
...and that's what I see.
Is this what Medium Tex pulls up in to counsel you when you're considering an all-stock portfolio?
Moderator: Global Moderator



I also sell ice cream and frozen fish out of the back.smurff wrote: That's the truck he uses when he tires of the law and goes carpet cleaning.

I also sell ice cream and frozen fish out of the back.MediumTex wrote:


I was talking to my 13 year old daughter about something a while back and mentioned MTV. She looked at me blankly and said "What's MTV?"Libertarian666 wrote: You know you're really old when... you recognize "Mr. Haney" immediately.
Or maybe you aren't really old if you can still remember anything from that long ago?

When I was a kid, my parents were always talking about the 50's and about the future. When I asked why they never mentioned the sixties, and what happened during that decade, they shrugged. "Nothing." :-)MediumTex wrote: OTOH hand, over the years I have been turned on to things from the 1960s (movies, music, popular trends, etc.) and I am always amazed that my parents somehow managed to live through that era without noticing much of anything that was going on around them culturally with the exception of a very few musical acts and a handful of movies.
When it comes to the 1970s, I could talk for hours about nothing but the role of the various Trans Am models in popular culture.dualstow wrote: This just reminded me of the time travel in one of the Austin Powers movies.
(What happened during the 70s and 80s. What did we miss?)
Austin Powers: A gas shortage and A Flock of Seagulls. That's about it.

All I can think of is Burt Reynolds going to make that second run at the end of the movie. This time for clam chowder. For some reason, I am heavily into the 70s. The music, the movies, the crime, world events, everything.MediumTex wrote:When it comes to the 1970s, I could talk for hours about nothing but the role of the various Trans Am models in popular culture.dualstow wrote: This just reminded me of the time travel in one of the Austin Powers movies.
(What happened during the 70s and 80s. What did we miss?)
Austin Powers: A gas shortage and A Flock of Seagulls. That's about it.
As far as the 1980s go, you've got presidents and popes being shot, AIDS, space shuttles blowing up, heavy metal music, preppies, and baby boomers rationalizing their success and probable immortality. There was so much going on, and I wasn't really even watching that closely.
Burt Reynolds' movies made more money in the 1970s than those of any other leading actor. He simply owned the box office in the 1970s. Clint Eastwood had some good ones as well, but Burt Reynolds was The Man.dualstow wrote:All I can think of is Burt Reynolds going to make that second run at the end of the movie. This time for clam chowder. For some reason, I am heavily into the 70s. The music, the movies, the crime, world events, everything.MediumTex wrote:When it comes to the 1970s, I could talk for hours about nothing but the role of the various Trans Am models in popular culture.dualstow wrote: This just reminded me of the time travel in one of the Austin Powers movies.
(What happened during the 70s and 80s. What did we miss?)
Austin Powers: A gas shortage and A Flock of Seagulls. That's about it.
As far as the 1980s go, you've got presidents and popes being shot, AIDS, space shuttles blowing up, heavy metal music, preppies, and baby boomers rationalizing their success and probable immortality. There was so much going on, and I wasn't really even watching that closely.
In the 80s, I think I was too busy doing my homework and generally being miserable.



You were probably parked somewhere in a custom van and just missed it.TennPaGa wrote:Well, dang. I guess this shows what *I* paid attention to in the 1970's (I was born in 1961). I was a big Steelers fan, but had completely forgotten that Terry Bradshaw was in a couple of Burt Reynolds movies (I do, however, recall that he made a country record, and had his own brand of peanut butter).MediumTex wrote:![]()

