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Windsor Forestry Tools was founded in Milan, Tennessee in 1948, specializing in the manufacturing of products for chainsaws. Often referring to their product line as 'The Windsor Cutting Train' in marketing materials and catalogs, Windsor's primary product line consisted of chainsaw bars, chains, and sprockets for all major manufacturer's chainsaws. The company continued to produce their line for decades until being acquired by a Swedish firm in the mid-'80s, something that would be repeated several times before the company's demise some time around 2010.
Tags: agriculture, chainsaw, evergreen, forest, forestry
In 1921, Harry Zabarsky and his brother, Mickey, started St. Johnsbury Trucking (SJT) with a single truck, and within a few years, had a growing fleet. Based in St. Johnsbury, Vermont, SJT grew to serve the northeastern U.S., and much of eastern Canada. The company grew and expanded heavily through acquisitions of trucking companies, operating terminals throughout Delaware, New England, New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania, and Vermont. The mid '80s saw fortunes turn for SJT in a post deregulation trucking industry, and by the end of the decade, it was clear the company was in trouble. After more than seven decades of business, St. Johnsbury Trucking officially closed its doors on June 14, 1993, leaving 4,400 hardworking people out of work.
Tags: 18 wheeler, ltl freight, massachusetts, new england, northeast
If you were a young boy in the '70s, there is a high chance that you had a shirt and/or pajamas with this 'Astro Pilot' design.
Tags: 70s kid, 70s style, astronaut, aviation, galaxy
Astro Pilot 1977
The San Fernando Valley, known locally simply as 'The Valley,' is an urbanized area in Los Angeles County, California. Situated to the north of the Los Angeles Basin, it contains a large portion of the City of Los Angeles, as well as several unincorporated areas; and the incorporated cities of Burbank, Calabasas, Glendale, Hidden Hills, and San Fernando. Much in the same way that New Yorkers bag on New Jersey, the San Fernando Valley gets dumped on by those who live in the Los Angeles Basin. Reasons range from "there's no culture" and "it's too damn hot," to "it's too far away" and "everyone who lives there is lame." This '80s 'Nuke The Valley' design was a popular one that L.A. Basin dwellers could be found wearing with pride.
Tags: 1980s, 1984, 80s kid, 80s retro, california
Founded in 1935, Harbor Tug & Barge Company was one of San Francisco Bay's first dedicated tugboat operators. In business for over half a century, at its peak, Harbor Tug maintained a fleet of 15 high-powered tugboats, and over 70 barges. Aside from guiding freighters in and out of the bay, Harbor Tug's barges were used for everything from waterfront construction and demolition projects, to the haulage of bulk materials and garbage.
Tags: barge, bay area, boat, california, golden gate bridge
Schraderbräu is a homebrew beer lagered by DEA Agent Hank Schrader in Breaking Bad, which he says is "brewed to silky perfection." His home brew is a Märzen style beer that measures a 13 SRM, with 26 units of bitterness, and 6.2% alcohol by volume. We're first introduced to Schraderbräu in Season 2, Episode 13, "ABQ," as we find Hank bottling his latest batch in his garage. This is the day he called in sick after receiving a promotion to the El Paso Intelligence Center, which disappoints his wife, Marie.
Tags: albuquerque, beer gift, beer lover, breaking bad, brewer
Mao Zedong introduced his idea of paper tigers to Americans in a 1946 interview with journalist Anna Louise Strong: "...he outcome of a war is decided by the people, not by one or two new types of weapons. All reactionaries are paper tigers. In appearance, the reactionaries are terrifying, but in reality they are not so powerful." A decade later, Mao was interviewed by Strong a second time, and invoked the concept again: "In appearance it is very powerful but in reality it is nothing to be afraid of; it is a paper tiger. Outwardly a tiger, it is made of paper, unable to withstand the wind and the rain. I believe that it is nothing but a paper tiger."
