Nostalgia Machine
Nostalgia Machine

Nostalgia Machine

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Kaia Gerber Leaves Fans Seeing Double As New Campaign Revives Memories Of Cindy Crawford
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Kaia Gerber Leaves Fans Seeing Double As New Campaign Revives Memories Of Cindy Crawford

Fashion fans have spent years pointing out the striking resemblance between Kaia Gerber and her famous mother, Cindy Crawford. With every new photoshoot and public appearance, the comparisons seem to grow stronger, and her latest campaign may be one of the clearest examples yet. According to InStyle, the model recently appeared in a new advertisement for denim brand Re/Done, and many fans immediately noticed how much she resembled Crawford during her supermodel peak in the late 1980s and early 1990s. The images quickly sparked conversations online, with many calling the resemblance almost unbelievable. A New Kaia Gerber Campaign Brings Back Supermodel Memories             View this post on Instagram                         A post shared by RE/DONE (@shopredone)   The latest Kaia Gerber campaign showcased the model in the relaxed, timeless style that has become closely associated with both her and her mother. Wearing classic denim and Converse sneakers, she embraced a simple look that highlighted the effortless fashion aesthetic both women have become known for over the years. 14 March 2024 – Beverly Hills, California – Kaia Gerber. World Premiere Of Apple TV+’s “Palm Royale” at the Samuel Goldwyn Theater. Photo Credit: Billy Bennight/AdMedia The campaign also marks an important step in her growing involvement with Re/Done beyond modeling alone. Earlier this year, she joined the company as both an investor and creative partner, signaling her desire to play a larger role in the creative side of the fashion industry as her career continues to evolve. Following Her Own Path While Honoring Her Roots Cindy Crawford, Presley Gerber, Rande Gerber / ImageCollect Despite the comparisons, Kaia Gerber has made it clear that she wants to build her own identity while appreciating her mother’s influence on her life and career. She has often spoken about her love of timeless fashion and classic style. Meanwhile, Cindy Crawford has welcomed the comparisons, saying she enjoys watching her daughter develop her own voice in the industry. Rather than competing, the two celebrate each other’s achievements and share an appreciation for enduring style. LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, USA – NOVEMBER 15: Model Kaia Gerber and mother/model Cindy Crawford arrive at the 6th Annual InStyle Awards 2021 held at the Getty Center on November 15, 2021 in Los Angeles, California, United States. (Photo by Xavier Collin/Image Press Agency) The mother-daughter duo have appeared together at events and campaigns over the years, frequently reminding fans of one of fashion’s most recognizable family resemblances. Their shared features and similar sense of style continue to capture attention wherever they appear. For many observers, the latest images simply reinforce what fans have been saying for years: Kaia Gerber may be creating her own legacy, but she also carries a remarkable connection to one of the defining supermodels of an earlier generation. Next up: Chuck Norris Is Receiving A Special Honor On An Unusual Holiday The post Kaia Gerber Leaves Fans Seeing Double As New Campaign Revives Memories Of Cindy Crawford appeared first on DoYouRemember? - The Home of Nostalgia. Author, Ruth A

WATCH: The First Trailer For The True Story Behind Sylvester Stallone’s ‘Rocky’
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WATCH: The First Trailer For The True Story Behind Sylvester Stallone’s ‘Rocky’

Nearly 50 years after Rocky inspired audiences around the world, a new film is preparing to tell the remarkable story behind its creation. The first trailer for I Play Rocky has now arrived, giving fans a look at the struggles and determination that transformed an unknown actor into one of Hollywood’s biggest stars. According to Amazon News, the upcoming movie focuses on Sylvester Stallone’s fight to bring his screenplay to life at a time when few people believed in either the script or the man who wrote it. For longtime fans of the franchise, the story may feel almost as inspiring as the film that eventually changed movie history. The Story Behind The Ultimate Underdog Film X The new I Play Rocky movie follows a young Sylvester Stallone as he refuses to give up on his dream of not only writing Rocky but starring in it as well. Despite facing repeated rejection and pressure to hand the role to a more established actor, Stallone remained determined to play Rocky Balboa himself. Is that young Sylvester Stallone? Nie, to Anthony Ippolito na planie filmu “I Play Rocky”: Filmweb/X That decision became one of Hollywood’s most famous gambles. The film portrays the obstacles he faced while trying to convince studios that he belonged in the leading role. Looking back today, audiences know that his gamble paid off, but the trailer reminds viewers just how uncertain the outcome once seemed. A New Generation Will Discover The Story X Academy Award-winning director Peter Farrelly brings the story to the screen, with Anthony Ippolito portraying the young Stallone during this pivotal period of his life and career. The supporting cast helps recreate 1970s Hollywood and the difficult journey to get Rocky made. I Play Rocky arrives nearly fifty years after the original film debuted in 1976, celebrating a story that continues to inspire audiences around the world. X For fans of the franchise, I Play Rocky offers an opportunity to see the real underdog story that happened behind the scenes. The movie promises to show that the determination audiences admired in Rocky Balboa may have first belonged to the actor who fought just as hard to bring him to life. With the trailer now generating excitement, many movie lovers are already preparing to step back into the world that gave birth to one of cinema’s most beloved heroes. Next up: Kaia Gerber Leaves Fans Seeing Double As New Campaign Revives Memories Of Cindy Crawford The post WATCH: The First Trailer For The True Story Behind Sylvester Stallone’s ‘Rocky’ appeared first on DoYouRemember? - The Home of Nostalgia. Author, Ruth A

