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Thursday, January 17, 2013

Moisturizing Jeans


http://www.vogue.co.uk/news/2013/01/16/wrangler-launches-moisturising-jeans-modelled-by-lizzie-jagger

They're jeans that moisturize your legs. Wouldn't they feel....I don't know, wet, clammy, weird?........

Forgotten Cigarette Brands

(Update 2/18/14: See also my post on electronic cigarettes.)

(Update 3/30/15: See also Forgotten Cigarette Brands Part II)

Cigarettes today are not what they used to be.

Well, let me rephrase that. Cigarettes have always been gross and deadly. But these days, a cigarette smoker is pretty much considered as low as a crackhead in some circles. Though it's nice the smoking awareness campaigns have brought the graphic evils of tobacco to dinner hour TV screens, I have to admit, they're as pointless as the anti-marijuana PSAs of the '60s to the '90s.

Besides, NOTHING can convince an innocent kid not to take up smoking more effectively than a kiss from a chain smoking aunt.

In the old days, you used to have a dizzying variety of cigarette choices available at your local grocery/convenience store (more than 50!). Today, there's about 10 or even fewer brands in most places. Today, most brands are available exclusively over the internet. Retail stores get their stock from a state regulated middleman. Which is why in many states (namely Washington State), there is so little variety.

But for remaining smokers, fire up a menthol and enjoy this stroll down the tobacco aisle of yesteryear....


Tareyton - My dad used to smoke these. No longer available in many areas, but they are available on the internet through RJ Reynolds.


 Kent - My mom used to smoke these.


Virginia Slims - Another disappearing brand of women's cigarette.


More - An icky tasting super long and thin "120" cigarette. I snagged a pack of these from the rack at Fred Meyer when I was a kid. They looked weird, so I though they'd taste cool (with that funky brown paper.) They were flat out GROSS.


Satin - "With a LUXURIOUS satin tip", never mind the tobacco inside was garbage. Satin was an '80s upstart brand. I knew of these by the free pack coupons they used to stuff in every Sunday newspaper.


Yves St. Laurant - A fashion designer's death by design. Another '80s brand.


Merit - Another former brand of choice. Of all the low-tars, I actually LIKED Merits. They were tolerable. But Merit was one of those "old peoples" brands that seemed to disappear rapidly.



Doral - A '70s brand.


Multifilter - Known for having two different filters, but the same result.



Vantage - A filter cigarette with a giant hole in the middle of the filter.


Sterling - An 80's brand


Benson & Hedges - Another disappearing brand and the first marketed for the "upscale" crowd.


Eve - A long thin women's cigarette

Viceroy - Never smoked this brand, but it was big in the '60s.


Lucky Strike - Motto "It's toasted" Just like your lungs after smoking a pack.



Chesterfield - A non-filtered smoke, popular from the '20s - the '60s when even by then, it was an "old people's cigarette" Before Kool and their jazz festivals in the '70s and '80s, it was popular with radio DJs (and immortalized as such in Donald Fagan's song "The Nightfly".) I never thought they were that spectacular


Raleigh - This was the brand your old neighbour probably smoked.


Dave's - A '90s brand still being made, Known for it's folksy magazine ads that made you think it was made by some average person, just like you, who wanted a better smoke than what those big corporations offered. Fact: It was made by Phillip-Morris the whole time.


Scotch Buy - Now here was an unusual brand made by RJ Reynolds for a corporate supermarket chain (Safeway and subsidiaries.) Safeway discontinued Scotch Buy and distanced itself as far as possible from the brand in the '90s when cigarette manufacturers were being sued. Smart move. They tasted like crap anyway.


 Bel/Air - One of the better menthols. Now vanished.



Carlton - The lowest tar and nicotine of any cigarette (without the nicotine, there's no point in smoking cigarettes.) Memorable for it's plain magazine ads that read. "If you smoke, please try Carlton" The gist was that it was a "safer" cigarette. But they tasted HORRIBLE and the filters were so tight, you can barely draw off of one.


True - Another weird filtered low-tar cigarette.


Misty - Another '80s women's cigarette. Still being made, but instead of women, it's gay men that buy them now.


Lark - I remembered seeing these on the shelves, but I can't remember anyone who ever smoked this brand.

Cheers! (Cough!...hack!...wheeze!)

(Thanks to Cigarettespedia.com for some of the images here....)

Monday, January 14, 2013

Classic Telephone Exchanges

Back in the day, before mandatory 10 digit dialing, local phone numbers were easier to remember. They had something called "exchange names", which the first two digits of a seven digit local number were corresponded to a word, like those listed below. This is why phones today still have 3 (now 4 letters for 7 and 9) below each number. 

For example, if your number was (and this was one of my OLD phone numbers) 633-3703, with your exchange would be "Melrose" or some variation for 63 as listed below, then 3-3703 or "MElrose -3-3703". In fact, my business card back then actually listed my number as ME3-3703 (with the conventional 633-3703 in parentheses underneath.) Surprised a lot of the old timers!

This system was used widely from the '40s to the early '70s when it was phased over to 7 digit listings. It was immortalized in the Glenn Miller classic "Pennsylvania 6-5000" (which was the phone number to The Hotel Pennsylvania, which Miller frequented before his death in 1944.) Amazingly - it STILL IS.    

I still think it's a pretty classy way (if confusing way for those not in the know) to list a phone number......

