TV jingles are another thing I miss.
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Little things you miss about 70's/80s culture
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"Do you believe, you believe in magic?
'Cos I believe, I believe that I do,
Yes, I can see I believe that it's magic
If your mission is magic your love will shine true."Comment
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Surprises. Whether it was flipping channels and stumbling on to a movie you didn't know was on to seeing a new book or toy in the store you didn't know was coming out to movie and TV plots. Especially that last one. No surprise guest stars or plot revelations because they advertise and hype everything. The first time on a long time I had that kind of surprise was Tom Baker's guest appearance on the last Doctor Who anniversary special.Comment
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I miss TV shows having self contained episodes.
With Star Trek, Six Million Dollar Man, Battlestar Galactica, etc. every week you would get a brand new adventure. Yeah, there was the occasional two parter but other than that you could expect a brand new story the next week.
Now everything is like soap opera that drags single storylines over multiple seasons and if you miss one episode, you are totally out of the loop. I just don't have the time or patience for that.
A show like "V" did it really well, where there was a story that progressed, but each episode was for the most part, pretty self contained.Comment
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If there is one thing I truly miss is all the different toy stores. Every place was selling toys, from hardware stores to department stores to hobby shops to grocery stores to pharmacies, etc. Nowadays the only big toy store standing is TRU. Apart from that, Walmart and Target are really the retailers nationwide. Of course there are comic book stores selling figures but they are generally scalpers.I am more than machine. More than man. More than a fusion of the two.Comment
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I miss TV shows having self contained episodes.
With Star Trek, Six Million Dollar Man, Battlestar Galactica, etc. every week you would get a brand new adventure. Yeah, there was the occasional two parter but other than that you could expect a brand new story the next week.
Now everything is like soap opera that drags single storylines over multiple seasons and if you miss one episode, you are totally out of the loop. I just don't have the time or patience for that.Comment
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I miss TV shows having self contained episodes.
With Star Trek, Six Million Dollar Man, Battlestar Galactica, etc. every week you would get a brand new adventure. Yeah, there was the occasional two parter but other than that you could expect a brand new story the next week.
Now everything is like soap opera that drags single storylines over multiple seasons and if you miss one episode, you are totally out of the loop. I just don't have the time or patience for that.Comment
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You know, thinking about this (TV shows with self-contained episodes)... perhaps it was a necessity of the time. This was in the days before VCRs. Families used to pore through TV Guide and make a note of what to watch, because if you missed a show- that's it. It's gone and the moment had passed. Oh, maybe in a few years, the show might land in syndication, but a lot of shows (pre-VHS/DVD boxed set era) would not be rebroadcast. So, it made sense for a TV show to have self-contained episodes so if you missed an episode or two (family went on vacation), you could just pick up with next week's episode.
It's hard to explain to the youngest Gen X'ers or Millennials about what life was like in the 70's. They've always seen computers in the house, and cable TV, Internet, VCRS and DVDs and phones you take with you everywhere. They can hardly imagine what life was like before those things existedComment
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If there is one thing I truly miss is all the different toy stores. Every place was selling toys, from hardware stores to department stores to hobby shops to grocery stores to pharmacies, etc. Nowadays the only big toy store standing is TRU. Apart from that, Walmart and Target are really the retailers nationwide. Of course there are comic book stores selling figures but they are generally scalpers.
Plus many business licences today limit stores, they only allow shops to sell one type of goods or items or it costs more, or simply not permitted at all.
Mostly only antique shops would carry a larger variety of items, and then they are priced at maximum, so it cuts down on that kind of fun in stumbling across things.Comment
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You know, thinking about this (TV shows with self-contained episodes)... perhaps it was a necessity of the time. This was in the days before VCRs. Families used to pore through TV Guide and make a note of what to watch, because if you missed a show- that's it. It's gone and the moment had passed. Oh, maybe in a few years, the show might land in syndication, but a lot of shows (pre-VHS/DVD boxed set era) would not be rebroadcast. So, it made sense for a TV show to have self-contained episodes so if you missed an episode or two (family went on vacation), you could just pick up with next week's episode.
It's hard to explain to the youngest Gen X'ers or Millennials about what life was like in the 70's. They've always seen computers in the house, and cable TV, Internet, VCRS and DVDs and phones you take with you everywhere. They can hardly imagine what life was like before those things existed"Do you believe, you believe in magic?
'Cos I believe, I believe that I do,
Yes, I can see I believe that it's magic
If your mission is magic your love will shine true."Comment
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