A Trip Down Memory Lane (Part 2)

I stumbled across something recently that I immediately connected with. I jotted down a bunch of the things mentioned in the article, but can’t recall where I saw it. It may have been on Facebook or Reddit. At any rate, I thought this was something that might jar your memory, too!

You can find the first batch of memories in Part 1 here:

Let’s continue with Part 2 …

Video rental stores

I can remember the first time we had a VCR. To rent tapes was quite expensive at first. Over time, it became the thing to do on a Friday or Saturday night.

I remember walking through the store to get to the New Release Wall. Often times, I would wait until a movie came out on video to see it. The only problem was that sometimes all the copies would be checked out. There were plenty of times I’d see a film I didn’t even know existed. I would pick up the box and read the synopsis on the back and we’d make a decision as to whether or not to rent it.

Then, of course, you’d always check out the classics. Movies were still a bit expensive to buy at the time, so I would rent Smokey and the Bandit, Cannonball Run, and so many other movies I had grown up with.

I truly miss browsing the shelves to see what movie to watch. I miss sitting on the couch with a bowl of microwave popcorn with the lights down watching videos without the issues you’d experience at the movie theater.

Making plans – looking up movie times

Before videos, you went to the movies. But before you could do that, you have to get a newspaper and look up the movie times. Theaters would take out full page ads to promote the movie times. I remember your entire date revolved around the times that a movie would start. Dinner before or after the movie – depended on when the show started.

Sometimes, you could call the theater and they had a dedicated phone line with a recording that gave show times and the movies that were showing.

Calling a friend and talking to their parents first

I remember how many times I would call up a friend and their parents would always answer. Some of the parents were nice and would chat with me as I waited for my friend to get on the phone. Other times, they were short.

As a teen, when I called a girl to chat, I was always freaked out if their dad answered the phone! “That Keith boy is on the phone for you!” Yikes!

If the conversation went on for more than 20 minutes, which it often did, my folks or their folks would get on you because they had to use the phone. Summers I would spend a lot of time on the phone, mainly in the evenings talking to girls who I had a crush on.

When TV went off the air at night

Back in the day, when there were only 3-5 channels to watch on TV, many stations went off the air at night. Today, if you wake up in the middle of the night, you can turn on the TV and get 100 stations of stuff to chose from. When I was a kid, however, you would turn on the TV and see the above test pattern with audio of a single tone playing loudly.

“This concludes our broadcast day” the announcer would say. Sometimes it would be followed by the National Anthem and then the test pattern. Because of this, I would grab my little radio and listen to the late night DJ’s and my love for radio was born.

Sitting down to read a book because nothing was on TV

When we only had a few channels on TV, there would be those times when there was “nothing to watch.” It was then, that you would go to the bookshelf in your bedroom or living room and grab a book to read. There were many hours spent reading books on my bed. My imagination took me to the streets of London, or the deck of a ship as I read adventure stories. I wish I had read more as a kid.

Saturday morning sitcoms/cartoons

Saturday Mornings were heaven for my brother and I. We grabbed a bowl of cereal and plopped down in front of the TV to watch cartoons. Bugs Bunny, Scooby Doo, the Laugh-O-Lympics, Captain Caveman, and more! When the cartoons were done, there were other shows on we watched like Dr. Shrinker, The Monster Squad, and Electra Woman and Dynagal. Those shows bring back many fond memories of Saturday mornings. It was the perfect way to kick off the weekend!

Not being accessible to work outside of the work hours

It is far too easy for employers to reach employees today. I get work email on my phone, although I try to avoid looking at it when I am not there. Employee burnout is high in every profession. The line between work life and home life is blurring. People are bringing work home with them. They are taking work calls during “home time.” This, to me, is unacceptable.

Work needs to stay at work. They get 40 hours of my time during the week, and sometimes more than that (even though there is no pay for it). I try my best to ignore anything work related when I am home. That needs to be my time with family.

I truly miss those days when you only had to think about work when you were there. I miss the days before cell phones when you could actually play 18 holes of golf without having to read text messages or emails from work. If I am out on the beach, the last thing I want to be doing is answering an e-mail.

I love the fact that we can have a phone with us to call someone in an emergency or snap a picture of a neat moment, but when the tech starts to intrude on family and leisure time, we are only adding to burn out or losing precious time with what is really important.

Some of my childhood friends…

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I’m sure if I asked you about your childhood friends, you could easily spout off many of them by name.  Me too!  As a matter of fact, I am lucky enough to still see and talk regularly with my best friend from elementary school.  Yesterday’s blog about Mr. Rogers got me to thinking on my way home from work about some of the other friends I had growing up.  These aren’t friends that I met personally, mind you, these are the TV friends who helped me learn my letters, numbers, parts of speech, and right from wrong.  Some of them were there to take me on adventures against bad guys.  From various kid shows, there were plenty of friends to keep me company on days when we were snowed in, days it was raining, or on days when you were home sick from school.

Sesame Street

“Can you tell me how to get to Sesame Street”?  I spent many mornings with the gang from Sesame Street!  There were so many characters on that show.  Many are still there, while some are long gone.  The first “muppet” to appear on the show is still there – Big Bird.  Early on, he would talk about his invisible friend “Snuffy” Snuffalupogus.  We could see him, Big Bird could see him, but none of the humans on the show could.  Now, everyone can see him.

