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Nostalgia Machine
Nostalgia Machine
13 m

50 Vintage Items From ‘Grandma’s Pantry’ People Found And Shared Online
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50 Vintage Items From ‘Grandma’s Pantry’ People Found And Shared Online

The post 50 Vintage Items From ‘Grandma’s Pantry’ People Found And Shared Online appeared first on Pleated Jeans.
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Clips and Trailers
Clips and Trailers
16 m ·Youtube Cool & Interesting

YouTube
"Any mexicans in your trunk?" | A day in the life of US troops | Stop-Loss | CLIP
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Fun Facts And Interesting Bits
Fun Facts And Interesting Bits
16 m

The States With the Largest Credit Score Decreases, Ranked
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The States With the Largest Credit Score Decreases, Ranked

Recent data shows every state dropped in average credit score year over year.
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The Lighter Side
The Lighter Side
18 m

Gen Z asked people about the best things Boomers have done and the replies were refreshing
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Gen Z asked people about the best things Boomers have done and the replies were refreshing

The Baby Boomer generation (those born from 1946 to 1964) often gets flak from younger generations. From their unique texting style to their approach to grandparenting and their perceived "angry" attitudes, Boomers are widely criticized.But one Gen Zer on Reddit was curious about the good Boomers have brought into the world and asked a question aimed at surfacing positive takes on their impact: "What are the best things Boomers have done?"People shared their thoughts on the great things Boomers have contributed to society. From social activism to supportive parenting and out-of-this-world cooking, here are 10 things to appreciate about Boomers: Boomers laugh together.Photo credit: Canva"Let's not forget how vocal and persistent the civil rights activists of the Baby Boomer generation were when protesting, including against the Vietnam War and racism and against women's oppression. Let's not forget how hard the artists, and especially musicians, of that generation worked to lift their voices LOUDLY and unflinchingly. Those Boomers served as my blueprint growing up, and they helped me see how to be a humanitarian." - BloodyBarbieBrains"The recipes... I love all the pastries... Cookies and cakes!" - Ambitious_Welder6613"Women in the workplace. Women able to get loans without a husband's signature. Civil rights." - Minute-Frame-8060 Elton John GIF Giphy "They gave us some pretty good music. Elton John, David Bowie, Stevie Wonder, Jimmy Page, Patti Smith, Neil Young, Elvis Costello." - gramersvelt001100, Ok_Still_3571"I never hated Boomers like many others did. I find that most Boomers, especially those born in the 50s seem to understand the world is hard for youth and are sympathetic. The most generous people I know are Boomers whether it's tipping or giving you a gift for a small favor. I feel much of the hate is unwarranted and unfair." - Erythite2023"Baby boomers get a lot of sh*t, but they heavily contributed to a lot of good things: civil rights, LGBTQ rights, women's rights, workplace protections, environmental laws, car safety standards, emission standards. If they screwed some things up, they also got a hell of a lot of things right. Boomers just lived their lives like everyone else does, doing the best they could. I really think when people complain, they should be honest about what they're doing differently than boomers did, and how they're going to make the world a better place so their grandchildren don't blame them for everything, too, which they probably will despite all efforts." - Electric-Sheepskin Boomer couple poses together.Photo credit: Canva"One big thing I credit them with is normalizing not having to dress so formally all the time for public settings. They were the ones who said 'f*ck no' to having to wear suits or skirts just to go run errands. I know they caught flak for that but I am very grateful for it?." - Antique_Remote_5536"My parents were baby boomers. while they certainly had their own set of issues, one thing I will always admire is their work ethic. It was one of the last generations that was raised with very little poor-me if that makes sense. My dad would show up to work with a good attitude and get all of his duties done without complaining while having the flu. Not because he didn't want to stay home but because that was just — normal back then. You made things work. He put his families security first over his sickness." - Forward-Air-4462"They created the best forms of music and media. I don't care what anyone says today's stuff doesn't even begin to compare to the entertainment boomers created." - AroundTheBlockNBack"Changed what it meant to age, mostly in positive ways. Older people were cast aside by industry and culture much quicker before they came along." - AnswerGuy301
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The Lighter Side
The Lighter Side
18 m

A woman named Annie shared a mini-rant about name jokes and opened a floodgate for others
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A woman named Annie shared a mini-rant about name jokes and opened a floodgate for others

