Yep! remember all of this. Not a disposable society back then. People fixed everything, and things were built to last and repair. Even stereos, and electronics. Great time to grow up in. We didn't have or need cell phones, tablets, and all the gadgets kid have now that keep them glued to a screen, gaming. We were outdoor kids, and loved it. There was no such thing as watching TV all day either.
If we sat inside watching TV on a Saturday afternoon, our dad would chase out of the house. He'd tell us that kids need to be outside. On weekdays, once we finished our homework of course, we could run around until dinner time.
And it was normal for fridges and stoves and kettles and radios and everything, to last for *decades*. WE expected it to stay that way. The current of our thinking, now, does not assume longevity, alas.
My parents bought two brand new homes in their time together. 20+ years. Never bought more than one appliance per house. TV too. I can’t tell you how many hot water heaters, W/D & DWs I’ve replaced. Insane.
My mom bought a (giant) microwave when I was a baby. It finally died when I was in my early 30s!! It was a little embarrassing using such a big, old appliance when we had company over, but my mom insisted that, as long as it's working, we're going to use it! 😅
I lived in the 50s and high school in the 60s I am now 74, and love that time you could run outside all day and your parents never worried. I feel sorry for the kids today.
There isn’t a better time, than these good old days. I’m a child of the 60’s. It was a blast being a child. I loved the Monkees and making the chain gum necklaces. 😘
The only reason that the 60s seemed like the perfect time to grow up is because we were children and didn't have the problems adults had. Reasurch a little history and you'll find the 60s was a very chaotic time. Civil rights, Vietnam War, rioting in the streets, college students being shot by the National guard were just a few things going on. No, there was a lot of bad things going on then.
@@bobprescottActually, there were huge numbers of gun safety and riflery classes at schools for decades. And it was common until recently, and probably still is done in some locations, for kids to bring their hunting rifles to school in the gun racks of their pickups, in order to go hunting after school. Disarming the victims does not make people more safe, it makes them less safe.
72 here. I remember our TV repairman, too - it was ME. Eight years old, I built my own tube tester from a kit. Still have it, in fact, but it's just a memento now. Nothing has tubes anymore, for one, and the thing was left in a damp basement for about twenty years, which damaged the meter. It's pretty hard to find a replacement these days, and it would likely be very costly if one could be found. Not worth it just to have a functioning tube tester with no tubes to test.😄😄
63 y/o here. My dad was an electrical engineer (as am I and my son as well). He would fix our TV, and I would be parked right there next to him. I used to love going to Radio Shack and using the tube tester.
@@sandramari5120 Sugar Frosted Flakes, now called just Frosted Flakes, becauss of that stupid pc thing I mentioned. Still, frosted flakes are grrrrraatttt!!!--- and for all time, they had *BETTER* be frosted with sugar. For that is the way God intended.
If my sister and I had behaved ourselves reasonably well throughout the previous week, mom let us fill up a bag of goodies at the Brach's Candy shop. The caramels, the watermelon and green apple hard candies were our favorites but we made sure to get plenty of the jelly nougats and butterscotch discs for the folks.
I remember that! We didn't go weekly, but did go once a month as the store as the grocery store was 45 minute drive away (we lived in the boonies) My mom had us do chores, and we'd earn stickers on the reward chart. Home work turned in on time...all sorts of way to earn stickers on the rewards chart. Every 10 stickers = $2 we could spend at Brach's (back then, a fortune!) and I'd often have about $10 to spend. I loved going right after halloween (when all the halloween goodies went on sale) and same after christmas- the sales!
A family that inhales candy together, stays together. Likewise, a family that goes aching-ly to the dentist together, stays together... except minus a few teeth when they come back out the door. 🙂
I'm 46 and remember it, only it was my grandparents that would always get some and had a jar filled with a variety of them. My favorite was also the jelly nougats, the hard strawberry candies, and the caramel with creme centers. You can get a few of their candies but not the jelly nougats that I loved so much.
I didn't realize how much I miss those good old days , kids these days all they know is cell phones, video games. Life was simpler back then, you could actually trust most people. The Brachs candies were so good, people these days don't know what they missed out on. Thank you for the memories I'm happy but sad at the same time. I'm 67 years old and look at this country and can't help but be sad.
@@samanthab1923 My dad would do the same thing occasionally, I think my favorite ones were the pink white and chocolate coconut squares , my sister and I would always try to get those first! Thank you for your comment!!
This channel brings us our feel good memories and I love it! Sometimes you’ll see something you had forgot about and then the memories come rushing back! There’s nothing else like it! The good ol days!
@@carolynridlon3988 But do you remember all those wonderful prizes inside? Sometimes they'd stick them in the bottom of the box, so there I went, shoving my arm into a full box, just to get that prize. Twas the little thrill of the prize, coupled with the thrill of not knowing what it would be. I also remember digging into jars of Maxwell House coffee, to get at the coupons for my mother's collection.
Your comment reminds me of an old buddy of mine. Remember the original big screen TVs that were the size and weight of a full bookcase? When flatscreens first came out, some guy got one and gave my buddy his big counsel TV. Took several guys to move it into his condo. He was totally bragging to everyone that he got it for free. Fast forward about 5 years. Everyone had a flatscreen TV now. He couldn’t get rid of it 😂 No one wanted it. The dump wanted a huge fee to accept it. He ended up putting it into his storage unit. I lost touch with him; for all I know he still has it 😂
I still have an old Curtis Mathis console TV that is utilized when the neighborhood kids come over with the grand kids to play vintage games on an NES or Atari. They seem to enjoy that over the more modern games that are available today.
@@MomentsInTrading There's this one guy on UA-cam, calls himself "shango". He takes these old TVs in, as some kind of labor of love, and he brings them back to life. It's a miracle to me when I see it, but he has the skills and the tools and the experience. He can resurrect just about anything electronic, not just TVs. He brought a 1961 RCA color tv back from the dead, and when he had gotten it adjusted to where he wanted it, he plugged a vcr into it, and played a Kennedy speech from May 1961, something to do with getting the space program underway in ernest. Needless to say, it was awesome to see, not just the tv, but John F. in glorious executive color!
@@keithbrown7685 My parents had a 1956 RCA black and white TV with the mahogany veneer that would swivel. I remember my father replacing maybe 2 tubes but it lasted well into the 70s till my parents got a new Zenith TV and it was still working but the main picture tube needed a booster. That RCA w as always on. I had a Samsung projection TV that I bought in the early 00s that was still working when I got rid of it over a year ago and it was hard to get rid of even for free. Everyone wants a flat screen. I remember my mother had a Bendix washer and dryer for years that would not die but then we moved in a new house and she gave them away. She bought a new GE combination washer/dryer that was nothing but trouble and after a few years she replaced it with a new Maytag washer and dryer that lasted for decades with no repairs.
My father repaired TVs for a few years. We had a Volkswagen Minibus to carry them to and from the customers. My brother and I used to evaluate tubes in our suitcase tube tester. I eventually joined the Navy - as an Electronic Technician. Thanks Dad!
Yup, same here. I was always helping my Dad to fix and build things. I too joined the Navy at 17 and eventually got my degree in Mechanical Engineering.
And weekday afternoon was too. Many stations had afternoon cartoon shows with local hosts. Such as Grandpa Happy and Captain Ernie from the Quad Cities back in the day.
@@glennso47 You Might be Old…If You Remember This, when teenage girls, were REAL girls, and teenage boys, were REAL boys and there was no MENTAL illness, or FAKE genders, and all kids, knew, what public bathroom, to use.
I had captain kangaroo on in the mornings as a kid in Santa Rosa, CA. Weekday afternoons was Bennie & Cecil (the sea sick serpent) and all the others (yogi bear, quick draw McGraw,....) and Flintstones at night once a week. When we moved to the central valley of CA (Lodi) we got Cisco kid, captain delta, lone ranger, big valley, death valley days,.... TV was the best in those days! 😊❤
My neighbors made their TV from parts available from Radio Shack. My two older brothers and I all read Hardy Boys books. We had a complete set. We had a mom & pop Drug Store in our semi-rural area, before grocery stores has drug stores. Everyone knew Mrs. Bond and her family who ran the store. Mom always had us pay special attention to the rows of decorative glass figurines and bowls for gifts, so we wouldn't break any.
