Read A 1980s Childhood Online

Authors: Michael A. Johnson

A 1980s Childhood (10 page)

The Paul Hogan Show

The Price is Right

The Real Ghostbusters

The Rockford Files

The Secret Diary of Adrian Mole Aged 13¾

The Simpsons

The Smurfs

The Snowman

The Sooty Show

The Sullivans

The Thorn Birds

The Tripods

The Two Ronnies

The Val Doonican Music Show

The Waltons

The Wide Awake Club

The Wind in the Willows

The Young Ones

Thomas the Tank Engine and Friends

Three of a Kind

Through the Keyhole

Thundercats

Tiswas

To the Manor Born

Tomorrow’s World

Tom’s Midnight Garden

Top Gear

Top of the Pops

Transformers

Treasure Hunt

Tucker’s Luck

Ulysses 31

University Challenge

Wacaday

Wheel of Fortune

Why Don’t You (Just Switch Off Your Television Set and Go and Do Something Less Boring Instead)?

Willo the Wisp

Wizbit

Worzel Gummidge

Yes Minister

You Rang, M’Lord?

Films of the 1980s

A Fish Called Wanda

1988

Airplane

1980

Any Which Way You Can

    

1980

Arthur

1981

A View to a Kill

1985

Back to the Future

1985

Batteries Not Included

1987

Beetle Juice

1988

Beverly Hills Cop

1984

Big

1988

Biggles

1986

Bill & Ted’s Excellent Adventure

1989

Caddyshack

1980

Chariots of Fire

1981

Clockwise

1986

Cocktail

1988

Cocoon

1985

Coming to America

1988

Crocodile Dundee

1986

Crocodile Dundee II

1988

Die Hard

1988

Dirty Dancing

1987

Dirty Rotten Scoundrels

1988

Driving Miss Daisy

1989

Educating Rita

1983

Empire of the Sun

1987

E.T. The Extra-Terrestrial

1982

Fatal Attraction

1987

Ferris Bueller’s Day Off

1986

Flashdance

1983

Footloose

1984

For Your Eyes Only

1981

Ghostbusters

1984

Ghostbusters II

1989

Honey I Shrunk the Kids

1989

Indiana Jones & the Last Crusade

1989

Indiana Jones & the Raiders of the Lost Ark
                    

1981

Indiana Jones & the Temple of Doom

1984

Labyrinth

1986

Lethal Weapon

1987

License to Kill

1989

Mannequin

1987

National Lampoon’s Christmas Vacation

1989

National Lampoon’s European Vacation

1985

Never Say Never Again

1983

Octopussy

1983

On Golden Pond

1981

Out of Africa

1985

Planes, Trains & Automobiles

1987

Police Academy

1984

Police Academy 2

1985

Police Academy 3

1986

Police Academy 4

1987

Police Academy 5

1988

Police Academy 6

1989

Private Benjamin

1980

Rain Man

1988

Raise the Titanic

1980

Robocop

1987

Romancing the Stone

1984

Roxanne

1987

Santa Claus: The Movie

1985

See No Evil, Hear No Evil

1989

Shirley Valentine

1989

Short Circuit

1986

Short Circuit 2

1988

Splash

1984

Stand By Me

1986

Teen Wolf

1985

The Blues Brothers

1980

The Breakfast Club

1985

The Burbs

1989

The Cannonball Run

1981

The Fly

1986

The Goonies

1985

The Karate Kid

1984

The Karate Kid Part II

1986

The Karate Kid Part III

1989

The Living Daylights

1987

The Man with One Red Shoe

1985

The Man with Two Brains

1983

The Money Pit

1986

The Naked Gun

1988

The NeverEnding Story

1984

The Tall Guy

1989

The Terminator

1984

This is Spinal Tap

1984

Three Men and a Baby

1987

Throw Momma from the Train

1987

Top Gun

1986

Trading Places

1983

Turner & Hooch

1989

Twins

1988

Uncle Buck

1989

Vice Versa

1988

Wall Street

1987

War Games

1983

Weird Science

1985

When Harry Met Sally

1989

Who Framed Roger Rabbit?

1988

Five
T
OYS
AND
G
AMES

If your parents are to be believed, the children of their generation had nothing more to play with than a single broken marble and a small piece of lint. Apparently, they had it tough in their day and they never had all the fancy toys we were blessed with when we were growing up. And they didn’t get toys at Christmas either – instead, they were given a satsuma and a clip round the ear, and on special occasions, such as birthdays, the whole family would simply gather round the wireless to listen to the shipping forecast as a special treat. They were poor but they were happy.

Not so my generation. We were materialistic and greedy and we wanted more toys and better toys. We had so many toys we didn’t know where to put them all. I remember our next-door neighbours used to clear out all the old toys each year and take them to the tip to make space for the new toys that would arrive at Christmas.

The 1980s was a period when children were spoiled like never before and the number and variety of toys available to children was greater than at any previous point in history. We not only had the cool new eighties toys to choose from, but we still had most of the toys from the sixties and seventies as well, like Space Hoppers, Stylophones, Meccano, Fuzzy-Felt, Play-Doh, Scalextric, Pogo Sticks, Spirographs, Stickle Bricks and Weebles (they wobble but they don’t fall down). In fact, most of the toys we played with in the eighties were toys from the sixties or seventies, but as the decade wore on, an increasing variety of eighties toys were added to the mix.

Let’s take a rummage through the toy cupboard of a typical 1980s child and see what retro treasures we can find.

Big Trak

If you were a 9-year-old child given the task of delivering an apple to your father, how would you choose to do it? Would you a) simply walk over to him and hand him the apple, or would you b) get out your Big Trak robotic transporter toy, programme in a sequence of commands and then watch with glee as the Big Trak delivered the apple in its trailer to your father, before shooting the cat with its built-in photon cannon? I think the answer to that question is fairly obvious. After using the Big Trak for the first couple of times you quickly realised that it took so long to programme the sequence of commands that your dad had given up waiting, and anyway, the chances are you would enter a wrong instruction in the commands and send the Big Trak hurtling off in completely the wrong direction.

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