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Those were the days, my friends
The way things were. Bittersweet nostalgia, gratitude for the passing of those days, or what not. Not restricted to skylines.
A little bit of theme music. here is one to get started. Remember Taverns (appropriate given the Mary Hopkins song), that staple of working-class Montreal? No women permitted? Pickled eggs and perhaps, pickled pork tongues? https://dcmontreal.files.wordpress.com/2013/04/tav1.jpg https://dcmontreal.files.wordpress.com/2013/04/tav3.jpghttps://dcmontreal.files.wordpress.com/2013/04/tav2.jpg dcmontreal |
Look like shit holes. Should be in the ugly thread
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what a wonderful contribution! thanks!
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Looking for, but can't find, videos of Super 2 flavoured milk commercials. Reminds me of youthful summer days at the campground.
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The old prairie coffee-houses, often named simply "Koffee Korner". Part coffee-house, part diner, part bar. Bakeries still exist with their offerings of coffee, but it's not the same.
Often built like this but dotted in villages. https://www.google.ca/maps/@53.55983...2!8i6656?hl=en |
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The wonderful thing about coffee houses and cafes "back in the day" was that they were great places to meet new people and exchange ideas. From good old political conversations, to talking about the weather, poetry readings, or just sucking up the ambience and watching the world go by.
Today you go to a cafe {ussually a boring change ie Starbucks} and no one talks or watches the crowds go by but just sit there with their eyes glued to the iphones. Even when people go in as a couple they rarely say a damn thing as they are too worried about missing their latest message or tweet. Our "social media" and all it's gadgets have made people decidedly unsocial..........they ttweet everyone and talk to no one. |
^^This!
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http://i.imgur.com/WkHHpZ1.jpg http://sites.psu.edu/siowfa15/wp-con...nda_Street.jpg http://thefuturebuzz.com/wp-content/...4/10/train.jpg People were always this way, now we just have a way to do it. |
People talked to each other more though despite a brief distraction with the daily news. Too many douchebags cannot even put their phone down to cross a f*ckin street, not realizing the light turned green.
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I dunno - is it really any worse than my parents who sit there in silence until their food comes then eat? I know I've been in situations where after spending an entire day doing stuff with someone just don't feel the need to chat. If it's single sided then it's very much obnoxious though. I still like to go to certain bars and meet new people though, which is incredibly easy at the right places. So things aren't all that bad! |
A few pictures (MUN Archives) of the end of an era, and though it is likely the second-most significant change ever in rural Newfoundland, it certainly gives the first-place cod moratorium a run for its money.
Post-Confederation, but before the Trans Canada Highway was built and provided our first reliable form of overland travel. Highways, called high or back roads here at the time, were little more than horse paths and every community on the island was instead serviced by the "coastal boat." Dozens of them circled the island ceaselessly and, in contrast to today's ferries, they almost all ended up in St. John's. People would put on their Sunday best to catch the ferry... http://i.imgur.com/TehELIe.jpg http://i.imgur.com/ORMsFDM.jpg And spend a few days shopping or looking for work in St. John's... http://i.imgur.com/xFR0FV1.jpg http://i.imgur.com/dLM0lVK.jpg http://i.imgur.com/tUTrfm0.jpg Boat travel was the norm - and I love being in a boat so much I think I would've very much enjoyed that. I love it perhaps even more than I love being in a tram. |
Nice, thanks for those.
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Wow, rural Newfoundland females back then dressed almost like their Ukrainian counterparts (covered hair and strongly contrasted colours on their frocks and tops).
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(Some of us still do, mistercorporate... lol; but seriously, a lot of old ladies with clear plastic scarves).
Throwback to when Switzerland's Celine Dion won the Eurovision Song Contest. |
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And this is one of them. It's obviously the product of unhappy screenwriters. It shows up over and over again. Single guy/girl thinks about future with partner. Cut to older married couple sitting in restaurant not talking to each other. Presto! One portrayal of existential anguish produced by hell of domestic tedium served right up. But it's ham-fisted and does no justice to the rich tapestry of shared knowledge, emotions and history that living with someone for a couple decades can produce. Sometimes you talk about stuff. Sometimes you laugh about stuff. Sometimes you sit there quietly, thinking of different things. To the outsider it may look like boredom, and sure, there are indeed moments waiting for the food to arrive that you wish you were somewhere else, but the idea that that moment serves as a blanket characterization of the entirety of a marriage is ridiculous. I remember the exhilaration and terror of dating. Having conversations like that for years and years would be exhausting. A guy I know in his late forties had a brief marriage when he was younger, but since then he's worked all over Russia in the mining industry while living a nutty bachelor life. The last time I saw him in Toronto he spent our dinner bragging about his crazy romantic exploits in between trying to chat up the waitress with the most excruciatingly cheesy pickup lines. I was embarrassed for him, and embarrassed to be in his company. He was an alright guy in his twenties, but after two decades of "chasing tail" (I think he actually used that term--cringe!) he'd coarsened into a creepy cad. |
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I've never been brave enough. |
They're as good as anything else pickled. Especially great sliced on a sandwich.
