Tag Archives: 1980's

A scary movie double-feature!

Alright, it’s arguable whether either film was actually scary.  I had fun, though.

First up last weekend I watched “Creep” (2014) and then I finally got to see “The Beast From 20,000 Fathoms” (1954).  I’d wanted to see “The Beast” since I was a little kid.  I was a nut for anything created by monster-maker special effects wizard Ray Harryhausen, and I’d seen a clip of the titular dinosaur’s Manhattan rampage in a documentary about movie monsters.  Man, was a mesmerized.  But “The Beast” was one Harryhausen creature that never seemed to make the rounds on 1980’s television.

Anyway, I had a nightcap of two vintage animated shorts — “Skeleton Frolic” (1937) Disney’s The Haunted House (1929).



Throwback Thursday: when you could watch Halloween specials only ONCE a year.

If you were a kid in the 1980’s and you wanted to see ANY holiday special … you snooze, you lose.  It was a Darwinian pop-culture childhood consumer jungle.

Alright, alright — yeah, I guess VCR’s were first appearing.  Whatever.

By the way … check out the old TV Guide-era fonts for channel numbers.  🙂



Throwback Thursday: this 80’s-era fake wood paneling!

People on the “I Found This Online” Facebook page are joking about this weird faux-wood paneling from the 1980’s.  (It got 96,000 “likes.”)  There is even a Reddit page about them!  These walls were everywhere in my rural/suburban New York neighborhood.

I love them!  Sure, you couldn’t hang anything up because you couldn’t get a thumb-tack in.  But they’re dark and rustic, and they take me right back to the 1980’s.  Gimme a basement with these walls, a plush rug, a television, an Atari 2600 and a stack of 80’s horror films on VHS ands I’ll be very happy.  (Hopefully the movies will include 1986’s “Aliens” and 1982’s “The Thing.”)

Better yet, leave out a couple of liters of soda and some chips, and let me invite a couple of Longwood High School friends over.



Throwback Thursday: Bazooka gum!!

It was always the cheapest candy at the store — it cost a nickel in the 1980’s, if memory serves.  And you got a free comic strip too, along with a fortune!!  We had an unwritten rule on the street I grew up on — you had to pass the comic around to whatever kids you were with so that they could read it too.

It tasted pretty damned good too.

They actually stopped including the comic strips in 2012, and now there are puzzles in the wrapper.  (Rome burns.)  But now, confusingly, you can buy a “wallet pack” of the gum in which they do include the comics?

I got a bunch of it in my Christmas candy.  That was awesome.



800px-Bazooka_gum

Photo credit: Parka Lewis at English Wikipedia, CC BY-SA 3.0 <https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0&gt;, via Wikimedia Commons

Throwback Thursday: The Roosevelt Island Tramway in the early 1980’s!

I found a couple of videos online the depict The Roosevelt Island Tramway around 1980.  (The picture below of the tram arriving in Manhattan dates from 2006, as I couldn’t find any vintage public domain photos.)

The first video I am linking to here was posted by Richard Cortell; he completed it as a long ago student project for The New York Institute of Technology.  Parts of the video are quite dark, but it’s still a terrific glimpse in New York City’s past.

The second video is also Cortell’s; this one is dated 1980.  It focuses more on life on Roosevelt Island — the tram is seen only at the beginning and end.

I’ve never been on the tram — or to Roosevelt Island.  But just seeing it brings back memories of my early childhood.  My Dad used to occasionally take me on trips to New York City, and I remember seeing it depart from 60th Street and Second Avenue in Manhattan.  I was pretty damned awed by it.

But I didn’t ask to ride on it.  My Dad took me to all sorts of places in NYC that were fun for a kid, but the sight of that hanging tram car made me pretty apprehensive.  Hell, I’m not sure I’d want to ride it as an adult.  (There was a malfunction in 2006 that left 80 people trapped up there for around 90 minutes.)

I didn’t know it at the time, but the tram would have actually been relatively new at the time that I saw it (and at about the same time Cortell filmed his videos).  It opened in July of 1976.

Postscript — there is actually a shot of the tram in that old “Million Dollar Movie” intro that everyone loves.  It’s right at the start, five seconds in.



Roosevelt_Island_Tramway_foggy

Photo credit: Kris Arnold from New York, USA, CC BY-SA 2.0 <https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0&gt;, via Wikimedia Commons