Anonymous | reply 23 | March 26, 2024 12:16 AM |
Music from rock to disco to soul. Great TV and great movies. I don't miss gass lines and out of control inflation and platform shoes.
by Anonymous | reply 24 | March 26, 2024 12:20 AM |
My youth.
by Anonymous | reply 25 | March 26, 2024 12:21 AM |
The longer hair on men and the hairy chests
by Anonymous | reply 26 | March 26, 2024 12:22 AM |
Thinking I had all the time in the world.
by Anonymous | reply 27 | March 26, 2024 12:22 AM |
The Magic Pan Restaurants.
by Anonymous | reply 28 | March 26, 2024 12:26 AM |
Oh, sorry R12. I concur.
by Anonymous | reply 29 | March 26, 2024 12:27 AM |
Bearded clams
by Anonymous | reply 30 | March 26, 2024 12:28 AM |
Fondue.
by Anonymous | reply 31 | March 26, 2024 12:29 AM |
The restaurant at Bloomingdale's that was called 40 Carrots or something like that.
by Anonymous | reply 33 | March 26, 2024 12:31 AM |
Surplus Stores.
by Anonymous | reply 34 | March 26, 2024 12:32 AM |
Painter's Pants.
by Anonymous | reply 35 | March 26, 2024 12:32 AM |
Rugby Shirts
Bass Weejuns
Famolare Shoes
by Anonymous | reply 36 | March 26, 2024 12:33 AM |
Hairy pussy
by Anonymous | reply 37 | March 26, 2024 12:34 AM |
Osh Kosh B'gosh
by Anonymous | reply 38 | March 26, 2024 12:34 AM |
Farrell's Ice Cream Parlor.
by Anonymous | reply 39 | March 26, 2024 12:37 AM |
Wild Pair Shoes.
by Anonymous | reply 40 | March 26, 2024 12:37 AM |
Swenson's Ice Cream Parlors.
by Anonymous | reply 41 | March 26, 2024 12:38 AM |
Love Affair douche
by Anonymous | reply 42 | March 26, 2024 12:38 AM |
"Love means never having to say you're sorry."
by Anonymous | reply 43 | March 26, 2024 12:39 AM |
Love's Fresh Lemon
by Anonymous | reply 44 | March 26, 2024 12:40 AM |
Vinyl records
Long shaggy hair on men
Hiphuggers
Discotheques
Good drugs
Quality movies
Real soul music
Lean bodies
Easygoing people
Mind you, I was born in '74, so I didn't get to appreciate much at the time.
by Anonymous | reply 45 | March 26, 2024 12:40 AM |
Men's bodies that were normal without exaggerated muscles, and that have become cartoonish.
Also, I miss clones.
(It's even getting hard to find porn that doesn't feature massively muscled and tattooed men.)
by Anonymous | reply 46 | March 26, 2024 12:40 AM |
Lacoste.
by Anonymous | reply 47 | March 26, 2024 12:40 AM |
Eastland Mall, Charlotte, NC (RIP).
by Anonymous | reply 48 | March 26, 2024 12:40 AM |
Howard Johnson and Sambo's restaurants.
by Anonymous | reply 49 | March 26, 2024 12:42 AM |
More mom and pop stores and restaurants instead of all chains in the suburbs.
More unique and one-off stores in cities.
by Anonymous | reply 50 | March 26, 2024 12:43 AM |
Not having to worry about drugs containing fentanyl.
by Anonymous | reply 51 | March 26, 2024 12:44 AM |
When pot made me horny and hungry instead of tired and sleepy.
by Anonymous | reply 52 | March 26, 2024 12:44 AM |
People didn't own automatic weapons and no worries about global warming.
by Anonymous | reply 54 | March 26, 2024 12:46 AM |
Clothes from run-of-the-mill retailers were much better quality than designer clothing of the present.
by Anonymous | reply 55 | March 26, 2024 12:46 AM |
* Peak music from Linda Ronstadt, Warren Zevon, Carly Simon, Jackson Browne, Joni Mitchell
* While at times I feel I'd do anything for a Quaalude or a glass of Brunello di Montalcino, I'm glad drugs and alcohol are no longer a part of my life.
* Eating in Little Italy on Friday nights, especially at Il Cortile.
* Alligator shirts and 501s.
* Julius and the Ninth Circle. Or maybe the fact that I survived that time allows me to feel nostalgic.
* Picking guys up on the beach where Ocean Park Blvd. meets the Pacific Ocean.
* Concerts that didn't cost that much.
* No assholes on speakerphone in public.
* Great movies.
by Anonymous | reply 56 | March 26, 2024 12:48 AM |
Female only finger fucking parties
by Anonymous | reply 57 | March 26, 2024 12:48 AM |
FDS Woman
by Anonymous | reply 58 | March 26, 2024 12:49 AM |
Disco.
by Anonymous | reply 59 | March 26, 2024 12:51 AM |
I wish I had been able to experience L.A. and Southern CA Beach culture in the 70s before those experiences were ruined by the super-rich.
by Anonymous | reply 60 | March 26, 2024 12:51 AM |
Healthcare costs were more reasonable.
by Anonymous | reply 61 | March 26, 2024 12:53 AM |
Fewer unhoused individuals.
by Anonymous | reply 62 | March 26, 2024 12:55 AM |
Carnation Instant Breakfast
by Anonymous | reply 63 | March 26, 2024 1:02 AM |
A greater sense of community in neighborhoods, apartment houses, etc.
by Anonymous | reply 65 | March 26, 2024 1:05 AM |
R63 Carnation Instant Breakfast still exists. The company simply rebranded the product to "Carnation Breakfast Essentials" featuring vanilla, chocolate, and strawberry flavors. This is the old-school powder in envelopes. (Their website says they also sell it in a canister and ready-to-drink liquid versions.) My sister still uses the strawberry powder and asks me to buy it for her at Walmart where it's about $2 less per box than the regular supermarket.
by Anonymous | reply 66 | March 26, 2024 1:22 AM |
San Francisco in the 70s was wonderful.
by Anonymous | reply 67 | March 26, 2024 1:27 AM |
My parents, my aunts and uncles, 2 of my cousins.
In the 70s our big Italian holidays meant 30+ people.
This Sunday’s Easter dinner they’ll be 8 of us.
by Anonymous | reply 68 | March 26, 2024 1:29 AM |
Oh the things I’d do to #50, R64
by Anonymous | reply 69 | March 26, 2024 1:30 AM |
Playgirl magazine, and hairy, HAIRY men who were proud of it.
by Anonymous | reply 70 | March 26, 2024 1:57 AM |
Bulges, bulges everywhere!
by Anonymous | reply 71 | March 26, 2024 2:04 AM |
Urinals with no dividers!
by Anonymous | reply 72 | March 26, 2024 2:05 AM |
Being completely unreachable whenever I was not close to a home or office telephone.
by Anonymous | reply 73 | March 26, 2024 2:10 AM |
R69
You take 50, and I'll take 43.
by Anonymous | reply 74 | March 26, 2024 2:33 AM |
Loud, good music.
by Anonymous | reply 75 | March 26, 2024 2:53 AM |
R74
31 is mine.
by Anonymous | reply 76 | March 26, 2024 3:10 AM |
FOLLIES!!
by Anonymous | reply 77 | March 26, 2024 3:14 AM |
R76 Oh, fine. I'm feeling generous.
by Anonymous | reply 78 | March 26, 2024 3:16 AM |
r64, 31 is the one I want most. But 43 looks as if he'd share the cookies he's got stashed in his locker when the game is over.
by Anonymous | reply 79 | March 26, 2024 3:17 AM |
The laid back vibe.
by Anonymous | reply 80 | March 26, 2024 3:28 AM |
Psychedelic everything, especially in the early 70s.
by Anonymous | reply 81 | March 26, 2024 3:31 AM |
Thinking that my good life would stay so and just get better.
by Anonymous | reply 82 | March 26, 2024 3:38 AM |
Absence of cyber-tech and cellphones.