Great memories. I remember going with our grandparents for a weekend. Grandma would get her hair done at the beauty salon while grand dad would check mail at the post office box. Later, we would go to the pharmacy/soda fountain and have an ice cream while picking out a new comic book.
@@midnightcaller200I found some old Tom Swift books in the early 80s as a teenager, and loved them. I also seem to remember the Happy Hollisters, but I think I only had, or borrowed one or two perhaps. I'll look them up in a moment. I'd forgotten that book series entirely until I read it in your comment. So thanks for reminding me! And I really liked the Sugar Creek Gang series, had a few of them. I also remember a great children's book called Pinky Pye, something about a cat, I think. I read it several times, and enjoyed it very much.
Oh, the good old days. Candies, Cereal, The 5 and Dime store with the lunch counter on the side. We had one of those BOX tv's with the slide out carriages that held the tube and the vacuum tubes behind it. I remember going to the hardware store for replacement tubes. My grandparents had an old Victrola record players, and they had a 78 rpm slide out record player panel with the radio that sat above it in the large cabinet. My parents have all those old furniture pieces. My aunt had one of those gargantuan wall unit pieces with a record player on one end, a radio in the middle and records to the other side, banked by the cabinet speakers in the unit.
Our TV repair guy would give us a loner TV if he had to take it back to the shop. No charge for it 😊 kept us kids off moms case about Saturday morning cartoons . This would be very unusual today if we still had repair people coming to our homes especially in a major city outside NYC.
My Mom always wanted one of those horses that you put the quarter in to ride. She remembered them from when she was little and always wanted one. I wish we could have made that happen for her before she pass in Jan. Thanks for the great Memories! I remember the little carousels that was in front of most K-Marts or Wal-Marts back in the day.
Me too! At our mall, and maybe some of our bigger stores, there was an electric horse that wanted quarters. I liked it, but I think it's good that the ride didn't last long. I could see myself wanting off after a couple of minutes.
I remember all of these. I liked Mr Green Jeans on Captain Kangaroo. The Statler Brothers had a song - Flowers on the Wall. Watching Captain Kangaroo now don't tell me- I've nothing to do!!! LOL LOL LOL
@@freedomrings1420 You Might be Old…If You Remember This, when teenage girls, were REAL girls, and teenage boys, were REAL boys and there was no MENTAL illness, or FAKE genders, and all kids, knew, what public bathroom, to use.
Just a bit of trivia. That song came out in 1965. Why I should remember such things, I don't know and don't really care anymore. :-) And not to brag, really, but I can sing and play the whole song on guitar. Such was the gift that music could give us. And the gift never wore out either.
Yeah, everybody in the family had the "3 in 1" entertainment center.......TV, radio, and record player. Took up a whole wall!!! My great Aunt had hers until she passed away. I wonder how much that thing was worth. It still looked new, and still worked, with the original tubes!!!
I saw one at Goodwill about 5 years ago. That thing was huge! Cabinet was close to 8 feet long-the biggest one I ever saw, and in like-new condition. Had the most beautiful carved wood panels over each speaker. I wanted to buy it, but I was short on money at the time, and didn't have help to move it. @@mewregaurdhissyfit7733
@@mewregaurdhissyfit7733 You Might be Old…If You Remember This, when teenage girls, were REAL girls, and teenage boys, were REAL boys and there was no MENTAL illness, or FAKE genders, and all kids, knew, what public bathroom, to use.
Being born in 1966 I must say as a child growing up in The United States of America during that time was great😃2023, "NOT" even close😫I feel bad for kids these days☹My wife and I were born at the right time😁ROCK ON!!!!!!!🤘🏻🤙🏻✌🏻
I remember all of these things. Taping a coin to the top of the needle arm helped make those cereal box records play. I loved Captain Kangaroo. I have very fond memories of watching his show. 😊
@@nbenefiel Just wondering, were you also counting flowers on the wall, smoking cigs, and playing solitaire with a deck of 51? :-) That's a reference to the song.
@@BakedRBeans You Might be Old…If You Remember This, when teenage girls, were REAL girls, and teenage boys, were REAL boys and there was no MENTAL illness, or FAKE genders, and all kids, knew, what public bathroom, to use.
They were so *neat* and they smelled so good. Me being a boy, I didn't get the chance to make any of my own, but my sisters took up the slack, no pun intended. :-)
I'm in my mid 50's, and I remember most of those things. Like watching tv on the big console in the living room, and of course, it would be on one of the 3 major networks. No cable back then, so if you lived out in the country, getting reception from your rooftop antenna could be rough. And wow, Crazy Cow cereal---I forgot all about that!
Thank you for the video. Being born in 1956 and living in a very rural area, just going to town was like a trip to the moon. Ah, if only I had a time machine.... Sadly, my children will never live in such an age of innocence. A long distance phone call was an event and to get an actual letter meant family meeting time as my parents read the letter aloud.
As a child born in 1960, i remember so many of these items or places! Here's another ideal, what about: Toni home perms Perfumes from the 60's - 80's Ripcord beadspreads for boys & chennele ones for girls Paper dolls, lincoln logs, tinker toys, spirographs, wooly larry (magnet boards)
"...Spirograph rings are groovy things. Your eyes won't believe what your hands have done. ..." That was part of their jingle in the early 70s. I first heard it Christmas 1973. I remember how my elders were so much better at Spirograph than I was. But I still loved it, and it still pulls on a wonderful heart string.
These were the best times glad I lived through them. Life is so generic now....and the young people don't know any better. Movement of time will be our demise. That is the way it always has been on this planet anyway.
So many memories. My dad used to be a tv repair man. Han ran his own tv repair business right out of our garage it was full of tv stereo and other electronic equipment. The great big tv furniture I remember all too well.
I remember all the things in the video, and I also remember when we used to get towels in boxes of laundry detergent, glassware in dry oats and even sugar. That's how we decided what brands we would purchase. I still have the Dixie Crystals butter dish that came in the sugar.
Also don't forget collecting glasses & pitchers (avocado green & amber) from gas stations or records & pots and pans from grocery stores?! These were a long with getting blue chip or green stamps!❤
🎉 Salutations from coastal Mississippi. Thank you for these memories. Shopping at the Piggly Wiggly, the rides,the candy and the cereal....so glad to be a child of the 70's ❤
@@leesashriber5097 You Might be Old…If You Remember This, when teenage girls, were REAL girls, and teenage boys, were REAL boys and there was no MENTAL illness, or FAKE genders, and all kids, knew, what public bathroom, to use.
I remember those Archie records from the Honeycomb boxes. I had "Everything's Archie" and "Love Light". Those things actually lasted a long, long time! And those animal rides in grocery stores? My daughter loved riding the 1 at a local supermarket just 10-12 years ago. I don't think they have it anymore, but surprisingly once in a while you can still find one.
I don't remember records on the back of cereal boxes. But I do remember the small cereal boxes on the front had small holes, you can open them, put some milk in there and eat out of them ( I did that at least twice)!
Your channel never disappoints, excellent memories and great presentations. I remember everything on this list. Made me smile today. Thank you. Cheers from Arizona 🍻😎
In addition to TV repair being a lost art, what about shoe repair? Try finding one of those today! Also, every town had at least one fix-it shop, where you could have any small appliance repaired. Replace? Never! "A little dab'll do you" worked well, until "Hey! You still using that greasy kid stuff!?" came along! Sales probably plummeted after that. The best cardboard records were in MAD Magazine- who can forget Alfred E. Neuman's "vocal" of "It's A Gas"?
Shops like that are out there,but they are few and far between, so you really have to look. Main problem is, repair cost vs. replacement of the item. Parts can be impossible to get. I fix my own, if possible. @@buickinvicta288
Well...I recall pretty much all of these thing so yes, I am old. I was an AVID reader growing up and the school book fair was always something I looked forward to! That and the visit of the book-mobile (who else remembers that?). Miss the Brach's candy displays, though for some reason my bag always ended up mostly full of root beer barrels, lol. And Brylcreem! Never used it myself but my dad sure did. Every time I see it mentioned or see it in an old t.v. show or movie I think of him. Miss you Pop!
The supermarket closest to my home had one of those mechanical horse rides for kids until just two years ago, when that strip mall was totally remodeled. For technically oriented families, Heathkit sold a line of electronics kits that included a build-it-yourself 25-inch color TV. It was a lot of work to build because you had to solder every resistor, transistor, capacitor, etc. to individual circuit boards and wire everything yourself. But that's what made it so much fun!