Tags: 1940s, 1946, chairman mao, chinese, chinese zodiac
Danger Doom was a hip hop project consisting of Danger Mouse and MF DOOM. Their first album, The Mouse and the Mask, was released in 2005, and followed by the Occult Hymn EP in 2006. MF Doom had stated that he hoped there would be a second Danger Doom album in which he would rap from the perspective of the cartoons and in their voices, rather than simply create stories around them. Danger Mouse was slated to reunite with MF Doom in 2008, though ultimately no reunion projects occurred before MF Doom's death in 2020.
Tags: danger doom, dj, edm, electronic music, hiphop
Danger Doom 2005
After a decade farming in rural Platteville, Wisconsin, Wilson J. Boldt joined Andrew Brothers in Platteville in a dual role as both farm and seed house manager in 1944. In 1947, he set out on his own by founding County Seedmen, and specializing in selling certified seeds and fertilizers to local farmers. Certified seeds are important to farmers as they are produced under strict seed certification standards to maintain varietal purity. Seed lots must also meet specified standards for other crops, inert matter, weed seeds, and germination. Boldt ran County Seedmen until selling it in 1968 to Dick Swart, who continued to operate County Seedmen for another 20 years until he retired.
Tags: 1940s, 1947, agriculture, country life, county seedmen
Beneke Fabricators Incorporated is a fictional fabrication company that exists in the Breaking Bad universe, making its first appearance in the seventh episode of the second season on April 19, 2009. Located at 5208 Morris Street in Albuquerque, New Mexico, the company run by Ted Beneke, who assumed ownership from his father who had founded the firm. Skyler White had worked for the company as their bookkeeper when Ted's father was running things, but later returns to her old job working for Ted. The exterior shots of Beneke Fabricators were filmed at the real world location of 2241 Phoenix Ave NE in Albuquerque.
Tags: beneke fabricators, breaking bad, fabrication, iron worker, labor union
The Dorm That Dripped Blood is a 1982 American slasher film that follows four college students who stay on campus over the Christmas break. The students are tasked with cleaning out a condemned dormitory, when an unknown assailant begins stalking and murdering them. Filmed on a Los Angeles college campus in December 1981, the film was originally released in the United States and United Kingdom under the title Pranks in 1982. When its distributors found the title to not be conducive to box-office sales, the film was re-titled The Dorm That Dripped Blood and re-released in 1983. In the United Kingdom, it suffered significant censorship due to its graphic violence, earning its inclusion on the British film "video nasty" list.
Tags: 80s, 80s movies, cinema, cinephile, college
The Atlantic Earth Festival was founded in 1989, in Rosebud, right in the heart of the southwestern Nova Scotia countryside. Attendees camped right at the festival site in a large field, enjoying a weekend of folk music in celebration of the earth. Held on the first weekend in June, the festival was used as a vehicle to celebrate the earth and create awareness for pesticide free farming and global environmental concerns. In 1992, the festival moved to Seaview Memorial Park in Halifax, and remained there until the final event in 1998.
Tags: 90s music, climate change, earth day, environment, environmental
Tower of Pizza opened its doors to the denizens of the Las Vegas Strip back in 1964. Behind the business with the iconic leaning tower neon sign was Gaspare "Jasper" Speciale, a well-known bookie and loan shark from New York. Serving traditional New York style pizza and authentic Italian dishes into the small hours, Tower of Pizza quickly became the late night spot for entertainers to grab a bite after performing at the casinos. The joint was also known as a mob hang-out where many deals went down in the dark corners and back rooms over the years. In 1979 Speciale sold the business to Bobby Capozzoli, the son of a California restaurateur who'd moved to Vegas. In the mid '80s, when the rent tripled, Capozzoli moved it out to Boulder Highway.
