Things That Were In My Parlour In The 1970s And Early 1980s. - Culture (3) - Nairaland
Nairaland Forum › Nairaland General › Culture › Things That Were In My Parlour In The 1970s And Early 1980s. (31873 Views)
| Re: Things That Were In My Parlour In The 1970s And Early 1980s. by amnesty7: 8:10am On Apr 06 |
Very educative and clean thread: no bigotry, no insults. Op must be at least 55 by now. Thank you for this historical journey. |
| Re: Things That Were In My Parlour In The 1970s And Early 1980s. by CJStarz: 8:11am On Apr 06 |
Those good old days... When somebody's child was everybody's child. |
| Re: Things That Were In My Parlour In The 1970s And Early 1980s. by Discountsempai: 8:11am On Apr 06 |
naptu2:Wonder why your family didn't get a Betamax. Better picture quality. My neighbours had a Betamax, that's where I watched Star wars for the first time ever . Clear clear very clear image compared to VHS. |
| Re: Things That Were In My Parlour In The 1970s And Early 1980s. by farady(m): 8:11am On Apr 06 |
naptu2 is a senior man in his late 50s or early 60s. Man really had a privileged beginning to have had these gadgets at that time. I think it was in 1980 our dad bought the first television set in the home; a 12" President Black and White tv. Before now, we go to neighbours apartment to watch tv. Then the stations commence transmission by 4:30pm on weekdays and either 12 noon or 1pm on weekends. Prior to that time, some vertical lines would appear at about 4pm with a continuous single pilot sound. I could relate with the submissions from the op. For radio, dad had this die hard transistor radio that has MW, SW1, SW2 and SW3. In the early 80s, I fell in love with the BBC world service that transmits on SW2 or 3. Next was the VOA. The BBC till date has remained my favourite news channel. Like the op, i monitored the coups of Dec 31st 1983, 1985 via the radio. Thank God for the advance in technology but things have really turned crazy in Nigeria. I pray God to restore the lost glory of Nigeria |
| Re: Things That Were In My Parlour In The 1970s And Early 1980s. by Discountsempai: 8:12am On Apr 06 |
naptu2:My maternal grandad had this in his house. Always looked like a very sophisticated piece of electronics. |
| Re: Things That Were In My Parlour In The 1970s And Early 1980s. by U09ce: 8:13am On Apr 06 |
Baba naptu2, arguably NL's top contributor to quality posts. Ese gan, Sir |
| Re: Things That Were In My Parlour In The 1970s And Early 1980s. by Discountsempai: 8:14am On Apr 06 |
naptu2:The good old 8 track players. DIsplaced by the compact cassete eventually. Now the same compact cassete is as dead as the dodo. |
| Re: Things That Were In My Parlour In The 1970s And Early 1980s. by Kobicove(m): 8:15am On Apr 06 |
LeeSmart:Na because you be Indomie Generation baby ![]() |
| Re: Things That Were In My Parlour In The 1970s And Early 1980s. by Kobicove(m): 8:16am On Apr 06 |
Discountsempai:Technology keeps evolving |
| Re: Things That Were In My Parlour In The 1970s And Early 1980s. by ResearchHedge22(m): 8:16am On Apr 06 |
naptu2:The good old days! Funny enough, we still got this at my parent's house. Still lying there with two big Kenwood speakers. |
| Re: Things That Were In My Parlour In The 1970s And Early 1980s. by anonimi: 8:17am On Apr 06 |
CJStarz:Was that why progressive governors then prioritised education for all children, in schools with adequate number of well paid teachers ![]() |
| Re: Things That Were In My Parlour In The 1970s And Early 1980s. by Discountsempai: 8:17am On Apr 06 |
Osariemen12: ![]() I was a child of the 1980's and even then some of those things were already yesterday's story..that 8 track player is a good example In 1988, was messing around in one of the rooms in the house where I grew up in, and found some old 8 track players (kept there by an old friend of my father's for some reason). Did not know what they were at all. |
| Re: Things That Were In My Parlour In The 1970s And Early 1980s. by Discountsempai: 8:21am On Apr 06 |