This is my favorite Utube channel. I can't wait for new ones to come up. What makes this channel so unique is the man's voice. He makes you feel like you've gone back in time. Thank you Recollection Road!!
Totally forgot about the test tube testers until now - I remember making the trip to the local hardware store as the designated carrying and holder of the box of precious, precious tubes, lol.
Wow... Growing up in the 60's in Seattle area, we watched JP Patches, Ketchikan the Animal Man (Bob Newman), Wunda Wunda, Romper Room, Stan Boreson and his dog No-Mo-Shun, Brakeman Bill, Captain Puget. What a great time to be a kid. I remember what a big deal it was when my parents bought a brand new 1968 Ford LTD 2dr hardtop and we took a family road trip to Lloyd Center in Portland to go shopping... My older sister got car sick and threw-up in the back seat!
I must REALLY be old! Even if I was 20 years younger, I’d remember most of these. I should stop watching your videos. Sometimes they remind me how I should go out to the south pasture and resume digging my own grave. I’m too cheap to let my estate pay for a grave digger. I was using Lucky Tiger for my flat top hair style while in high school back in the 50’s. I remember soldiers coming back from WWII. I was 8 years old then. Gotta go… dig out my shovel, get ready to die and polish up my Realistic radio to serenade me into the next life. Thanks for reminding me of how old I really am, and prepare appropriately for the next chapter of my soul.
There was a little clip of Slim Goodbody with Captain Kangaroo. His name is John Burstein. He was born in 1949. He still tours the US and Canada in his Slim Goodbody outfit. He's in a group called Bodyology. He's older but yes, he still looks good in spandex.
That reminds me of a funny story: I am a youth sports photographer, and a couple years ago I was doing a dance competition where one of the solos had a girl in a leotard like Slim Goodbody. I commented on that to her parents, and they had no idea what I was talking about. It was the grandparents that got it. This made me feel VERY old
We rarely bought from the Brachs display as we still had a mom & pop penny candy store left over from earlier times. They had *everything* and a kid with a quarter could make that go a long way.
We moved to NC from CT. Dad was vice president of an electronics company. Mom wanted to move "back home" after 16 years in CT so Dad bravely quit his job and opened a TV repair shop. He worked there successfully until retirement. I always admired how he quit a very successful position and moved his family of 6 to a strange new town and made it work. Thank goodness he did. NC was definitely a better, safer place to grow up. We lived not too far from NYC in CT. and the town was going down hillin 73...I realize CT has some beautiful areas though.
My favorite has always been Koogle peanut butter; cinnamon or vanilla flavored from the late 70s. Yum yum. And Brach's hard cinnamon candy was awesome.
Well speak for yourself. You may be growing old, but I'm still hot young stuff. Even though all my sisters are grandmothers I'm still living life in the fast lane! They aged and mouldered-- but I haven't changed a bit! This is no lie.
I remember the first time I saw a color tv picture. Our family had known only b&w tvs for decades. Then one time in 1975, my brother-in-law and my sister came to visit a while, and he brought his portable color tv.... And I was ASTOUNDED, blown away-- just speechless. It was one of those kid moments when your eyes open wide in absolute wonder! I mean, to see the logo of your tv station in those unreal colors, instead of all those years of shades of gray. It was like seeing everything anew. And I was sad at having to go back to blah old b&w when he took his tv home. Oh and btw, I got color shock, to see Tweety Bird looking sooo yellow. 🙂
@@dougthompson5449 It's almost like TV was trying to make up for all those years of b&w, by piercing your eyes with something that was almost techno-color, but thankfully not quite that loud. :-) And Star Trek would have been just the show to make kids *and* parents see the light, and to plan and save like mad for their first color TV, and to *never* look back.
I'm old enough to remember when drug stores had soda fountains, and there were things called "five and dimes", like F.W. Woolworth, for example. They went out of business in '97, but ultimately morphed into Foot Locker.
@@cokesquirrel According to Wikipedia, that is precisely what happened. It surprised me, too. There was another company in between called Venator Group. Here's the article: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/F._W._Woolworth_Company
I loved reading comic books especially Archie and Marvel comics! Cereals always had prizes in them and sometimes puzzles or games on the back of the box. Up through the 90’s and early 2000’s I still put my two kids on the mechanical rides at the malls ( horses, ducks , cars ect). They are no longer at our malls. Kids loved those rides you fed quarters in. 😊❤️
Oh my. I remember all of these. I'll be 73 next week. I ordered Hardy Boys and Nancy Drew books for my grand kids only a few years ago from Amazon. And thank God the mall rides were still available for my kids back in the 80s. ❤
I never made a gum wrapper chain but I remember friends did. My parents didn’t get us candy, soda or gum. When we went to visit relatives we got soda and candy. My mom always went grocery shopping by herself. I remember passing the Brach’s display with the assorted candy. I just never got it. My mom always bought the cheapest cereal when I was young. Rice Krispies or Kellogg’s Frosted Flakes. When I moved out and married she started buying more cereal with sugar like Count Chocola. We never had oatmeal or other hot cereal. Nor eggs and sides unless we went out for breakfast. At my school, in 6th grade, all the kids went to this camp for 3-4 days. The first morning we went to eat in the mess hall. They had hot oatmeal! I was so excited. Other kids didn’t want there’s so I ate four bowls. I was in heaven. I remember getting a Bobby Sherman and Partridge Family paper record from the cereal box. I cut it out and put it on my dad’s console stereo. I guess the paper record wasn’t good for the expensive needle on his turntable. 😁
We never had candy, pop or snacks in our house either. Mom did make us oatmeal though only on cold mornings. There were six of us kids. We did make gum wrapper chains. My grandma would give us the gum wrappers mostly. They were good times though!
Oldest of 5. We never had soda or candy in the house. On the rare occasion my dad would by Birch Beer, he knew we hated it. My mom would buy day old bread. We toasted it anyway. She only bought enough vegetables for my dad & herself. We wouldn’t touch them. Didn’t force us. Would buy the good cereals & cookies but if we gobbled them up, that was it till next week.
I grew up in a typical small town with a park at the center. Surrounding on all sides were all the businesses you needed. Hardware, pharmacy with soda fountain, grocery, bar, electronic sales and repair, clothing, sporting goods and a restaurant. Gas stations and the movie theater were only a block down the main street. It was a great time and place to grow up. I miss that world.
I also remember when windows were made of wooden frames and the glass was individual panes. If you broke one you just replaced that pane not the whole window
I loved when the TV repairman came! He would open his tri-level tackle box with it’s wonders of vacuum tubes and multi-colored wires and clips. Ah, Rhetty! You have taken me back, again. Thank you!
Color TV sets of the 70s also had the slide bars or buttons you could use to adjust the hues! We messed around them whenever we went to my grandma's house!
Riding in the back of your dad’s pick-up (I now live in AZ and its still legal here), burning your trash in metal trash cans, Thrifty’s ice cream 5 cents/scoop, my dad having his gun rack mounted behind the seat covering the window. Mom would go to the grocery store for regular supplies but then go a block down the street to buy chicken and fish. Also we bought a freezer and would buy half a beef at a time…..good times
I was born in 1961, and enjoyed the 60s, 70s, and early to mid 80s. Great music, movies, TV shows. Best times for kids to have grown up in. In my opinion the late 90s up till now, sucked and are sucking. Kids today will never know what real fun and games were like. =(
That's Hillarious. I grew up in the 80's, and I remember all the grumpy old people saying "the fifties were the best time to grow up, and kids today will never know what real fun and games were like"
I was born in 1958 and u got it right !!! Things started getting sucky in the 90's. We were lucky to grow up in the good 'ol days, I loved the 60's , 70's & 80's , got married in '79, and still married after 43 years !!
As far as reading went, I was an unusual kid. I started reading seriously in the 5th grade, and I read history and biography - in my 70's and still reading the same subjects! These videos do bring back memories.
@LJB103, Read THIS,,You Might be Old…If You Remember This, when teenage girls, were REAL girls, and teenage boys, were REAL boys and there was no MENTAL illness, or FAKE genders, and all kids, knew, what public bathroom, to use.