As someone named Annie, I've spent decades fielding jokes made about my name, from references to "Little Orphan Annie" to "Annie Get Your Gun" to "Little Annie Oakley" to everyone's favorite lyric from Michael Jackson's "Smooth Criminal." So when a fellow Annie shared a public message on behalf of all of us, I'd never felt more seen:"Hi, I speak for all women named Annie when I say this. Yes, we are okay. Yes, we know the sun will come out tomorrow. No, you are not clever for making those connections. Yes, I have heard it every time I meet a new person. You are not the smooth criminal who struck me. Thank you." from mildlyinfuriating If I had a nickel for every time I've heard, "Annie, are you okay?" and a dime for everyone who followed that up with, "I bet you never hear that, huh?" I'd be a wealthy woman. Obviously, there are more important things in the world than having your name become a meme, but it is mildly annoying to hear the same jokes over and over again your entire life, politely pretending that whoever is telling it this time is oh-so-clever. (Though, I will say, the commenter who wrote, "On behalf of everyone I just want to thank you for your white cheddar shells," did make me laugh.)Apparently, Annie's mini-rant hit a nerve, not just with other Annies but with everyone whose name comes with the same pop culture references over and over. - YouTube www.youtube.com The comments are filled with people pointing out the repeated name jokes they've spent their life putting up with, and it's wild how many there are:"Hi, I speak for all women named Jenny when I say...my number is not 867-5309, you do not, in fact, have my number.You can be fooled by the rocks that I've got, because I'm not, I'm not Jenny from the block.""Yes. I'm a Tiffany. And no, we're not alone now.""Similarly, no I will not beam you up. Also, I do know." – Scotty"And here I am just wondering why people keep asking me where my lamb is and concerned about how my garden grows…" – Mary"Joelene here. Yes, I will steal your man. All your men. They’re mine now.""Hi Annie, I'm a white girl named Becky.....""On behalf of all A-A-rons, it's not funny anymore." A famous Key and Peele skit ruined Aarons forever. Giphy "Chiming in for all Jakes here. We've seen the commercials. Yes, khakis, very clever.""As a Maria, I'm very tired of people always singing my name. Too many damn songs with my name in it and it drives me insane how often it happens.""My name is Hannah and my last name isn’t Montana and I know it’s a palindrome and also I am not a banana. I give it all a pass usually (with the palindrome I get to pretend to be Woo Young Woo) but I’m kind of done with the banana thing.""Try being a man named Jesse and having people tell you they wish they had your girl. ?""And are you saying that not all Roxanne's are working the street for money???""As a Felicia - quit saying bye. It’s old.""As a Sam, I would like to travel back in time and assassinate Dr. Seuss so I feel you.""As a Luke, the next person that claims to be my father owes my mother child support." Poor Luke. Giphy "Jagger here. No, I don’t have the moves.""I feel it. My name’s Victoria. I get asked about my secrets a lot.""As an Eileen, I already know I have to not be a klutz or else I get people singing Come On Eileen.""As a Robin, please don’t 'tweedle dweedle deet' at me, or ask me where Batman is. I am not rockin’ and I truly don’t know.""Feel ya girl. My name is Brandi. Used to work at a golf course club as a bartender/drink cart girl. The amount of times I’ve gotten 'you’re a fine girl?' Or 'what a good wife you would be' I got to the point where I’d avoid saying my name. ? Yes, I’ve heard THAT song before sir! & I love it so stop ruining it for me."It may seem silly, but whether a name is connected to a popular cultural reference is something parents might want to consider when choosing names for their kids. While occasional jokes aren't the end of the world, sometimes it can be a genuine issue, as one person shared:"As I’ve gotten older, I can deal with the annoying 'Sweet Caroline' references, but as a kid, it would make me so uncomfortable when adults would start enthusiastically singing it to me. My parents let me go by my middle name for a lot of my childhood because people really don’t listen when a kid says they’re uncomfortable, but of course, people would ignore that and demand my 'real name' and the cycle would start again."Of course, name memes can't be predicted, as the people in the comments named "Isis" and "Tesla" can attest. And learning to take these things in stride probably builds character or something. But it is good to keep in mind: when you feel tempted to make an obvious name joke, the person on the other end has probably heard it a million times and might be over it. As an Annie, I'm telling you: I'm okay. But I'm over it.
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The Lighter Side
The Lighter Side
18 m

How those giant colorful parachutes became a gym staple in the '80s and '90s
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How those giant colorful parachutes became a gym staple in the '80s and '90s

