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Hekate

(95,750 posts)
1. I have only vague memories of Howdy Doody -- but my brother was utterly convinced he was a real boy
Wed Dec 25, 2024, 03:48 AM
Dec 25

Joe was a year younger than me…

wnylib

(25,152 posts)
2. Love the scene as they leave Santa's workshop.
Wed Dec 25, 2024, 06:14 AM
Dec 25

The full sun is shining brightly as the sleigh takes to the dark sky full of stars.

I don't remember that particular episode, but I do remember watching the show with my brothers and some kids in the neighborhood who came over to watch it with us.

AllaN01Bear

(23,681 posts)
3. remember hearing mum about neigborhood kids going to neigbors houses to watch howdi dody
Wed Dec 25, 2024, 09:02 AM
Dec 25

i was born in 1957 and this was a little bit before me.

wnylib

(25,152 posts)
5. Not everyone had a TV back then.
Wed Dec 25, 2024, 02:41 PM
Dec 25

So my brothers, who were both older than me, invited their friends who didn't have one to watch with us. I was born in 1949, so I was pretty young at the time, but I remember the opening song, the characters, and the group of us sitting cross-legged on the floor watching our console TV.

The TV stood about 4 feet high on the floor. The screen was in the upper part, maybe 8 or 10 inches in size. You had to turn it on several minutes before the program started to let it "warm up" in order to have a clear picture. It was black and white, of course, which all TVs were then.




AllaN01Bear

(23,681 posts)
6. correct. remember hearing about ppl would stop in front of a store that was selling and watch. there was a
Wed Dec 25, 2024, 02:45 PM
Dec 25

speaker usually so that they could hear the program audio as well.

wnylib

(25,152 posts)
7. I hadn't started school yet, or at least was not
Wed Dec 25, 2024, 03:18 PM
Dec 25

in school all day. (Kindergarten was half a day.) By the time I was in third grade, several more families had a TV. I remember walking home from school with a group of friends talking about what we had watched the might before, like Leave it to Beaver.

As late as 1962, during the Cuban Missile Crisis, there were still people who did not have a TV, or who were working or shopping in the evening when Kennedy made his televised speech about surveillance films finding Russian missiles in Cuba. There were people who went to stores to watch it on display models. The movie, 13 Days, shows this very well.




ProfessorGAC

(71,210 posts)
8. Alas, A Bit Before My Time
Wed Dec 25, 2024, 05:39 PM
Dec 25

I wasn't born until the start of the 10th season.
The last episode was just after I turned 4.
I'm certainly aware of the show, but I have no recollection of watching it.

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