MisterCairo
I'll Lock Up
- Messages
- 7,005
- Location
- Gads Hill, Ontario
Loud talkers who are close talkers.
My wife is a high school teacher who forgets that at home, she does not need to project her voice like she is on stage at Stratford...
Loud talkers who are close talkers.
My mum spoke what was referred to as "broad Scots", a broad term (pun inteneded) that includes dialects of Scottish English.
Read a Robbie Burns poem, you'll get the idea.
Or watch The Fall and Rise of Reginald Perrin, later series with the Scots cook speaking a made-up version!
Whilst I can empathise with your sentiment, I don't agree that The Fedora Lounge is a hat forum. The name, fedora, is most definitely a description of a style of hat, but having the word lounge, makes the forum a much broader church.
The members that post about their jackets have just as strong affinity to the Fedora Lounge as those who post about their hats. Furthermore, the members who are leather jacket aficionados are polite, knowledgeable and never engage in any sort protestation about other topics, indeed, many post on a variety of threads. It's that rich diversity on so many subjects that make The Fedora Lounge such an enjoyable experience. Long may it be so.
Indeed, Lizzie, you are so right. However, if a forum is to last it must expand, take on new subjects, whilst keeping a passing nod to the original ideals. In my time here I have seen many members come and go, it's sad when they no longer post, could it be that they feel that The Lounge is too insular?I can even remember when we spent a very great deal of time here discussing, in depth, all aspects of the 1930s and 40s. We used to have a pretty strong reputation for that, in fact.
I can even remember when we spent a very great deal of time here discussing, in depth, all aspects of the 1930s and 40s. We used to have a pretty strong reputation for that, in fact.
The youngest people with firsthand recollections of that time would be 80 now, or close to it. People born during the Depression are now well into their 80s, and some in their early 90s. Very few who were adults then, even during the latter years of “the Era,” are still alive.
I don’t think I’m projecting too much in observing that people often harbor a fascination with the world of their parents’ and grandparents’ early lives. It’s true of me, and of others with whom I’ve discussed the matter. The world that made them has its echoes in us, for sure.
Those of us born in the post-War baby boom are getting on in years ourselves. Relatively few of us have surviving parents, let alone grandparents.
I’d wager that these days the mention of “vintage” conjures in most people’s minds images from the 1960s and ’70s.
I’d welcome more discussions on the 1930s and ’40s. But I accept that nothing lasts forever. And I remind myself that the last of my grandparents died in 1989, and that my mother still survives. The 1960s and ’70s was their world, too.
... the History Channel was documentaries about WWII...
Funny thing is, for me the 70s and 80s *were* the Depression. Graduating into 25 percent local unemployment had my grandmother and me swapping stories.
As for forums expanding beyond their original brief, I guess it's a lot like cable TV channels. Remember when "Arts & Entertainment" actually showed Arts and Entertainment, the Learning Channel was all about educational programming, the History Channel was documentaries about WWII, and channels with "news" in their name actually showed news? It's my theory that, eventually, all forms of media will degrade to an endless scroll of elderly Joe Namath grimacing insanely into the camera trying to sell you supplemental Medicare insurance.
Funny thing is, for me the 70s and 80s *were* the Depression. Graduating into 25 percent local unemployment had my grandmother and me swapping stories.
As for forums expanding beyond their original brief, I guess it's a lot like cable TV channels. Remember when "Arts & Entertainment" actually showed Arts and Entertainment, the Learning Channel was all about educational programming, the History Channel was documentaries about WWII, and channels with "news" in their name actually showed news? It's my theory that, eventually, all forms of media will degrade to an endless scroll of elderly Joe Namath grimacing insanely into the camera trying to sell you supplemental Medicare insurance.
Pantyhose, no. Compression support hose, yes.You mean to say Namath no longer sells pantyhose???
True, and pretty much the only thing you won't see on The History Channel these days is shows about actual recorded history.The History Channel is so full of crap like Ghost Hunters, Bigfoot Hunters, Ancient Aliens, Alien Crap, more Ghost crap, and other crap...
The History Channel is so full of crap like Ghost Hunters, Bigfoot Hunters, Ancient Aliens, Alien Crap, more Ghost crap, and other crap presented by people without credentials or those with credentials for a all together unrelated field. A lot of vague information, out-and-out lies, and stretching to make something out of nothing and posing it as credible information when we all can see it is crap.
That pretty well sums it up.
People wanna believe. Even those who know it’s mostly BS get something out of the fantasy, I think. After all, they have hundreds — thousands — of other viewing options these days. They’re like kids with imaginary friends.
We live in a society geared by the fundamental mechanics of its construction to always aim for the lowest common denominator. You can't change that without changing the mechanics themselves.
We live in a society geared by the fundamental mechanics of its construction to always aim for the lowest common denominator. You can't change that without changing the mechanics themselves.