We didn’t even HAVE a (working) TV in our house until after I went away to university. And my childhood was very good indeed. Who needs TV when you have a backyard skating rink, a two story playhouse, a stile over the fence into a “wild” area several sections in size, and a library pass? We played Sh(u)tes and Ladders, Hearts, Monotony, etc with each other… and my mother played the piano while we sang (and 10¢ when we memorized all the words to a hymn or Broadway song).
JVC released the first VHS machines in the United States in 1977. Steph would’ve already been nine… By the time he was a teenager, video cassettes would’ve been common-place, even in the US…
Luckily, VCRs were a thing by the time I was a teenager, so we didn’t face this predicament often, unless the power went out while a programme was being recorded!
I never watched any sports highlights growing up. All I needed for entertainment were my games, the internet and of course, animated shows. Plus, the occasional chapter book.
during Nam, we got AFRTS and NFL, MLB, NBA, etc 16mm films of weekly highlights. we could watch superbowls over and over. war was cool, sometimes. i was the EMFN that got stuck with showing them every night at movie call on the messdecks. poor me!
Glad I never gave a fig about how well or poorly any professional sports team performed. Never could understand why anyone gets so invested in it either.
Not so much highlights, but I remember watching the Monday Night Football broadcast when Joe Theismann got his leg snapped. They replayed that gruesome scene over and over.
Also back when I was a kid people would be in the moment, share i the experiences with those also present and maybe later tell tales about what went on.Now so many forget to enjoy being present and instead are busy snapping pictures or video of what goes on, the result being they could almost just have stayed at home watching what others record – the exception being that it would of course not bring likes on social media.
Reruns are great. Last night I was watching Green Acres and found out Mr. Haney’s first name . Charleton! The actor Joe Conley , Ike Godsey of The Waltons fame , spilled the beans. Charleton – charlatan ! That’s great comedy ! And I didn’t need no stinking internet to find this out.
The “Miracle in Miami” from 2018, when the Dolphins beat the Patriots using a lateral with 7 seconds on the clock. Ticket cost….$200, Hotdog and Coke,,,$20. The look on Tom Brady’s face…..priceless!! Thank goodness for YouTube
Well, thanks to TV ads, the Agony of Defeat ski jumper is burnt into my old screen. The Networked stopped using it after he had his first great grandchild.
I would take yesterday over today when it comes to sports. Today we are over-saturated with up to the minute sports and over analyzed everything. Back then it was simple, Monday Night Baseball, Saturday Game of the Week, maybe a couple of games on local television. No ESPN or Fox to over-analyze each game.
Sports reporting was better when it was just three or four minutes on the late news delivered by guys in ugly sports coats and uglier toupees. ‘SportsCenter’ and the like took the fun out of that.
Hey, Cartoon-Boy! Today, I’m on your side (and I’m considerably older than you, too). —Although I will grant that the ability to pause or replay on my computer can be useful….
What I think about more often is the music. My favorite in high school and college was Neil Young. I can only recall seeing him on the Johnny Cash show once (2 songs) and then on something with CSN&Y. Maybe 10 minutes total video, which I couldn’t save. Now I could go on YouTube and watch him for hours. Of course, there’s probably 10 times more out there of BTS or Harry Styles, but that’s another story.
BE THIS GUY about 1 year ago
HEY! That’s what made This Week In Baseball must viewing! Plus, it had cool music.
ronaldspence about 1 year ago
there was always summer reruns!
baddawg1989 about 1 year ago
[Dana Carvey’s Grumpy Old Man character] That’s the way it was and we LIKED it!
BasilBruce about 1 year ago
There was the VCR, as long as the authorities didn’t find out.
The dude from FL (not bragging) Premium Member about 1 year ago
Midnight TV was off the air, except those test patterns. Weekends was Wolfman Jack on the radio, and I was there, man!
Erse IS better about 1 year ago
We didn’t even HAVE a (working) TV in our house until after I went away to university. And my childhood was very good indeed. Who needs TV when you have a backyard skating rink, a two story playhouse, a stile over the fence into a “wild” area several sections in size, and a library pass? We played Sh(u)tes and Ladders, Hearts, Monotony, etc with each other… and my mother played the piano while we sang (and 10¢ when we memorized all the words to a hymn or Broadway song).