You’d be hard-pressed to find a Gen Xer or Millennial who doesn’t have fond memories of making giant mushroom caps, rolling and bouncing beach balls, or chasing classmates while holding onto a multi-colored parachute. Part of its timeless magic was because, unlike traditional sports or merciless dodgeball, parachute play encouraged play for play’s sake, not establishing winners and losers. But how exactly did this game become such a staple of the ‘80s and ‘90s? Well, that's a story every bit as colorful as the parachute itself. As explained by popular “research party” host Phil Edwards, the first mention of parachute play dates all the way back to the ‘60s, largely thanks to a physical education teacher named Betty Henrie, who wrote the first parachute play guidebook. In it, she described parachute play as a “quite vigorous” and “very stimulating” method for all children to reap the benefits of exercise, including those with disabilities. - YouTube www.youtube.com The inclusive nature of parachute play would eventually catch the attention of the founders of the “Whole Earth” movement (an "outgrowth of the hippy movement,” as Edwards put it) in the ‘70s. As a direct response to the Vietnam War, the Whole Earth movement sought to invent and popularize games that strayed away from competitiveness and promoted getting along through a manual called The New Games Book. Naturally, parachute games fit the bill and made it into the book. And ever since, educators have been recognizing its benefits. One guide from 1981 hailed it as “ideal for introducing movements to children with severe multiple impairments. Children who might have a hard time gripping a ball or holding a bat could more easily hold a parachute.”Parachute Day: The true story behind your favorite gym class memory. byu/hbktommy4031 inTikTokCringeParachutes are still being used in schools to help kids hone motor and social skills. The simplest, most common games include:Cat and MouseOne “cat” is placed on top of the parachute, and up to three “mice” under the parachute. The cat tries to tag the mice as the other kids shake the parachute to hide the mice. Merry-Go-RoundTwo groups move in a circle, one moving clockwise and the other moving counterclockwise with the parachute, to create a spinning motion that mimics the circular movement of a merry-go-round.Making Waves/Shaking The ParachuteThis one’s pretty self-explanatory. Make big waves, small waves, ripples, tidal waves with the parachute…so simple yet so fun. Other games might incorporate nursery rhymes or songs, balls, seasonal items, etc. They might even be used as a way to wind down after more active games. Parachute play is nothing if not versatile. It goes to show that even though kids are inundated with trendy new tech, some classic methods remain superior, due in no small part to the intentions involved in making them. As Edwards concluded in his video:"It's not this super random and fun thing; it's actually the contribution of dedicated and creative teachers and those who wanted to include new people in play for better vibes or better accessibility, and we all got to benefit and experience something that feels a lot like magic."
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The Lighter Side
The Lighter Side
18 m

Kansas police pulled over an '80s pop icon for speeding and it turned into a hilarious photo shoot
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Kansas police pulled over an '80s pop icon for speeding and it turned into a hilarious photo shoot

