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Why were the 70s such a tacky decade?

GHT

I'll Lock Up
Messages
9,446
Location
New Forest
And then we had the 1970's cars. We went from the James Bond of the, Aston Martin DB5, can't post two Youtube clips simultaneously, so you will have to click on the link if you were taking a vacation on Mars in the 1960's, and missed the original, and only worthy, Bond.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ce1aPY_JQXY

to the fibreglass Lotus Esprit, of the 1970's Roger Moore era.
[video=youtube;qhKifK99e8E]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qhKifK99e8E[/video]
 
And then we had the 1970's cars. We went from the James Bond of the, Aston Martin DB5, can't post two Youtube clips simultaneously, so you will have to click on the link if you were taking a vacation on Mars in the 1960's, and missed the original, and only worthy, Bond.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ce1aPY_JQXY

to the fibreglass Lotus Esprit, of the 1970's Roger Moore era.
[video=youtube;qhKifK99e8E]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qhKifK99e8E[/video]

Geez, even Bond stunk in the 70s. :doh:
 

LizzieMaine

Bartender
Messages
33,178
Location
Where The Tourists Meet The Sea
Yes, gas lines, Vietnam, 20% interest rates, high unemployment, ugly clothes, interior decorating and accessories was waaaaaaaaayyyy better. lol lol lol

The eighties were awful. Unemployment here was in the twenties for a lot of the time, the clothes were ridiculous, the design sensibilities were even worse, the music was inane, and the general happy-talk zeitgeist was just plain dumb. Iran-Contra, the Savings and Loan debacle, "Greed is Good," yuppies in suspenders, I didn't enjoy any aspect of the eighties.
 
Messages
16,937
Location
New York City
The eighties were awful. Unemployment here was in the twenties for a lot of the time, the clothes were ridiculous, the design sensibilities were even worse, the music was inane, and the general happy-talk zeitgeist was just plain dumb. I didn't enjoy any aspect of the eighties.

So much of it matters where you lived. In NJ, the '80s were like life returned. Prices stabilized (trips to the super market weren't a nerve racking search for older, not-yet-marked-higher food), less people lost their jobs and more people were getting them and interest rates came down so people started to buy homes again. In general, economic life returned.

I am not - not at all, not for a moment - disputing in anyway your experience in Maine, but living in NJ, our experience (or at least my very "Wonder Year" middle-class family, friends and neighbors), in general, saw things get much better.
 

LizzieMaine

Bartender
Messages
33,178
Location
Where The Tourists Meet The Sea
That was the era in which the evisercation of all of our local industry thru globalization reached a fever pitch -- in rapid succession we lost the textile industry, the shoe industry, the poultry industry, and the fish-processing industry, and the paper industry started its downward decline. Thousands of good union jobs were lost with no hope of replacement, and we're still struggling with the ripples from that -- we've turned into a "destination state" for retirees and gentrifiers, not a state capable of sustaining itself, or its native-born population. People from New York and New Jersey got fat off our blood, but we had nothing to show for it. No, I didn't like the eighties at all.
 

AmateisGal

I'll Lock Up
Messages
6,126
Location
Nebraska
So much of it matters where you lived. In NJ, the '80s were like life returned. Prices stabilized (trips to the super market weren't a nerve racking search for older, not-yet-marked-higher food), less people lost their jobs and more people were getting them and interest rates came down so people started to buy homes again. In general, economic life returned.

I am not - not at all, not for a moment - disputing in anyway your experience in Maine, but living in NJ, our experience (or at least my very "Wonder Year" middle-class family, friends and neighbors), in general, saw things get much better.

Yeah, I really think it depends on where you lived as to how you viewed the 80s. For us, the farm crisis colored the 80s. Lean, lean times for us. I still remember walking around our family farm, picking up trash, cleaning up piles of junk or whatever was lying around, because we were expecting to be inundated with a bunch of people for the farm sale. Tough. But we still held on to the farm. My brother farms it now - he's the fourth generation to farm it.
 

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