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This
page contains
trivia pertaining to the seventies, as well as some fun links that are
sure to bring back a few memories.
Remember
these icons of our youth?


Keep
on Truckin', Farrah Fawcett's poster and hairstyle, lava lamps, stingray
bicycles, clackers/click-clacks, 8-track tape players, Altamonte Mall,
meatball parmesan subs at Nucci's, Taco Tico on Lee Road, no traffic
on 436, orange groves, The Springs, "Boom Boom" Bowden, bad
clothes and hairdos, NikNik shirts, patch jeans, leisure suits, platform
shoes, desert boots, disco sucks, Jaws, Star Wars, Saturday Night Live
with the original cast, tube tops, waterbeds, incense, head shops (Adolf's
Aardvark and the Infinite Mushroom), custom vans, no blow dryers, pre-AIDS,
pre-crack cocaine, polyester, powder blue tuxedos, afros, a legal drinking
age of 18 in Florida, Lil' 500 on 17-92, foosball, Hot Foots, Skate
City, Nickel's Alley, The Pitcher House, Woogie's Pub, Rosie O'Grady's,
crocheted bikinis, hot pants, go-go boots, the original glam rock bands,
patchwork clothing, glitter t-shirts, gold and silver lame, spandex
pants, Have a Nice Day, Charlie's Angels, shag haircuts, hair parted
in the middle with wings, curly perms, wearing a scarf to hide a hickey,
not being able to buy Coor's beer in Florida, gas for 35 cents a gallon,
lick-and-stick postage stamps, 10 cent pay phone calls, KC and the Sunshine
Band, Grad Night, "Calculus is a Bummer!", Jack-in-the-Box, Steve Miller
Band, FCW (Future Conquerors of the World), the mafia house... please
send a message to lbhs1976@cfl.rr.com
to add to this list!
Rocky
won the Academy Award
for Best Picture in 1976.
Movies
about the 70s that will take you back if you want to go: Dazed and Confused,
Fast Times at Ridgemont High, Bill & Ted's Excellent Adventure, Forrest
Gump, Annie Hall, Almost Famous (all highly recommended); Stoned Age,
Dick, Summer of Sam, Detroit Rock City (can't personally speak for these).
Memorable 70s music: The Eagles, Boston, Elton John, Bad Company, KISS,
Lynyrd Skynyrd, Peter Frampton, The Doobie Brothers, The Beach Boys,
Cheap Trick, Bachman Turner Overdrive, Golden Earring, Ted Nugent, Aerosmith,
Grand Funk Railroad, Fleetwood Mac, Steely Dan, The Who, Black Sabbath,
Led Zeppelin, Montrose, Deep Purple (every band that ever played at
a dance at LBHS in the 70s played "Smoke on the Water"), Styx, Loggins
and Messina, Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young (and Neil Young is still
phenomenal).
Significant
advancements since 1976: The Internet, e-mail, cellular phones, cable
TV, fax machines (now outdated), digital photography, laptop and desktop
PCs, CDs, mp3, MTV, DVDs, e-commerce, keyless entry, palm pilots, online
maps and directions, designated drivers, non-smoking sections, 3-point
shots in basketball, 2-point conversions in football, paying at the
pump, ATM machines, self-adhesive postage stamps, motor voter registration...
so why are we still voting with butterfly ballots and maintaining the
electoral college?!
Fun
Links
That
70s Show:http://www.that70sshow.com/index_home.htm
Seventies
Trivia:Home.austin.rr.com/jkendal/index.html
Baby
Boomers:www.babyboomers.com
Hit TV
Shows of the Seventies:www.tvparty.com/70hit.html
Watergate:www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/national/longterm/watergate/splash2a.htm

