Inkstainedwretch
One Too Many
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Does anybody still say "It's your nickel"? How many people now would understand the reference?
I think local calls were up to a quarter before cell phones killed phone booths.Does anybody still say "It's your nickel"? How many people now would understand the reference?
To tell on someone used to be known as “dropping a dime” on them. I can’t say that I’ve heard that phrase in a long time.
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I’ve heard the similar expression “on their dime” more often.
Payphones have alas lost some of their mystique, no less because of their rapid disappearance, because of a small sign indicating “Does not accept incoming calls”.
This was one of the reasons my oldest and bestest friend finally gave in and got himself a cell phone five or six years ago. Up to that point he didn't mind using payphones, but year after year they got to looking more and more like something you wouldn't want to touch unless you were wearing a biosuit, and even then nine out of ten didn't work. More importantly, his mother had developed some health issues as she grew older, so he needed a more reliable form of communication in case of emergency. Sadly, she died unexpectedly in her sleep two weeks ago at the age of 81....That, and they’re often in such states of disrepair you wouldn’t want to use them.
That, and they’re often in such states of disrepair you wouldn’t want to use them.
It's likely many of the phones on that show (and others) were nothing more than props that were placed there for filming and removed afterwards. Sound effects such as background noise, the sound of the phone ringing, the conversation, etc., are regularly added in post-production (i.e., after filming is complete).Up until a couple of years ago there was a TV show called Person of Interest. Pay phones were a significant aspect of the makeup of the show, and there always seemed to be a 'functioning' one, in good shape, when needed. I wonder if those phones (or one phone) were plopped in place for the shoots, or they just went looking for phones that looked like they worked.
Went home for lunch and there was a news story about pay phones (Siri must have been looking over my shoulder on the forum). There are 100K pay phones left in the USA (with 1/5 of them in NYC). Down from two-million in 1999.
Expressions that I used to hear quite regularly when I was young when a person came upon something that was confusing or outrageous were "What in Sam Hill . . .", "What the dickens . . ." or "What in tarnation . . ."
". . . is going on here?!!"
I believe that they were all euphemisms for Hell or the Devil and people were too polite or God fearing to actually speak those words. Now "WTF" is ubiquitous.
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Scatology, blasphemy, and blasphemous scatology ran rampant at every level of our neighborhood, but with the exception of frequent suggestions that one's mother was a prostitute, for the most part sexual references just weren't used.