17 sights, sounds and feels that only children of the '70s will ever understand
Remember getting wrapped up in a super-long phone cord?

Kids at Seattle Center during Bumbershoot, 1973
A lot has changed since the 1970s. If you took a 20-year-old from 2024 and put them in a time machine back to 1974, they’d have a hard time figuring out how to use a telephone, get a good picture on the television set with rabbit ears, or buy tickets for the Pink Floyd or Jackson 5 concert.
They’d also probably be appalled by the number of people who smoke, the massive amount of litter on the streets, and the general lack of concern for the safety of children. In certain cities, they’d also be blown away by the amount of smog in the air.
A Reddit user directing a production that takes place in the '70s wanted to learn what life was like in the “Me Decade,” so they asked the AkkReddit forum for “some behaviors from that time that have disappeared,” and he received over 2,400 responses.
Some were bittersweet remembrances of a carefree and unsupervised childhood. At the same time, others recalled a time when children were often the targets of abuse and subject to many traumatic experiences that they were discouraged from speaking about.
We looked at the thread and chose the 17 best responses to behaviors from the ‘70s that “have disappeared.”
1. Playing with the phone cord
"We had a long cord that you could swing like a jump rope."
"Answering every phone call with some variation of '
"Smoking everywhere all the time."
"I remember the teachers lounge in my grammar school oozing smoke."
"Returning soda bottles to the store and getting enough money back to buy a candy bar."
"367-1234. At the time the time will be 11:22 and 20 seconds — beep”
"Reading TV Guide for program times."
"Wrapping tin foil squares on 'rabbit ear' antennas."
"When the picture got fuzzy, slapping the side of the TV set to correct the picture."
10. The phone book had many uses
"That big phone book was the booster seat for the youngest kid at the table."
"References the cb radio culture during normal conversations. Everyone understood."
"You got that right, good buddy."
This article originally appeared last September.- Those 'carefree' 70s and 80s childhoods weren't the utopia some make them out to be ›
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