A Common 'tator about 1 year ago
JVC released the first VHS machines in the United States in 1977. Steph would’ve already been nine… By the time he was a teenager, video cassettes would’ve been common-place, even in the US…
blunebottle about 1 year ago
I never wasted my time watching other people playing games. More fun to participate.
Bilan about 1 year ago
On the plus side, we didn’t have to pay for cable, and then pay extra for ESPN, just to watch the bowl games.
Nor were there dozens of bowl games with teams that didn’t even have a winning record.
markkahler52 about 1 year ago
O for those days, Gone of long ago…when you had to be right there, If you didn’t wanna miss a bit of the Show…
Troglodyte about 1 year ago
Luckily, VCRs were a thing by the time I was a teenager, so we didn’t face this predicament often, unless the power went out while a programme was being recorded!
dlkrueger33 about 1 year ago
I loved seeing that ski jumper crash every week with his “Agony of Defeat” during ABC’s Wild World of Sports!
JoeStoppinghem Premium Member about 1 year ago
And our attention span was stronger.
iggyman about 1 year ago
“It is now 11 o’clock, do you know where your children are” Remember that?!
Slowly, he turned... about 1 year ago
and why not talk about a 3 hour game for 12 hours before it is played and 16 hours after it is played?
nosirrom about 1 year ago
Warner Wolf “Let’s Go To The Video Tape”
Ellis97 about 1 year ago
I never watched any sports highlights growing up. All I needed for entertainment were my games, the internet and of course, animated shows. Plus, the occasional chapter book.
Jingles about 1 year ago
during Nam, we got AFRTS and NFL, MLB, NBA, etc 16mm films of weekly highlights. we could watch superbowls over and over. war was cool, sometimes. i was the EMFN that got stuck with showing them every night at movie call on the messdecks. poor me!
Croc Holliday about 1 year ago
Glad I never gave a fig about how well or poorly any professional sports team performed. Never could understand why anyone gets so invested in it either.
Willywise52 Premium Member about 1 year ago
That’s why he’s still in it…
MichaelAxelFleming about 1 year ago
Now the good stuff is on YouTube, usually within minutes.
Kaputnik about 1 year ago
I don’t currently follow any sports. But just the other day I did look for a YouTube clip of highlights from game 7 of the 2016 World Series.
Zebrastripes about 1 year ago
VHS tapes…have a bunch…lol
sloaches about 1 year ago
Not so much highlights, but I remember watching the Monday Night Football broadcast when Joe Theismann got his leg snapped. They replayed that gruesome scene over and over.
Ignatz Premium Member about 1 year ago
The internet can be lousy, but there are times when you NEED to get a complete resume of Lillian Roth’s career right NOW.
bbbmorrell about 1 year ago
but imagine our joy when we see it fifty years later on youtube, after our grandkid shows us how to get online.
ladykat about 1 year ago
It was a good childhood.
aerotica69 about 1 year ago
We went outside and tried to reenact the highlight. Well, except for the “agony of defeat” skiing tumble.
David_the_CAD about 1 year ago
It was called memory. You could replay it over and over in your mind.
The only problem with this was that when you saw a tape of it, the play was frequently not a good as you remembered.
Charles & Susan Premium Member about 1 year ago
The good old days
WCraft Premium Member about 1 year ago
My youngest son once asked me: When you were young, which DVDs did you most like to watch over and over?
newsbb about 1 year ago
Also back when I was a kid people would be in the moment, share i the experiences with those also present and maybe later tell tales about what went on.Now so many forget to enjoy being present and instead are busy snapping pictures or video of what goes on, the result being they could almost just have stayed at home watching what others record – the exception being that it would of course not bring likes on social media.