The Many Pulpy Delights of Gold Key’s Star Trek Comics
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The Many Pulpy Delights of Gold Key’s Star Trek Comics

  Star Trek ran for only seventy-nine episodes before the show was cancelled in 1969. Two years. It might have gone the way of mid-60s two-season shows that hit high marks with critics then faded away. (Ever heard of CBS sitcom ‘The Governor and J.J.’? It won Julie Sommars a Golden Globe.)  There are as many explanations for its eventual success as there are new versions of Star Trek.  I would not venture to chart exactly how an often campy, expensive sci-fi show with middling ratings, diverse casting, and surprisingly progressive politics even managed to even get a second season in the mid-1960s, much less launch a franchise—a ‘universe’, as they say—that continues to expand and get cancelled, in perpetuity. Histories abound from cast and crew and fans alike. To even approach the issue, however, one must keep two important things in mind.      The original series (TOS, officially), gets remembered as fantasy wish-fulfilment for nerds, a characterization cemented in the minds of Black Mirror fans by a pair of season-spanning episodes. But Star Trek was mainstream prime-time prestige television for its time, running against proven hits Bewitched and My Three Sons. The show secured five Emmy nominations (one for Outstanding Drama Series) in its first year.  In renewing the show for a second season, ‘NBC may have hoped the publicity’ surrounding its critical recognition ‘would have translated into increased viewership’, notes Michael Kmet at Star Trek Fact Check. (Spoiler: it didn’t.) The second thing we forget about the time of TOS is that it launched a merchandising juggernaut nearly on par with Beatlemania, anticipating manic toy-store tie-ins of 80s children’s cartoons, although with a slightly more literary bent (the first tie-in Star Trek novel debuted in the same year as the show). There were cereal box tie-ins (send away for six free masks from Kellogg’s Corn Flakes) and bizarre toys that made no sense.      Before the show itself became a cartoon in 1973, it was a licensed comic book. Not the 18-issue Marvel Star Trek series of repute, but a long-running series of stories produced by Western Publishing imprint Gold Key comics, an outfit that made comics for other TV programs (even ‘The Governor and J.J’ got one) and had its own stable of heroes from the far-flung future and prehistoric past (such as ‘Magnus, Robot Fighter’, and ‘Turok, Son of Stone’).      Gold Key Star Trek comics came out in the series’ first year, 1967, and ran until 1979, when Marvel acquired the license from Paramount (and could only use characters and concepts from the first Star Trek movie). There’s a case to be made for these comics as a key driver of the show’s grassroots popularity, ratings-be-damned. The series outlasted the original show by over a decade. ‘Stories by Dick Wood, John David Warner, George Kashdan, Len Wien and others were all, as I recall, mostly solid,” comics writer Paul Kupperberg opines.  Those many solid stories would count for little if the  Gold Key art were not fantastic, pulpy fun of the best sort. That starts with brilliantly-designed covers which, at least in the first few years of the series, mixed photography from the show with art and design that seems to bring together the aesthetics of Blue Note album covers with a more lurid, giallo art style. The strange mix derives from the fact that the comic’s first illustrators, Italian comic artists Nevio Zeccara and Alberto Giolitti, hadn’t seen the show.       ‘Sure, we’d get scenes with the Enterprise looking as if it had exhaust fumes coming out of the nacelles and secondary hull, giant pink tricorders, and phasers that looked more like they belonged in the company’s Flash Gordon book. Also, the artists seemed to have a problem properly drawing Uhura and Chapel. Chekov was hardly in this series and, when he was, he wasn’t very memorable.’ —Warp Factor Trek     Spock often features as the cover star, reflecting the way Leonard Nimoy’s character broke out and became a major star of the show, to the dismay of network executives, who thought his pointy ears made him look Satanic. (Gene Roddenberry recalls NBC telling him after a fight, ‘fine, leave him in, but keep him in the background, will you?’.)      It didn’t seem to matter tremendously to readers of the comics that the art inside suggested a different universe than the one appearing on TV each week for two years. And after the series ended, the writers and artists could take the plots anywhere they wanted, although ‘later stories did their best to capture the continuity and feel of Star Trek,’ superfan Bob Vosseler notes.  Those comic writers had to answer to the world’s most obsessive fan community after all. When it came to the art of the Gold Key Star Trek comics, however, dramatic license was and could be taken, to the delight of at least one fan: ‘I always kind of wished the guys who drew the Star Trek comic had designed the TV show as well’, Kupperberg writes. ‘The interiors of the Enterprise were way more elegantly futuristic than the squared-off plywood boxes of the show, and they dressed members of landing parties in cool jumpsuits.’ Indeed. See more classic Gold Key covers just below.       The post The Many Pulpy Delights of Gold Key’s Star Trek Comics appeared first on Flashbak.

