How would one rewrite the story of Superman? Without a phone booth to change from Clark Kent into the Man of Steel, where could he go to change? A bar? A sewer? Someone tell me.
In the tv series from the fifties, George Reeves left the scene , taking off his hat and tugging at his tie and would go running into a handy alley or if at work, a storage room at the Daily Planet
Simple, easy to use, easy to fix, easy on the ears. Pushbutton dial slightly easier than rotary dial, did not control one’s life or interrupt a meal with a friend. What’s not to like.
It started as ten cents a call and was up to two dollars a call when they pulled them all out. Bell claimed “outdated technology”. I was expecting to see a credit card machine attached to the phone.
Our town got its first rotary system in the late 1950s. Before that, you answered the operator’s “Number, please?” with a three digit number(there were fewer than 1000 phones in our town. Long distance calls required you wait for the operator to contact another operator in the town you were calling.
You could talk on the street and people on the phone could hear you without shouting. They had these glass booths which were nearly soundproof. Nobody passing by asked if you were shouting at them.
We had a special ruler that did math calculations! I was on my way to a friends house, needed directions and panicked when I couldn’t find my cell phone. Where e can you find a public phone today?
Superfrog about 1 year ago
Rings a bell.
kingdiamond69 about 1 year ago
Ok back in my day you had to put money into a phone to make a phone call when you traveled .
Farside99 about 1 year ago
We actually had a cord on our phone, and you couldn’t just walk around the neighborhood with it and annoy anybody within hearing distance!
cracker65 about 1 year ago
We had rotary phones. Mess up, and you have to start over.
dlkrueger33 about 1 year ago
How would one rewrite the story of Superman? Without a phone booth to change from Clark Kent into the Man of Steel, where could he go to change? A bar? A sewer? Someone tell me.
Nighthawks Premium Member about 1 year ago
In the tv series from the fifties, George Reeves left the scene , taking off his hat and tugging at his tie and would go running into a handy alley or if at work, a storage room at the Daily Planet
sandpiper about 1 year ago
Simple, easy to use, easy to fix, easy on the ears. Pushbutton dial slightly easier than rotary dial, did not control one’s life or interrupt a meal with a friend. What’s not to like.
Stocky One about 1 year ago
Yup, and as a kid, I would go around checking to see if people had forgotten their change. It was my version of a “collect call”!
dflak about 1 year ago
I started in the wireless industry in 1986. Market penetration was 2% back then.
DawnQuinn1 about 1 year ago
It started as ten cents a call and was up to two dollars a call when they pulled them all out. Bell claimed “outdated technology”. I was expecting to see a credit card machine attached to the phone.
MaryBethJavorek1 about 1 year ago
we answered every call that came in on a rotary phone and didn’t worry about scammers and telemarketers
Duane Ott about 1 year ago
Our town got its first rotary system in the late 1950s. Before that, you answered the operator’s “Number, please?” with a three digit number(there were fewer than 1000 phones in our town. Long distance calls required you wait for the operator to contact another operator in the town you were calling.
mistercatworks about 1 year ago
You could talk on the street and people on the phone could hear you without shouting. They had these glass booths which were nearly soundproof. Nobody passing by asked if you were shouting at them.
Bill D. Kat Premium Member about 1 year ago
The best part was anonymously calling people to ask if their refrigerator was running and/or if the drugstore had Prince Albert in the can.
Direwolf about 1 year ago
saw a funny video of two teenagers trying to figure out how to make a call on a rotary phone…they couldn’t do it
cuzinron47 about 1 year ago
One good thing about those days, you didn’t lose your phone.
MFRXIM Premium Member about 1 year ago
We had a special ruler that did math calculations! I was on my way to a friends house, needed directions and panicked when I couldn’t find my cell phone. Where e can you find a public phone today?