General Trelane (Ret.) Premium Member about 1 year ago
Reruns are great. Last night I was watching Green Acres and found out Mr. Haney’s first name . Charleton! The actor Joe Conley , Ike Godsey of The Waltons fame , spilled the beans. Charleton – charlatan ! That’s great comedy ! And I didn’t need no stinking internet to find this out.
snowedin, now known as Missy's mom about 1 year ago
Me too!
abjackson about 1 year ago
Me too
AZPhinFan about 1 year ago
The “Miracle in Miami” from 2018, when the Dolphins beat the Patriots using a lateral with 7 seconds on the clock. Ticket cost….$200, Hotdog and Coke,,,$20. The look on Tom Brady’s face…..priceless!! Thank goodness for YouTube
Goat from PBS about 1 year ago
He was born in 1968, the year Bob Gibson rewrote the record books for how good a pitcher can be in the MLB.
I wish I could’ve seen that.
Mentor397 about 1 year ago
On the other hand, we did get to watch the Space Shuttle Challenger explode, over and over and over.
NavalHistorian about 1 year ago
George Michael Sports Machine!
whelan_jj about 1 year ago
When I was a kid we sometimes watched games on the radio. Mostly we played our own.
zeexenon about 1 year ago
Well, thanks to TV ads, the Agony of Defeat ski jumper is burnt into my old screen. The Networked stopped using it after he had his first great grandchild.
dlaemmerhirt999 about 1 year ago
Had to wait until the 2000s before you could rewatch it . . . OR record it without the express written permission of the MLB.
AwelCruiz about 1 year ago
I annoys me how the characters shorten “Stephen”. It’s “Steve”, no matter the spelling. “Steph” is short for “Stephanie.”
Okay, rant over.
liberalnlovinit about 1 year ago
But I do own a videotape of Super Bowl I.
I'm Sad about 1 year ago
I would take yesterday over today when it comes to sports. Today we are over-saturated with up to the minute sports and over analyzed everything. Back then it was simple, Monday Night Baseball, Saturday Game of the Week, maybe a couple of games on local television. No ESPN or Fox to over-analyze each game.
198.23.5.11 about 1 year ago
TV sports have progressed to the point where the Universe can do without Howard Cosell;who got grumpier and grumpier the older he got
MFRXIM Premium Member about 1 year ago
I could climb over our back fence into the school’s playground, right where the swing set stood!
Zebra about 1 year ago
Everyone now is all “Oh no, I can’t use electronics! What Shall I do?” they need to learn to be content without a phone.
Asharah about 1 year ago
Well, you did get to watch the same skier crash over and over by watching ABC’s Wide World of Sports opening.
Buoy about 1 year ago
Don’t listen to rat and pig, Stephan. They are just jaded.
eddi-TBH about 1 year ago
He forgot “Wide World of Sports”.
Otis Rufus Driftwood about 1 year ago
Sports reporting was better when it was just three or four minutes on the late news delivered by guys in ugly sports coats and uglier toupees. ‘SportsCenter’ and the like took the fun out of that.
DaBump Premium Member about 1 year ago
That’s right, ya whippersnappers, and we LIKED IT that way!
j.painterjones about 1 year ago
It sounds like a WONDERFUL childhood!
Sisyphos about 1 year ago
Hey, Cartoon-Boy! Today, I’m on your side (and I’m considerably older than you, too). —Although I will grant that the ability to pause or replay on my computer can be useful….
steve7701 Premium Member about 1 year ago
What I think about more often is the music. My favorite in high school and college was Neil Young. I can only recall seeing him on the Johnny Cash show once (2 songs) and then on something with CSN&Y. Maybe 10 minutes total video, which I couldn’t save. Now I could go on YouTube and watch him for hours. Of course, there’s probably 10 times more out there of BTS or Harry Styles, but that’s another story.
Murph1908 about 1 year ago
Don’t forget This Week in Baseball on Saturday.
BA baa, bada bap ba ba, ba BA Bada bap ba!
wildlandwaters about 1 year ago
Thank goodness for youtube…I can rewatch Mantle and Maris playing in their heyday again!
JoeMartinFan Premium Member about 1 year ago
I’m happy with my ’60s and ’70s childhood…we spent much more time outside than in front of a screen.