Tags: 1960s, 1964, casino, gambling, italian
Hemp is a botanical class of Cannabis Sativa cultivars grown specifically for industrial and consumable use that was first spun into usable fiber 50,000 years ago. Along with bamboo, hemp is one of the fastest growing plants on Earth, and also like bamboo, hemp be used to make a wide range of environmentally friendly products. It can be refined into a variety of commercial items, including paper, rope, textiles, clothing, biodegradable plastics, paint, insulation, biofuel, food, and animal feed. Despite hemp's limitless applications, the plant was first struck down by the Marihuana Tax Act of 1937, and then became a victim of the '70s 'war on drugs' in America due to its association with marijuana.
Tags: cannabis clothing, cannabis culture, cannabis gift, cannabis sativa, earth day
Founded in the mid-sixties in Overland Park, Kansas, American Freight System grew from a Midwest regional short haul carrier to a national long haul powerhouse inside just two decades. By the mid-eighties, American was operating close to 200 terminals from coast to coast with a fleet of 1,600 tractors and 5,200 trailers, making them the fourth-largest trucking company in the United States at the time. Unfortunately, the company sold themselves to an investment group in 1988 that promptly stripped the company for a quick profit, leaving American Freight System as a footnote in the history books.
Tags: 18 wheeler, american freight system, delivery, freight, kansas
Star Frontiers is a space opera role-playing game that is set near the center of a spiral galaxy. A previously undiscovered quirk of the laws of physics allows starships to jump to "The Void," a hyperspatial realm that greatly shortens the travel times between inhabited worlds, once they reach 1% of the speed of light. Four races — Dralasite, Humans, Vrusk, and Yazirian — have independently discovered this way of travelling vast distances, and in "The Frontier Sector," they form the United Planetary Federation (UPF). A large number of the star systems shown on the map of the Frontier sector in the basic rule book are unexplored and undetailed, allowing the game master to put whatever they wish there.
Tags: 1980s, 1982, 80s gamer, d20, dnd
Ripcord Games began as a publishing label of Panasonic Interactive Media in 1997, and is probably best known for Postal, its debut game, and the Spec Ops series. In 1999 Ripcord Games was spun off from the parent company and sold, but continued to operate as it had previously, but as a privately held company. The company partnered with Southpeak Interactive for publishing, but when Southpeak suddenly dissolved in November 2000, so did Ripcord's much needed funding. Although the company had the most experience publishing games for the PC, Ripcord had announced and promoted several console titles, but without the financial support it required, Ripcord shuttered their offices in 2001 and stopped publishing.
Tags: arcade, console gamer, gamer apparel, gamer gift, gamer life
The Planets, Op. 32, is a seven-movement orchestral suite by the English composer Gustav Holst, written between 1914 and 1917. In the last movement the orchestra is joined by a wordless female chorus. Each movement of the suite is named after a planet of the Solar System and its supposed astrological character. Overcome by the power and clamor of Mars, Holst desired peace. Hence, ‘Venus, the Bringer of Peace. In Holst view on the progression of life, after all the clamor and anxiety of Mars, Venus would be clear to come next and give some calm. Peace can only reign supreme when the warring power of Mars has spent itself. The opening horn solo, answered by three phlegmatic flutes, is an invocation to peace...
Tags: 70s aesthetic, 70s style, equality, feminism, feminist
The Minnesota North Stars were a professional ice hockey team for 26 seasons, from 1967 to 1993. The North Stars played their home games at the Metropolitan Sports Center in Bloomington, Minnesota, and the team's colors for most of its history were green, yellow, gold, and white. The North Stars played 2,062 regular season games and made the playoffs 17 times, including two finals appearances, but were unable to bring home the cup. After the 1992–93 season, the franchise moved to Dallas.