(From The Bell System's "Notes on Nationwide Dialing, 1955")

22


23


24


25


26


27


28


29


ACademy


BAldwin


CApital


CAstle

ADams


BElmont


BEverly


CEdar


CEnter


CEntral

CHapel


CHerry


CHestnut


CHurchill


CIrcle

ALpine


BLackburn


CLearbrook


CLearwater


CLifford


CLinton

AMherst


ANdrew


COlfax


COlony


COngress

BRidge


BRoad(way)


BRown(ing)


CRestview


CRestwood

ATlantic


ATlas


ATwater


ATwood


AVenue


BUtler

AXminster


AXtel


CYpress

32


33


34


35


36


37


38


39


DAvenport


DAvis


EAst(gate)


FAculty


FAirfax


FAirview

DEerfield


DEwey


EDgewater


EDgewood


EDison


FEderal

DIamond


DIckens


FIeldbrook


FIeldstone


FIllmore


FIrestone

ELgin


ELliot


ELmwood


FLanders


FLeetwood

EMerson


EMpire


ENdicott


FOrest


FOxcroft

DRake


DRexel


ESsex


FRanklin


FRontier

DUdley


DUnkirk


DUpont


EVergreen


FUlton

EXbrook


EXeter


EXport


EXpress

42


43


44


45


46


47


48


49


GArden


GArfield


HAmilton


HArrison


HAzel

GEneral


GEneva


HEmlock


HEmpstead


IDlewood

GIbson


GIlbert


HIckman


HIckory


HIllcrest


HIlltop

GLadstone


GLencourt


GLendale


GLenview


GLobe

HObart


HOmestead


HOpkins


HOward


INgersoll

GRanite


GReenwood


GReenfield


GReenleaf


GRover


GRidley

HUbbard


HUdson


HUnter


HUntley


HUxley


IVanhoe

GYpsy


HYacinth


HYatt

52


53


54


55


56


57


58


59


JAckson


LAfayette


LAkeside


LAkeview


LAmbert


LAwrence

JEfferson


KEllogg


KEystone


LEhigh


LEnox

KImball


KIngsdale


KIngswood


LIberty


LIncoln


LInden

(In 1955, this



was reserved



for radio



telephone



numbers)



JOhn


JOrdan


LOcust


LOgan


LOwell

(In 1955, this



was reserved



for radio



telephone



numbers)



JUniper


JUno


JUstice


LUdlow


LUther

LYceum


LYndhurst


LYnwood


LYric

62


63


64


65


66


67


68


69


MAdison


MAin


MArket


MAyfair


NAtional

MEdford


MElrose


MErcury


NEptune


NEwton


NEwtown

MIdway


MIlton


MIssion


MItchell


NIagara

OLdfield


OLive


OLiver


OLympia


OLympic

MOhawk


MOntrose


MOrris


NOrmandy


NOrth(field)

ORange


ORchard


ORiole


ORleans


OSborne

MUrdock


MUrray


MUseum


MUtual


OVerbrook


OVerland

MYrtle


OWen


OXbow


OXford

72


73


74


75


76


77


78


79


PAlace


PArk(view)


PArk(way)


RAndolph


RAymond


SAratoga

PErshing


REd(field)


REd(wood)


REgent


REpublic

PIlgrim


PIoneer


RIver(side)


RIver(view)


SHadyside


SHerwood

PLateau


PLaza


PLeasant


PLymouth


SKyline

POplar


POrter


ROckwell


ROger(s)


SOuth(field)

PRescott


PResident


PRospect


SPring


SPruce

STate


STerling


STillwell


STory


SUnset

PYramid


SWathmore



SWift


SWinburne


SYcamore

82


83


84


85


86


87


88


89


TAlbot


TAlmadge


TAylor


VAlley


VAndyke

TEmple


TEnnyson


TErminal


TErrace


VErnon

THornwell


TIlden


VIctor(ia)


VIking


VInewood

ULrick


ULster


ULysses

TOwnsend


UNderhill


UNion


UNiversity


VOlunteer

TRemont


TRiangle


TRinity


TRojan


UPtown

TUcker


TUlip



TUrner


TUxedo

TWilight


TWinbrook


TWinoaks


TWining

92


93


94


95


96


97


98


99


WAbash


WAlker


WAlnut


WArwick


WAverly

WEbster


WElls


WEllington


WEst(more)


YEllowstone

WHitehall


WHitney


WIlliam(s)


WIlson


WIndsor

(In 1955, this



was reserved



for radio



telephone



numbers)



WOodland


WOodlawn


WOodward


WOrth


YOrktown

(In 1955, this



was reserved



for radio



telephone



numbers)



YUkon

WYandotte


WYndown


WYman

Sunday, January 13, 2013

Micronations

Ever wanted to just declare your independence and form your own banana republic?

Well, actually a LOT of people want to do that....

  
Much easier to do in the virtual world than in the real one. Not to say some haven't tried. History is filled with failed attempts at nation building:

Try this game out:

http://nationstates.net/

But that hasn't kept people from trying the real thing.

They're called "micronations". A micronation is basically a one-person government, dictatorship and subjects are usually members of one's own family (like in some areas of Utah or the South) or just themselves. A King/Queen in their own minds I guess. And the land mass is no bigger than one's own residence. 

It also pays to be absolutely insane (or have balls the size of watermelons.)

Sealand:


The most famous of these is Sealand. Sealand was created out of an abandoned man-made World War II Royal Navy base in the English Channel called Rough's Tower. 


When the Royal Navy abandoned it in 1956, a pirate radio operator named Paddy Roy Bates took it over. Since Rough's Tower was abandoned and in international waters, he declared Rough's Tower a sovereign nation and called it Sealand. Bates and his family moved there and the hobby grew, minting their own coins and stamps and issuing passports. All worthless of course, but one can dream, can't they?

http://www.sealandgov.org/

Molossia:


Located in Nevada, this guy is your basic Micronation hobbyist. This video explains everything. 


And he's STILL at war with East Germany.....

http://www.molossia.org/countryeng.html

More on micronations:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Micronation