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I'm 52 and I remember all of this stuff. Scooby Doo was my favorite cartoon and we would watch Super Friends, Space Ghost, The Flintstones, etc... My brother and I would get up at 6am and race downstairs to see what was on first. I still remember trying Wheaties and it had Bruce Jenner on it after winning the Gold Medal for the Men's Decathlon in the 1976 Olympics. My brother also would open up the cereal boxes first and dig through the cereal to find the prizes inside.
The best part of being 52 is seeing how the phone has changed. It still blows my mind that I can order a pizza using an app, like Pizza Hut, pick out exactly the pizza or 3 pizzas that I want, pay for them, and have them delivered anywhere I am. All on the phone. In the 70's, you had to dial the number and if you messed up, you hung up and started again. Then you would hear it ring, and ring and if no one was home, it would ring for a while. You'd hang up and say, "I guess they aren't home." That was it. No texting, no leaving a message, and no way for them to know anyone had called at all. Then the answering machine was invented and that changed everything in the 80's.
Whoever wrote the script for this must not have been around in the 70s. For #4, they were called Mood Rings. Never hear them called "emotion rings." And for #7, it was always Easy-Bake Oven, not mini-bake. It says Easy-Bake right on the box! And #9 is really messed up. It shows Pet Rocks, but talks about feathered hair, which is discussed again in #10.And where did "floating beds" come from in #12. They were always called waterbeds. And for #22 the generic name of Ditto machines (mimeograph machines) is never mentioned, but it should. Also, many of these items were around long before the 70s, and some remained popular well into the 80s.
Thanks for watching our video!
If you enjoyed it and the nostalgic moments from the past, show your support for our team by hitting like and subscribe. Your support means a lot and helps us keep bringing you content you love! ❤
I'm 52 and I remember all of this stuff. Scooby Doo was my favorite cartoon and we would watch Super Friends, Space Ghost, The Flintstones, etc... My brother and I would get up at 6am and race downstairs to see what was on first. I still remember trying Wheaties and it had Bruce Jenner on it after winning the Gold Medal for the Men's Decathlon in the 1976 Olympics. My brother also would open up the cereal boxes first and dig through the cereal to find the prizes inside.
I skimed through I didn't see Jarts the deadly lawn dart game,playing chicken with those used to scare our parents😅
The best part of being 52 is seeing how the phone has changed. It still blows my mind that I can order a pizza using an app, like Pizza Hut, pick out exactly the pizza or 3 pizzas that I want, pay for them, and have them delivered anywhere I am. All on the phone. In the 70's, you had to dial the number and if you messed up, you hung up and started again. Then you would hear it ring, and ring and if no one was home, it would ring for a while. You'd hang up and say, "I guess they aren't home." That was it. No texting, no leaving a message, and no way for them to know anyone had called at all. Then the answering machine was invented and that changed everything in the 80's.
??? Fonzie's unforgettable "aaiieee?" LMAO - These AI voiceovers can be frickin hilarious....
Script written by person who did not grow up in the seventies.
Whoever wrote the script for this must not have been around in the 70s. For #4, they were called Mood Rings. Never hear them called "emotion rings." And for #7, it was always Easy-Bake Oven, not mini-bake. It says Easy-Bake right on the box! And #9 is really messed up. It shows Pet Rocks, but talks about feathered hair, which is discussed again in #10.And where did "floating beds" come from in #12. They were always called waterbeds. And for #22 the generic name of Ditto machines (mimeograph machines) is never mentioned, but it should.
Also, many of these items were around long before the 70s, and some remained popular well into the 80s.
It's AI reading it.