Tags: 1960s, 1967, bloomington, hockey fan, hockey life
The Kansas City Southern Railway Company (reporting mark KCS) was an American Class I railroad. Founded in 1887, it operated in 10 Midwestern and Southeastern U.S. states: Illinois, Missouri, Kansas, Oklahoma, Arkansas, Tennessee, Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana, and Texas. KCS had the shortest north-south rail route between Kansas City, Missouri, and several key ports along the Gulf of Mexico. The focus of the routes was the fastest way to connect Kansas City to salt water ports as it was 800 miles from Kansas City to the Gulf of Mexico compared to 1,400 miles between Kansas City and the Atlantic Ocean ports. KCS operated over a railroad system consisting of 3,984 route miles that extend south to the Mexico–United States border.
Tags: engineer, kansas city, kansas city southern, locomotive, midwest
Silicon Graphics, Inc. (stylized as SiliconGraphics, and later rebranded as SGI) was an American high-performance computing manufacturer founded in Mountain View, California in 1981. SGI was dedicated to manufacturing high-performance workstations, software design, and supercomputers for professionals specializing in 3D graphics. At its peak in the '90s, Silicon Graphics had legendary status among 3D artists and graphic designers who leveraged the unique power of these workstations as they were at the bleeding edge of visual computing. The '90s also saw Silicon Graphics workstations become the go-to workstations in Hollywood, with SGI machines contributing special effects, post-production work, and 3D animation to over 40 major productions.
Tags: 3d modeling, commodore 64, computer, designer, developer
Based in Southern California, International Racing Enterprises Ltd. was an off-road race organizer and promoter behind several Baja style racing events throughout the '70s and '80s. Not much more info on them, but hey, it's an off-road racing design with a cool old school race buggy, so what's not to like?
Tags: 4x4, 70s aesthetic, 70s style, baja, baja california
Big Sur is a rugged and mountainous section of the Central Coast of the U.S. state of California, between Carmel and San Simeon, where the Santa Lucia Mountains rise abruptly from the Pacific Ocean. It is frequently praised for its dramatic scenery, and has been called the longest and most scenic stretch of undeveloped coastline in the contiguous United States. The views, redwood forests, hiking, beaches, extreme surfing, and other recreational opportunities have made Big Sur a popular destination for visitors from around the world. With 4.5 to 7 million visitors annually, it is among the top tourist destinations in the United States. Despite its popularity, the region is heavily protected to preserve the rural and natural character.
Tags: 70s aesthetic, 70s style, beach, big sur, ocean
Big Sur 1976
Released in 1987, into the Pandemonium is the third studio album by Swiss extreme metal band Celtic Frost. The album is vastly different from the band's previous work which cemented its late '80s avant-garde metal term; it is also a departure from the style found on the band's previous albums, Morbid Tales and To Mega Therion that Celtic Frost had become known for. However, it does have the recurring symphonic elements found on previous albums. The album has a more classic heavy metal style within the songs with elements of industrial, classical, gothic rock and doom metal. The album's cover image is a detail from the right (Hell) panel of The Garden of Earthly Delights, a triptych painted in 1504 by Hieronymus Bosch.
Tags: album cover, black metal, celtic frost, death metal, demon
Inn-Square Men's Bar in Cambridge, Massachusetts originally started as a men’s only bar (yes, that was a thing) back in 1964. It was as a favorite watering hole for local public works employees, who practically kept the place in business on their own. In the '70s, the bar was sold, and while it was still called the Inn-Square Men's Bar, they added a little 'ladies invited' under the name, and it soon evolved into one of the most well-loved music venues in town. The Inn-Square was a small, warm neighborhood bar with great taste in music, featuring both local and national bands that might otherwise not get to play. Despite the bar's second act being a huge success, the Inn's liquor license wasn't renewed in 1984, bringing an end to the bar.
Tags: 1970s, 1974, 70s, boston, dive bar
Luckie's Massage & Sauna was a Chinese style massage parlor located in downtown San Francisco. In business from 1974 to 1982, Luckie's provided traditional Chinese style massage to the downtown crowd so that they didn't have to make their way out to Chinatown.