Kobicove:Literially My phone can now do the work of my local bank branch, play videos and live tv, play music, play radio, play computer games, give me directions while I am driving, show me sattelite images of my city, and give me a satellite view of where I live, take clear photographs, and even look up where people are. I can even buy groceries , clothes and so forth using it. Back in 1993, I would have needed separate pieces of equipment plus visit some physical building to do the above...if I was an adult as I am now. And a phone back then was just an instrument for recieveing and making calls. |
| Re: Things That Were In My Parlour In The 1970s And Early 1980s. by ResearchHedge22(m): 8:23am On Apr 06 |
naptu2:Am beginning to have a tinge of nostalgia. We played this growing up. The console is still at home till today. |
| Re: Things That Were In My Parlour In The 1970s And Early 1980s. by Discountsempai: 8:25am On Apr 06 |
Ojady:Well, my family had some of those things , but if you told my father he was rich, he would have laughed at you. Back in the 1980's and 90's, my parents had side hustles . Especially after the time SAP was introduced. |
| Re: Things That Were In My Parlour In The 1970s And Early 1980s. by naptu2(op): 8:26am On Apr 06 |
Discountsempai:SAP! It was SAP that changed everything. You didn't have to be rich to have all these but that changed after SAP. |
| Re: Things That Were In My Parlour In The 1970s And Early 1980s. by sunnedee: 8:26am On Apr 06 |
naptu2:Omo. You be ancestor! We had all these too except the telephone and game console. When my father passed away, I couldn't discard them and kept all his electronics for years. I still have the black and white TV at home right now. Weldone op for the memories. |
| Re: Things That Were In My Parlour In The 1970s And Early 1980s. by zedman1(m): 8:27am On Apr 06*. Modified: 8:17pm On Apr 06 |
Mirasteel:I was expecting this comment, but when I look back, were all these things good compared to what's in use now? See, we even had the privilege of replacing the old black and white TV with a "colour" TV, but that one, there were some times we had to give it a hard slap to reset the colour - lol, a malfunction though. Most homes then only made use of vegetable oils on special occasions because of the cost. Palm oil was what we mostly used. Rice, not even the stone-free rice, was mostly prepared on Sundays and on special occasions. Most of us only heard about Uncle Ben's stone-free rice; we neither saw nor tasted it until the early 90's. If you wanted to visit a friend, irrespective of how far their location was, if you or they don't have a telephone (Land line), just know your journey is a gamble, 'cos you might not meet them at home and you have no one to blame for that. And to think that we didn't even belong to the lower class then. This was what most people in the middle class experienced. There are things I don't fancy when I look back to those days, particularly during the military era. Well, as per security, there were more cases of house robbery and road blocks by robbers, yet we could still say it was better then than now, cos there were no bandits, terrorists or mass murder cases as compared to now. A single bad news was heard by almost everyone across the country, whereas today, people carry on like nothing happened even if hundreds of persons lost their lives in a day. There has also been a great increase in moral decadence now, with little to no empathy or sympathy. In summary, like someone once said, things change, some for good and others for worse but our minds are conditioned to forget about bad thiings of the past more than the good ones. We remember the good ones more, hence the saying " the good old days". So in essence, there's no such thing as the good old days. We just remember the good times of the past. |
| Re: Things That Were In My Parlour In The 1970s And Early 1980s. by ResearchHedge22(m): 8:32am On Apr 06*. Modified: 8:57am On Apr 07 |
naptu2:I remember the cord. We still got this at home too. It just become obsolete as the years passed. The VHS tapes my Dad bought back then are still at home till this very day. He's got so much stuffs from way back. Still figuring out what we might do with them. You just brought back all those memories. |
