All 80s Weekend-An Origin Story

As discussed in my first post, I have ALWAYS loved the 1980s.  No need to rehash that.  And I discussed how I came up with the idea of All 80s Weekend.  Basically, I put on a couple of movies that really screamed 1980s.  One was a movie I had not seen since I was a kid, and the other I had never seen.  ***And there is a difference between watching a movie that was made in the ’80s, and watching an ’80s movie.***  Indiana Jones was made in the 80s, and it’s an amazing movie.  But, it doesn’t make me necessarily make me feel like I was in the 1980s when I’m watching it.  However when you’re watching The Breakfast Club, it makes you feel like if you looked over at a calendar hanging on your wall, it’d say 1985.

Back to the original 2 movies…watching these 2 back to back  created a monster in me.  I was overcome with joy for having experienced these great 80s movies. I was overcome with joy for having felt like I lived in the 1980s for the past 2 hours. I was overcome with desire to experience this again. I was overcome with the need for more 80s.  I felt like Johnny 5 – “More Input!”

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What I would do in the coming weekends was try to recreate this experience.  Of course I would need to try other movies.  So during the week, I’d plan out what movies I was going to watch that weekend.  I’d send text messages to my wife with the pictures of the movies and just say “All 80s Weekend”!  Thus, the name was born.

Okay, I’m already too far into this and still haven’t revealed what the 2 movies are.  I’d say these are not the main titles you’d normally associate with the 80’s, but they’re not extremely obscure either.  Of course I’d seen Goonies, John Hughes stuff, Back to the Future, Top Gun, and all the obvious main titles too many times to count.  These movies were just obscure enough that I hadn’t seen them a million times on Saturday afternoon growing up.  Without further ado, the 2 movies that launched a thousand (or 4 so far) posts:

 

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Three O’Clock High was the movie I had seen as a young kid, probably on HBO on some random Saturday afternoon.  But I had forgotten about it.  As soon as I put on the movie, I INSTANTLY had all these memories rush back.  That is an amazing feeling! It is what so much of all this nostalgia craze is all about!!!  It’s like a drug!LikableWhiteAfricanhornbill-small

 

The Legend of Billie Jean was a 1st time watch.  It was a surprise to me.  I knew of Helen Slater, because she was my first crush of my life (Supergirl).  MV5BMjQ2ZmIyODctMjgxMi00OWFmLThlOTItMmI3MzVmYzgzMTUxL2ltYWdlXkEyXkFqcGdeQXVyODQxNTk4OQ@@._V1_But the attitude of this movie, and the themes it deals with, and the way they are dealt with, these are all very pertinent in today’s world.  But make no mistake, this is an 80s movie!!!

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So if you’re that 80s movie fan, and maybe you’ve seen all the major titles, take a chance on these 2. These are highly recommended and All 80s Weekend approved!!

5 random retro things from my toy display case:

I’ve always been a collector, but just never serious enough about anything to turn it into something truly impressive.  First it was baseball cards, then pogs, then comic books, then a 6 month phase of Magic the Gathering.  Even now, I’m trying to put back together my childhood toy collection, 75% of which was lost in a fire.  I’d put a year or two or three into the passion, and then something else would catch my eye.  But I still have most of the things I collected.  But the real point here is that I have the “collecting gene”, whatever that may be.  I just like to collect “things”.  And I treasure “things”.  I attach meaning to them.  I attach a feeling to them.  Most importantly, I attach a memory to them.  I was explaining to a friend a few months ago, that I can remember where I was and what I was doing when I got the majority of my baseball cards when I was between say 8 and 12 years old.  I remember being in a pizza parlor with my family, opening a pack of 1988 Topps baseball cards, and getting a Don Mattingly “Record Breakers” card.  This is the case with most of what I have.  And for a sentimental person like myself, the memories mean more than the actual objects.  I think deep down, I’m afraid if I lose the objects, I’ll lose the memories.

So to this point, not only am I a collector of things, I’m a saver of things.  And it doesn’t matter if it has monetary value or not.  It only matters that I care about it.  So I wanted to share some random things with you today, like show-and-tell.