Tags: china, chinatown, chinese, chinese massage, happy ending
Crystal Castles is an arcade game released in 1983 where the player controls a bear who has to collect gems located throughout trimetric-projected rendered castles while avoiding enemies, some of whom are after the gems as well. Crystal Castles is one of the first arcade action games with an ending, instead of continuing indefinitely, looping, or ending in a kill screen, and to contain advance warp zones. Crystal Castles has nine levels with four castles each, and a tenth level with a single castle—the clearing of which ends the game. Each of the 37 castles consists of a maze of hallways filled with gems and bonus objects and also includes stairs, elevators and tunnels that the player can use as shortcuts.
Tags: 1980s, 8 bit, 80s arcade, 80s style, 8bit
Jazz is a music genre that originated in the African-American communities of New Orleans, Louisiana, in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, with its roots in blues and ragtime. Since the 1920s Jazz Age, it has been recognized as a major form of musical expression in traditional and popular music. Much like the erratic flight of a butterfly, jazz does not have a set style, but rather many styles, which leaves the definition of jazz hard to lock down. Without set rules they have to follow, a jazz musician can play various styles, and since jazz can be played with a variety of instruments, this only adds to the confusion of defining the genre.
Tags: 70s style, butterfly, guitar, guitarist, jazz age
Centurions: PowerXtreme is a syndicated 30 minute American science fiction animated television series produced by Ruby-Spears and animated in Japan. Top comic book artists contributed to the design and concepts of the show, while Japanese anime artists handled the character designs. The series run began in 1986 as a five-part miniseries, and after being well received, was followed by a 60 episode run. The show centered around the adventures of a unit of elite soldiers who wear special exoskeletons that accept various weapons and equipment teleported from their HQ in a low orbit space station. The toy line followed this premise very well, allowing kids to snap on gear accessories using multiple attachment points.
Tags: 80s, 80s cartoons, 80s kid, 80s tv, action figures
Prodigy Communications Corporation was an online service that operated from 1984 to 2001 that offered its subscribers access to a broad range of networked services. Prodigy grew and evolved to become one of the major internet service providers of the '90s. The company claimed it was the first consumer online service, citing its graphical user interface and basic architecture as differentiation from CompuServe, which started in 1979 and used a command-line interface. By '94, Prodigy was the first of early dial-up services to offer full access to the web and to offer web page hosting to its members. Two years later, they retooled as a true ISP, making its main offering internet access branded as Prodigy Internet.
Tags: 1984, 80s retro, coding, developer, dial up
Despite appearances of being Russian in origin, Relsky vodka was actually made in Sweden, beginning in 1721. As Russian vodkas gained in popularity in the early 20th century, Relsky's identity began to morph, giving the illusion of being from Russia without actually saying as much. From the red bearded Cossack with the Papakha hat, to frequent use of images of Moscow in advertising, they really drove it home. While Sweden does produce some quality vodkas, history says that Relsky wasn't one of them, and was largely considered a bottom shelf brand.
Tags: alcohol, beard, cccp, cossack, drinking
Chewing tobacco is a type of smokeless tobacco product that is placed between the cheek and lower gum to draw out its flavor. It consists of coarsely chopped aged tobacco that is flavored and often sweetened; it is not ground fine like dipping tobacco. Unwanted juices are then spat, which is, well, pretty gross, but for those who enjoy a good chew, it's a lifestyle. This '70s design is for those folks who chew and want to give others a heads-up that at any time they could spew some nasty tobacco spit in their direction, so in that light, this is almost like a warning message.
Tags: 70s aesthetic, 70s style, chewing tobacco dip merch, cowboy, dip
Earth Day was first celebrated in 1970 and in the decades since has grown to include countless events coordinated globally in more than 193 countries. Over the years, there have been quite a few slogans used to promote the event and the environmental conservation it espouses, but 'give earth a chance' is probably one of the better ones.
Tags: 1970, 1970s, 70s style, climate change, earth