11:12 Alan Bleviss on the voice-over for "When a Man Loves a Woman." He was an actor in Canada who moved to New York City in the 70s and became one of the all-time great voice-over talents.
Maybe how "old school" it was, but by this time, it was way past cool to have Aqua-net, being a fan of Poison, or still buying 8-bit video games. Since much of these were devoted to the stay at home crowd, they are targeted mostly to a 30- and up crowd.
Aah, the Standard carpet commercial, it comes on at about 17:50, I remember being 3 years old, and for some reason, I used to LOVE that commercial!!! I've been looking for it for years, thank you. :)
I was as well since it was EVERYWHERE on '90s (and possibly '80s?) Baltimore TV outside of primetime. I get the same nostalgic kick for Carpeteria commercials from Southern California, even though I never lived there. Luskins also makes me nostalgic, especially after founder Jack Luskin passed away in 2017. We still have "Nobody has what Tate Has" today.
This was before the Baltimore switch of 1995 happened. Before WJZ lost the ABC affiliation, Robert Iger (an executive of ABC) told that he wanted to keep the strongest ABC affiliates of all time, WJZ, yet Tom Murphy (a fellow executive of Capital Cities/ABC) wanted one of the lowest-rated NBC affiliates of all time, WMAR-TV. Murphy won out and signed a recommendation to Scripps, who also awarded the Phoenix and Tampa franchises as new ABC affiliates. In response, CBS executives told that he wanted to keep WBAL-TV, yet some wanted the more-appealing first place perennial WJZ-TV. Some executives won, and Westinghouse and CBS recommended and awarded not only the Baltimore franchise, but the Boston and Philadelphia franchises. This left NBC with Hearst's Baltimore franchise WBAL-TV, by default.
25:11 Watch the new Shirley Temple Collection, for the first time in colour. In it's full glory with its unforgettable mild racism for a whole generation to discover. Pizza $2.30, New shirt $32.99, Movie rental $4.99, Watching a black child watching Shirley dance with blackface, absolutely pricelss.
@@anandguruji83 For some reason, I think that ad campaign got picked on for being sexist more than a hundred other ad campaigns. Like you, I'm very fond of it.
11:12 Alan Bleviss on the voice-over for "When a Man Loves a Woman." He was an actor in Canada who moved to New York City in the 70s and became one of the all-time great voice-over talents.
It's amazing how "80's" 1994 still looked. I like it. :)
Maybe how "old school" it was, but by this time, it was way past cool to have Aqua-net, being a fan of Poison, or still buying 8-bit video games. Since much of these were devoted to the stay at home crowd, they are targeted mostly to a 30- and up crowd.
The difference between the early 90’s and late 90’s is amazing to me. Technology and culture changed so much!
@@dustin6528 94 is the mid 90s
By 1995-96 commercials began to look more core 90s. IMO.
Aah, the Standard carpet commercial, it comes on at about 17:50, I remember being 3 years old, and for some reason, I used to LOVE that commercial!!! I've been looking for it for years, thank you. :)
I was as well since it was EVERYWHERE on '90s (and possibly '80s?) Baltimore TV outside of primetime. I get the same nostalgic kick for Carpeteria commercials from Southern California, even though I never lived there. Luskins also makes me nostalgic, especially after founder Jack Luskin passed away in 2017. We still have "Nobody has what Tate Has" today.
That song for Household Insurance has been haunting me for ages!
29:23 oh wow, hearing this instantly brought be back to that time. I remember hearing that commercial a lot
I was 17 years old.. ( iam old) " good year " for me.
Old enough to run for president
I was 10
Puffs Facial Tissue ©1994 Procter and Gamble (P&G) 4:03 & Tide with Bleach Alternative Liquid Laundry Detergent ©1994 Procter and Gamble (P&G) 22:45
I watched this on may 5 2020 lol
In the future now
13:46 it’s like a 90’s dream haha , love it
26:17 - Will Nora agree to put Dorian on the stand? Stay tuned for "One Life to Live" next.
This was before the Baltimore switch of 1995 happened. Before WJZ lost the ABC affiliation, Robert Iger (an executive of ABC) told that he wanted to keep the strongest ABC affiliates of all time, WJZ, yet Tom Murphy (a fellow executive of Capital Cities/ABC) wanted one of the lowest-rated NBC affiliates of all time, WMAR-TV. Murphy won out and signed a recommendation to Scripps, who also awarded the Phoenix and Tampa franchises as new ABC affiliates. In response, CBS executives told that he wanted to keep WBAL-TV, yet some wanted the more-appealing first place perennial WJZ-TV. Some executives won, and Westinghouse and CBS recommended and awarded not only the Baltimore franchise, but the Boston and Philadelphia franchises. This left NBC with Hearst's Baltimore franchise WBAL-TV, by default.
47:48: Mazda Millenia
ABC TGIF promo @ 17:21
This is great for background noise for it😊 help you too go to sleep,,
13:50 Records I recognize are Sex Pistols, Blondie, Dolly Parton, and Elton John.
25:11 Watch the new Shirley Temple Collection, for the first time in colour. In it's full glory with its unforgettable mild racism for a whole generation to discover.
Pizza $2.30, New shirt $32.99, Movie rental $4.99, Watching a black child watching Shirley dance with blackface, absolutely pricelss.
34:00 hey that’s Kellen Hathaway from DENNIS THE MENACE
"There's only one JZ". ....okay
45:10 weatherschool (my parents founded it)
34:38 LOL!! The girl bobbin her head so funny
wjz cbs 13 owned by o&o/wmar abc 2 owned by scripps broadcasting
Meow mix!😀
SEXY SPECIAL K CEREAL 15:13 PACE PICANTE SAUCE 52:17
SEXY SPECIAL K CEREAL 15:13 PACE PICANTE SAUCE 52:17
@@anandguruji83 For some reason, I think that ad campaign got picked on for being sexist more than a hundred other ad campaigns. Like you, I'm very fond of it.
@@Oppeldeldoc1 I love it , better then what I see now lol
48:32 🤣👍🏻
I would like to meet her
Standard carpet
The kids Kix Cereal “There’s a problem’ ;Nah it’s just good stuff..
6:19 10:56