Being pulled over by the police is always nerve-racking, and it's probably even more awkward when the driver is a pop star with multiple chart-topping singles. In July 2025, one such encounter went viral after sheriff's deputies in Kiowa County, Kansas, stopped a vehicle transporting British '80s hitmaker John Waite. But instead of leading to tension, the traffic stop resulted in a genuinely wholesome moment.Waite and his band were en route to their concert at United Wireless Arena in Dodge City when they were pulled over for speeding. Sergeant Justin Rugg just happened to be a longtime fan. "I'm not even on cloud nine; I'm on like cloud 12," he said after making the stop, according to the Kiowa County Sheriff Office's Facebook page. The post continued: "It's not every day our Deputies get to pull over cool guys!!" Everyone was a good sport about the whole thing. Waite took a photo with the officer and even had his band pose for another, leaning over the hood of the patrol car and looking back at the camera in mock confusion. The band eventually made it to the show, and both Waite and the sheriff's office shared the photos. The KCSO wrote to Waite, "Have a rockin' time and check out that beautiful Kansas sky!" On his own account, the musician added, "Pulled over for speeding. Good guy cop!" - YouTube www.youtube.com "The next thing I know, I'm taking photographs with him, and we're almost wrestling"Neither the report nor the social media posts officially say whether Waite's crew received a speeding ticket, but given the cordial tone of the photo session, it seems likely they were let off with a warning.The comment sections are full of solid jokes and observations, including this one: "Excuse was he didn't want to be late for a show. He got off with a verbal. I'm going to have to try that next time." A commenter whose profile lists their occupation as a 911 dispatcher with the Kiowa County Sheriff's Office wrote: "I was just excited to dispatch on this call lol!! Freaking AMAZING!!!!! Hey, John Waite, stop in here on your way back!! It's my weekend to work so I didn't get to see you!!!!"Months later, Waite laughed about the viral encounter during an interview with the YouTube channel AccordingToAmabile."[The officer] says, 'Who are you?'" he recalled. "I'm going, 'John Waite.' He says, 'John Waite!' And the next thing I know, I'm taking photographs with him, and we're almost wrestling. Everybody's cracking up and laughing. He was a great guy! That night, I look out in the audience, and he's raging, jumping up and down about four rows back! You meet some fantastic people [as a musician]. You really do. And a lot of it's very funny." - YouTube www.youtube.com You've probably heard Waite's '80s hitsWhile many people admitted they don't recognize the singer's name, it's likely they've heard at least a few of his songs.Waite's first prominent gig came in the late '70s as the frontman and bassist of the hard rock–power pop band The Babys, best known for minor hits like "Isn't It Time" and "Every Time I Think of You." The group, which briefly included Journey keyboardist Jonathan Cain, broke up in 1981, and Waite launched a solo career the following year with his debut LP, Ignition. He enjoyed a long run of commercial success in the decade, landing 10 singles on the Billboard Hot 100, including his ultra-smooth 1984 No. 1 hit "Missing You." (If you haven't seen the music video, do yourself a favor. It's 1984 in visual form. Classic stuff.)In between his various solo projects and tours, Waite had another breakthrough moment. In 1988, he co-founded the supergroup Bad English, which scored a No. 1 hit the following year with the sleek ballad "When I See You Smile." No wonder Sergeant Rugg was so impressed. - YouTube www.youtube.com
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The Lighter Side
The Lighter Side
18 m

Ontario teen says he'll live in 'modular home' invention for a year to prove it can end homelessness
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Ontario teen says he'll live in 'modular home' invention for a year to prove it can end homelessness

Ribal Zebian, a student from the city of London in Ontario, Canada, already made headlines last year when he built an electric car out of wood and earned a $120,000 scholarship from it. Now, he's in the news again for something a little different. Concerned with homelessness in his hometown, Zebian got to work creating a different kind of affordable housing made from fiberglass material. In fact, he’s so confident in his idea that the 18-year-old plans on living in it for a year to test it out himself.Currently an engineering student at Western University, Zebian was concerned by both the rising population of the unhoused in his community and the rising cost of housing overall. With that in mind, he conjured up a blueprint for a modular home that would help address both problems. View this post on Instagram A post shared by Ribal Zebian (@ribalzebian)Zebian’s version of a modular home would be made of fiberglass panels and thermoplastic polyethylene terephthalate (PET) foam. He chose those materials because he believes they can make a sturdy dwelling in a short amount of time—specifically in just a single day.“With fiberglass you can make extravagant molds, and you can replicate those,” Zebian told CTV News. “It can be duplicated. And for our roofing system, we’re not using the traditional truss method. We’re using actually an insulated core PET foam that supports the structure and structural integrity of the roof.” See on Instagram Zebian also believes these homes don’t have to be purely utilitarian—they can also offer attractive design and customizable features to make them personal and appealing.“Essentially, what I’m trying to do is bring a home to the public that could be built in one day, is affordable, and still carries some architecturally striking features,” he said to the London Free Press. “We don’t want to be bringing a house to Canadians that is just boxy and that not much thought was put into it.”Beginning in May 2026, Zebian is putting his modular home prototype to the test by living inside of a unit for a full year with the hope of working out any and all kinks before approaching manufacturers.“We want to see if we can make it through all four seasons- summer, winter, spring, and fall,” said Zebian. “But that’s not the only thing. When you live in something that long and use it, you can notice every single mistake and error, and you can optimize for the best experience.”While Zebian knows that his modular homes aren't a long-term solution to either the homeless or housing crisis, he believes they could provide an inexpensive option to help people get the shelter they need until certain policies are reformed so the unhoused can find affordable permanent dwellings. @hard.knock.gospel What to buy for the homeless at the grocery store. ? Most people get it wrong. After being there myself, these are the survival items that actually matter ? The 2nd to last one is about more than survival—it’s about DIGNITY. We are all one circumstance away from the same shoes ? SAVE this for your next grocery run. ? IG@hardknockgospel Substack@ Outsiders_Anonymous #homelessness #helpingothers #kindness #payitforward #learnontiktok Zebian’s proposal and experiment definitely inspires others to try to help, too. If you wish to lend a hand to the unhoused community in your area in the United States, but don’t know where to look, you can find a homeless shelter or charity near you through here. Whether it’s through volunteering or through a donation, you can help make a difference.
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The Lighter Side
The Lighter Side
18 m