That belief that ideas and progress still mattered.
by Anonymous | reply 83 | March 26, 2024 3:44 AM |
Skiing in jeans on second-hand skis at rough north east ski mountains for 6 dollars.
by Anonymous | reply 84 | March 26, 2024 4:35 AM |
I miss the Gremlin!
by Anonymous | reply 86 | March 26, 2024 4:41 AM |
Scrappy Provincetown.
Empty art museums and their dowdy cafeterias.
Cavernous bathhouses (in the old meaning) at grand public beaches.
Army Navy football at West Point. Harvard Yale football at the Yale Bowl.
Bizarre shops owned by chilled out hippies.
Enormous luxury American cars you borrowed to go on a date.
Tiny simple affordable European convertibles - the Triumphs, MGs and Fiats.
Hamburger Drive ins.
Hot dog stands on Connecticut state roads.
Old school mothers and grandmothers in the neighborhood who cooked wonderful food, often in the working kitchen in the basement, not the show kitchen upstairs.
by Anonymous | reply 87 | March 26, 2024 4:55 AM |
Going into various towns on a road trip and seeing the different restaurants and stores there.....because they were different, not the same combo of Walmart/Target/Subway/Starbucks seen almost everywhere today.
by Anonymous | reply 88 | March 26, 2024 5:00 AM |
Skipping school and hitting the beach in my pale blue semi transparent nylon Speedos, picking up older guys (I was mid teens, they were early twenties), a little afternoon delight then back to the beach for a reapplication of my Hawaiian Tropic.
by Anonymous | reply 89 | March 26, 2024 5:45 AM |
Airplane food. It was delicious!
by Anonymous | reply 90 | March 26, 2024 6:06 AM |
Keep on Truckin'
by Anonymous | reply 91 | March 26, 2024 9:19 AM |
But the Carnation Breakfast Bars are gone. My mom was strict about us eating sweets but she thought those were "healthy" so for me they were like a candy bar.
by Anonymous | reply 92 | March 26, 2024 9:22 AM |
I miss dating. No, no hookups. Actual dates. With men who could hold conversations.
I miss my gloriously full head of hair. And my small waist. And my flat stomach.
I miss how easy it was to hang out with friends.
I miss Chicken Delight.
by Anonymous | reply 93 | March 26, 2024 11:48 AM |
Glory holes, everywhere!
by Anonymous | reply 94 | March 26, 2024 11:53 AM |
[quote] Oh dear, now I know why so many hate Greg.
Please don’t feed the attention whore troll. Just ignore it.
by Anonymous | reply 95 | March 26, 2024 11:53 AM |
Oh please, R95.
You like my attention much more than I like yours.
by Anonymous | reply 96 | March 26, 2024 11:55 AM |
R74 #31 is Bill Walton
by Anonymous | reply 97 | March 26, 2024 11:56 AM |
I miss gay men who had manners and weren’t like every other rube in society — see R95.
by Anonymous | reply 98 | March 26, 2024 11:57 AM |
Oops—I meant #32
by Anonymous | reply 99 | March 26, 2024 12:05 PM |
Overalls
Striped rugby shirts
Getting high and listening to albums with my friends
by Anonymous | reply 100 | March 26, 2024 12:15 PM |
Jeans...their fitted look...Levis and Wranglers (Lee jeans were a distant third)...by the end of the decade "designer jeans" ruined jeans. Faded, tight Levis on a guy made this little and teenage gayling tingle in all the right places.
No cellphones...no social media. Yeah, we experienced all the anxieties and problems teens today go through, but we also had better social skills, more fully rounded, close friendships.
Doing nothing and just hanging out...it's a lost art!
by Anonymous | reply 101 | March 26, 2024 12:21 PM |
I miss when technology was special. Going over to my friends house, dark brown rustic environment, big oversized sofas, sunken conversation pit, looking for a record collection like it was one of a kind, firing up his fathers stereo stacked high with lots of lights and shiny knobs, felt like I was lucky to play with a piece of tech worth thousands of dollar, putting on high-fidelity headphones that were so comfortable and clear music sounded like heaven. Getting high during the processes was the cherry that made it all sing.
by Anonymous | reply 102 | March 26, 2024 12:25 PM |
Less partisanship. Remember Republicans turning against Richard Nixon because of Watergate?
by Anonymous | reply 103 | March 26, 2024 12:27 PM |
[quote]Striped rugby shirts
Hu, Rugby shirts are a staple like jeans, or a button down shirt, they never went out of style. Ralph Lauren even sells them starting at $150.
by Anonymous | reply 104 | March 26, 2024 12:28 PM |
I miss my unwrinkled, clear-skinned face.
by Anonymous | reply 105 | March 26, 2024 12:29 PM |
I remember "liberal Republicans" and "Conservative Democrats" were an actual thing in each part. Religion was not yet fully connected to one party. People respected each other's view point. No MAGA no Trump.
by Anonymous | reply 106 | March 26, 2024 12:30 PM |
My parents had parties and we didn't hang out with the adults, we usually had to stay upstairs. My brothers and I didn't mind, we got to watch my parents tv and eat snacks so it was fun for us. Now my brothers have their kids involved with everything and some of the comments his kids make are disrespectful, sometimes I wish some things could be for just adults.
by Anonymous | reply 107 | March 26, 2024 12:30 PM |
All the Sara Lee varieties
by Anonymous | reply 108 | March 26, 2024 12:55 PM |
The Carol Burnett Show
by Anonymous | reply 109 | March 26, 2024 12:55 PM |
I miss my pet rock.
by Anonymous | reply 110 | March 26, 2024 1:55 PM |
To R64, I would service them all, the entire team, and the hot assistant coaches too. Northwestern, Penn, Drexel, La Salle, Temple. The gloryholes at Temple University were amazing (Beury Hall Basement, any mensroom in Beury Hall). I used to take basketball players to 3rd fl Beury Hall, Norris St. side mensroom. 2 very heavy noisy wooden doors. marble stalls went to the floor. The men's room at the SAC (Student Assistance Center), Mitten Hall. Sooo many more!!
by Anonymous | reply 111 | March 26, 2024 3:23 PM |
And while Phillywhore was taking care of Temple, on the other side of the Keystone state, the men's rooms in the Cathedral of Learning at Pitt sustained many a horny cocksucker with more loads than any one person could actually take.....
by Anonymous | reply 112 | March 26, 2024 3:30 PM |
Being a kid with a lot of freedom to roam around and play. We lived in a coastal town in San Diego, and the beach was 2 blocks away (across the train track). Our parents would drop us off sometimes on a Friday or Saturday night at the roller skating rink where we'd skate to disco tunes while they went to the Belly Up Tavern close by to listen to live music/jazz. We'd have a few hours of unadulterated (quite literally) freedom to socialize with other kids and have fun.
Oh, those halcyon days of youth, when I was so ignorant of what adulthood would really be like.
by Anonymous | reply 113 | March 26, 2024 3:31 PM |
Some called it the Cathedral of Yearning, r112.
by Anonymous | reply 114 | March 26, 2024 3:33 PM |
R114 I just remember a few afternoons in there where there were 20 of us, all those stalls without doors.....so much cock, so much cum, the scent was glorious......