I was born in the early 50s and grew up in the 60s and 70s. I always said grew up in the best error there ever was the music was great. The movies were great. And life was so cool.😎 I am almost 71 my how time does fly. I am old now. He retired, but growing up in the 70s was cool and all those great bands inspired me to play guitar. This is my hobby today I’ve been playing for 50 years. The cool thing about all of it. I can play my favorite songs from my good old era, thanks for these videos. They are super cool. They take me back to the good old days.👍🏼👍🏼😎😎🎸
I'm 63 and still remember visiting the Hickory Farms stores in the local malls with my parents, especially right before Christmas. The electric horses in front of our local stores used to cost a penny.
Yeah, I also remember our family doctor making house calls and colored sugar water in little wax bottles. Of course, I also remember Mom darning our socks and starching Dad's shirts and ironing for hours on end. And I remember only having 3 TV channels that we watched on like a 12 inch screen in B&W. And I remember my sister having polio, because no vaccine (she was OK, eventually). Like any other time, it was good points and not so good points.
I remember watching a show called Winky Dink in the 60s where you put a piece of plastic on your tv set and the story asked you to draw on the tv screen to solve Winky Dinks problem. That show was so fun. I think I was 5 years old or so. So 1967? The Winky Dink on google is 50s. Lot's of re-runs in those days.
Electric Company also had double entendres for the adults who had to watch the series with their children/students. My favorite skit was "Love of Chair - the Story of a Boy and His Chair" to teach prepositions.
Thanks again. Recall all of this to one degree or another. The coin sidewalk rides seemed to last into early 1980s in my area. I miss the America so much of those days😢
I remember TV tube testers at Rite Aid and Radio Shack, and yes even the kiddie rides like the merry go round outside of Rite Aid! I used to watch The Electric Company and Zoom, which aired on PBS, anyone remember Don’t Look Now, that show was pulled off the air so quickly!
My granddad worked on TV's when he retired. They were the old vacuum tube ones. I would sit and watch him for hours use schematics and a multimeter and trace down problems. There were those horses and cars for kids outside the Piggly Wiggly. I always wanted to get on one, but if I did, it didn't go anywhere, since we couldn't afford the change to put in them. My brother and I cut a record out of the back of a Super Sugar Crisp box once, and it was a Halloween take since the box was sold around that time of year. Those were times of naivety and fun. Didn't have much money, but it really didn't matter.
My dad used to repair tvs and radios in our basement shop. He made one of those Heathkit stereos for us when I was little. We used it a long time. Being a horse fanatic, I always wanted to ride the mechanical horse outside the grocery store. I'd forgotten about the records on the cereal boxes, lol. My mom loved Bobby Sherman!😊
Yep, I'm old. Funny thing, during the part about Brach's candy, I suddenly had a flash memory of Chuckle's candy, something that I haven't thought about in at least 40 years, and did a search to see if they still existed. I found them, and placed an order. 😁Funny the way the brain works.
Got our first colored TV in 1968. A big console that was very heavy. It used a TV antenna, too, not cable. I did make the long chains out of gum wrappers & had a rabbit foot. Favorite Brachs candy were root beer barrels & cinnamon candies. Constantly in a Nancy Drew book. And had a number of records from the cereal boxes. They worked well on my small phonograph. My Dad used Brylcream. And I can remember wanting to and riding on the rides in the front of stores. Loved Captain Kangaroo, too. See Morgan Freeman on the Pic of the Electric Company? He was young! Yes, you could fix your own TV by changing out the tunes. I don't miss worrying about that at all! Thanks for more great memories!
Yep! remember all of this. Not a disposable society back then. People fixed everything, and things were built to last and repair. Even stereos, and electronics. Great time to grow up in.
We didn't have or need cell phones, tablets, and all the gadgets kid have now that keep them glued to a screen, gaming. We were outdoor kids, and loved it. There was no such thing as watching TV all day either.
If we sat inside watching TV on a Saturday afternoon, our dad would chase out of the house. He'd tell us that kids need to be outside. On weekdays, once we finished our homework of course, we could run around until dinner time.
And it was normal for fridges and stoves and kettles and radios and everything, to last for *decades*. WE expected it to stay that way. The current of our thinking, now, does not assume longevity, alas.
My parents bought two brand new homes in their time together. 20+ years. Never bought more than one appliance per house. TV too. I can’t tell you how many hot water heaters, W/D & DWs I’ve replaced. Insane.
There were repairmen for everything. You would have your chairs and couches reupholstered. Wasn’t a throwaway society back then.
My mom bought a (giant) microwave when I was a baby. It finally died when I was in my early 30s!! It was a little embarrassing using such a big, old appliance when we had company over, but my mom insisted that, as long as it's working, we're going to use it! 😅
I lived in the 50s and high school in the 60s I am now 74, and love that time you could run outside all day and your parents never worried. I feel sorry for the kids today.
yeah, this stopped around the late 90s.
That's funny. I'm sure kids today feel sorry for people who grew up in what they believe were the "boring 50's"
There isn’t a better time, than these good old days. I’m a child of the 60’s. It was a blast being a child. I loved the Monkees and making the chain gum necklaces. 😘
today kids bring guns to school sad
It is very sad =( @@bobprescott
Same here, 60s rock on! :)
The only reason that the 60s seemed like the perfect time to grow up is because we were children and didn't have the problems adults had.
Reasurch a little history and you'll find the 60s was a very chaotic time. Civil rights, Vietnam War, rioting in the streets, college students being shot by the National guard were just a few things going on. No, there was a lot of bad things going on then.
@@bobprescottActually, there were huge numbers of gun safety and riflery classes at schools for decades. And it was common until recently, and probably still is done in some locations, for kids to bring their hunting rifles to school in the gun racks of their pickups, in order to go hunting after school.
Disarming the victims does not make people more safe, it makes them less safe.
I am 71 years old. I still remember our TV repair man from the 60s named Benny. The gum wrapper chains were called boy catchers in the sixties.
72 here. I remember our TV repairman, too - it was ME. Eight years old, I built my own tube tester from a kit. Still have it, in fact, but it's just a memento now. Nothing has tubes anymore, for one, and the thing was left in a damp basement for about twenty years, which damaged the meter. It's pretty hard to find a replacement these days, and it would likely be very costly if one could be found. Not worth it just to have a functioning tube tester with no tubes to test.😄😄
63 y/o here. My dad was an electrical engineer (as am I and my son as well). He would fix our TV, and I would be parked right there next to him. I used to love going to Radio Shack and using the tube tester.
@@earthwormscrawlMy go-to for parts and such was Allied Radio. Radio Shack did not yet exist. Good old days!!
For the cereal he forgot the Pink panther
@@sandramari5120 Sugar Frosted Flakes, now called just Frosted Flakes, becauss of that stupid pc thing I mentioned. Still, frosted flakes are grrrrraatttt!!!--- and for all time, they had *BETTER* be frosted with sugar. For that is the way God intended.
Yep, you got me I'm old. I remember all those thing fondly. Wouldn't trade it for anything. Those are precious memories... Jeff
If my sister and I had behaved ourselves reasonably well throughout the previous week, mom let us fill up a bag of goodies at the Brach's Candy shop. The caramels, the watermelon and green apple hard candies were our favorites but we made sure to get plenty of the jelly nougats and butterscotch discs for the folks.
I remember that! We didn't go weekly, but did go once a month as the store as the grocery store was 45 minute drive away (we lived in the boonies) My mom had us do chores, and we'd earn stickers on the reward chart. Home work turned in on time...all sorts of way to earn stickers on the rewards chart. Every 10 stickers = $2 we could spend at Brach's (back then, a fortune!) and I'd often have about $10 to spend. I loved going right after halloween (when all the halloween goodies went on sale) and same after christmas- the sales!
They sell Brach's in my market.
A family that inhales candy together, stays together. Likewise, a family that goes aching-ly to the dentist together, stays together... except minus a few teeth when they come back out the door. 🙂
My favorites were the butterscotch disks.
I'm 46 and remember it, only it was my grandparents that would always get some and had a jar filled with a variety of them. My favorite was also the jelly nougats, the hard strawberry candies, and the caramel with creme centers. You can get a few of their candies but not the jelly nougats that I loved so much.
