![]() |
Quote:
A couple of Toronto channels showed soft-core or at least some skin on occasion. City-TV had it's "baby blue movies" night in the early 70s but I was just a wee lad. What became Omni was CFMT and late nights they'd broadcast European and Latino films that often showed nudity. Nothing gratuitous that I recall, but enough to make it worth staying up late. :tup: |
Quote:
I have to admit though, there was something to the sheer simplicity of those Atari games. My kid plays video games on a PS5 and I find the controls to be overwhelming at times :haha: |
Quote:
Although I guess the modern equivalent is having an Android TV box and illegal streaming sites, no dish required. |
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
My other grandparents, who had the C-band dish, got American channels I'd never heard of, such as Turner Classic Movies (which back then was not carried on Canadian cable). My late grandfather was a huge movie buff and that's why they had the dish. |
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
In the United States, the only legal way to stream those two game shows is if you have a local station that carries the show and streams full-time online. All of the streams I’m aware of that do this are geo-blocked in Canada. I’ve definitely looked into non-cable options for Jeopardy. This question frequently comes up on the Jeopardy subreddit. |
Interesting... I had no idea it was so tough to find Jeopardy online.
|
Quote:
Quote:
|
Quote:
Heck, even this old ministry of Transportation Ontario commercial came after. This one I remember. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_9wHORHy2Gw There was another show that we used to watch on Saturday mornings, and it was only after the cartoons were over..It was in the "B" list. It took me years to try to figure it out, but I think it was on CFTO , and was hosted by that Toronto TV personality David Devall (I think). The opening theme song was the Beatles - "All you need is love", and it was an adoption show called Family Finders, where they tried to find homes for children in need of adoption. He paraded kids in front of the cameras focusing on one or a set at a time and you had to call in..He often said "and this one goes with him/her", and this one goes with (repeat), meaning that they were siblings. Times sure were different!. |
Quote:
|
Quote:
Quote:
My Dad and Stepmom's place - where I spent part of the time - is outside the City (Springbank), which at the time was quite remote and you couldn't get cable if you were willing to pay. So we also had one of the massive satellite dishes, and they had pirated boards which became increasingly harder to use over time. At one point you had to manually enter codes for individual channels on satellites that would only work for a day or two. But, the channels you didn't have access to often had a video feed with no audio, including the adult ones. This was most definitely not an issue for me! I quickly learned what satellites had them and made sure to put it back to the original settings afterwards. |
Toronto in 1990
|
How is this from 1990, because Scotia Plaza was built in 1988 and is not in the skyline footage shots?
unless it's just an agglomeration of stock footage from the 1980s lol |
Quote:
|
Hey, remember the days of this forum before 3 members held us all hostage to their never ending rants and gaslighting defending racism?
|
All times are GMT. The time now is 5:05 PM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.7
Copyright ©2000 - 2023, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.