RANDOM THING #1

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1982 LJN E.T. and Elliott powered bike toy & 1986 McDonald’s Muppet Babies Gonzo

I’m pretty sure I got the E.T. bike from my older New Jersey cousins in a box of stuff they were done with.  I looked up to them and anything of theirs was like gold to me.  But I also have always been obsessed with E.T.  I don’t think I ever had the accompanying Elliott, and I don’t even remember ever having the basket.  I do remember when I was in my teens figuring out that the 1986 McDonald’s toy Gonzo fit onto his bike.  He’s not left this seat since.  The real treasure here though is the ET bike, and mainly because it connects me to my cousins, and to a period of time that I cannot get enough of.

RANDOM THING #2

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My Cocktail soundtrack and my George Michael – Faith cassette tapes

The George Michael Faith tape was the 1st album I ever owned.  I asked for it for Christmas in 1988 because “Faith” was my favorite song.  I was 7.  I remember opening it in my grandparents house.  I’ve held onto it ever since.  I don’t think I’ve listened to this actual cassette in over 25 years.

I’m actually not sure how I got the Cocktail soundtrack.  But I do know that I wore the heck out of that tape.  Between “Kokomo” and “Don’t Worry Be Happy”, could there be a better album for a little kid?  Nevermind that I had definitely never seen the movie at that point, and for good reason.  But I did know that I loved Tom Cruise because I had seen Top Gun.  And I had seen the Beach Boys on full house, and my dad always played them in the car going to the Jersey Shore every summer.  So I loved them, and I definitely loved “Kokomo”.  I still sing it all the time.  These cassette tapes are in my little retro display case I have in my dining room, along with the rest of this stuff.

RANDOM THING #3

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Vintage postcard from Wildwood, NJ circa the 1980s and a reproduction button of the legendary Castle Dracula

I only acquired these items in 2018.  But they are already near and dear to my heart.  My family always went to Wildwood, located at the bottom of the Jersey Shore.  Basically every summer.  It’s something I’ve continued to do with my friends in our 20s, and now with my wife.  I love it, and there is nowhere else I’d rather vacation.  It’s like home.  So when I saw the Wildwood Historical Society was selling these last year, I pounced on them.  The postcard reminds me of being a kid on the boardwalk in the 1980s.  It is an enormous boardwalk, with a bunch of piers, full of rides, vendors, games, mini-golf, bumper cars, ice cream, posters and stuffed animals I can’t win, and most importantly, the Castle Dracula.  That was until a fire took it out in the early 2000s.  But the Castle Dracula was a full scale haunted house, with haunted boat tour around it’s moat.  To a 6 year old kid, this really was Dracula’s Castle!

 

RANDOM THING #4

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A 1970s Pillsbury Doughboy squeezable rubber doll

This Pillsbury Doughboy was something that I remember having in the bathtub with me when I’d take baths at my grandparents house.  So it was long enough ago that it was before I was showering.  But I remember it vividly.  I’ve held onto it because it reminds me of my grandparents and being at their house out in the country when I was little.  I loved being there, plus not many sets of grandparents had an Atari 2600, but mine did.

RANDOM THING #5

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A tin Pac Man ghost which held sour blueberries from 2011

This is really nothing, and it should be garbage.  This doesn’t hold sentimentality necessarily.  This was just a silly little add on to my Christmas gift from my sister in-law.  But I thought the tin case was so cool that I’ve held onto it.  Its probably 3-4 inches tall.  It doesn’t do anything, just sits in the case, but it looks so pretty.  These are the types of things that can seem like treasure if you think about them in the right way.  These are types of things I’ve held onto.  I enjoy it.

Well thank you for reading about my random stuff!  I’m thinking for my next post, I will finally reveal the movies I watched for my first 3 All 80s weekends.  Stay tuned 🙂

My ’80s Oasis in the ’90s

In my first post, I really tried to hammer home the idea of how ’80s music, movies, styles, photos, information, and just general 80s aesthetic and vibes are currently at their most accessible point since the 1980s.  And that this was what convinced me, swayed me to finally start writing about my favorite decade.

But this accessibility was not always there. This piece I will explore my yearning to satisfy 80s era cravings, in the late 90s/early 00s.  During this time period, especially living in a small city, this was not always easy.