I didn't realize how much I miss those good old days , kids these days all they know is cell phones, video games. Life was simpler back then, you could actually trust most people. The Brachs candies were so good, people these days don't know what they missed out on. Thank you for the memories I'm happy but sad at the same time. I'm 67 years old and look at this country and can't help but be sad.
The Vietnam War was simpler times????????????????????????????
I’m close to your age & remember my Dad helping himself to some butterscotch candies while shopping.
@@samanthab1923 My dad would do the same thing occasionally, I think my favorite ones were the pink white and chocolate coconut squares , my sister and I would always try to get those first! Thank you for your comment!!
@@haroldburch541 No problem 👋
@@vicepresidentmikepence889 And who could trust the people who led the US into that mess? This other person's comment is full of beans.
Oh the wonderful memories! ❤
This channel brings us our feel good memories and I love it! Sometimes you’ll see something you had forgot about and then the memories come rushing back! There’s nothing else like it! The good ol days!
The records on the back of cereal boxes is something I completely forgot till he showed it on this episode!😊
@@carolynridlon3988 But do you remember all those wonderful prizes inside? Sometimes they'd stick them in the bottom of the box, so there I went, shoving my arm into a full box, just to get that prize. Twas the little thrill of the prize, coupled with the thrill of not knowing what it would be.
I also remember digging into jars of Maxwell House coffee, to get at the coupons for my mother's collection.
Brings back great memories!!!! I still watch a 1980's Magnavox TV. It still works great!!
Your comment reminds me of an old buddy of mine.
Remember the original big screen TVs that were the size and weight of a full bookcase? When flatscreens first came out, some guy got one and gave my buddy his big counsel TV.
Took several guys to move it into his condo. He was totally bragging to everyone that he got it for free.
Fast forward about 5 years. Everyone had a flatscreen TV now. He couldn’t get rid of it 😂
No one wanted it. The dump wanted a huge fee to accept it. He ended up putting it into his storage unit. I lost touch with him; for all I know he still has it 😂
@@MomentsInTrading He may still have it and probably still works!!!
I still have an old Curtis Mathis console TV that is utilized when the neighborhood kids come over with the grand kids to play vintage games on an NES or Atari.
They seem to enjoy that over the more modern games that are available today.
@@MomentsInTrading There's this one guy on UA-cam, calls himself "shango". He takes these old TVs in, as some kind of labor of love, and he brings them back to life. It's a miracle to me when I see it, but he has the skills and the tools and the experience. He can resurrect just about anything electronic, not just TVs.
He brought a 1961 RCA color tv back from the dead, and when he had gotten it adjusted to where he wanted it, he plugged a vcr into it, and played a Kennedy speech from May 1961, something to do with getting the space program underway in ernest.
Needless to say, it was awesome to see, not just the tv, but John F. in glorious executive color!
@@keithbrown7685 My parents had a 1956 RCA black and white TV with the mahogany veneer that would swivel. I remember my father replacing maybe 2 tubes but it lasted well into the 70s till my parents got a new Zenith TV and it was still working but the main picture tube needed a booster. That RCA w as always on. I had a Samsung projection TV that I bought in the early 00s that was still working when I got rid of it over a year ago and it was hard to get rid of even for free. Everyone wants a flat screen. I remember my mother had a Bendix washer and dryer for years that would not die but then we moved in a new house and she gave them away. She bought a new GE combination washer/dryer that was nothing but trouble and after a few years she replaced it with a new Maytag washer and dryer that lasted for decades with no repairs.
The gum wrapper chains! I'd forgotten all about that. And, I sure loved the grocery store quarter horses.
Feel like they were around the same time as Life Saver corsages
My father repaired TVs for a few years. We had a Volkswagen Minibus to carry them to and from the customers. My brother and I used to evaluate tubes in our suitcase tube tester. I eventually joined the Navy - as an Electronic Technician. Thanks Dad!
Thank you for your service 👍 God bless you🙏
Yup, same here. I was always helping my Dad to fix and build things. I too joined the Navy at 17 and eventually got my degree in Mechanical Engineering.
My dad was a Magnavox TV repairman in the 70s. He also had some funny stories from some of the house calls he made like a dog nicknamed "Chainsaw".
I remember Captain Kangaroo. Saturday morning cartoons used to be great back then!!! Thanks Love your videos
And weekday afternoon was too. Many stations had afternoon cartoon shows with local hosts. Such as Grandpa Happy and Captain Ernie from the Quad Cities back in the day.
@@glennso47 You Might be Old…If You Remember This, when teenage girls, were REAL girls, and teenage boys, were REAL boys and there was no MENTAL illness, or FAKE genders, and all kids, knew, what public bathroom, to use.
AND MR GREEN JEANS & BUNNY RABBIT
I had captain kangaroo on in the mornings as a kid in Santa Rosa, CA. Weekday afternoons was Bennie & Cecil (the sea sick serpent) and all the others (yogi bear, quick draw McGraw,....) and Flintstones at night once a week. When we moved to the central valley of CA (Lodi) we got Cisco kid, captain delta, lone ranger, big valley, death valley days,.... TV was the best in those days! 😊❤
@@carolynridlon3988 Do you still live in LIBTARD, Commifornia, with all of the 20, 000 "Illegal Alien", domestic terrorists?
My neighbors made their TV from parts available from Radio Shack. My two older brothers and I all read Hardy Boys books. We had a complete set. We had a mom & pop Drug Store in our semi-rural area, before grocery stores has drug stores. Everyone knew Mrs. Bond and her family who ran the store. Mom always had us pay special attention to the rows of decorative glass figurines and bowls for gifts, so we wouldn't break any.
Great memories. I remember going with our grandparents for a weekend. Grandma would get her hair done at the beauty salon while grand dad would check mail at the post office box. Later, we would go to the pharmacy/soda fountain and have an ice cream while picking out a new comic book.
Did you ever read the Tom Swift books? I had a set of them and a lot of other books. like happy Hollister, Sugar creek gang and Alfered Hitchcock
@@midnightcaller200I found some old Tom Swift books in the early 80s as a teenager, and loved them. I also seem to remember the Happy Hollisters, but I think I only had, or borrowed one or two perhaps. I'll look them up in a moment. I'd forgotten that book series entirely until I read it in your comment. So thanks for reminding me!
And I really liked the Sugar Creek Gang series, had a few of them.
I also remember a great children's book called Pinky Pye, something about a cat, I think. I read it several times, and enjoyed it very much.
I inherited a bunch of Nancy Drew books from my cousins, who were a couple years older than I. The books had 1930s copyrights, not the 1950s ones.
And Nancy Drew books
Oh, the good old days. Candies, Cereal, The 5 and Dime store with the lunch counter on the side. We had one of those BOX tv's with the slide out carriages that held the tube and the vacuum tubes behind it. I remember going to the hardware store for replacement tubes. My grandparents had an old Victrola record players, and they had a 78 rpm slide out record player panel with the radio that sat above it in the large cabinet. My parents have all those old furniture pieces. My aunt had one of those gargantuan wall unit pieces with a record player on one end, a radio in the middle and records to the other side, banked by the cabinet speakers in the unit.
My aunt & uncle had a big Hi-Fi unit in their dinning room
Our TV repair guy would give us a loner TV if he had to take it back to the shop. No charge for it 😊 kept us kids off moms case about Saturday morning cartoons . This would be very unusual today if we still had repair people coming to our homes especially in a major city outside NYC.
Did you mean a "loaner TV", or was the set you borrowed just antisocial? Hehe!
My Mom always wanted one of those horses that you put the quarter in to ride. She remembered them from when she was little and always wanted one. I wish we could have made that happen for her before she pass in Jan. Thanks for the great Memories! I remember the little carousels that was in front of most K-Marts or Wal-Marts back in the day.
Me too! At our mall, and maybe some of our bigger stores, there was an electric horse that wanted quarters. I liked it, but I think it's good that the ride didn't last long. I could see myself wanting off after a couple of minutes.
I remember all of these. I liked Mr Green Jeans on Captain Kangaroo. The Statler Brothers had a song - Flowers on the Wall. Watching Captain Kangaroo now don't tell me- I've nothing to do!!! LOL LOL LOL
That song is very catchy.
@@freedomrings1420 You Might be Old…If You Remember This, when teenage girls, were REAL girls, and teenage boys, were REAL boys and there was no MENTAL illness, or FAKE genders, and all kids, knew, what public bathroom, to use.
