Sitting im my living room watching. While my grandfather kept making comment about their hair.
Sitting in my living room with the black and white tv which only got 2 or three channels. A lot of static and lot of hysteria from me because I o nly saw the screen roll up and down. Thought I would die that night.
Pammyj 9 months ago .
Because benjr gave an answer yesterday, so it showed back up on your list. The same way it showed up on mine because you asked why it was here.
At my grandmother's house, watching the Ed Sullivan show that night. They and my parents had a fit when these guys with longish hair walked onto the stage. We (the kids) loved it.
I like them plenty and am very thankfull for the direction the took music. Its is only a extremely rare few that have changed American culture so much.
At home, in the family room, watching what drivel my older brothers decided THEY wanted to watch: "Star Trek," "Hogan's Heroes," Beatles on "Ed Sullivan," all that useless tripe.
I was watching too, in my family's cramped apartment, sitting on the living-room floor on an old pillow, watching on our old black-and-white set. Remember the flack Joey Heatherton got for appearing in that show in a low-cut, clingy top? I recall it as having bold stripes, but I may be wrong.
I was 13 years old, foolish, and innocent . . .
But egads, that was love! .
Right in front of the B&W TV. All of my friends were too. I was in HS then.
What a great time that was .
I was watching too, in my family's cramped apartment, sitting on the living-room floor on an old pillow, watching on our old black-and-white set. Remember the flack Joey Heatherton got for appearing in that show in a low-cut, clingy top? I recall it as having bold stripes, but I may be wrong.
I cant really gove you an answer,but what I can give you is a way to a solution, that is you have to find the anglde that you relate to or peaks your interest. A good paper is one that people get drawn into because it reaches them ln some way.As for me WW11 to me, I think of the holocaust and the effect it had on the survivors, their families and those who stood by and did nothing until it was too late.