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How Old Are We?

Posted: Thu Apr 24, 2008 8:46 pm
by Carol the Dabbler
I've been wondering what the correlation -- if any -- might be between one's generation and the likelihood that one is a Magnum fan. (You can vote without creating a post if you prefer to be anonymous. :wink: )

Posted: Thu Apr 24, 2008 9:08 pm
by Little Garwood
I was born in 1971 (as I *just now* posted on my Hawaii Five-O thread! :lol: ) And while I'm not from Magnum's generation, I was at that wonderfully impressionable age and MPI was *my* show growing up. :wink:

Posted: Thu Apr 24, 2008 9:25 pm
by Doc Ibold
I was born in '79, so I GUESS you could tab me in the "Lily" Generation

Posted: Fri Apr 25, 2008 4:44 am
by SelleckLover
I won't reveal my age, but my first car was a 1961 Chevrolet Corvair, with a 4 cylinder air cooled rear mounted engine. Every once in a while it wouldn't start and I had to bang on the alternator or generator, I can't remember which, with a Coke bottle and then it would start. It was a 3 speed stick shift with a bench seat and a dashboard made out of what seemed to me to be really heavy cardboard...(!) Everyone used to kid me about having 2 chipmunks on a treadmill for an engine because it was considered a really, really small car. (Wow, I remember a lot about that car!) :D I had a pair of really cool jeans that I hand embroidered (I was a good flower child!) and my mother threw them away one day while I was at school because she said it made me "look like a bum". LOL (This was in the days when public schools had dress codes and you couldn't wear jeans to school.) There were no copy machines so we had to make copies on a typewriter with carbon paper, no cell phones, iPods, Walkmans, MP3 players...there was only AM radio to listen to for music. (The Corvair had no radio in it.)

Geez...it sounds so primitive now, even to me! :D :D

Posted: Fri Apr 25, 2008 8:17 am
by Carmen
Okay, I was born 1965, my whole family loves to watch MPI, so let`s go on with the dates. Husband 1965 too and my sons where born 1990, 1993, 2002 and 2004. I can add my Dad as a fan (not as big, but anyway) born 1942.

Posted: Fri Apr 25, 2008 12:30 pm
by Vanity
I was born in 1970 - had the right age to watch the show as soon as it aired, one year and two days later than in the US.

Posted: Fri Apr 25, 2008 2:22 pm
by J.J. Walters
I'm pushing the big 4-0. Good heavens! :shock: I was at various stages of teenage wasteland during the show's initial run. The show was a rock of stability and grounding during an otherwise crazy time for me.

Posted: Fri Apr 25, 2008 2:24 pm
by Little Garwood
SelleckLover wrote: There were no copy machines so we had to make copies on a typewriter with carbon paper, no cell phones, iPods, Walkmans, MP3 players...there was only AM radio to listen to for music. (The Corvair had no radio in it.)

Geez...it sounds so primitive now, even to me! :D :D
LOL I have an obsession with what I call "Clunky Technology." Stuff from the 1960s-70s (and before) that was unwieldy, large with various handles, dials, and switches that served only a few purposes. Reel-to-Reel tape recorders...Mission: Impossible is a goldmine for stuff like this, as is Hawaii Five-O. Seems to me that gadgets should be obvious and not-so slick. They're more fun to see in action!

Posted: Fri Apr 25, 2008 4:48 pm
by SelleckLover
Case in point, Little Garwood...the cordless phone Magnum uses every once in a while looks like a brick with an antenna on it! LOL :D

Posted: Fri Apr 25, 2008 8:14 pm
by IKnowWhatYoureThinking
James J. Walters wrote:I'm pushing the big 4-0. Good heavens! :shock: I was at various stages of teenage wasteland during the show's initial run. The show was a rock of stability and grounding during an otherwise crazy time for me.
James I think that would describe quite a few of us on here. I just turned 39 in March. During Magnum's run the show was kind of a get away from craziness. In fact, I still look at the show as a way to get away for a little while.

Posted: Sat Apr 26, 2008 4:01 am
by Carol the Dabbler
SelleckLover wrote:I had a pair of really cool jeans that I hand embroidered (I was a good flower child!) and my mother threw them away one day while I was at school because she said it made me "look like a bum". LOL (This was in the days when public schools had dress codes and you couldn't wear jeans to school.) There were no copy machines so we had to make copies on a typewriter with carbon paper, ... there was only AM radio to listen to for music.
Hey, SL, you must be younger than me (I'm about 6 weeks older than Tom Selleck, which is to say a year or two older than Magnum -- depending on which of his birthdates you believe). By the time embroidered jeans were popular, I had my own apartment (with roommates), so my wardrobe was safe from Mom (who *had* thrown away my stash of Mad magazines!).

I was a high-school teacher then, and as you said, nobody could wear jeans to school -- girls couldn't even wear slacks, and teachers were expected to dress like grown-ups. Xerox machines were just coming in, but the school didn't have one yet, so I ran off my tests on a "ditto" machine, technically known as a spirit duplicator -- the freshly-made copies still smelled like the solvent used, so the kids would "sniff" them. FM radio was the latest thing, but only old people listened to it then, because all they played was classical music.

Posted: Sat Apr 26, 2008 4:35 am
by SelleckLover
Yeah, Carol...I said I wouldn't reveal my age -- but I guess I will now. I'm 56, soon to be 57 or "pushing sixty". (UGH!) My husband is just turned 63 in March. (He was born in 1945 approx. 2 months after Mr Selleck.) He spent 4 years in VietNam, on the flight deck of the aircraft carrier USS Constellation. BTW, the flight deck of an aircraft carrier is the MOST dangerous 4 acres in the WORLD. The fact that he came home alive is a miracle!

Posted: Sat Apr 26, 2008 9:24 am
by Carmen
Hey Carol, I can remember sniffing them copys!! :lol:

Once I received an e-mail about "good old times", describing childhood back in the 60th and 70th. It was mostly about friendship and how we where raised back then without permanent parental control by cell phones, no computers, playing in the streets till sundown, climbing trees, having fights (again without parents involved)
My kids can`t believe the only time to watch TV for me at the age of 5 or 6 was daily between 5.00 and 6.00 pm, (in Germany we had 3 channels to choose back then, and only from 5.00 untill midnight)

Posted: Sat Apr 26, 2008 9:16 pm
by AJL
23, seems to be the youngest around here :wink:

Posted: Sun Apr 27, 2008 12:49 am
by sophia
Hey, Sellecklover
We already knew your age anyway.
You told us how old you were in 1980 in the Magnum experiences post.
I was born the same year as your first car. :lol:
I haven't thought about my first car in years.
It was a Chevrolet Impala.
I called it my tank. You could get lots of friends in that car and it could really fly.