Just a bit of trivia. That song came out in 1965. Why I should remember such things, I don't know and don't really care anymore. :-)
And not to brag, really, but I can sing and play the whole song on guitar.
Such was the gift that music could give us. And the gift never wore out either.
@@keithbrown7685 You should do a video on it and post it on your UA-cam channel.
Soupy Sales was my fav!
We had a cabinet TV. Always blowing a tube and being repaired. Great memories.
Yeah, everybody in the family had the "3 in 1" entertainment center.......TV, radio, and record player. Took up a whole wall!!! My great Aunt had hers until she passed away. I wonder how much that thing was worth. It still looked new, and still worked, with the original tubes!!!
I saw one at Goodwill about 5 years ago. That thing was huge! Cabinet was close to 8 feet long-the biggest one I ever saw, and in like-new condition. Had the most beautiful carved wood panels over each speaker. I wanted to buy it, but I was short on money at the time, and didn't have help to move it. @@mewregaurdhissyfit7733
@@mewregaurdhissyfit7733 You Might be Old…If You Remember This, when teenage girls, were REAL girls, and teenage boys, were REAL boys and there was no MENTAL illness, or FAKE genders, and all kids, knew, what public bathroom, to use.
God I remember so many of these from the 70’s and 80’s. The best time to grow up. Those times are sorely missed!
Being born in 1966 I must say as a child growing up in The United States of America during that time was great😃2023, "NOT" even close😫I feel bad for kids these days☹My wife and I were born at the right time😁ROCK ON!!!!!!!🤘🏻🤙🏻✌🏻
1966 for me too and I totally agree with you.
I was born in 66 also
Born in 59...
I agree with you being a kid then was great fun...
Today's kids have no idea how much fun we had...
@@Martys-4x4
Holy shit....
That's terrible of them...
I was born in 1958. The 60s, 70s & 80s were the best times to be alive and enjoy.
I remember all of these things. Taping a coin to the top of the needle arm helped make those cereal box records play. I loved Captain Kangaroo. I have very fond memories of watching his show. 😊
Green Jeans.
We used coins for *all* of our record troubles. Usually a penny did the trick. 🙂
I remember waiting for the first Captain Kangaroo show to start.
@@nbenefiel Just wondering, were you also counting flowers on the wall, smoking cigs, and playing solitaire with a deck of 51?
:-) That's a reference to the song.
@@keithbrown7685
I remember the song.
I must be old cuz I remember all those things best time to be a kid thank you for all the memories.
Yes, records on the back of cereal boxes… a long forgotten piece of history!!
The best records were in MAD Magazine-the cardboard ones, and later the better-sounding flexi-discs. Hilarious!
@@BakedRBeans You Might be Old…If You Remember This, when teenage girls, were REAL girls, and teenage boys, were REAL boys and there was no MENTAL illness, or FAKE genders, and all kids, knew, what public bathroom, to use.
Still have my
Jackson 5 cut out cereal box record
" mamas pearl"
🌼🌼🌼🌼🌼
Wow, never heard of that title- maybe it was like a fan club only release?@@JV-bq8jz
I love these throwback Channels & proud to say I'll be 53 next week GOD willing & truly blessed to be born in 1970!🙏💯💖👊
Pffttt... kid.
Just a baby!
I was born in '63, so I remember all of this stuff!
@@monkeygraborange Is that so? Tell me more Elder!😂
@@pattymerrill2838 It's all good BigSis!😂
Gum wrapper necklaces were so much fun!!! Thank you for this sweet look back 😊
They were so *neat* and they smelled so good. Me being a boy, I didn't get the chance to make any of my own, but my sisters took up the slack, no pun intended. :-)
I'm in my mid 50's, and I remember most of those things. Like watching tv on the big console in the living room, and of course, it would be on one of the 3 major networks. No cable back then, so if you lived out in the country, getting reception from your rooftop antenna could be rough. And wow, Crazy Cow cereal---I forgot all about that!
Thank you for the video. Being born in 1956 and living in a very rural area, just going to town was like a trip to the moon.
Ah, if only I had a time machine....
Sadly, my children will never live in such an age of innocence.
A long distance phone call was an event and to get an actual letter meant family meeting time as my parents read the letter aloud.
As a child born in 1960, i remember so many of these items or places! Here's another ideal, what about:
Toni home perms
Perfumes from the 60's - 80's
Ripcord beadspreads for boys & chennele ones for girls
Paper dolls, lincoln logs, tinker toys, spirographs, wooly larry (magnet boards)
Erector sets were big also.
Cut-outs we played with endlessly.
"...Spirograph rings
are groovy things.
Your eyes won't believe
what your hands have done. ..."
That was part of their jingle in the early 70s. I first heard it Christmas 1973. I remember how my elders were so much better at Spirograph than I was. But I still loved it, and it still pulls on a wonderful heart string.
The good old days
You are incorrect. My grandmother told me the 1930's were the good old dayd
@@vicepresidentmikepence889 lol
These were the best times glad I lived through them. Life is so generic now....and the young people don't know any better. Movement of time will be our demise. That is the way it always has been on this planet anyway.
So many memories. My dad used to be a tv repair man. Han ran his own tv repair business right out of our garage it was full of tv stereo and other electronic equipment. The great big tv furniture I remember all too well.
MY DAD WAS A TV REPAIR MAN TOO! HIS SHOP TOOK UP HALF OF OUR HOUSE HE SWORE RCA TV'S WERE THE BEST TO FIX
I remember all the things in the video, and I also remember when we used to get towels in boxes of laundry detergent, glassware in dry oats and even sugar. That's how we decided what brands we would purchase. I still have the Dixie Crystals butter dish that came in the sugar.
Also don't forget collecting glasses & pitchers (avocado green & amber) from gas stations or records & pots and pans from grocery stores?! These were a long with getting blue chip or green stamps!❤
My hubby & I had a set of glasses from Mobil gas stations for years. The American Bison rocks glass 😂
Drinking glasses with the Flintstones on them had jelly in them first...
🎉 Salutations from coastal Mississippi. Thank you for these memories. Shopping at the Piggly Wiggly, the rides,the candy and the cereal....so glad to be a child of the 70's ❤
Totally forgot about the gum necklaces!!! Taking me back to the days of fun. 😊 Thank you my friend.
Had a Bobby Sherman lunch box!!
I still have mine! Hahaha
@@pattymerrill2838 , no way!!!! I'm so jealous!! 😊
It's well worn. Sour apple was one of my top favorites! @@leesashriber5097
@@leesashriber5097 You Might be Old…If You Remember This, when teenage girls, were REAL girls, and teenage boys, were REAL boys and there was no MENTAL illness, or FAKE genders, and all kids, knew, what public bathroom, to use.
My friend had one also. I was so jealous. My lunchbox was "Laugh-in". My mother picked it out. 😢
I remember those Archie records from the Honeycomb boxes. I had "Everything's Archie" and "Love Light". Those things actually lasted a long, long time! And those animal rides in grocery stores? My daughter loved riding the 1 at a local supermarket just 10-12 years ago. I don't think they have it anymore, but surprisingly once in a while you can still find one.
I don't remember records on the back of cereal boxes. But I do remember the small cereal boxes on the front had small holes, you can open them, put some milk in there and eat out of them ( I did that at least twice)!
Your channel never disappoints, excellent memories and great presentations. I remember everything on this list. Made me smile today. Thank you. Cheers from Arizona 🍻😎
In addition to TV repair being a lost art, what about shoe repair? Try finding one of those today! Also, every town had at least one fix-it shop, where you could have any small appliance repaired. Replace? Never! "A little dab'll do you" worked well, until "Hey! You still using that greasy kid stuff!?" came along! Sales probably plummeted after that. The best cardboard records were in MAD Magazine- who can forget Alfred E. Neuman's "vocal" of "It's A Gas"?
Brylcreem is still around.
We still have a fix it shop. He specializes in vacuums and sewing machines. 😊
I cherish my Cobbler. Only open every other day of the week & weird times but worth it.