Yearning and lots of fulfillment!
by Anonymous | reply 115 | March 26, 2024 4:13 PM |
Was this on the second or third floor, r115?
by Anonymous | reply 116 | March 26, 2024 4:14 PM |
I seem to remember the second, because that was the bigger one.....or was it the third? I think I mostly went to the second. I blew a Pitt professor one Saturday afternoon on a higher floor.
by Anonymous | reply 117 | March 26, 2024 4:16 PM |
I forgot, r117, that we were talking about what happened in the 1970s. Though I was a student there, I knew nothing of the Cathedral men's rooms. I would meet guys on Bellefield at night, or else by hitchhiking home to Squirrel Hill during the day.
by Anonymous | reply 118 | March 26, 2024 4:28 PM |
My experience was more in the 80s, oops, but it was hopping even then.
by Anonymous | reply 119 | March 26, 2024 4:30 PM |
My twenties.
by Anonymous | reply 120 | March 26, 2024 4:44 PM |
Remember these chairs with the built-in stereo? Bring these back.
by Anonymous | reply 121 | March 26, 2024 5:21 PM |
R121 I would have killed for one of those chairs in my childhood room. Never got it.
by Anonymous | reply 122 | March 26, 2024 5:42 PM |
disco music. Back when it was mostly unknown and unheard outside of the gay and black communities. Before it hit the mainstream and died an deserved death.
by Anonymous | reply 123 | March 26, 2024 6:25 PM |
The whole Christopher Street scene in the West Village. Sitting on the McNulty's Tea Shop step and watching the guys go by. Cruising the pier and the trucks. The International Stud's back room w/Ladies Who Munch on the jukebox.
by Anonymous | reply 124 | March 26, 2024 6:35 PM |
R121 R122 -- your chair dreams can still come true - there are other models with speakers available online.
by Anonymous | reply 125 | March 26, 2024 6:38 PM |
[quote] All the Sara Lee varieties
Honest DL answer.
by Anonymous | reply 126 | March 26, 2024 7:57 PM |
Nothing. I was a small child and the 70s were terrible. Polyester, feathered haircuts, roach clips in hair with ribbons. Gaucho pants. Vests. None of it looked good. Gas lines, inflation, smog, traffic, threat of nukes, we're all gonna die, Satanic panic, drugs being a new thing dealt in junior high and high schools, pissed off Vietnam vets. Surf culture in LA. I didn't understand any of it.
by Anonymous | reply 127 | March 26, 2024 8:08 PM |
My body 😢
by Anonymous | reply 128 | March 26, 2024 8:12 PM |
Jell-O 1-2-3
by Anonymous | reply 129 | March 26, 2024 9:12 PM |
The CBS Saturday night lineup.
by Anonymous | reply 130 | March 26, 2024 9:40 PM |
Smoking everywhere
by Anonymous | reply 131 | March 26, 2024 10:27 PM |
R125 those are nice, but they don't have a built in stereo.
by Anonymous | reply 132 | March 26, 2024 10:44 PM |
The bulges.
by Anonymous | reply 133 | March 26, 2024 11:01 PM |
Burt Reynolds
by Anonymous | reply 134 | March 26, 2024 11:03 PM |
Sex on the piers and the Trucks in NYC
by Anonymous | reply 135 | March 26, 2024 11:03 PM |
R54, we had global warming back then. It was just referred to as “ecology”.
by Anonymous | reply 136 | March 26, 2024 11:05 PM |
Yes R103, back when Republicans had a sense of shame and moral and ethical principles.
by Anonymous | reply 137 | March 26, 2024 11:11 PM |
I miss my Panapet!
by Anonymous | reply 138 | March 27, 2024 1:15 AM |
The Chevy vans, called the Shagging Wagon because people would customize them with beds, chairs, and liquor cabinets. My uncle had one.
by Anonymous | reply 139 | March 27, 2024 1:49 AM |
I remember the young guys in our neighborhood would always try to get "shagging" vans or cars.
My teen years were more the 80s but I remember older siblings' friends doing it too in the 70s.
by Anonymous | reply 140 | March 27, 2024 1:54 AM |
Hairy men driving conversion vans.
by Anonymous | reply 141 | March 27, 2024 1:59 AM |
Barbra Streisand in peak golden voice.
by Anonymous | reply 142 | March 27, 2024 2:10 AM |
I spent the 70s hitchhiking all over. It was amazing. I miss it… the excitement, the surprises, the people I met I never would have met elsewhere.
by Anonymous | reply 143 | March 27, 2024 3:11 AM |
I miss real Disco music.
by Anonymous | reply 144 | March 27, 2024 3:14 AM |
Aunt Jemima Quick-Make Frozen Pancake Pre-Made Mix Cartons
Ice-Cream Truck Wacky Pack Collection Series
“Run, Joe, Run”
by Anonymous | reply 145 | March 27, 2024 3:20 AM |
R36 Famolares came back some time ago. (I have two pair!)
by Anonymous | reply 146 | March 27, 2024 3:21 AM |
Run, Joe, Run is from the 20s— duh.
by Anonymous | reply 147 | March 27, 2024 4:17 AM |
They mean Run Joey Run by David Geddes, peaked at No. 4 on the Billboard Hot 100 in the fall of 1975. Described as “a teenage tragedy song,” is wasn’t quite Leader of the Pack. Or Papa Don’t Preach.
by Anonymous | reply 148 | March 27, 2024 4:58 AM |
The mineral oil rain lamp! My aunt had one of these and I thought it was the height of elegance.
by Anonymous | reply 149 | March 27, 2024 5:08 AM |
Piss elegant!
by Anonymous | reply 150 | March 27, 2024 5:12 AM |
Earth Day started in 1970 after a massive oil spill in the Santa Barbara channel. 3 million gallons of oil turned the beaches pitch black, more than 10,000 seabirds, dolphins, seals, and sea lions. This activists started Americas first Earth Day to bring awareness to environmental concerns.
by Anonymous | reply 151 | March 27, 2024 5:26 AM |
I miss my erections.
by Anonymous | reply 152 | March 27, 2024 5:36 AM |
Bell bottom jeans
by Anonymous | reply 153 | March 27, 2024 5:55 AM |
Disco
by Anonymous | reply 154 | March 27, 2024 6:17 AM |
Really short shorts. Muscle cars and big American land yachts
But most of all, like OP, thin men!
[quote]There are certainly thin men around, especially in the gay community
R19 Where? I hardly ever see any, especially in my own age group
by Anonymous | reply 155 | March 27, 2024 7:19 AM |
Most middle class suburban families still drove Big American Cars- this started to change in a big way in the 1980's.
I miss this huge beauties with their wide comfortable bench seats and great thigh support and velour seats.
by Anonymous | reply 156 | March 27, 2024 7:27 AM |
My thick head of hair.
by Anonymous | reply 157 | March 27, 2024 8:50 AM |
R155- In those days everyone had slim and natural bodies ( no tattoos, no piercings, no rings and no shaved 🪒 pubic hair).
Now everyone is either FAT or MUSCULAR or both.
