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January 24, 2019

20 Cool Snaps That Capture Wanchai Bars in Hong Kong From the 1970s

Wan Chai is a metropolitan area situated at the western part of the Wan Chai District on the northern shore of Hong Kong Island, in Hong Kong. Its other boundaries are Canal Road to the east, Arsenal Street to the west and Bowen Road to the south. The area north of Gloucester Road is often referred to as Wan Chai North.

Wan Chai is one of the busiest commercial areas in Hong Kong with offices of many small and medium-sized companies. Wan Chai North features office towers, parks, hotels and an international conference and exhibition centre.

As one of the first areas developed in Hong Kong, the locale is densely populated yet with noticeable residential zones facing urban decay, but it is also famous for its many restaurants, hotels, and bustling bars.

These fascinating color pics from m20wc51 that show what Wanchai bars looked like in the 1970s.

The 'Candlelight' bar was at 42-50 Lockhart Road, circa 1970

The corner of Lockhart Road and Luard, Wanchai, 1970

The corner of Lockhart Road, Wanchai, 1970

The Pussycat was at 34-38 Lockhart Road in Wanchai, 1970

The Old Toby Bar next to the Pussycat Bar was the one favored by Black Sailors and Servicemen, Lockhart Road, Wanchai, circa 1970-71





40 Fascinating Photos Show What Los Angeles Looked Like in the 1970s

Los Angeles is the most populous city in California and the second most populous city in the United States, after New York. It is the cultural, financial, and commercial center of the West Coast.

Los Angeles is in a large basin bounded by the Pacific Ocean on one side and by mountains as high as 10,000 feet (3,000 m) on the others. The city proper, which covers about 469 square miles (1,210 km2), is the seat of Los Angeles County, the most populated county in the country. Los Angeles is also the principal city of the Los Angeles metropolitan area, the second largest in the United States after that of New York City.

Street scenes of Los Angeles in the 1970s

Los Angeles is one of the most substantial economic engines within the United States, with a diverse economy in a broad range of professional and cultural fields. It is also famous as the home of Hollywood, a major center of the world entertainment industry.

These fascinating photos from Flickr's members that show what Los Angeles looked like in the 1970s.

Los Angeles street scenes, 1970

The demolition of L. A. High after the earthquake of February 1971

Morrison Hotel, Los Angeles, May 1972

Western Avenue looking south toward Wilshire Boulevard, Los Angeles, 1972

The Broadway, Los Angeles, 1973





January 23, 2019

Music for Lovers Only: Awesomely Bad Valentine Album Covers

Hope your Valentine’s Day has been special - flowers, candy, a special dinner, perhaps a plushie to add to the collection of Valentine’s Day plushies. However you celebrate, or choose not to, the music can be just as important.


1. When You’re In Love The Whole World Is Jewish
Bob Booker and George Foster (Starring the “You Don't Have To Be Jewish” Players)


Complete with a mom to guilt you into anything... including marriage to a man “just like father.”

Wait... Valerie Harper?! Rhoda Morgenstern was involved with this?!

Note: It’s a stage play about a young Jewish boy who wants to marry his gentile girlfriend. Hilarity ensues, because it must.


2. A Man Without Love
Engelbert Humperdinck



The name was the first clue. But don’t tell my aunt this, she thinks he’s a Golden God.

Seriously, don’t ask. She’s not 80 years old - I can’t figure out the appeal either!

And why two covers?!


3. You Gave Me a Mountain Mr. Walker. It’s All Over.
Margie Singleton


Pack it in, Mr. Walker. She’s so over you.


4. Music for Lovers Only
Jackie Gleason


Because after he sends Alice to the moon, he’s going to be ready to love again.

Wait, this is the same Jackie Gleason... right? Right?!


5. Music for Young Lovers
The Organ Masters


Yes...“young.” Like the guy who looks old enough to be your dad.






Before iPhone, There Was Ericofon aka Cobra Phone

The Ericofon is a one-piece plastic telephone created by the Ericsson Company of Sweden and marketed through the second half of the 20th century. It was the first commercially marketed telephone to incorporate the dial and handset into a single unit. Because of its styling and its influence on future telephone design, the Ericofon is considered one of the most significant industrial designs of the 20th century. It is in the collection of the Museum of Modern Art in New York City. In Sweden, the Ericofon is known as the cobra telephone for its resemblance to a coiled snake.

The original phone was produced in two slightly different designs. The earliest version is slightly taller, with the earpiece at nearly a 90-degree angle to the base. A later version has a shorter handle, with the earpiece angled slightly downward. The two versions are referred to as the old case and the new case. The old case was molded in two pieces, while the new case was molded as a single piece. Both versions were initially produced in 18 colors. They used the four-prong plug common in the United States at the time.

A third version, the model 700, was produced beginning in 1976. It is easily distinguished from earlier Ericofons by its squarish design, as well as changes to the handle and plug.

Most Ericofons had mechanical rotary dials, typical of all phones made in the era. While Ericofons produced by Ericsson used miniature buzzers as ringers, North Electric introduced the electronic “Ericotone” ringer. The Ericotone ringer used a simple, one-transistor oscillator circuit to produce a distinctive “chirping” sound. This was one of the earliest uses of a transistor in a telephone; telephones with mechanical bell ringers and rotary dials did not need transistors.

North Electric introduced a touch-tone version of the Ericofon in the United States in 1967. Production of this variant was much lower than that of the rotary-dial Ericofons. A design flaw in the hook switch mechanism can cause the touch-tone version of the phone to become unusable if it is set down too forcibly. North Electric ceased production of the Ericofon for North America in 1972.

Ericsson introduced a push-button version of the Ericofon, the model 700, for the company’s 100th anniversary in 1976. The model 700 had a squarer design than earlier models. It was not a touch-tone phone. Instead, its electronics generated electrical pulses as its buttons were pressed, simulating the pulses produced by a rotary dial. Ericsson continued to produce rotary-dial Ericofons until about 1980.










Inside American Restaurants in the 1960s Through 45 Cool Pics

What did the inside of American restaurants look like in the 1960s? Just check out these cool pics to see.

Diamond Room Singers, Spring Valley, New York

Fairmont Hotel & Tower, San Francisco, CA

Grossinger's Terrace Room, NY

Hackneys Seafood Restaurant, Atlantic City, NJ

Hilltop House, Omaha, NE





Bernard Philip Hopkins: The Most Hated Man Who Ever Lived

An honest tombstone, finally: “Liar - Thief - Cheat - Selfish - Unsharing - Unloving - Unkind - Disloyal - Dishonorable - Unfaithful


Bernard Philip Hopkins was born on December 02, 1904 in Pleasant Hill, Cass County, Missouri, United States. He was the son of Peter Paul Hopkins (1865–1937) from Ireland and Cathrine Noger (1880–1943) from Missouri.

Hopkins was single in 1930 census living in a boarding house as they did sometimes when unmarried back then in Beeville, TX. He married a woman named Lillian Lucille Newman (1907-1988). She first married on Jul 19, 1925 to a man named Jack Moore Plummer with two kids, so she must have married Mr. Hopkins sometime after 1930.

Hopkins died on January 22, 1993 (aged 88) in Caldwell, Burleson County, Texas, USA.

Say what you will about Mr. Hopkins — Lord knows his grave marker has — but the man sure knew how to make an impression.

(via Gawker, Joey deVilla)






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