2023 marks the 20th anniversary of the RECESS album. This was the cover of the CD, our first full studio album. Designed by John Otte, and messed with by Mr Molio
Tags:
70s style, lunch box, lunchbox, saturday morning cartoons, school
SuperBubbleSunshinePop! What more need be said? And why not?
SuperElasticBubblePlastic Pop & Bubblegum music from The Super Sugar Beats, bringing Saturday-Morning bubblegum & sunshine Pop hopping in the 21st century! (logo by Isaac Harrell)
Tags:
70s tv, super sugar beats, music, 70s pop culture, 1970s
SuperElasticBubblePlastic Pop & Bubblegum music from The Super Sugar Beats, bringing Saturday-Morning bubblegum & sunshine Pop hopping in the 21st century! (logo by Isaac Harrell)
Can you even wait 5 minutes !!! before you buy this !! Just add water, shake, wait and eat !!! A must have !!!! You could have a dance party while simultaneously making dessert. Just put the powder in the shaker cup, add milk, shake, and in minutes you would have a creamy treat in vanilla, chocolate or banana. Such was the beauty of Royal's Shake-a-Puddin', which also may bring to mind bubbly commercials of girls with flipped hair, miniskirts, and Go-Go boots shaking pudding to the tune of "Shake, Shake, Shake-a-Puddin'. Puddin-Puddin, Shake-a-Puddin' Mmmm- Mmmmm."
By the late 1940s, Ben Cooper, Inc. was one of the largest and most prominent Halloween costume manufacturers in the United States.Its costumes were generally very thin fabric with a silk-screened image on the front that sold for less than $3. The company began selling its costumes through large retailers such as J. C. Penney, Sears, Woolworth's, and five-and-dime stores.Costumes often sold for $1.25 ($15 in 2021 dollars). At the time, the most popular costumes were traditional Halloween figures such as devils, ghosts, skeletons, and witches. In the 1950s, television characters such as Davy Crockett, Superman, and Zorro were more popular.