I like slim guys with natural bodies too.
by Anonymous | reply 158 | March 27, 2024 1:44 PM |
R127-If you are referring to the late 1970s yes things are quite tacky by then. When I think of the 1970s I think of 1973 when girls had a long straight Marcia Brady hair and were still wearing mini skirts. And John Denver was at the top of the charts. Most queens talk about the 70s all they talk about is the late 70s disco as is if that’s the 70s. To me the late 70s is already the 1980s with punk, new wave and disco and people being very slick🕺.
by Anonymous | reply 159 | March 27, 2024 1:52 PM |
Spencer's gifts, and having sex with multiple guys in one night.
by Anonymous | reply 160 | March 27, 2024 2:01 PM |
Gas lines.
by Anonymous | reply 161 | March 27, 2024 2:08 PM |
You were old enough to have sex with multiple guys in one night, AND at that same age bought shit at Spencer Gifts?
How young were you?
I started WAY too late, apparently.
by Anonymous | reply 162 | March 27, 2024 2:11 PM |
Rona Barrett's Gossip and Hollywood magazines
by Anonymous | reply 164 | March 27, 2024 3:04 PM |
R62- You mean fewer homeless people.
by Anonymous | reply 165 | March 27, 2024 9:22 PM |
Having at least ten exterior and interior color choices for a car....and being able to tell the difference between them from 50 yards away.
by Anonymous | reply 166 | March 27, 2024 10:02 PM |
Boston ferns, salad bars, papasan chairs, a ladygarden the size of a slice of New York pizza!
by Anonymous | reply 167 | March 27, 2024 10:13 PM |
and the winner is .....
by Anonymous | reply 168 | March 27, 2024 10:15 PM |
R66
And you could mix and match the colors.
Not like now, when "If you want this exterior color picked from these four, you can choose from these two interior colors."
by Anonymous | reply 169 | March 27, 2024 10:16 PM |
Nice people, fewer guns, and especially the great music.
by Anonymous | reply 170 | March 27, 2024 10:16 PM |
Beverly Butthole
by Anonymous | reply 171 | March 27, 2024 10:16 PM |
Crabs
by Anonymous | reply 172 | March 27, 2024 10:18 PM |
The rest stops along Rt. 80.
by Anonymous | reply 173 | March 27, 2024 10:36 PM |
The vibe really on both sides of the Atlantic. Before corporations took over the world. Krishnas in the airports handing out flowers. Free camping and fires on the beach with friends and family. The west coast of the US had space to live and space to play without fucking rules and regs and fees for every dam thing. The people weren’t run hard and squeezed for every bit of their energy chasing the dollar. Those ridiculous giant cars in the USA. England had beer gardens and long boozy days with the aunts playing the piano and sing alongs. The U.K. Had great local pubs and fish and chips were like 2 dollars we stayed up late and had a fourth meal. The trains were excellent back then they worked were cheap and reliable. We humans have soiled the nest and the youth will never know what they lost.
by Anonymous | reply 174 | March 27, 2024 10:39 PM |
Variety shows and specials.
by Anonymous | reply 175 | March 27, 2024 10:46 PM |
Women with hairy armpits and hairy pussies and assholes
by Anonymous | reply 176 | March 27, 2024 10:50 PM |
The smell of Nair on hair
by Anonymous | reply 177 | March 27, 2024 10:53 PM |
Fewer humans.
by Anonymous | reply 178 | March 27, 2024 11:38 PM |
Tacky Rehoboth.
by Anonymous | reply 179 | March 27, 2024 11:39 PM |
The possibility of going to the Mine Shaft, as long as I wasn't wearing a pastel alligator shirt and hadn't spritzed with Eau Sauvage.
by Anonymous | reply 180 | March 27, 2024 11:43 PM |
Bad drugs, horrible music, too much dark wood.
by Anonymous | reply 181 | March 27, 2024 11:46 PM |
[quote] In those days everyone had slim and natural bodies ( no tattoos, no piercings, no rings and no shaved 🪒 pubic hair).
R155 I dont mind the shaved pubic hair, can deal with the tattooes, rings and even the piercings at a pinch, but I cant deal with the fat, and most of the mean in my age group and younger are huge
by Anonymous | reply 182 | March 28, 2024 12:16 AM |
My huge fro
by Anonymous | reply 183 | March 28, 2024 12:24 AM |
I had an afro and wore huge platform shoes and had capes that I wore daily.
by Anonymous | reply 184 | March 28, 2024 12:26 AM |
Fudgesicles and Good Humor ice cream bars tasting so good. They taste like chemical crap now.
by Anonymous | reply 185 | March 28, 2024 12:31 AM |
25¢ beer night (Thursdays) at the nearby college boite.
by Anonymous | reply 186 | March 28, 2024 12:38 AM |
real rock music
by Anonymous | reply 187 | March 28, 2024 12:43 AM |
[quote]Having at least ten exterior and interior color choices for a car....and being able to tell the difference between them from 50 yards away.
R166 yes, this so much!
Want to really sell me an electric car? Give me the option to have the interior in tufted deep buttoned loose pillow bordello red velour with chrome and fake wood highlights and dash and I'm all in
by Anonymous | reply 188 | March 28, 2024 12:54 AM |
Kids matinee at the cinema was 50 cents.
by Anonymous | reply 189 | March 28, 2024 1:28 AM |
Abortion Hut at the mall
by Anonymous | reply 192 | March 28, 2024 3:16 AM |
Only my youth. I thought the 1970s was the most boring decade.
by Anonymous | reply 193 | March 28, 2024 3:17 AM |
Fotomat
by Anonymous | reply 194 | March 28, 2024 5:24 AM |
My only responsibilities were paying attention in school (or pretending to), 20 minutes of homework, bringing in the trash cans every Thursday afternoon, and picking up the dog crap in the back yard.
It was a pretty sweet deal...
by Anonymous | reply 195 | March 28, 2024 9:58 AM |
Tattoos were considered low class.
by Anonymous | reply 196 | March 28, 2024 12:25 PM |
Also, for some people, the occasional tattoo was hot and sexy and. maybe a little dangerous.
Now they're like wallpaper. And common.
by Anonymous | reply 197 | March 28, 2024 12:31 PM |
Little parental supervision. Adventures everywhere..
by Anonymous | reply 198 | March 28, 2024 12:32 PM |
Double knit pants - you knew exactly what was going on below the waist. Thick thighs? Awesome ass? Massive junk? God, yes.
More realistic TV - less middle class drama/comedy written and produced by middle class people for middle class people.
Kids drinking - it was HILARIOUS when we stole booze at adult parties and passed out.
by Anonymous | reply 199 | March 28, 2024 12:42 PM |
I miss the empty Times Square with its old original movie theaters and I could walk anywhere and feel safe. The theater. The original Prince/Sondheim musicals, No, No, Nanette with Ruby Keeler and Patsy Kelly, Lenny with Cliff Gorman and the Housten Grand Opera Company's production of Porgy and Bess which was brought to NY which nothing could ever beat. It was a lavish production which played on Broadway not in a distancing opera house which is to be dreaded. Balanchine in charge of the NYCB with the most glorious dancers. Baryshnikov and Kirkland at ABT. London Theater
Disneyworld with no hassles and affordable prices. The Ice Capades at the Garden with Ken Shelley and Jo Jo Starbuck. Coach airplane travel.
Beautiful cut men who had no tattoos just beautiful skin with normal fit bodies. Locker rooms where guys walked around naked with no embarrassment even in middle school and high school and it was not considered childhood trauma or abuse. The only thing they were wearing was a towel over the shoulder and nobody had a problem with communal showers which were to be expected in most of men's locker rooms. And you could be naked in a sauna and steam room and it was no problem.
A relaxed attitude among most people which today has completely disappeared. Not seeing constant hatred all around and no mass crazies like Trump and the rethug party. The crazies were people who yelled incoherently on the NY streets and they could be easily ignored.
