Category:
1960s

Radio Sunglasses

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To hell with iPods! These are so much cooler!

Of course, the online inflation calculator I use says: "What cost $24.95 in 1967 would cost $165.76 in 2011. " Or, in other terms, roughly the cost of a new 8GB iPod Touch.

Maybe modern life is better!

From Playboy for August 1967.

Posted By: Paul - Sun Oct 14, 2012 - Comments (9)
Category: Fashion, Music, Technology, Chindogu, 1960s

Baldwin Hills Dam Disaster



Today we are used to seeing disasters unfold live on TV. But in 1963, it was all new.

More info here.

Posted By: Paul - Sun Sep 23, 2012 - Comments (5)
Category: Disasters, 1960s, TV News

The Five Man Army



Samurais and the Old West: can the combo ever not satisfy?

Posted By: Paul - Sun Sep 16, 2012 - Comments (9)
Category: Crime, Movies, Stereotypes and Cliches, Wild West and US Frontier, 1960s, Asia

Sea Lion Hide Shoes

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[From Playboy for November 1968. Click to enlarge.]

Lizard, alligator, shark--sure, I've heard of shoes made with those, and also with ostrich skin.

But sea lion?!?

I went looking and found a firm that still uses sea lion hide for various products, though I'm not sure sea lion shoes are among their offerings.

But Holy God, look at this crocodile chair!

image

Posted By: Paul - Wed Sep 12, 2012 - Comments (7)
Category: Animals, Furniture, Shoes, 1960s

The Pipes of Pain

Would you go to a dentist called Dr. Pain? Would your decision change if you knew he was going to play bagpipes for you as he waited for your anesthesia to take effect?

Unfortunately, the question is moot, since Dr. Rodney Pain, the bagpipe-playing dentist of San Francisco, is surely no longer in practice. (He's probably no longer alive.) A photo and caption detailing his unusual blend of dentistry and Scottish music ran in newspapers back in early 1966. [Saskatoon Star-Phoenix, Spokane Daily Chronicle]



More in extended >>

Posted By: Alex - Mon Sep 10, 2012 - Comments (14)
Category: Medicine, Music, 1960s

No Time for Ugliness





Imagine an idyllic era when the major problem cities faced was too much signage! And there are no foreclosure signs, even in the slums!

Yesterday's hell is today's paradise.

Posted By: Paul - Sun Sep 02, 2012 - Comments (3)
Category: PSA’s, Signage, Urban Life, 1960s

1960 Plymouth XNR Concept



Why aren't the streets of 2012 filled with such vehicles?

This one-of-a-kind car sold recently for nearly one million dollars. More info here.

Posted By: Paul - Sat Sep 01, 2012 - Comments (4)
Category: 1960s, Cars, Yesterday’s Tomorrows

Dimensions

Dimensions by Bernard Longpré, National Film Board of Canada



Ostensibly a primer in spatial awareness for kids, this drug-addled escapade is really an elaborate allegory for sexual tension. The geeky male's inability to physically connect with, mate with, or ultimately please the attractive female. Watch, and see if you don't agree.

Posted By: Paul - Mon Aug 27, 2012 - Comments (3)
Category: Confusion, Misunderstanding, and Incomprehension, Drugs, Geeks, Nerds and Pointdexters, Sexuality, Stupidity, Surrealism, 1960s

Gender-Differentiated Toy Film Projectors

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Guess which model is for boys, and which for girls....

Original ad here.

Posted By: Paul - Sat Aug 25, 2012 - Comments (9)
Category: Movies, Toys, Gender, 1960s

Walter Pichler’s TV Helmet of 1967


From db-artmag.com:
Around twenty-five years previously: a person wears a white helmet that is submarine-like in the way it extends to the front and back. His entire head disappears into the futurist capsule; only the title betrays what is happening inside it. The TV Helmet of 1967 is a technical device that isolates the user while imbedding him or her in an endless web of information: closed off against the outside world, the wearer is completely focused on the screen before his or her eyes. This work by Walter Pichler doesn't merely formally anticipate the cyber glasses developed decades later. He also articulated questions of content in relation to the media experience long before the "virtual world" was even discovered. Pichler called his invention a Portable Living Room, and this is usually interpreted as scathing sarcasm. When at least the tube is on in the living room, then we can easily do without varnished cabinets and potted violets, the title seems to say.

Read more here.

Posted By: Alex - Sat Aug 18, 2012 - Comments (7)
Category: Art, 1960s

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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.

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