Educating People on the 80's

Discussion in 'Unrelated Discussion' started by garat, March 11, 2014.

  1. garat

    garat Cat Herder Uber Alumni

    Messages:
    3,344
    Likes Received:
    5,376
    This is awesome. :)

    arseface, Geers and kvalheim like this.
  2. kvalheim

    kvalheim Post Master General

    Messages:
    1,726
    Likes Received:
    645
    I'm all too familiar with the comfort of parachute pants
  3. Col_Jessep

    Col_Jessep Moderator Alumni

    Messages:
    4,227
    Likes Received:
    257
    The only thing I remember vividly from the 80s was when the wall in Berlin fell and Germany was reunited. Parachute pants? F... that! :)

    I remember a vacation as a kid. Our connecting flight was from Berlin in the early morning so we decided to spend the night in a hotel in Berlin. I saw the Brandenburg Gate and The Wall on our way. That was enemy territory behind that wall. And fellow Germans were living there. Some armed with machine guns on their watchtower and prepared to shoot anybody who moved in the Todesstreifen. I tried to find a translation for Todesstreifen and it's commonly translated with no mans land. I think that translation doesn't do it justice, death zone would probably be more fitting.

    We were there to catch a plane and go on a family vacation the next morning. The insanity of that situation only hit me years later. And almost overnight Eastern Germany was free! It was the craziest thing and I don't think anything crazier will happen during the rest of my lifetime.

    So this defines the 80s for me. This night in Berlin, surrounded by the Eastern Bloc on all sides, and seeing it crumble only a short time later. Happy people from East Germany driving in their little plastic cars with lawn-mower motors over the border, finally free to go wherever they liked after so many decades.

    If you want a picture that symbolizes the 80s, this is it:

    [​IMG]
    Last edited: March 11, 2014
    LavaSnake likes this.
  4. jbeetle

    jbeetle Well-Known Member

    Messages:
    1,022
    Likes Received:
    75
    The 80s was just one large dressing room montage.
  5. Geers

    Geers Post Master General

    Messages:
    6,946
    Likes Received:
    6,820
    [​IMG]
    garat likes this.
  6. embox

    embox Moderator Alumni

    Messages:
    434
    Likes Received:
    73
    That's most touching thing I've read on this forum!
  7. Col_Jessep

    Col_Jessep Moderator Alumni

    Messages:
    4,227
    Likes Received:
    257
    Thanks Embox. I was reminded of those days by what's happening in the Ukraine now. Let's hope they can find a diplomatic solution. I think the stakes are much higher than many people realize.
  8. maxpowerz

    maxpowerz Post Master General

    Messages:
    2,208
    Likes Received:
    885
    Who remembers wrestling with one of these for hours and hours :D
    180px-Atari-2600-Joystick.jpg
    nawrot likes this.
  9. garat

    garat Cat Herder Uber Alumni

    Messages:
    3,344
    Likes Received:
    5,376
    Two most poignant memories for me in the 80s were in 1986, sitting in my school cafeteria, watching the Challenger shuttle launch - we still did things like that, not sure if it still happens or not. A room full of 8 through 11 year olds watching that was just.. surreal, though I still remember it crystal clear to this day.

    Second was, watching the events Jessep is talking about on TV.

    And Max.. LOL - never had a console until I bought a Dreamcast in 2000, but my best friend had an Atari and we played a LOT of Combat, Adventure, and various other games on that thing. Closest I had to a console was the first Colecovision that also had a high speed tape drive, business applications, AND a cartridge reader. Only games we ever had though were Pitfall and Xaxxon.
  10. maxpowerz

    maxpowerz Post Master General

    Messages:
    2,208
    Likes Received:
    885
    I still have my dreamcast...
    I also have Pac-Man on my VMU :D
  11. Col_Jessep

    Col_Jessep Moderator Alumni

    Messages:
    4,227
    Likes Received:
    257
    I had an Amiga 500 back in the day and a couple of friends a C64. Maybe some of you remember this baby:

    [​IMG]

    I'm not sure if the Competition Pro was just sold here in Europe. Apparently there is still a modern version available with USB for PC. Back in the day everybody had one, most the black model with red buttons though.
  12. maxpowerz

    maxpowerz Post Master General

    Messages:
    2,208
    Likes Received:
    885
    Retro Max....

    WP_000849.jpg

    My Sexy SEGA Dreamcast, Palm Tungsten T3, and my Acer slate that i play PA on .. lol
  13. Geers

    Geers Post Master General

    Messages:
    6,946
    Likes Received:
    6,820
    When I was your age, if we wanted to play "Flappy Bird" we'd have to go out and kill a sparrow and toss it through tree branches.

    #oldmanrebukes
    garat likes this.
  14. garat

    garat Cat Herder Uber Alumni

    Messages:
    3,344
    Likes Received:
    5,376
    I still have my original Amiga 1000, from 1984, in the box, downstairs in one of our spare bedrooms.
    arm2thecore and maxpowerz like this.
  15. hostileparadox

    hostileparadox Well-Known Member

    Messages:
    1,186
    Likes Received:
    151
    Oh the 80's... Atari 2600, Simon, watching the large collection of VHS videos we had, Transformers...
    I was a very privileged kid growing up in Cuba.
  16. sylvesterink

    sylvesterink Active Member

    Messages:
    907
    Likes Received:
    41
    The glory of parachute pants:

    Yes. If you wear them, you too can dance like that.
    Geers likes this.
  17. Col_Jessep

    Col_Jessep Moderator Alumni

    Messages:
    4,227
    Likes Received:
    257
    And these things were still in common use:

    [​IMG]

    Haven't listened to a cassette tape in ages. Somebody asked at work for a tape a couple of years back. No luck although we usually keep old tech around for a decade or two just in case.
  18. arm2thecore

    arm2thecore Active Member

    Messages:
    198
    Likes Received:
    132
    That makes two of us.

Share This Page