But I noticed climate change in the mid 70s. I felt something was off and it was unsettling.
by Anonymous | reply 200 | March 28, 2024 1:14 PM |
Betty Ford as FLOTUS
by Anonymous | reply 201 | March 28, 2024 1:17 PM |
R196- They’re still LOW CLASS
by Anonymous | reply 202 | March 28, 2024 1:39 PM |
My family.
by Anonymous | reply 203 | March 28, 2024 1:44 PM |
Sculpted wall-to-wall carpet.
by Anonymous | reply 204 | March 28, 2024 1:54 PM |
Gay men had a separate culture apart from the alphabet jumble of today’s sexual culture.
Broadway wasn’t shit.
Talk shows had on interesting guests who would sit and talk intelligently.
Variety shows
The media wasn’t as combative.
Kitty Carlisle dressing up fabulously to appear on a game show.
by Anonymous | reply 205 | March 28, 2024 1:55 PM |
[quote] Talk shows had on interesting guests who would sit and talk intelligently.
This right here^. And they weren't afraid to say controversial things.
Somebody here, in a long-ago thread, explained why.
It's related to how A List stars, beginning in the 80s, through their movie contracts, gained leverage over all aspects of their personal appearances including the booking process to appear on talk shows.
I think Michael Ovitz is credited or blamed for stars turning the tables and demanding that if you're a talk show host, expect that the star isn't going to say any more that what it takes to promote their movie and if they do stray, it will be a safe topic.
I saw that with my own eyes when Jennifer Aniston appeared on Letterman. She was gorgeous to look at, with an unbelievable body she encased in a little black dress, but man, words were coming out of her mouth at the same time she was saying nothing.
Give me Zsa Zsa or Eva any day of the week.
by Anonymous | reply 206 | March 28, 2024 2:22 PM |
R204- I always liked wall to wall carpeting.
I also miss wallpaper- in middle class homes in the 1970's even the bathrooms often had wallpaper.
by Anonymous | reply 207 | March 28, 2024 2:55 PM |
Conversation pits
A well-read populace
No McMansions
No freakish looking plastic surgery addicts
by Anonymous | reply 208 | March 28, 2024 3:14 PM |
R206, And, talk show interview segments lasted longer than mere minutes and the host didn’t constantly have one eye on the clock for the next commercial break.
by Anonymous | reply 209 | March 28, 2024 3:18 PM |
Three things happened to talk shows starting in the 1980s:
The host getting personally involved with the guests (see Oprah Winfrey). No matter what the guest says, the host should be neutral. The conversation is about the guest, not the host. So Oprah crying with her guests ruined the point of view of the guest.
In an effort to gain ratings, talk shows were juiced up. You no longer had guests speaking intelligently, you had the dregs of society arguing about paternity, getting into fistfights and throwing chairs (see Geraldo Rivera).
People were given talk shows that had no ability to host one. Part of being a talk show host is having excellent conversational skills. I know a lot of people liked Rosie O’Donnell’s show, but being a chatterbox isn’t being a good host. With the reissue of Chitty Chitty Bang Bang on dvd, Rosie had on Dick van Dyke, a very interesting man. Half the interview was spent with her talking about her kid and imitating how excited the kid was. Rosie never learned that when you have a legend on, you shut up and let them do the talking. Dick van Dyke doesn’t want to talk about your kid that he’s never met.
by Anonymous | reply 210 | March 28, 2024 3:31 PM |
Outdoor mall tea rooms, some with glory holes.
by Anonymous | reply 211 | March 28, 2024 4:19 PM |
Nostalgically, when it was just ABC, CBS and NBC.
The quality of the programming was better.
by Anonymous | reply 212 | March 28, 2024 4:23 PM |
Just the three major television networks in the early ‘70s where I lived. No cable. It was great.
by Anonymous | reply 213 | March 28, 2024 9:08 PM |
Many talk show guests were not promoting anything other than themselves.
by Anonymous | reply 214 | March 28, 2024 9:48 PM |
I remember buying a Damron’s Guide when I turned 18. This narrow little book in pre-internet times was the only way you could get the names of gay bars in cities and towns all across the country. It also listed the local cruising areas that—at that time—only the locals knew about. Having the guide felt like holding a treasure map! I know: MARY!
by Anonymous | reply 215 | March 28, 2024 9:53 PM |
People wanting to find their soul mate
by Anonymous | reply 216 | March 28, 2024 10:03 PM |
I was 16 when the decade ended:
Sneaking looks at After Dark and Blueboy at the Tower Books magazine racks
Gay bars where the bouncer looked the other way and you could dance all night
Venice Beach before it was overrun and gentrified
Independent bookstores, obscure record shops, and repertory movie houses in full flower
The Castro in its heyday
by Anonymous | reply 217 | March 28, 2024 11:43 PM |
A fickle decade…
I was a sex god until 1978. Then, at 10 years old, I aged out and got chubby; nobody wanted me.
by Anonymous | reply 218 | March 28, 2024 11:47 PM |
Streakers
by Anonymous | reply 219 | March 29, 2024 1:02 AM |
Abortion in all 50 states.
by Anonymous | reply 220 | March 29, 2024 1:12 AM |
The Mall. There seems to be a sinister plot to prevent people from commingling these days. Movie theaters are virtually empty; I don't know how long they will last.
by Anonymous | reply 221 | March 29, 2024 3:16 AM |
Our much higher standard of living ( In the United States)- which peaked in 1973.
by Anonymous | reply 222 | March 29, 2024 3:44 AM |
Yes! R180. Even though I was wearing a flannel shirt and jeans, I was pointedly told by the burly doorman to leave, because I was also wearing Paco Rabanne. I’ll never forget doing the walk of shame out of there.
by Anonymous | reply 223 | March 29, 2024 7:39 PM |
Paco Rabanne? You actually bought that shit?
by Anonymous | reply 224 | March 29, 2024 8:16 PM |
What did you buy, R224, in the '70s? (Fragrance.)
by Anonymous | reply 225 | March 29, 2024 8:20 PM |
R213 forgive me for going off topic but I’ve been meaning to ask something on here for a while. In the US, if you don’t take pay for cable how many free channels do you have, and are they worth watching?
by Anonymous | reply 226 | March 29, 2024 8:35 PM |
R226, I think you get zilch, nothing. Unless you have satellite or subscribe to something like Netflix, etc.
by Anonymous | reply 227 | March 29, 2024 8:37 PM |
I miss going with my parents into town on a Saturday shopping. The streets were packed and people actually dressed up to go shopping. There were so many shops and department stores, and very few chain stores. Now most places struggle to even have a higher street due to online shopping.
by Anonymous | reply 228 | March 29, 2024 8:39 PM |
R226 It depends on where you live. In a large metropolitan area like Los Angeles, you can actually pull in dozens of stations over the air with just an antenna. My sister is in Santa Monica. She has no pay cable or satellite - just a good antenna. She gets the old time networks and local channels - that totals about seven - plus all of their digital sub-channels. I think they each have about two or three. There's also the public television stations. I think there are still three in L.A.-Orange County area that she gets. Then, there's probably about another 15 of the newer digital channels that she enjoys. .. Of course, there's also a ton of crap that she'll never watch (home shopping, jewelry sales, foreign language channels, religious nutballs, etc.)
by Anonymous | reply 229 | March 29, 2024 8:50 PM |
R225 nothing. Nothing at all. Just my own pheromones.
by Anonymous | reply 230 | March 29, 2024 9:21 PM |
What an ignorant comment R224.
by Anonymous | reply 231 | March 29, 2024 9:26 PM |
R226? I live in the Ocala National Forest and I still get about 50 channels from Orlando, an hour and a half south of me, with a Mohu antenna. However, there's probably only 20 or so I actually watch.
by Anonymous | reply 232 | March 29, 2024 9:30 PM |
Talking on the telephone for hours until your parents yelled at your for getting off. I don't think I have more than a 10 minute conversation with anyone anymore.
by Anonymous | reply 233 | March 29, 2024 9:35 PM |
[quote]In the US, if you don’t take pay for cable how many free channels do you have, and are they worth watching?