A 1980s dark period

During the early 90s and mid 90s, the 80s were being forgotten.  80s things were no longer in style, but it was too soon for them to be considered retro-cool.  Grunge, alternative, and rap had taken over rock radio.  Luckily John Hughes was still making movies, but Ally Sheedy was relegated to a throw-away cameos like this Airline ticket agent in Home Alone 2.

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TBS, TNT, Comedy Central, HBO, these all played 80s movies fairly often, and that is how I saw many of the 80s classics.  But the problem was it was on their schedule. Not like today, where I can most likely find it streaming for free, or at worst rent it and be watching it instantly.

Sure, we owned a few VHS tapes we could watch whenever.  We had a recorded-off-TV copy of Top Gun and Crocodile Dundee 2. We wore those right out.

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But the point is, it was not as easy to immerse yourself in 80s culture.  It would have been much more difficult tothabe an All 80s Weekend. We did not have a dedicated 80s radio station. Same with TV. You could see some 80s sitcoms in syndication, but it’d be scattered between 90s stuff.  And maybe one of the biggest differences between then and today, it was hard to find a cool 80’s property t-shirt! You could no longer find a rad Ghostbusters shirt at the mall.  They did not exist, at least to the average 12 year old in a small city with a bad mall. Now, you could buy probably find 15 really GREAT Ghostbusters shirts online.  But during the 90s and early 2000s, there was just a dark period.  The 90s we’re in, and that made it tough to access the 80s consistently.

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I mean look how cool this shirt is!

The Moment I Knew I Needed More 80s in My Life

Up until probably high school, I was FINE with all of the stuff I mentioned above, because I really didn’t know any different. Grunge, great.  I was fine with it.  It was not until a fairly surprising thing happened that I realized I wanted to experience more 80s stuff again.

#1.

When (takes a deep breath), when Limp Bizkit released their cover of George Michael’s “Faith”, that was when I knew.  It hit me like a ton of bricks. Besides, George’s Faith album was the 1st album I ever owned. I got it for Christmas 1988. So when I heard a cover of it in 1997, I lost my mind. Something I used to love, and that no one really talks about anymore, just became cool again. It made me realize that there was value in some of this older stuff that I liked, and just because people didn’t talk about it as much anymore, didn’t mean people didn’t like it.  And I HATED Limp Bizkit! LOL! It didn’t matter though, I bought the CD anyway.

There were a few things, such as a “Faith” cover by a bad rap/metal band that kept me enticed until maybe the last 10 years or so, when the 80s became ultra accessible again.

#2.

Hot off the heels of Happy Gilmore and Billy Madison, Adam Sandler released The Wedding Singer. This was a double bonus type situation.  Sandler was on fire, especially with teenagers at that point. And he’s releasing a movie that takes place in the 80s, which is a huge factor in the film.  So this movie was right up my alley.  It has great music and it’s stock full of 80s references, and they just do a good job of giving it a nice 80s feel.

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#3.

The big big big one, that was not only extremely funny and entertaining, but basically a nostalgia documentary on 80s pop culture, was VH1’s “I Love the 80s”.

I Love the 80s was a 10 part series where comedians and 80s personalities would comment on pop culture that shows, music, movies, commercials, and toys of the 80s. It was nostalgia fuel and served as the ultimate memory jogger, and tugged at my 80s heartstrings.

 

And an honorable mention to when my mall got a Hot Topic. I could finally get a Ghostbusters or Batman or Goonies shirt. Of course, the t-shirts were usually only black, were too heavy, too big, had huge sleeves, and we’re not nearly as creative as the shirt I posted above. But beggars can’t be choosers.

There were probably other things too. But these were my 80s oases in the 80s-less desert of the 1990s.  I’d love to hear if anyone else has any other examples!!

Well thanks for reading! Until next time…

 

 

 

An All ’80s Weekend

 

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Since this is my first post, I guess an introduction is in order.  It is normal and typical for people to feel a special bond with the time period when they were young.  That’s the feeling The Wonder Years was based on.  They were discovering the world and everything felt bigger, more important, and more exciting.  I guess I’m no different.  Yet, I was only 8 years and 6 days old on the very last day of the 1980s.   It is equally possible that based on my “discovering the world/Wonder Years” theory, I easily could have been obsessed with the 1990s, as I was most certainly in my “Wonder Years”.  And while I do love a great many things about the 1990s, I’ve always felt the closest connection with the 80s and its music, its movies, its fashions, its toys, etc.

