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- Sep 3, 2018
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Not good with maps at all.
Who saw her walk away? Which direction?
Denison, Iowa is like Mars to me.
Imagine Donna Reed's hometown. That's a pretty good description.
Not good with maps at all.
Who saw her walk away? Which direction?
Denison, Iowa is like Mars to me.
I can totally see that. Runs outside to play, or maybe in a snit, maybe hiding while they call her or maybe went farther than she meant to. Then when more searchers show up, she thinks she's in trouble and sneaks back inside to hide.
Love that description -- how many of us watched that show every week -- With Shelly Fabares and that handsome son, Jeff Stone played by Paul Petersen!Imagine Donna Reed's hometown. That's a pretty good description.
I watched Donna on Nick at Nite in the 80s!Love that description -- how many of us watched that show every week -- With Shelly Fabares and that handsome son, Jeff Stone played by Paul Petersen!
And how many of us have no idea who Donna Reed and "The Donna Reed Show" are!!..
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You can even take it back a decade or so earlier as well. How many kids who grew up in the eighties had decent exposure to Bugs Bunny Daffy Duck and the like? Those cartoons were chock full of pop culture allusions from the 30s and 40s. We may not have known what the references were to, but we soaked them up.I watched Donna on Nick at Nite in the 80s!
OT, sorry: To answer your question, recently, I have gotten a sense of just how much knowledge of past pop culture has diminished in recent generations. As a child, I was familiar with the shows on TV during the 80s (Magnum, Miami Vice), the shows from the 70s that were in reruns (WKRP, Laverne & Shirley), and then the the oldies from the 50s and 60s (Donna, The Beaver). Nowadays, there is a whole genre of videos on Youtube where Millennials react to old pop culture they know almost nothing of. It's sad watching twentysomethings show their lack of knowledge of pop culture that I took for granted even as a child.