Category:
1960s

Giant foot on wheels

Rolled through the streets of Stockholm in 1966 to advertise an art exhibit. Source: The Toledo Blade - Oct 3, 1966.

Posted By: Alex - Sun Dec 29, 2013 - Comments (6)
Category: Art, 1960s

Do the President Twist

Posted By: Paul - Thu Dec 19, 2013 - Comments (9)
Category: Music, Politics, 1960s

Hot Rod Hootenanny





Surely any band named "The Weirdos" deserves a place on WU.

Posted By: Paul - Fri Nov 22, 2013 - Comments (5)
Category: Motor Vehicles, Music, 1960s

Major Mudd





Major Mudd, one of the TV heroes of my youth.

Any WU-vies want to share memories of their own lesser-known regional TV icons?


Posted By: Paul - Wed Nov 20, 2013 - Comments (11)
Category: Regionalism, Spaceflight, Astronautics, and Astronomy, Television, Children, 1960s, 1970s

Styling on the slopes


Ski mask by Emilio Pucci. From Life - Dec 7, 1962.

Posted By: Alex - Tue Nov 19, 2013 - Comments (9)
Category: Fashion, Headgear, 1960s

Johnny Seven O.M.A. Gun



Wow. Able to give the parents of 2013 seven kinds of frenzied PC headaches with one toy!

Posted By: Paul - Thu Nov 14, 2013 - Comments (6)
Category: Excess, Overkill, Hyperbole and Too Much Is Not Enough, Guns, Toys, Advertising, Children, 1960s

Abstract Controversy

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This painting was commissioned and displayed in a public building in the 1960s. It immediately aroused ire and controversy and disgust. Can you guess why?

Answer after the jump.



More in extended >>

Posted By: Paul - Sun Oct 20, 2013 - Comments (7)
Category: Art, Confusion, Misunderstanding, and Incomprehension, Death, Politics, 1960s

Underwater Barber Shop, 1966

From Weeki Wachee, Florida, which describes itself as "the only city of live mermaids."

Posted By: Alex - Fri Oct 18, 2013 - Comments (4)
Category: 1960s, Hair and Hairstyling

Special Delivery



Perhaps reviewer GE_Pretzel said it best:

Subject: A sedative masquerading as a bus safety film

There are few films that can surpass or even equal the mediocrity of Special Delivery, a horrendously cumbersome safety film for schoolbus operators that fails to captivate. Instead of simply attempting to discuss the fundamentals of schoolbus safety and procedure in a concise, forthright manner, the film's creators place the necessary educational elements within a dry, unengaging story involving Mickey Miller, a recalcitrant little boy who has developed a strong distrust of the local schoolbus and its driver, Bill Marshall. It appears that Mickey has been reading far too many James Fenimore Cooper novels, as he wears a feathered headdress and continually shoots toy arrows at the schoolbus, a vehicle that he refers to as the "white man's stagecoach." Mickey is miffed when he isn't allowed to board the bus because of his age, but shortly after he reaches "age more than five," he and his older sister Millie are taken on a special bus ride by Bill in an effort to gain the young boy's respect. After a mishmash of schoolbus operation information is conveyed during the trip, Mickey alters his attitude and begins to take well to Bill. At the end of the film, however, Bill humiliates a diminutive boy who isn't allowed to ride the bus by calling him "Shorty" right in front of all of the other children. If Bill is striving to establish a rapport with his future passengers, he certainly isn't doing a good job. This lengthy production is quite a chore to watch.

It should be a crime to wear garish horn-rimmed glasses like the ones Millie sports throughout the film.


Posted By: Paul - Thu Oct 10, 2013 - Comments (3)
Category: PSA’s, Children, 1960s, Mental Health and Insanity, Bus

Weird-Ohs

image

How could Weird Universe not do a feature on a line of model kits dubbed "Weird-ohs"...?

This blog features a good writeup on them.

image

Here's a period ad from BOYS LIFE.

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And the horrifying reality of the finished product. Buy yours now through the link below!




Posted By: Paul - Tue Oct 01, 2013 - Comments (8)
Category: Freaks, Oddities, Quirks of Nature, Hobbies and DIY, Toys, Air Travel and Airlines, 1960s, Fictional Monsters

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Who We Are
Alex Boese
Alex is the creator and curator of the Museum of Hoaxes. He's also the author of various weird, non-fiction, science-themed books such as Elephants on Acid and Psychedelic Apes.

Paul Di Filippo
Paul has been paid to put weird ideas into fictional form for over thirty years, in his career as a noted science fiction writer. He has recently begun blogging on many curious topics with three fellow writers at The Inferior 4+1.

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