Shops like that are out there,but they are few and far between, so you really have to look. Main problem is, repair cost vs. replacement of the item. Parts can be impossible to get. I fix my own, if possible. @@buickinvicta288
glad to hear it!@@samanthab1923
Well...I recall pretty much all of these thing so yes, I am old. I was an AVID reader growing up and the school book fair was always something I looked forward to! That and the visit of the book-mobile (who else remembers that?). Miss the Brach's candy displays, though for some reason my bag always ended up mostly full of root beer barrels, lol. And Brylcreem! Never used it myself but my dad sure did. Every time I see it mentioned or see it in an old t.v. show or movie I think of him. Miss you Pop!
The supermarket closest to my home had one of those mechanical horse rides for kids until just two years ago, when that strip mall was totally remodeled.
For technically oriented families, Heathkit sold a line of electronics kits that included a build-it-yourself 25-inch color TV. It was a lot of work to build because you had to solder every resistor, transistor, capacitor, etc. to individual circuit boards and wire everything yourself. But that's what made it so much fun!
And less expensive, too. 🙂
The mechanical rides were still around when my son was young. 2000?
"AGE IS JUST A NUMBER AND MINES UNLISTED"❣️😋
My number is out of service.
Mine is a wrong number 😮
OLD IS A STATE OF MIND. STOP WITH THE NONSENSE YOU ARE OLD. 🐦🐦🐦🐦🐦🐦
Lol, I don’t think a lot of the younger generation knows what an “unlisted “ telephone number means ☹️
@@justintyme7213 WITH AGE COMES "WISDOM"👍😎
This is my favorite Utube channel. I can't wait for new ones to come up. What makes this channel so unique is the man's voice. He makes you feel like you've gone back in time. Thank you Recollection Road!!
Totally agree
Totally forgot about the test tube testers until now - I remember making the trip to the local hardware store as the designated carrying and holder of the box of precious, precious tubes, lol.
Wow... Growing up in the 60's in Seattle area, we watched JP Patches, Ketchikan the Animal Man (Bob Newman), Wunda Wunda, Romper Room, Stan Boreson and his dog No-Mo-Shun, Brakeman Bill, Captain Puget. What a great time to be a kid. I remember what a big deal it was when my parents bought a brand new 1968 Ford LTD 2dr hardtop and we took a family road trip to Lloyd Center in Portland to go shopping... My older sister got car sick and threw-up in the back seat!
We were so lucky to have beem kids/grown up at this time. I would go back there in a second. ☮️💟
I must REALLY be old! Even if I was 20 years younger, I’d remember most of these.
I should stop watching your videos. Sometimes they remind me how I should go out to the south pasture and resume digging my own grave. I’m too cheap to let my estate pay for a grave digger.
I was using Lucky Tiger for my flat top hair style while in high school back in the 50’s. I remember soldiers coming back from WWII. I was 8 years old then.
Gotta go… dig out my shovel, get ready to die and polish up my Realistic radio to serenade me into the next life. Thanks for reminding me of how old I really am, and prepare appropriately for the next chapter of my soul.
LOL!
There was a little clip of Slim Goodbody with Captain Kangaroo. His name is John Burstein. He was born in 1949. He still tours the US and Canada in his Slim Goodbody outfit. He's in a group called Bodyology. He's older but yes, he still looks good in spandex.
Probably looks better than the current Ric Flair.
That reminds me of a funny story: I am a youth sports photographer, and a couple years ago I was doing a dance competition where one of the solos had a girl in a leotard like Slim Goodbody. I commented on that to her parents, and they had no idea what I was talking about. It was the grandparents that got it. This made me feel VERY old
We rarely bought from the Brachs display as we still had a mom & pop penny candy store left over from earlier times. They had *everything* and a kid with a quarter could make that go a long way.
The good 'ol shade tree of memory, thanks for the trip!🙂💖💯🤍💫👍!
We moved to NC from CT. Dad was vice president of an electronics company. Mom wanted to move "back home" after 16 years in CT so Dad bravely quit his job and opened a TV repair shop. He worked there successfully until retirement. I always admired how he quit a very successful position and moved his family of 6 to a strange new town and made it work. Thank goodness he did. NC was definitely a better, safer place to grow up. We lived not too far from NYC in CT. and the town was going down hillin 73...I realize CT has some beautiful areas though.
Thank you so much for these wonderful programs and from the original crispy critter I applaud you
What great memories of the days I miss! As many others do as well!! Good times! I try to relive some of those things! When I can!
I love this channel...always brings back long-lost memories! ❤️
Remember the doormats made from plastic bread bags?
Say what??? 🙂
How about braided rugs made of old neckties?
@@BELCAN57 You spook me.... Where do you come from... I think you may be from ... ya know... another...like... dimension. 🙂
Boy oh boy do I remember those days I guess I'm old😂😂😂
😮I loved the Nancy Drew mystery books!! I wish we could go back to those happier times!!!
Another great video sir, good times.
Ohh yes!! ❤
My favorite has always been Koogle peanut butter; cinnamon or vanilla flavored from the late 70s. Yum yum. And Brach's hard cinnamon candy was awesome.
Chocolate Koogle was my favorite
O my goodness, I remember those! I really like their peanut butter O.O
@@tonycollazorappo Gourmet peanut butter at its finest. It MUST come back.
Its bitter sweet watching these videos . They bring back fond memories , And remind Us that we are growing old . Love the videos !
Well speak for yourself. You may be growing old, but I'm still hot young stuff. Even though all my sisters are grandmothers I'm still living life in the fast lane! They aged and mouldered-- but I haven't changed a bit!
This is no lie.
i remember all of these things. radio shack had tube testers and the famous battery a month club too.
Another great vid by Recollection Road
I remember the first time I saw a color tv picture. Our family had known only b&w tvs for decades. Then one time in 1975, my brother-in-law and my sister came to visit a while, and he brought his portable color tv....
And I was ASTOUNDED, blown away-- just speechless. It was one of those kid moments when your eyes open wide in absolute wonder!
I mean, to see the logo of your tv station in those unreal colors, instead of all those years of shades of gray. It was like seeing everything anew. And I was sad at having to go back to blah old b&w when he took his tv home.
Oh and btw, I got color shock, to see Tweety Bird looking sooo yellow. 🙂
When we first got a TV the first show that I saw on it was "Star Trek". I was amazed at the bright red uniforms that the crew was wearing.
@@dougthompson5449 It's almost like TV was trying to make up for all those years of b&w, by piercing your eyes with something that was almost techno-color, but thankfully not quite that loud. :-)
And Star Trek would have been just the show to make kids *and* parents see the light, and to plan and save like mad for their first color TV, and to *never* look back.
The color wasn’t as big a deal as cable was. We had watched a snowy picture for most of my life. Only 50+ miles to NYC but ugh the worst reception
I'm old enough to remember when drug stores had soda fountains, and there were things called "five and dimes", like F.W. Woolworth, for example. They went out of business in '97, but ultimately morphed into Foot Locker.
Maybe I miss read this but are you saying Woolworths became footlocker? I certainly do not think that is correct but If i am wrong, apologies
@@cokesquirrel According to Wikipedia, that is precisely what happened. It surprised me, too. There was another company in between called Venator Group. Here's the article: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/F._W._Woolworth_Company
I remember when I was a kid we could ride the "horsey". I was so sad when my mom said I was too old to ride the horse.
There was a Radio Shack, that I frequented as a kid, that had a tube tester, well into the late 80s.
Who DIDN'T love Radio Shack?🙏💯💖👊
I loved reading comic books especially Archie and Marvel comics! Cereals always had prizes in them and sometimes puzzles or games on the back of the box. Up through the 90’s and early 2000’s I still put my two kids on the mechanical rides at the malls ( horses, ducks , cars ect). They are no longer at our malls. Kids loved those rides you fed quarters in. 😊❤️
Oh my. I remember all of these. I'll be 73 next week. I ordered Hardy Boys and Nancy Drew books for my grand kids only a few years ago from Amazon. And thank God the mall rides were still available for my kids back in the 80s. ❤
I never made a gum wrapper chain but I remember friends did. My parents didn’t get us candy, soda or gum. When we went to visit relatives we got soda and candy. My mom always went grocery shopping by herself. I remember passing the Brach’s display with the assorted candy. I just never got it. My mom always bought the cheapest cereal when I was young. Rice Krispies or Kellogg’s Frosted Flakes. When I moved out and married she started buying more cereal with sugar like Count Chocola. We never had oatmeal or other hot cereal. Nor eggs and sides unless we went out for breakfast. At my school, in 6th grade, all the kids went to this camp for 3-4 days. The first morning we went to eat in the mess hall. They had hot oatmeal! I was so excited. Other kids didn’t want there’s so I ate four bowls. I was in heaven. I remember getting a Bobby Sherman and Partridge Family paper record from the cereal box. I cut it out and put it on my dad’s console stereo. I guess the paper record wasn’t good for the expensive needle on his turntable. 😁
We never had candy, pop or snacks in our house either. Mom did make us oatmeal though only on cold mornings. There were six of us kids. We did make gum wrapper chains. My grandma would give us the gum wrappers mostly. They were good times though!