It depends where you live. I live in New York City and while there are a lot of free channels, it's also difficult to get them because there's so much "traffic" over the airwaves plus the tall buildings interfere with the signal. I had a regular antenna for awhile and the picture would freeze a lot.
by Anonymous | reply 234 | March 29, 2024 9:35 PM |
R231 never did get into a sex club, slathered in cologne as he was.
by Anonymous | reply 235 | March 29, 2024 9:38 PM |
When I lived in a mid block garden apartment in midtown Manhattan I got NY1, Food Network, QVC and three Spanish channels for free from the antenna and through the cable even though I wasn’t paying for service.
by Anonymous | reply 236 | March 29, 2024 9:53 PM |
Parenting where the parents ran the show.
Someone upthread alluded to adult parties which were off limits to kids. or segregated by age daytime parties.
I remember being nosy kid, once. I wanted to listen in on the mysterious, intriguing adult conversation going on inside my Aunt's house when it was fucking mid-80s outside and us kid cousins all were outside jumping the water sprinkler.
I snuck in and my mother stood up, took my little arm in hand, marched me to the door saying "You're not to presume you may join adult conversation. Stay outside and play."
Now, day and night time parties are overrun with children.
by Anonymous | reply 237 | March 29, 2024 10:02 PM |
Scheduling your TV viewing week with TV Guide, and the anticipation of watching every show and TV movie with family and friends. And, talking about what we watched last night, at school or work, the following morning.
The absence of reality TV, and all the attention-seeking fame whores who would come with it two decades later.
The candy counters and cafes at JC Penney, Sears, Montgomery Ward.
by Anonymous | reply 238 | March 29, 2024 10:08 PM |
R238, my junior high best friend (who's now a dean at Columbia) and I would walk to the local grocery store every Tuesday to buy the new TV Guide. We'd search which old movies were scheduled for broadcasting and would cheer for anything with Bette Davis, Joan Crawford, Katharine Hepburn, Olivia de Havilland, Ingrid Bergman, or Vivien Leigh.
by Anonymous | reply 239 | March 29, 2024 10:23 PM |
People dressing to suit their body-type. No 45 year old 300 pounders walking around in sports bras and yoga pants.
by Anonymous | reply 240 | March 29, 2024 10:32 PM |
My neighbor's mom, who was a housewife, always had TV Guide. I thought that was cool. My mom would never splurge on that. We just used the Sunday paper insert and called it the "TV guide."
One summer, my neighbor's mom got me hooked on The Young and the Restless.
My neighbor (who was an only child) was kind of spoiled. They had all kinds of good snacks at their house. They had an extra fridge in the carport. Neighbor's mom was the first person I knew who drank diet sodas on a regular basis.
by Anonymous | reply 241 | March 29, 2024 10:33 PM |
r226: I receive 34 FREE digital channels where I live. Of those I maybe watch 7 or eight of them.
The way OTA (over-the-air) works these days is that the main channels in a locality now have four or five "sub-channels" broadcasting from their antenna. Even PBS has sub-channels.
I learned all this after I cut the cord from my cable providers in disgust. This was 8 years ago. Never looked back. Use a Roku for occasional streaming of PBS Passport.
by Anonymous | reply 242 | March 29, 2024 10:37 PM |
[quote]I was pointedly told by the burly doorman to leave, because I was also wearing Paco Rabanne.
You would have been pointedly told by me that there was no way we were going to have sex if you were wearing Paco Rabanne. That was the single worst smelling cologne of the 1970s. Those wonderful magazine ads were such a lie. Only Brut and patchouli smelled worse.
by Anonymous | reply 243 | March 29, 2024 10:38 PM |
^^ see it’s not just my opinion
by Anonymous | reply 244 | March 29, 2024 10:43 PM |
Pan Am First Class
by Anonymous | reply 245 | March 29, 2024 10:56 PM |
When two good tv shows were on opposite channels, agonizing which one to watch.
by Anonymous | reply 246 | March 29, 2024 11:10 PM |
I had a really wonderful childhood in the early 70s in a beautiful house up on a hill in Carpinteria, California. I'm extremely nostalgic for those days of children's books and roller skating and going everywhere on our bikes. Old TV shows like Bewitched and I Dream of Jeannie and The Brady Bunch - The Outer Limits was on at noon on Sundays and Sunday nights were Mutual of Omaha's Wild Kingdom and The Wonderful World of Disney. Plus Saturday morning cartoons. We had a pool table and played a lot. I have to just sigh now, because I'd never be able to afford to live there again. If only my parents had kept that house!
by Anonymous | reply 247 | March 30, 2024 12:44 AM |
Attaching playing cards to our bike wheels with clothespins so that our bikes made a noise when we rode.
by Anonymous | reply 248 | March 30, 2024 12:49 AM |
I remember doing that with the playing cards. My neighbor's mom (the same lady who got me hooked on Young & Restless) said something about it. She said it was noisy. I guess it was obnoxious-sounding, but it was fun.
by Anonymous | reply 249 | March 30, 2024 12:58 AM |
Splurge, R241?
TV Guide cost 25 cents in 1975.
by Anonymous | reply 250 | March 30, 2024 1:12 AM |
CB Radios and Trucker culture
And songs where little gayboys could practice their backup singing. I swear, the 1970s songs were the best for little gayboys.
by Anonymous | reply 251 | March 30, 2024 1:19 AM |
Meeting people. The Internet is necessary and fun, but it can be very isolating.
by Anonymous | reply 252 | March 30, 2024 1:20 AM |
My parents gave me a dollar a week allowance in the early 70s. I would never waste 25 cents of it for a TV Guide. If I wanted something, I had to save for it, which I learned to do. When I went to college, I was amazed at how much money flowed through the fingers of wealthier kids on a weekly basis.
by Anonymous | reply 253 | March 30, 2024 1:22 AM |
[quote] Splurge, [R241]? TV Guide cost 25 cents in 1975.
My mom grew up very poor and maybe it was a splurge, to her. Or a waste of money. Also, since we subscribed to the newspaper, maybe she thought the "TV guide" insert was enough.
by Anonymous | reply 254 | March 30, 2024 1:23 AM |
Up With People
by Anonymous | reply 255 | March 30, 2024 1:23 AM |
I agree, R254. We elderfolk had parents and grandparents who lived through the Depression and World War Two. You "made do" with what you had. Why buy a TV Guide when there's one in the newspaper? Why buy meat at the store, (when meat was available,) when you can kill the big turtle that is attacking your chicks and make turtle soup! Why worry about your own home when the Germans are bombing overhead; you and your friends just hope they bomb the school so you never have to go there again.