| Re: Things That Were In My Parlour In The 1970s And Early 1980s. by IbnB: 8:32am On Apr 06*. Modified: 11:01pm On Apr 06 |
Ojady:That guy is in his mid fifties at least...and he still doesn't have enough sense to see through Tinubu's scams |
| Re: Things That Were In My Parlour In The 1970s And Early 1980s. by TheStoriesOfMan: 8:33am On Apr 06 |
SisterAnn:I'm telling you. I used to respect him until he started reasoning haywire. With the way the economy is going, I doubt if he can afford a Roomba. |
| Re: Things That Were In My Parlour In The 1970s And Early 1980s. by naptu2(op): 8:35am On Apr 06 |
ResearchHedge22:It was because of the rectangular shape of the remote and the cord that I converted it into my "microphone" while watching music videos. |
| Re: Things That Were In My Parlour In The 1970s And Early 1980s. by Treasure17(m): 8:38am On Apr 06 |
Elders dey this forum for real. |
| Re: Things That Were In My Parlour In The 1970s And Early 1980s. by TheStoriesOfMan: 8:40am On Apr 06 |
Those legacy objects you say in the 70's was what I had in the 50's. America and Japan were producing new gadgets, especially the Atari games far back in the 60's. I worked in NPA, so I got them first hand before anybody in the country does. Good ol days when travelling from Nigeria to UK was a snap of the finger. Na monthly allowance I dey use fly plane. You didn't even mentioned terrestrial dish mounted on the ground with thick iron poles. When I checked my store, I had so many gadgets as a single man that year. I just smiled. |
| Re: Things That Were In My Parlour In The 1970s And Early 1980s. by edydeyemi(m): 8:44am On Apr 06 |
Axis313:I follow doff my hat for Oga Naptu2, na boss him be. I grew up in the era of black & white TV, Nitel ring dial telephones, turntables with massive Kenwood speakers, Video cassette players with attached remotes (ours was a Hitachi Video player that had a calendar up to the year 2010 ), video sender devices that let you broadcast movies to closeby neighbours. And yes, the first video game I ever played was Pac-Man; my primary school introduced computer studies when I was about to leave in '96, and we were permitted to use the PC for a couple of minutes every Wednesday. Boy! Life was much simpler back then. |
| Re: Things That Were In My Parlour In The 1970s And Early 1980s. by JuanDeDios: 8:44am On Apr 06 |
Flangelo12:
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| Re: Things That Were In My Parlour In The 1970s And Early 1980s. by Giigglee: 8:46am On Apr 06 |
naptu2:This is really back when |
| Re: Things That Were In My Parlour In The 1970s And Early 1980s. by johnie: 8:47am On Apr 06 |
naptu2:In the early days of the VCR, our parents used to warn us about taking the cassettes out of the house. Why? It was a way thieves knew which houses had VCRs and target! At a time, musical videos became popular on shows like those hosted by Olisa Adibua on NTA 2 Channel 5 (can't remember the name of the show now). We would set our video tapes in the VCR machine so we could selectively record the songs we liked live. We would replay them after. This was a good way to learn the songs, dance moves, etc. |
| Re: Things That Were In My Parlour In The 1970s And Early 1980s. by Mercury12(m): 8:48am On Apr 06 |
naptu2:Agbawo. .... nah tape cassette i dey use to lol |
| Re: Things That Were In My Parlour In The 1970s And Early 1980s. by naptu2(op): 8:49am On Apr 06 |
johnie:Olisa Adibua - Top of the Pops. I remember the day he wore a t-shirt (with no collar) and tie. I also remember the day that he was flinging viewers' letters. The video clubs really helped with music videos from around 1985 onwards. We were members of Cosmo and VideoMart. |
| Re: Things That Were In My Parlour In The 1970s And Early 1980s. by johnie: 8:53am On Apr 06 |
naptu2:I got to know the meaning of LP, EP, Side A & B and tracks through this. These carried on to the audio cassettes. Those coming across the term "track" today may not realise it came from the tracks (circular ridges on the discs. |
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