Recent comments in /f/OldSchoolCool
[deleted] t1_j6i3i35 wrote
DredgerDI6 t1_j6i31od wrote
Reply to Barbra Streisand (1970s) by ShoKKa_
Saw What's up Doc during my formative years and I fell head over heels.
Hooray4Metaphors t1_j6i2yfa wrote
Reply to Barbra Streisand (1970s) by ShoKKa_
MargbarKhamenei1401 t1_j6i2jpd wrote
Reply to comment by hosehoseee in Barbra Streisand (1970s) by ShoKKa_
Why ruin a beautiful post with a Trump comment?
[deleted] t1_j6i2dzn wrote
Reply to Barbra Streisand (1970s) by ShoKKa_
[removed]
Baxter1911 t1_j6i250n wrote
HOT đ
Thelegend26_ t1_j6i1utu wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in Bouncer Cairo Mary exiting a customer from Shanghai Red's bar in San Pedro, CA 1953 by foofoofum
Whyâd you just copy the comment someone made on the original post lol
Kiyohara t1_j6i1spz wrote
Reply to My great-grandfather, Paris (circa 1930) posing with the carriage and the horses that would drown him in the Seine. by thoxo
Well, if they were going to kill him, he probably should have sold them and gotten new ones. Or kill one as a lesson to the rest.
betasp t1_j6i0w31 wrote
Reply to Target Checkout Lanes 1990s by Djf47021
You can tell this is old because I see more than 3 lanes open.
Hooray4Metaphors t1_j6i0t1r wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in Buster Keaton, Roscoe Arbuckle, and Al St. John, 1918. Once his deadpan persona became established, Keaton avoided smiling in front of a camera. by L0st_in_the_Stars
Keaton and St. John both died at 70. Keaton was a couple years younger though.
randomdude5566 t1_j6i0mid wrote
Reply to My great-grandfather, Paris (circa 1930) posing with the carriage and the horses that would drown him in the Seine. by thoxo
Not the ending to the story I was expecting
Torkzilla t1_j6i03pu wrote
Reply to comment by jeronisaurus in Target Checkout Lanes 1990s by Djf47021
I worked at a superstore about 20 years ago and it had 30 checkout lanes and 15-16 of them were staffed with humans at all time. Even late night there were 4-5 open. The automated registers and completely unstaffed huge swath of checkout lanes is a very recent phenomenon.
whip_m3_grandma t1_j6i00vb wrote
Reply to comment by Alatarial in Twins, 1987 by Alatarial
Unless they died I couldnât care less, donât post ugly babies online and expect not to hear about it.
blazeproof t1_j6i007y wrote
Reply to Lisa Loeb and Sarah McLachlan 1998 by indikacat
Nice.
JaBoTX t1_j6hzn45 wrote
Reply to Target Checkout Lanes 1990s by Djf47021
All lines open...... Those were the days
hesaidshesdead t1_j6hzn1q wrote
Reply to Barbra Streisand (1970s) by ShoKKa_
Little guy behind her is having a whale of a time!
TinaLikesButz t1_j6hzkly wrote
Reply to My great-grandfather, Paris (circa 1930) posing with the carriage and the horses that would drown him in the Seine. by thoxo
Awesome photo. Your grandfather was very handsome. Any idea of his trade? Those horses are huge.
krokus_headhunter t1_j6hzhlt wrote
Reply to Lisa Loeb and Sarah McLachlan 1998 by indikacat
Endfest. Standing in the sun tripping on acid watching/listening to Sarah was something I'll never forget. Just fell head over heels in love with her.
So_Do_You_Like_Stuff t1_j6hyemm wrote
Reply to comment by Hadochiel in Barbra Streisand (1970s) by ShoKKa_
Robert Smith is the greatest person who ever livedâŚ'Disintegration' is the best album ever
olyhawk OP t1_j6hydkn wrote
Reply to comment by Reign_n_blud in Me rockin' the big hair and mustache, 1986. by olyhawk
Thanks! Yeah it basically just looked like a little dirt on my upper lip!
jraynack t1_j6hybfd wrote
Reply to Kids in France during WWII. Photo taken by my dad that I had never seen until yesterday. The kids look like from the movie âThe Sandlotâ or âGooniesâ. by sdtriathlete
The kid on the right looks like Babyface Finster, the gangster from Looney Toons!
angelfieryrain t1_j6hxsvm wrote
Reply to Target Checkout Lanes 1990s by Djf47021
I kind of miss working there in the late 90s. They had some decent employee discounts that extended to Hudsons and Marshall Fields.
pdawg37 t1_j6hxkyw wrote
Reply to My great-grandfather, Paris (circa 1930) posing with the carriage and the horses that would drown him in the Seine. by thoxo
The Original Truck Nuts attached to the wagon (by the wheel). Classic.
Hooray4Metaphors t1_j6i3u00 wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in Buster Keaton, Roscoe Arbuckle, and Al St. John, 1918. Once his deadpan persona became established, Keaton avoided smiling in front of a camera. by L0st_in_the_Stars
Indeed. Crazy amount of talent in this picture