Chuck Norris Is Receiving A Special Honor On An Unusual Holiday
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Chuck Norris Is Receiving A Special Honor On An Unusual Holiday

For decades, Chuck Norris became known around the world as a martial arts champion, action hero, and pop culture icon. Whether audiences knew him from Walker, Texas Ranger or the countless stories that turned him into an internet legend, his influence stretched far beyond television screens and movie theaters. According to Click2Houston, today, however, many people closest to him believe his greatest achievement may not lie in Hollywood at all. Instead, they point to the nonprofit organization he created with his wife, Gena Norris, and the thousands of young lives it has influenced. A Celebration Of Service And Leadership Chuck Norris/Instagram Recently, family members gathered in Texas alongside Raising Cane’s founder Todd Graves to celebrate the life and impact of Chuck Norris while launching the company’s National Chicken Finger Day campaign. The event honored not only the actor’s entertainment career but also his decades-long commitment to helping young people succeed. WALKER, TEXAS RANGER, Chuck Norris, 1993-2001, © CBS/courtesy Everett Collection The campaign focuses on supporting Kickstart Kids, the nonprofit organization founded by Norris and his wife to teach students confidence, discipline, leadership, and character through martial arts training. During the event, Raising Cane’s announced a fundraising commitment of up to one million dollars to help continue that mission and expand its reach to even more young people. A Legacy Bigger Than Hollywood WALKER, TEXAS RANGER, from left: Chuck Norris, Clarence Gilyard Jr., 1995 (1993-2001). ph: Tony Esparza /© CBS /Courtesy Everett Collection Many fans will always remember Chuck Norris for his action scenes, martial arts skills, and unforgettable television moments. Yet those closest to him increasingly describe him as a husband, father, mentor, and humanitarian whose proudest achievements came away from the spotlight. Through Kickstart Kids, he has spent years helping students develop respect, perseverance, responsibility, and self-confidence. WALKER, TEXAS RANGER, Chuck Norris, 1993-2001. © CBS /Courtesy Everett Collection The campaign also gives supporters a chance to participate through promotions and fundraising events tied to National Chicken Finger Day. Organizers hope the effort introduces a new generation to the work that remains important to the Norris family. As celebrations continue, the tribute reminds fans that Chuck Norris’ legacy extends far beyond action scenes and famous kicks. For many young people touched by his programs, his greatest role may be that of teacher and mentor. Next up: Sam Neill’s Cause Of Death Confirmed Following The Actor’s Unexpected Passing At 78 The post Chuck Norris Is Receiving A Special Honor On An Unusual Holiday appeared first on DoYouRemember? - The Home of Nostalgia. Author, Ruth A

Toothpaste through the decades, from tube concept to the fluoride breakthrough (1892)
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Toothpaste through the decades, from tube concept to the fluoride breakthrough (1892)

A century of vintage toothpaste ads and tubes, from 1890s tooth powder to Crest's fluoride breakthrough and beyond.