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This is me stopping and looking around. I was born on Christmas day, 1981. My 37th Birthday was 4 days ago. And I’m admittedly worried about getting old. It’s something that has been on my mind a lot lately.  For instance, I was worried about turning 37 for so long that when my birthday actually came, to me it seemed like I was turning 38 because in my mind I had already been 37 for like 10 months.  So part of me thinks that my obsession with the 80s only stems from wanting to be young again.  It’s my version of a midlife crisis. The cliche is that some people going through their midlife crisis want a Corvette because it makes them feel youthful.  I just want to hear Little Red Corvette.  But another part of me thinks my obsession with the 80s has always been there, even when I was just in my teens, and it’s not necessarily about wanting to feel young/being scared of getting old, but more about me being drawn to the ’80s aesthetic.  It’s most likely a mixture of both.

So why “All 80s Weekend”?

Like I’ve stated, I’ve always loved the ’80s.  But not since the ’80s has it been so accessible.

  • There are amazing ’80s blogs such as Branded in the 80s, which has a section showcasing ’80s childhood bedrooms from movies, and detailing and cataloging every item in the bedrooms of Elliott from E.T., Mikey from the Goonies, and over a dozen more.
  • Super fun podcasts, such as my favorite: Purple Stuff Podcast, which has many episodes in which Matt and Jay wax poetic about their favorite things from 1986, or discuss and debate their favorite discontinued foods from the ’80s, like Giggles Cookies.

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  • Excellent 80s Instagram profiles Totally80sRoom which has dedicated a room to all things 1980s, like that light brown Black and Decker DustBuster that everyone had, and that clear 1980s telephone that everyone wanted. It’s a mini museum of 1980s and I want to do the same. (cont)
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Totally 80s Room
  • I was given a free year of SiriusXM last year and I can now hear whatever the top 40 countdown was today in 1985, but counted down today and by the original MTV VJs.
  • Amazon, Netflix, and others have given on demand access to not only my favorite 80s movies, but also those I’ve never seen or heard of.  And thanks to Google, I can find those titles I’ve never heard of.  Not to mention, Stranger Things came out and took my already inflated interest in the 80s and multiplied it by a billion or maybe even a kajillion.
  • And finally, I am slowly replacing my childhood toys, a lot of which I’ve seen for sale and bought through Instagram.

The access to the 80s is at an all time high. 

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My 1987 GI Joe Gung Ho I acquired through Instagram

The point of all of this is that while my interest has always been there, all of these examples, all of these resources have been fueling the fire to the point where my interest has boiled over, and here I am creating a god-damned 1980s blog 3 days before 2019.  It’s boiled over for others too.  Every 80s movie and TV show is either getting remade, rebooted, or given a 30 years later sequel.  Weezer covered Toto, and Skeletor was in a Honda commercial.  Access is at an all time high, and maybe it’s not a coincidence that interest is at an all time high.

Okay, so really this time, why All 80s Weekend?

About a year ago on a random Saturday afternoon, I watched 2 ’80s movies back-to-back.  One I had seen when I was younger, and one I had never seen before.  I enjoyed this double feature so much that I instantly wanted to chase that feeling, not only of seeing a great movie I had never seen before, but also of immersing myself into a certain time period.  I tried recreating that feeling again on subsequent Saturdays, some were successful, some not as much.  I figured why stop at movies?  Spend a whole weekend only watching 80s movies and television, playing 80s video games, and listening to 80s music.  Create an ALL 80s WEEKEND.  The notion of an All 80s Weekend seemed like such an 80s thing to do.  And it was easy, since I love the 80s, and I mostly hate music made in the last 10 years.  I have no problem with modern movies, TV, and video games. They’re quite good.  But for certain weekends, it would be so much fun to lose myself in the 1980s.

I have not written anything in quite a while so bare with me.  I needed some sort of creative outlet, and at the same time, to be able to satisfy some of my 80s cravings.  I plan on posting lots more 80s related things.  I’ll be posting about the moment I realized I needed more 1980s (happened in 1997), and I’ll be posting about the specific movies involved in the original all 80s weekends.  I may post about some of the toys I’ve re-acquired and which I am still seeking.  I will most likely post about newly discovered (to me) movies and music of the 80s.