Here we go again with a blast from my past.
It's another Channel 12 holiday promo (you can check out my Christmas, Thanksgiving and Easter promos if you'd like to see more)...
Looking beyond the shaky video quality, I think it's still pretty entertaining. Maybe you noticed how the areas on the left and bottom edge of the set were visible, but back in the day because of the bezels that surrounded old television picture tubes that was never visible like it is now.
Saturday, February 13, 2010
Saturday, January 30, 2010
Stars Hall of Fame: Brochure #3
Labels:
brochures,
retro,
wax museum
Wednesday, January 13, 2010
Stars Hall of Fame: Brochure #2





Labels:
brochures,
wax museum
Tuesday, January 12, 2010
Stars Hall of Fame

On the cover of this retro-brochure is a gold Rolls-Royce, and I was informed by a reader that the Movieland in California also had a gold Rolls-Royce. This is interesting because the Movieland Wax Museum in Niagara Falls, Ontario (which a recently blogged about) also featured a gold Rolls-Royce. I guess if you run a wax museum devoted to movie stars you're required to have a gold Rolls on hand.



Labels:
brochures,
retro,
wax museum
Friday, January 8, 2010
The Year in FAIL
This video is pretty hilarious, even if some of the humans in this compilation got severely injured. It's the price you pay for Internet fame.
Wednesday, January 6, 2010
Movieland Wax Museum

Here's a retro-brochure (I think I just coined that term. Maybe I should trademark it) for the Movieland Wax Museum in Niagara Falls, Ontario.



Labels:
brochures,
retro,
wax museum
Thursday, December 31, 2009
Last post of the Decade

Earlier this month I published a post on the December 1982 issue of Electronic Games Magazine. In that post I said I planned to feature more gifts and fun stuff from the magazine in upcoming posts, and so as promised, here's one of them.
The insane ad above from United Microware Industries, Inc. for their AMOK video game has to be one of the most ill conceived ads ever. It's such a bizarre mix of imagery. Fellow blogger, Kurt at Gaming After 40, has a different "mime ad" if you wish to see more of this incomprehensible ad campaign.
I can only assume the ad designer was a friend, or maybe the mime was the daughter of the company owner. If you removed the mime, the remaining fantasy art is pretty good and you'd have a decent and more effective ad for your 1982 video game.
Labels:
ad,
retro,
video game
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)