My mother did not see an orange for six years during the war in Britain. My father once wore a raincoat my grandmother made from a shower curtain rather than buy a new one. We were taught to appreciate what we had, not to wish we had things that we didn't.
by Anonymous | reply 256 | March 30, 2024 1:41 AM |
Recording 'All My Children' and 'One Life to Live' and watching both after I got home from work and was eating dinner.
by Anonymous | reply 257 | March 30, 2024 2:38 AM |
Drinks at the bars were cheap and creative. Sloe gin fizz, White Russian, Singapore Sling although mostly I stayed with what was called a wine spritzer. Inexpensive wine mixed with club soda or something. I miss the clothes, those suits the men wore, the hair styles. sideburns, Farah hairstyle imitators. Bells. Those cute little tank tops. Gold chains for the night out were cheap, 20 bucks, 14k gold. I still have mine :)
I used to go out in Manhattan, it was pretty dangerous but of exotic for me. I’m from Long Island, Suffolk. Especially on a snowy night. Snow all blowing around, walking down. The street in boots and with a buzz on. Laughing with my friends. Going in and out of different clubs or in the rain. Friend of mine started a female bar called the Rooster but it did not make it. We went but once I don’t think it stayed open long. Have to give her kudos for trying. During the work week went out to the corner local bar in Queens where I lived. A bar up the street from me on Woodhaven Boulevard. I was in there when that blackout happened. Bartender locked the doors because outside the street was suddenly a sound like a riot, windows being broken, shouts, cars screeching. Our neighborhood was white but now it was invaded by blacks who pulled up in cars and smashed out the windows of the storefronts, stealing all they could and it was pretty scary! That bar had no windows all brick building and when the bartender heard the noise outside, he locked the door put candles on the bar and gave us free drinks and we waited it out. It did get kind of warm in there, it was summer. No music though :( no electricity!
That was the summer of the 44 Caliber Killer, aka Son of Sam.. He was shooting girls down in blocks all around where I lived (Middle Village). I hitched home from queens blvd after work one night down Woodhaven Blvd, two guys picked me up and it turned out they were undercover detectives looking for the 44 Caliber Killer. They read me the riot act and showed me the police drawing out at the time. I was terrified of them. I guess they were protecting me but I wondered at first if they really were who they said they were.
I did go to a disco in Brooklyn during that time and a guy in the disco screamed and pointed at me, saying HE was the 44 Caliber Killer (what he was known as then) and he was going to ‘get’ me. I ran out of the disco and went to another club. I don’t think he was but the papers were running stories on it so often and it was just a way for this jerk to get attention. I wondered how he didn’t get arrested and check out after I left. Half of the dance floor stopped and looked at this guy.
One last thing, I went to many different clubs in that time for years. One was called Billy the Kid. Anyone remember this one?
Believe it or not, maybe because I was young, did all this with people who were friends all of these memories are kind of nostalgic for me now.
by Anonymous | reply 258 | March 30, 2024 3:12 AM |
[quote] Gold chains for the night out were cheap, 20 bucks, 14k gold. I still have mine :)
What? Gold chains were never that cheap.
by Anonymous | reply 259 | March 30, 2024 3:15 AM |
R259 Yep. They were. Venders sold them on the street but also all the stores in the malls did. They went up from fourteen dollars to 20 and I was not happy to pay 20. But well, had to be ‘decked out’. These were very thin chain links btw but that was the style then, thin and delicate.
You got three to make them sit at different levels on your neck and chest.
by Anonymous | reply 260 | March 30, 2024 3:20 AM |
[quote] You got three to make them sit at different levels on your neck and chest.
Guido.
by Anonymous | reply 261 | March 30, 2024 3:22 AM |
Carmela Soprano had gold chains of different lengths.
by Anonymous | reply 262 | March 30, 2024 3:29 AM |
Ha.I’m white with red hair. The chains were not v shaped when hung but round or more oval. The soprano thing prob is from that era.
Like this but with links and very slinky. Thin.
A wine spritzer was 1.50 btw.
by Anonymous | reply 263 | March 30, 2024 3:49 AM |
That is the soprano thing is more a later era.
by Anonymous | reply 264 | March 30, 2024 3:51 AM |
All this talk of television and cable reminds me that something I miss from the '70s era in Los Angeles is the "Z Channel."
The local cable company on the Westside, then called Theta Cable, had this film channel they referred to as the "Z Channel." From wiki:
[quote] Z Channel was launched in 1974 by Theta Cable[2] (a division of TelePrompTer Corporation and Hughes Aircraft Co.) which was acquired by Group W (Westinghouse) in 1981. Operations were located in Santa Monica, California. Jerry Harvey was hired as program director in 1980. As program director, Harvey was given permission to program the network the way he saw fit. As such, the network featured a wide variety of films not typically shown on other pay television services at the time.
[quote] These included many B movies, silent films, foreign films, and original unedited versions of films. On Christmas Eve 1982, Harvey made the decision to show the original (previously unreleased in two years) version of Heaven's Gate, a movie that had been considered a disaster by all accounts. His decision was a success as the movie became the most watched feature ever shown on Z Channel. Other networks soon followed and aired Heaven's Gate.
And funny, cuz I actually remember watching Heaven's Gate on Z.
by Anonymous | reply 266 | March 30, 2024 5:12 AM |
Psychedelic wallpapers. I am amazed I didn’t become a mass müderer.
by Anonymous | reply 267 | March 30, 2024 8:22 AM |
Water beds
by Anonymous | reply 268 | March 30, 2024 10:41 AM |
R238 and, speaking of TV Guide, remember their fall new show editions? It was so much fun to look through and see what shows you might want to check out. And then you’d get frustrated because it would turn out that an interesting new show was on opposite a favorite returning show. Or when the returning show edition came out, you’d discover a favorite program had moved to a new time slot … opposite another favorite program, of course. You had to choose, and that was that, as R246 says. No VCRs in homes until the very end of the decade, and even then they were rare.
A lot of network TV was awful, but it was all we had, and it was a culturally unifying force. Almost everybody watched TV. We all saw basically the same shows at the same time. We've lost that connection, and as mundane and mediocre as it sometimes was, it was important.
by Anonymous | reply 269 | March 30, 2024 11:10 AM |
R221, many thanks for the video link. I watched it to the end--so cool. Hickory Farms, girls in their Dr. Scholl's sandals, and the old ladies with their sprayed bouffants. Hardly a fattie in sight!
by Anonymous | reply 270 | March 30, 2024 11:38 AM |
R269, Going to school or work the next day and discussing something that had been broadcast the previous evening was fun.
by Anonymous | reply 271 | March 30, 2024 12:06 PM |
Smoking weed back them made you kind of a rebel or outsider or kind of edgy. Now every house frau, soccer mom, and Repug smokes weed or does eatables making it as a mundane as Yankee Candles or a glass of Zinfandel.
by Anonymous | reply 272 | March 30, 2024 1:17 PM |
There were no surveillance cameras in any of the stores so it was much easier to steal stuff and get away with it.
by Anonymous | reply 273 | March 30, 2024 3:56 PM |
Guys wearing striped tube socks to the mid-calf. Blue jeans that show a man's cock. like 501's
by Anonymous | reply 274 | March 30, 2024 4:31 PM |
[quote]There were no surveillance cameras in any of the stores so it was much easier to steal stuff and get away with it.
Obviously you never saw the Good Times episode where Wilona became a dressing room watcher. The surveillance cameras were human.
by Anonymous | reply 276 | March 30, 2024 7:27 PM |
I miss "Davey and Goliath" - have to hunt that down again. Used to watch it really early in the morning on Saturdays.
by Anonymous | reply 277 | March 31, 2024 5:37 PM |
New Linda Ronstadt albums nearly every year (1973-1978).
by Anonymous | reply 278 | March 31, 2024 6:58 PM |
Public Access TV!
by Anonymous | reply 279 | March 31, 2024 9:25 PM |
[quote] There were no surveillance cameras in any of the stores so it was much easier to steal stuff and get away with it.