The magical 1982 Genesis reunion with Peter Gabriel was actually to save him from crushing debt
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The magical 1982 Genesis reunion with Peter Gabriel was actually to save him from crushing debt

On March 26, 2022, as the final seconds ticked away from Genesis’ farewell tour, the crowd at London’s O2 Arena was clearly emotional. The prog-pop band’s most famous lineup—front man Phil Collins, guitarist/bassist Mike Rutherford, and keyboardist Tony Banks—had finally reunited after a 13-year hiatus (and a temporary pandemic delay), and no one wanted this improbable run to end. But there may have been another reason for the sadness: a glaring absence onstage.Peter Gabriel had co-founded the band in 1967, helping catapult them to rock glory with his golden rasp and surreal stage antics, before leaving in 1975 to launch a solo career. Collins, previously the drummer, got the promotion to lead singer, leading the group through the commercial heights of “Mama” and “Invisible Touch.” Hardcore prog fans pined to hear Gabriel sing Genesis again, but outside of a few powerful one-offs—a tease of their epic “Dancing With the Moonlit Knight” during a 2016 solo tour, a 1999 re-recording of their starry-eyed ballad “The Carpet Crawlers”—that door remained shut. - YouTube www.youtube.com Now here he was at the O2, seated among the commoners, with an opportunity to help bring the Genesis story full-circle. Instead, he took the unselfish (if, let’s face it, slightly unsatisfying) route: avoiding the spotlight and letting his former bandmates enjoy the curtain call they’d rightly earned. (“Me going was a rite of passage, really,” the singer told Mojo in 2023. “I’d been part of the creation of Genesis, so I wanted to be there at the end.”)Here’s the thing, though: A lot of casual fans forget that Gabriel had already reunited with Genesis for an entire show—it just happened 20 years earlier. Oh, and it occurred not because of rosy nostalgia but due to mounting debt and death threats.The reunion stemmed from the financial disaster of the first WOMADGabriel staged the inaugural WOMAD (World of Music, Arts, and Dance) in July 1982, with the noble vision of sparking genuine cultural fusion. The three-day event featured British post-punk (Echo and the Bunnymen, Pigbag) and art-rock (Peter Hammill, Robert Fripp), traditional Irish folk (The Chieftains), Indian sitar players (Imrat Khan), Afro-Caribbean dance companies (Ekomé)—a legit anything-goes atmosphere that remains novel at music festivals decades later, let alone in the early days of MTV. "I [wanted] to celebrate all these fantastic musicians, art, dance, film from around the world that weren't getting exposure,” Gabriel told filmmaker John Edginton in a raw-footage clip filmed for his 2014 documentary, Genesis: Together and Apart. He had big dreams for WOMAD, and, as he noted in the 2007 book Genesis: Chapter and Verse, the first fest was “magnificent.” - YouTube www.youtube.com "We put it on during school time, so there were a lot of schools working on projects about world music; it was very exciting, fresh, passionate,” he said. “But the people just didn’t come. There was a rail strike that weekend, and even though we thought we had enough names to pull in an audience, we were hopelessly under each day, and suddenly realized the financial consequences.”Gabriel found himself in an alarming situation, receiving “horrible phone calls and death threats” from his creditors. “It was a very oppressive nightmare,” he said. Luckily, his old band stepped in—not that anyone involved would have chosen the reunion without this dire prompt.By 1982, Gabriel had been enjoying a successful solo career, crafting artful pop songs and studio experiments while tinkering with new recording technology (the Fairlight CMI sampling synthesizer, for one). He had little interest in looking backward—outside of a couple early solo tours where he was forced to play a Genesis song or two due to a lack of material, he’d more or less distanced himself from his old band. (His debut single, “Solsbury Hill,” is about his desire to leave Genesis—and the music business entirely. “I felt like I was just in the machinery,” he told Rolling Stone, citing a lyric. “We knew what we were going to be doing in 18 months or two years ahead. I just did not enjoy that.”) The band, meanwhile, had soldiered on just fine without their original front man, growing into a stadium act with Collins behind the mic. - YouTube www.youtube.com "It made sense to us"When manager Tony Smith reached out to Genesis, seeing if they could help Gabriel escape his dark spiral with a one-off benefit reunion, everyone felt it was the right thing to do. “Whether or not he felt he needed our help to get