Funny how back then they had a drawer slot for $2 bills, now they're just something you stick with your 100s and 50s because no one is going to want them as change (unless you work at a bank) and you get them once or twice in a three-month period.
Except that with how much stuff costs nowadays, $50s and $100s are quite useful in a lot of places if you still hold on to the belief that cash is real money. They're a lot like what $10s and $20s bought back in those days. $2 barely gets you a cheeseburger at McDonald's, a candy bar, or a taco at Taco Bell, and it doesn't get you the daily newspaper or cup of coffee in most places. Neither denomination is accepted in vending machines except in rare instances unfortunately.
We acquired this on VHS in the late '80s, it was already showing its age by the time. FYI, the musician credited as Wolfgang Kaltenbach was actually Rotheide (Heidi) Narholz(neé Pehofer), the wife of Gerhard Narholz, the latter of whom composed the other two songs used in "$2 Bill", "Holiday For Girls" as Tony Tape and "Entry of the Artists" as Otto Sieben.
Funny how back then they had a drawer slot for $2 bills, now they're just something you stick with your 100s and 50s because no one is going to want them as change (unless you work at a bank) and you get them once or twice in a three-month period.
Except that with how much stuff costs nowadays, $50s and $100s are quite useful in a lot of places if you still hold on to the belief that cash is real money. They're a lot like what $10s and $20s bought back in those days. $2 barely gets you a cheeseburger at McDonald's, a candy bar, or a taco at Taco Bell, and it doesn't get you the daily newspaper or cup of coffee in most places. Neither denomination is accepted in vending machines except in rare instances unfortunately.
Fascinating. Thank you for posting.
We acquired this on VHS in the late '80s, it was already showing its age by the time. FYI, the musician credited as Wolfgang Kaltenbach was actually Rotheide (Heidi) Narholz(neé Pehofer), the wife of Gerhard Narholz, the latter of whom composed the other two songs used in "$2 Bill", "Holiday For Girls" as Tony Tape and "Entry of the Artists" as Otto Sieben.
I never met a creep that I didn't like!
A cheesy film by today's standards!
That lady rax clerk was quite pretty; so is the lady at supermarket with the light blue purse! 👜🩵🥰