That's sad if that's what is missed from the '70s.
by Anonymous | reply 280 | March 31, 2024 9:27 PM |
Mainly because it's still going on openly 50 years later, WITH the fucking cameras in place.
by Anonymous | reply 281 | April 1, 2024 1:43 AM |
Pierre Cardin cologne. It smelled great. The bottle looked like an erect cock. The atomizer sprayed out of the top. As a young teenager, I picked up a couple of those tiny sample tubes at Macy's every time I went into the store. I put it on and looked through a GQ magazine, imagining one of the models wearing it and paying particular attention to me, as I did him...
by Anonymous | reply 282 | April 1, 2024 2:41 AM |
Tang.
by Anonymous | reply 283 | April 1, 2024 3:13 AM |
Tang smelled better than any 70s cologne.
by Anonymous | reply 284 | April 1, 2024 3:23 AM |
[quote]Pierre Cardin cologne
I got Pierre Cardin cologne for Christmas one year. I thought I was sooooo sexy wearing French cologne.
by Anonymous | reply 285 | April 1, 2024 3:48 AM |
Following the saga of Patty Hearst and the Symbionese Liberation Army. It was quite fascinating.
by Anonymous | reply 286 | April 1, 2024 4:03 AM |
Many colognes react and smell differently according to ones body chemistry, R243, so I’ll assume your chemistry is just not compatible with Paco.
by Anonymous | reply 287 | April 1, 2024 5:38 AM |
Oh, I never put it on, r287. Smelling it on other gays was torture enough.
by Anonymous | reply 288 | April 1, 2024 7:36 AM |
“On other gays” R288? You’re weird.
by Anonymous | reply 289 | April 1, 2024 7:42 AM |
Women worrying about 'panty-lines'
by Anonymous | reply 291 | April 1, 2024 5:07 PM |
r290 We sucked each other's cocks in the summer of 1978, in WeHo, in my car.
by Anonymous | reply 292 | April 1, 2024 5:22 PM |
L'eggs! Loved playing with the eggs when my mom bought them.
by Anonymous | reply 293 | April 1, 2024 5:23 PM |
My first boyfriend. I was totally and completely in love. Fuck, I should've recognized that then.
by Anonymous | reply 294 | April 2, 2024 12:06 AM |
What would you have done differently, r294?
by Anonymous | reply 295 | April 2, 2024 12:13 AM |
I would have realized how much he tried to protect me. I wouldn't have been so closed off with him. I should have realized how much was happening to him and brothers too. We all had some kind of major disfunction happening and I should have realized it then. I really did love him, though.
by Anonymous | reply 296 | April 2, 2024 12:16 AM |
Thank you for asking R295.
by Anonymous | reply 297 | April 2, 2024 12:17 AM |
-not Meghan Markle. 😆
by Anonymous | reply 298 | April 2, 2024 12:19 AM |
I miss Frizzies, oily T zones, feminine napkins, and Nair for short shorts.
I miss getting up when my panty hose didn’t.
by Anonymous | reply 299 | April 2, 2024 12:26 AM |
I miss smoking cigarettes and being so young I wasn’t worried about cancer.
Miss driving in my car, smoking, drinking a cold soda, blasting my Pioneer stereo.
by Anonymous | reply 300 | April 2, 2024 12:31 AM |
I miss simple success stories like Erma Bombeck going from simple housewife to noted humorist.
The grass is always greener over the septic tank.
by Anonymous | reply 301 | April 2, 2024 12:32 AM |
r301 I loved Erma Bombeck!
by Anonymous | reply 302 | April 2, 2024 12:55 AM |
[quote]I loved Erma Bombeck!
One of the things that I remember was she said she would take a casserole dish out of the oven using two forks and her husband never understood why she didn’t use hot pads.
by Anonymous | reply 303 | April 2, 2024 12:59 AM |
I miss all the beaded curtains you could buy for the doorway. You could mix and match they had lots of colors. The clackyclack as you walked through them. It was fun and hip as a kid.
by Anonymous | reply 304 | April 2, 2024 1:12 AM |
Toys were not for the airy-fairy types. Our toys made us hardcore!
by Anonymous | reply 305 | April 2, 2024 1:16 AM |
I had Klackers when I was a little boy. One broke away from the string and shattered our kitchen window. But the Klacker itself was undamaged.
by Anonymous | reply 306 | April 2, 2024 1:25 AM |
I miss the summer evenings which seemed to last forever. Playing pinball with my friends, then getting ice cream cones, then playing endless rounds of kick the can in the alleyways.
by Anonymous | reply 307 | April 2, 2024 2:02 AM |
Longer attention spans and the fact that Donald Trump wasn't known yet.
by Anonymous | reply 308 | April 2, 2024 2:03 AM |
Kids’ television was trippy and weird, even some of the skits on Sesame Street. Electric Company, the Muppet Show, and a bizarre show called Alphabet Soup. Free To Be…You And Me.
by Anonymous | reply 309 | April 2, 2024 2:20 AM |
R306/R306, Klackers must have driven patents insane.
by Anonymous | reply 310 | April 2, 2024 2:24 AM |
^parents
by Anonymous | reply 311 | April 2, 2024 2:24 AM |
Them too.
by Anonymous | reply 312 | April 2, 2024 2:56 AM |
Texture in night spots like “fern bars” where the acoustics weren’t all so loud.
by Anonymous | reply 313 | April 2, 2024 3:00 AM |
Jukeboxes.
by Anonymous | reply 314 | April 2, 2024 4:12 AM |
Salad bars with sneeze guards
by Anonymous | reply 315 | April 2, 2024 4:17 AM |
I kinda miss having only 7ish channels on television to choose from. And the channel sign offs at midnight creeped me out.
by Anonymous | reply 316 | April 2, 2024 4:42 AM |
I miss the weird, sometimes totally pointless and occasionally dangerous toys. Slime. Pet Rock. Stretch Armstrong. Lawn Darts that you threw into the air that could piece the skull of any child in their downward trajectory, and did. Candy cigarettes that blew out "smoke" of powdered sugar. Sea Monkeys that were advertised in the pages of comic books - your own little undersea kingdom! I think they were some kind of tiny shrimp. X-Ray Glasses! Johnny Switchblade Adventure Punk. Teddy Chainsaw Bear. "Bag of Glass."
by Anonymous | reply 317 | April 2, 2024 4:51 AM |
Sea monkeys were actually brine shrimp.
by Anonymous | reply 318 | April 2, 2024 3:50 PM |
You can still buy Slime or Slime with Worms.
by Anonymous | reply 319 | April 2, 2024 6:53 PM |
Riding my bike without a helmet LIKE GOD FUCKING INTENDED.
by Anonymous | reply 320 | April 3, 2024 12:10 AM |
Even though I don't like kids, I do miss the sounds of kids playing in the street. Now it's just construction and gardeners all day.
by Anonymous | reply 321 | April 3, 2024 4:28 PM |
[quote] white cross speed
Crossroads
by Anonymous | reply 322 | April 3, 2024 4:45 PM |
Cum gum
by Anonymous | reply 323 | April 4, 2024 4:07 PM |
Pussywether
by Anonymous | reply 324 | April 4, 2024 4:10 PM |
Royall Lyme.
by Anonymous | reply 325 | April 5, 2024 3:44 AM |