Oldest of 5. We never had soda or candy in the house. On the rare occasion my dad would by Birch Beer, he knew we hated it. My mom would buy day old bread. We toasted it anyway. She only bought enough vegetables for my dad & herself. We wouldn’t touch them. Didn’t force us. Would buy the good cereals & cookies but if we gobbled them up, that was it till next week.
I was born in 99, but I could tell you kitty rides outside of department and grocery stores were some things that I still did as a kid
Yep, our neighborhood grocery stores have them and my kids loved them when they were little. The one is a penny a ride.
I started laughing at the TV commercials, because I instantly said, "I learned it by watching you!" I always love the stuff you come up with!
Good ole days. The 70s were great times!
Old is a state of mind. I am only old on the outside.
I grew up in a typical small town with a park at the center. Surrounding on all sides were all the businesses you needed. Hardware, pharmacy with soda fountain, grocery, bar, electronic sales and repair, clothing, sporting goods and a restaurant. Gas stations and the movie theater were only a block down the main street. It was a great time and place to grow up. I miss that world.
We had a downtown like that.
I also remember when windows were made of wooden frames and the glass was individual panes. If you broke one you just replaced that pane not the whole window
I remember when you had to boot Windows over DOS. I did it for years. 🙂
@@keithbrown7685 uummm, I am talking about actual windows that have weights in the frames to open and close them.
I loved when the TV repairman came! He would open his tri-level tackle box with it’s wonders of vacuum tubes and multi-colored wires and clips.
Ah, Rhetty! You have taken me back, again. Thank you!
I watched Capt. Kanagaroo in the early 60s. When the Electric Co came on I was beyond that as that was a 70s kids show.
Dang, I thought I was old reminiscing about the 80's, but y'all got me beat.
Color TV sets of the 70s also had the slide bars or buttons you could use to adjust the hues! We messed around them whenever we went to my grandma's house!
Riding in the back of your dad’s pick-up (I now live in AZ and its still legal here), burning your trash in metal trash cans, Thrifty’s ice cream 5 cents/scoop, my dad having his gun rack mounted behind the seat covering the window. Mom would go to the grocery store for regular supplies but then go a block down the street to buy chicken and fish. Also we bought a freezer and would buy half a beef at a time…..good times
Krispie Kritters! I loved those.
It's all there in my memories. Children today will never have these joys in their lives that required imagination and creativity.
I actually teared up watching this one! Thank you!
I loved Nancy Drew books ! ❤
I was born in 1961, and enjoyed the 60s, 70s, and early to mid 80s. Great music, movies, TV shows. Best times for kids to have grown up in. In my opinion the late 90s up till now, sucked and are sucking. Kids today will never know what real fun and games were like. =(
Myself was born September 1970 & approve this message!🙏💯💖👊
That's Hillarious. I grew up in the 80's, and I remember all the grumpy old people saying "the fifties were the best time to grow up, and kids today will never know what real fun and games were like"
I was born in 1958 and u got it right !!! Things started getting sucky in the 90's. We were lucky to grow up in the good 'ol days, I loved the 60's , 70's & 80's , got married in '79, and still married after 43 years !!
@caroledefelice8972 You're crazy. My grandmother told me the 30's were the good old days
Not the least of which is because our society is openly permeated by perverts. Do you own a mirror?
As far as reading went, I was an unusual kid. I started reading seriously in the 5th grade, and I read history and biography - in my 70's and still reading the same subjects! These videos do bring back memories.
@LJB103, Read THIS,,You Might be Old…If You Remember This, when teenage girls, were REAL girls, and teenage boys, were REAL boys and there was no MENTAL illness, or FAKE genders, and all kids, knew, what public bathroom, to use.
Same, I read science, history and Sci-Fi. And still do, I use a Kindle reader because my eyes are not the same as they use to be :(
@@tonycollazorappo My break from "reality" was murder mysteries (read all 80 Perry Mason books).
I was born in the early 50s and grew up in the 60s and 70s. I always said grew up in the best error there ever was the music was great. The movies were great. And life was so cool.😎 I am almost 71 my how time does fly. I am old now. He retired, but growing up in the 70s was cool and all those great bands inspired me to play guitar. This is my hobby today I’ve been playing for 50 years. The cool thing about all of it. I can play my favorite songs from my good old era, thanks for these videos. They are super cool. They take me back to the good old days.👍🏼👍🏼😎😎🎸
I'm 63 and still remember visiting the Hickory Farms stores in the local malls with my parents, especially right before Christmas.
The electric horses in front of our local stores used to cost a penny.
Yeah, I also remember our family doctor making house calls and colored sugar water in little wax bottles.
Of course, I also remember Mom darning our socks and starching Dad's shirts and ironing for hours on end. And I remember only having 3 TV channels that we watched on like a 12 inch screen in B&W. And I remember my sister having polio, because no vaccine (she was OK, eventually). Like any other time, it was good points and not so good points.
I remember watching a show called Winky Dink in the 60s where you put a piece of plastic on your tv set and the story asked you to draw on the tv screen to solve Winky Dinks problem. That show was so fun. I think I was 5 years old or so. So 1967? The Winky Dink on google is 50s. Lot's of re-runs in those days.
Thank you.
I remember going to the farm to buy our milk. Havent thought of that in 50yrs. Just hit me watching this and thinking back. Love this series.
Electric Company also had double entendres for the adults who had to watch the series with their children/students. My favorite skit was "Love of Chair - the Story of a Boy and His Chair" to teach prepositions.
Thanks again. Recall all of this to one degree or another. The coin sidewalk rides seemed to last into early 1980s in my area. I miss the America so much of those days😢
I remember TV tube testers at Rite Aid and Radio Shack, and yes even the kiddie rides like the merry go round outside of Rite Aid! I used to watch The Electric Company and Zoom, which aired on PBS, anyone remember Don’t Look Now, that show was pulled off the air so quickly!
My granddad worked on TV's when he retired. They were the old vacuum tube ones. I would sit and watch him for hours use schematics and a multimeter and trace down problems. There were those horses and cars for kids outside the Piggly Wiggly. I always wanted to get on one, but if I did, it didn't go anywhere, since we couldn't afford the change to put in them. My brother and I cut a record out of the back of a Super Sugar Crisp box once, and it was a Halloween take since the box was sold around that time of year. Those were times of naivety and fun. Didn't have much money, but it really didn't matter.
My dad used to repair tvs and radios in our basement shop. He made one of those Heathkit stereos for us when I was little. We used it a long time. Being a horse fanatic, I always wanted to ride the mechanical horse outside the grocery store. I'd forgotten about the records on the cereal boxes, lol. My mom loved Bobby Sherman!😊
Yep, I'm old. Funny thing, during the part about Brach's candy, I suddenly had a flash memory of Chuckle's candy, something that I haven't thought about in at least 40 years, and did a search to see if they still existed. I found them, and placed an order. 😁Funny the way the brain works.
Wow I too had forgotten about Chuckles. My favorite one was the black licorice piece so I ate it last.
@@dougthompson5449 🤮 lol the licorice is my least favorite
Cool...
Got our first colored TV in 1968. A big console that was very heavy. It used a TV antenna, too, not cable. I did make the long chains out of gum wrappers & had a rabbit foot. Favorite Brachs candy were root beer barrels & cinnamon candies. Constantly in a Nancy Drew book. And had a number of records from the cereal boxes. They worked well on my small phonograph. My Dad used Brylcream. And I can remember wanting to and riding on the rides in the front of stores. Loved Captain Kangaroo, too. See Morgan Freeman on the Pic of the Electric Company? He was young! Yes, you could fix your own TV by changing out the tunes. I don't miss worrying about that at all! Thanks for more great memories!
You alright. I learned it by watching you.