Fun fact: Max Headroom also had his own talk show.I'm old enough to remember when Coke used schizophrenic nightmare fuel to push their brand...
It was the '80s, man. We didn't know any better.
Fun fact: Max Headroom also had his own talk show.I'm old enough to remember when Coke used schizophrenic nightmare fuel to push their brand...
I'm aware he had the show; I just thought it was weird his pushing Coke. But yeah, '80s is basically carte blanche for oddities and absurdities.Fun fact: Max Headroom also had his own talk show.
It was the '80s, man. We didn't know any better.
And having to replace the tape because you played your favorite song so many times that the tape warped.Having to rewind a cassette tape to listen to the music again.
Depends which variant of coke he was pushing.I'm aware he had the show; I just thought it was weird his pushing Coke.
I mean It was the 80's.Depends which variant of coke he was pushing.
I think it was a tongue-in-cheek nod to the fact that Max Headroom was basically a cocaine-sweat nightmare of a character. If that guy, real or fictional, wasn't on cocaine, then nobody was. Thankfully, that was during my youth and innocence, and I was too young to appreciate it for what it was.Depends which variant of coke he was pushing.
I want to say the '80s get a bad rap, but yeah, most of it was pitched on cocaine (or crack, depending on which side of the tracks you were fortunate/unfortunate enough to grow up on.)I mean It was the 80's.
That one ain’t quite dead: it’s still around in pool halls and pubs.Placing a quarter or quarters on the arcade cabinet and calling dibs on the next game.
Oh man, those were the best weekends! Having friends over for a sleepover, and my parents took us to Blockbuster to rent the latest movies or latest [cartridge] videogames, the utter devastation of seeing their shelves lined with the boxes, but none of the rentable blue boxes behind them, etc. Lots of good memories. I think the statute of limitations is up, so I'll openly I recall one year my buddies and I pulled a whole "Ocean's 11" deal and stole a copy of a Sega Genesis game (can't remember which) from Blockbuster. It's took us an HOUR because we thought we were being clever whilst at the same time being mortified at the idea of getting caught.Blockbuster.
Hollywood Video.Blockbuster.
Yes. Disney XD, Cartoon Network, and Nickelodeon still do them. Though it's not as big as it used to be. Saturday morning cartoons on local channels have been dead for years though. That pretty much went away by 2011. Only 4Kids TV remained at that point, and even they didn't last long afterward.Do kids even have cartoon blocks on regular tv any more?
Depends on where you are. Some of the arcades in downtown Detroit have different methods. They either have tokens, or it's free play. If it's free play, you either called next or place a quarter down symbolically. If you're out of Dave and Busters, you place your card down.That one ain’t quite dead: it’s still around in pool halls and pubs.
It was Cartoon Network for me. Would come home from school and there would be a dedicated few hours to old cartoons, either Looney Tunes or Tom & Jerry.TBS Superstation would air old MGM and Warner Bros cartoons early in the morning or sometimes in the middle of the afternoon.
They've actually showed a couple of anime movies during the mid-90s too.
Same. This was before we got Cartoon Network at the time, and before they really started taking off. Before that point it was either USA channel, TBS Superstation, or some local TV channels that would air old Warner Bros cartoons. Or a bunch of tapes from the dollar store that had various cartoons put on it. Nickelodeon would sometimes air Warner Brothers cartoons as well, but it was usually because Tiny Toons was really popular on there at the time.It was Cartoon Network for me. Would come home from school and there would be a dedicated few hours to old cartoons, either Looney Tunes or Tom & Jerry.