himself out of trouble, it made sense to us,” Collins wrote in Chapter and Verse, “and it certainly was not a condescending gesture.” Banks added that, beyond the kind act of helping their friend, it made sense as an act of fan service: “People had been asking us to organize some sort of get-together for years and years, and this seemed a very good reason to do it, at the same time as helping Peter pay off this particular debt. We did need a reason because it wasn’t something we were itching to do."It’s not like they hated each other: Collins had even played on Gabriel’s self-titled 1980 solo album, helping create the distinctive “gated” drum sound that became ubiquitous throughout the decade. But it was a somewhat awkward fit musically, given how far their respective sounds had diverged. "Having tried for seven years to get away from the image of being ex-Genesis, there's obviously a certain amount of stepping back," Gabriel reportedly told NME ahead of the show. "I don't think they would choose at this point to work with me … [but] I’m very grateful and I'm intending to enjoy myself." - YouTube www.youtube.com The problem was how to solve their logistical puzzle—Genesis was only still playing a few of their Gabriel-era songs, and their old front man wasn’t up to speed on any of them. They managed to arrange two or three rehearsals at London’s Hammersmith Odeon, where Genesis played a triple-header on September 28th, 29th, and 30th. The quirky set drew from Gabriel’s time in the lineup, sprinkling in one solo cut (“Solsbury Hill,” ironically) and a single '80s-era track (“Turn It on Again,” with Gabriel on second drums). Understandably, the performances were rather loose—not up to anyone’s respective standards—and the massive downpour of rain probably didn’t improve anyone’s mood.But in the widely shared bootlegs of that show, fans were just happy to see everyone on stage again. They even saw a brief reunion of the full ‘70s quintet lineup: Former guitarist Steve Hackett, who learned about the event while on vacation in Brazil, flew back to the U.K. to play on “I Know What I Like (In Your Wardrobe)” and “The Knife.” "As they’d already rehearsed up their stuff, I was only able to join the encores,” he wrote in his 2020 book, A Genesis in My Bed, “but I was thrilled to be involved with the team once more." - YouTube www.youtube.com “It felt like a bit of a dream”It’s easy to look back on the gig with a what-if feeling. Could they have somehow figured out more rehearsal time? (Probably not.) Should they have professionally recorded the event, no matter how sloppy they expected it to be? (Definitely.) “I regret it now, but I was keen not to record the show,” Rutherford wrote in his 2015 memoir, The Living Years. “I thought it would be a bit rough and ready and that it was better to be there and in the moment.”Ultimately, what matters is that with Six of the Best, Genesis accomplished their primary goal: rescuing their old friend from a terrifying plight.“It felt like a bit of a dream,” Banks wrote in Chapter and Verse. “I was very glad when it was over, because I hadn’t particularly enjoyed playing that stuff at the time. I always tended to be into what we were doing either at the time or whatever the next thing was. I was pretty glad to have left some of those old songs behind. But the audience reaction was very good, and I believe that show did go some way to sorting out Peter’s financial problem; now WOMAD is a monster thing.”Indeed. The festival re-emerged stronger in the mid-’80s and has continued annually—without death threats—ever since.Gabriel might have been watching the final Genesis show, but he was on stage in spirit. Collins gave him a shout-out during the set, and the band wrapped this historic occasion with their swirling ballad “The Carpet Crawlers,” a track Gabriel helped craft for his Genesis swan song, 1974’s The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway.Few major rock bands have replaced one iconic singer with another. Even fewer have done it by promoting from within. And while Genesis achieved such longevity because of their songwriting—the imagination, the color, the dynamics—perhaps that familial spirit had something to do with it. They weren’t always on the same page, musically or otherwise—but as Six of the Best proved, they came through for each other when it mattered most. - YouTube www.youtube.com
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Classic Rock Lovers
Classic Rock Lovers  
18 m

What was the best-selling song in 1973?
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What was the best-selling song in 1973?

Underdog story. The post What was the best-selling song in 1973? first appeared on Far Out Magazine.
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