I was born in 1974, so I don't remember too much. Am I lucky?
Disco
Abba, my mom was a big fan and probably still is. They're also a guilty pleasure of mine.
Gold Key comics.
Whitman comics
Star Wars
Jaws
All In The Family
The Jeffersons
Diff'rent Strokes
Laverne & Shirley
Happy Days
Fruit Stripe gum
Record players
Big huge headphones for listening to record players and the radio.
8-track cartridge tapes.
Rotary dial phones.
Black and white TVs
Dials on TV sets.
Remote controls only having one button and needed a cord to connect them to the set.
TV antennae.
Only having three channels (including the one that was only in French), but having lots of good shows. Pretty much the exact opposite of today.
Pong
Pinball
Space Invaders
Lava lamps
Comic book ads for Sea Monkeys and joke items.
That comic book ad where a skinny guy gets bullied by a big musclebound dude who runs off with his girlfriend, and then later they show the skinny guy in his house angrily kicking at nothing as he looks at a book and decides to order some bodybuilding kit. Six months later he's a stud with big muscles flexing in the mirror, he goes back to the beach, beats up the bully and gets his girlfriend back. They must have lived in a warm climate because where I live there would be snow and ice everywhere six months after summer, when I assumed the story first took place.
Scooby-doo
The Dark Age of Animation, although it really began in the 50's with the invention of TV.
Popeye Candy cigarettes. (they later just called them candy sticks and removed the red coloring on their tips).
McDonaldland
KFC still being called Kentucky Fried Chicken, and those funny plastic banks of Col. Sanders with big heads.
A & W was still a drive-in.
Lik M. Aid Dip and Lick candy. They were these packets of powdered candy like the kind in Pixy Sticks, and they came in three or four packets with two candy sticks that you licked and dipped in the powder to eat. It usually took you a few days to eat it. If you could eat a packet at one sitting without getting sick, you pretty much accomplished a miracle. They still make the candy but it's really different-looking.
Bottle Caps. They were a candy shaped like bottle caps in different soda-type and fizzed when you put them in your mouth. I remember being drawn to the colorful picture of the Kilroy-style bottle cap character on the package.
Hostess potato chips coming in foil and paper packets instead of plastic ones.
It sounds like we ate a lot of junk food, but most of the time my mom kept healthy things like fruit and veggies in the fridge and we usually ate that for snacks. Candy and salty snacks were normally only once in a while
Pudding coming in cans instead of plastic cups. Sometimes the ring would come off it but I usually could just pry the lid open with my spoon.
Calling Toucan Sam "the Froot Loop bird", and when I once saw a real toucan on TV I was amazed to see a real live Froot Loop bird.
My mom working as a waitress at a bowling alley restaurant that has closed down years ago.
My dad being away most of the summer at his job as a fisherman, but mom being home because the bowling alley where she worked closed for the summer. I used to enjoy all the extra attention I got from my mom.
The Coca-Cola "I'd like to teach the world to sing" Christmas commercial.
The Muppet Show.