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Kermit the Frog, long before he starred on and hosted The Muppet Show”, was a regular on Sesame Street.  He often showed up in a trenchcoat and reported the “news”.  He also popped in on music composer Don Music, who was often having trouble writing a song.  Word is Don was cut from the show cause he always banged his head on the piano.

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Remember Grover?  He was voiced by Frank Oz … who literally used the same voice for Yoda in the Star Wars films!  Grover would crack me up as the waiter who always seemed to annoy that one guy who was always trying to order something at the restaurant.

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Ernie and Bert were pals.  They were much like my friends and me.  They could annoy each other, and at they same time, they liked each other.  They fished together, they built snowmen together, they each had their own interests and yet, they still got along.  Ernie was the trickster and Bert was usually the target.

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Count Von Count was probably my favorite.  He was obsessed with numbers and counting.  He lived in a castle and his thoughts were often accented by thunder cracks and lightning! He loved counting so much, he often laughed afterward.  “Two knocks on the door…..ha ha ha (thunderclap)!”

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Speaking of counting, anyone who watched Sesame Street remembers the pinball count.  It was your typical jazzy, funky music where an animated pinball rolled around in the machine counting to 12.  You can sing it right now, right?  So many great other songs were on this show: I Don’t Want To Live On the Moon, The Alligator King, The Ladybug Picnic, Rubber Duckie, It Ain’t Easy Being Green, C is For Cookie, and of course, Mahna Mahna!

I also remember Sherlock Hemlock (who solved mysteries like Sherlock Holmes), Roosevelt Franklin (an African American Muppet who was cut from the show because they felt it was too stereotypical), The Twiddlebugs (who lived outside in Ernie’s window box), and Guy Smiley!  There’s a name!  Guy Smiley!

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The Electric Company

“Hey, you guys!” was often heard shouted by the great Rita Moreno in the opening theme.   This was just a “cool” way to learn!  While there are many different segments aimed at teaching kids things some of them stand out far more than others. For example, the Soft Shoe Sillhouette, as they were called, featured two people in silhouette pronouncing a word.  The first would say “Sh” and the other would say “ip”.  They would say it over and over until eventually, they would say “Ship”.  I remember how much that helped me learn to read by sounding out words.

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As far as my friends from the show, well I have to start off with Easy Reader.  He was played by none other than Morgan Freeman!  He was so cool and he thought reading was cool.  If reading was cool enough for Easy Reader – it was cool enough for me!

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Another character who helped me learn to read was Otto the Director, played by Rita Moreno.  She would try so hard to get the actors to remember their lines.  They would always forget the one word they had on the cue card.

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Then there was Spiderman!  Yes, Spiderman was on the Electric Company!   Spidey’s Super Stories featured Spidey on an adventure and he never spoke, well, audibly anyway.  He “spoke” in balloons, like in the comic books.  The audience had to read what he was saying.  Eventually a comic book called Spidey’s Super Stories was produced by Marvel comics.

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Captain Kangaroo

“Good Morning, Captain”.  The show would begin with a montage of celebrities and non-celebrities saying “Good Morning, Captain” and eventually, there he was – Captain Kangaroo – saying “Good morning” to you.  In an interview once, Bob Keeshan said the show was kind of like a “nice visit to your grandparents house”.

Some of the friends on this show included the farmer. “Mr. Green Jeans”, “Mr. Bunny Rabbit”, and “Mr. Moose”.  Mr. Moose was my favorite.  He always seemed to tell some kind of knock knock joke which led to a bunch of ping pong balls falling on the Captain.

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One thing I remember about this show was the cartoon Simon.  It was a British cartoon about a kid who had a magic piece of chalk.  With that chalk he could create all kinds of things for some sort of adventure.  What I remember about it was the theme:  “Well you know my name is Simon, and the things I draw come true…”  Mike Meyers did a sketch on SNL based on this with Danny DeVito…a must see if you remember Simon.

The Kroft Super Show

So this show was one that I had kind of forgot about.  I was reminded of it after discussing some of the other shows with a friend.  I don’t recall what network it was on, but I seem to remember it being on before or after Land of the Lost.

Do you remember Dr. Shrinker?  Cheesy 70’s programming at it’s best!  Dr. Shrinker is some sort of mad scientist who shrinks a bunch of teenagers and they spend the entire episode running away from him and trying not to get caught by him or his henchman, Hugo.  Hugo was played wonderfully by the great Billy Barty!  What I remember most about this was how they had these huge oversized props behind the actors to show how “tiny” they were.

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You thought Batman 66 was cheesy??  This show introduced us to Electra Woman and Dyna Girl!  Electra Woman was played by Deidre Hall and Dyna Girl was Judy Strangis.  There were two crime fighters who posed as news reporters when not fighting crime.  They wore these huge things called ElectraComs on their wrists that allowed them to speak to each other and it also served as a gadget that got them out of pretty much any situation (just like Batman’s utility belt). Dyna Girl was basically a female Robin and instead of yelling “Holy (fill in the blank)”, she would yell “Electra Wow!” LOL!

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A highlight of this cheesy show was their scientist friend, Frank Heflin.  He helped them by staying at the Electra Base (like the Bat Cave) and operated the CrimeScope (like the Bat Computer).  He was played by the great character actor Norman Alden.  He was in many movies, and provided the voice for Aquaman and Green Arrow on the Super Friends cartoon.  He also was the café owner in the café where Marty McFly meets his father at in the 1950’s in the classic film Back to the Future.

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Next time … The Parts of Speech, History, and Musical Math …