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Spent a snowy Saturday night eating pickled sausages and drinking Extra Old Stock with a buddy in college while we played Dino Crisis for like 14 hours straight
It was a rough Sunday morning |
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I've drank in many old Taverns very similar to those in small towns in BC
To each their own but I find them fascinating. Still stop in at the Ymir hotel bar when I am through the Kootenays. So much more interesting than the banal and soup-du-jour bars that you find virtually everywhere today |
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The epicentre of cool for me as a kid - I watched an absurd amount of MuchMusic and 299 Queen West was a must visit whenever I made it to Toronto:
http://www.blogto.com/upload/2014/07...17-STROMBO.jpg blogto.com |
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And as if hipsters wouldn't be weeping tears of joy into their beards to find a place with that vibe that served their latest fad of overpriced craft beer! |
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I totally agree with you regarding boats - we took the Lévis-Québec ferry a few times and it still feels super exotic - I would find it so cool to have that be my daily commute. I believe it would make sense - as I pointed out already on here, our neighbor worked in Old QC and commuted like that. There's a bus line in front of our place that goes straight to the ferry terminal. Not sure how early you have to get up in the morning though, because the entire ferry process (boarding, trip, unloading) is far from instant. |
Almost every building in that shot is still there, it's just that they have built a road on reclaimed land between them and the harbour.
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Barber Shops!!!
https://transylvaniabounty.files.wor...7/dsc_1055.jpg They virtually don't exist any more. They've been replaced of course by hair styling salons, but when I was growing up, they were dens for men. Men would go to barber shops just as much to talk about baseball and hockey as they would to get a trim. They were a manly getaway. Not any more.......... |
We're so far behind the times... but in a good way. I swear to God I'm going out shortly, I won't be doing this to every post. :haha: But barber shops are still very much a thing here. And they serve beer (limit of one only). There's a whole subculture surrounding the famous ones, like Fogtown, and every neighbourhood has a couple. There's one three houses away from me:
http://i.imgur.com/vQAX9xa.jpg?1 And another one about a block from me: http://i.imgur.com/z6GYfhf.png I'm balding (bald?), and there's no hairstyle one can have with bald that I like, so I buzz my head. But I'm also lazy as fuck so I can just go to the barber and get it done for a twonie at one place, $5 at the other (including beard shaving and moisturizer). :D Just in case it's weird everywhere else... we also still have neighbourhood butchers and shoe repair and tailors and superettes and nail salons and hairstylists (where women go in the morning to get their hair styled, NOT cut) as well. |
I wish I had access to pictures which made me nostalgic to my hometown when I was a kid. The mid 80s to mid 90s were the point in time where things were most positive. We had tons of stores, restaurants, and other businesses back then that don't exist anymore (buildings demo'd too). Seeing a town completely rot from a population of about 1000 to about 400 in your very, very brief lifetime (27 years) is a real experience.
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I can still picture the Electric Circus dancers in the windows :haha: I miss Rap City/ DaMix and The DownLo the most. I miss Namugenyi Kiwanuka :( |
^ Would love a beer with each haircut. I'm not sure it's legal though.
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I'll at the very least share this for anyone who was a child in the mid 90s and watched hours of YTV.
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Moncton needs to get on the hipster train of barber shops offering beer and other nonsense. I feel like Uptown Saint John is on the cusp of too many of them opening soon.
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http://theshipvictory.ca/wp-content/...07/dining2.jpg http://theshipvictory.ca/ Inside it has a wheel, rigging, cannons, etc. Two-for-one haddock on Mondays for $10.98! They also have breaded clams and breaded scallops, something you don't really see in pub menus farther west. Shellfish used to be cheap stuff. |
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The best tavern by far in Halifax was the previous iteration of the Midtown Tavern. I went there quite frequently when I was in med school, mostly on Fridays after the end of classes. Good beer, great steak and tabletop shuffleboard!!! :) http://jimleff.info/chowtour/assets/..._6_500x362.jpg Good memories. They tore it down for the new Nova Centre (Halifax convention centre & hotel). I haven't been to the new (relocated) Midtown though. Is it still good??? |
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There are a lot of restaurants I'm a bit nostalgic about from when I was a kid but I'm not sure they'd hold up today, or if the ones that are still around are as good as they were. Another example is the Bluenose II restaurant on Hollis Street. It has apparently undergone gentrification; no more backlit white plastic sign: https://3.bp.blogspot.com/-OUF1d-qvL...ture%2B208.jpg http://www.teenaintoronto.com/2016/0...alifax-ns.html Other similar places were Athens and Sparta on Quinpool Road, King of Donair (various locations), and Chickenburger out in Bedford. A lot of the greasy spoon restaurants in Halifax are either Greek or Lebanese. Willman's Fish and Chips in the Hydrostone area has been there since 1946, but it's another local institution I've never visited. John's Lunch is supposed to be good too. Maybe next trip. |
Paddy Greene's, in west Hamilton (Westdale, not far east of McMaster U.)
It was taken down in 1984, and replaced by this: https://goo.gl/maps/2nE1jZ5BJS92 While it was demolished about 5 years before I hit 'legal age', I do recall it well. And especially the separate men's and women's entrances that were a legacy from yesteryear. http://thespec-stories.com/wp-conten...8-1024x638.jpg Source http://thespec-stories.com/wp-conten...E-535x1024.jpg Source http://media.socastsrm.com/wordpress...y-Greenes2.jpg Source |
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https://assets.shop.loblaws.ca/produ..._front_a06.png Blah-Blahs and their subsidiaries sell 'em, and I see them at Longo's where I shop in my town. But I wonder how many Luke could have downed. |
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