ritish-born
Peter Frampton established himself as a singer-songwriter-guitarist
in two late-Sixties bands, the Herd and Humble Pie. By 1975,
though, he was $300,000 in debt and working solo for $500 a
night. In desperation, he took the best songs he'd written over
the past few years and re-recorded them in concert, hoping to
capture some of that in-person excitement on vinyl. The resulting
album was a two-record set, Frampton Comes Alive!,
which sold over thirteen million copies. Not only was it the
biggest double album to that time, but it was also number one
for an incredible seventeen weeks. Three hit singles came out
of that package: "Show Me the Way," "Baby I Love Your Way,"
and "Do You Feel Like We Do." The next year, Frampton struck
again with "I'm in You" and a remake of Stevie Wonder's "Signed,
Sealed, Delivered." In 1978, Peter co-starred with the Bee Gees
in the film Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band,
and in 1979 had his last hit of the decade, "I Can't Stand It
No More." |

Kiss
-- the most successful gimmick band of all time -- made their
television debut as guests on a Paul Lynde Halloween special
for ABC. Formed in 1972, the hard rock group decided to call
attention to themselves through the use of outlandish effects:
explosive devices, snow machines, police lights, rocket-firing
guitars, levitating drums, bizarre make-up, outrageous costumes,
and a bass player who both ate fire and spit blood. By the mid-70s,
Gallup pollsters were reporting that Kiss was the most popular
act in teenage America. Ironically, three of the four band members
did not even perform on their biggest hit single, a lilting
1976 ballad, "Beth." Only drummer Peter Criss (who wrote the
song) showed up for the session, at which he was accompanied
by a 26-piece orchestra and a 30-voice boys choir. |
Other
Music Highlights of 1976:
- Bernie
Leadon, original member of the Eagles since they were organized
in 1971, leaves the group and is replaced by Joe Walsh.
- Because
of booming record sales in recent years, the Recording Industry
Association of America (RIAA) creates a new platinum award, for
singles that sell in excess of 2 million copies and an album that
sells 1 million units. The first platinum single was Johnnie Taylor's
"Disco Lady," and the first platinum album went to the Eagles for
their Greatest
Hits 1971-1975.
- A
Chorus Line opens on Broadway. It would become the longest-running
musical in entertainment history.
- Lasers
are used in a rock show for the first time, by the Who.
- Genesis
begins its first tour of America.
- Bruce
Springsteen, while playing in Memphis, tries to sneak into Graceland
to see his idol Elvis Presley. He is stopped by security guards,
who quietly lead him off the grounds, unconcerned that he is a major
star.
- Paul
McCartney begins his Wings over America tour, from which an album
by the same name would be released a year later and zoom to number
one.
- Donna
Summer's American debut single in 1975, "Love To Love You Baby,"
smolders up the charts in 1976 as part of the disco explosion.
- Prior
to the release of the album No
Reason To Cry, Eric Clapton begins a concert tour of England,
his first in years.
- Elton
John plays for a week at New York's Madison Square Garden. The summertime
concerts smash all attendance records.
The
Top 40 Singles of 1976:
- "Disco
Lady" - Johnnie Taylor (First chart appearance: 3/6/76; Highest
position: #1)
- "Don't
Go Breaking My Heart" - Elton John and Kiki Dee (7/17/76; #1)
- "Play
That Funky Music" - Wild Cherry (7/31/76; #1)
- "Tonight's
The Night" - Rod Stewart (10/23/76; #1)
- "Kiss
and Say Goodbye" - The Manhattans (5/29/76; #1)
- "Silly
Love Songs" - Paul McCartney and Wings (4/17/76; #1)
- "A
Fifth Of Beethoven" - Walter Murphy (7/4/76; #1)
- "Love
Machine (Part 1)" - The Miracles (12/13/75; #1)
- "50
Ways To Leave Your Lover" - Paul Simon (1/3/76; #1)
- "December,
1963 (Oh, What A Night)" - The 4 Seasons (1/31/76; #1)
- "Love
Hangover" - Diana Ross (4/24/76; #1)
- "Shake
Your Booty" - K.C. & the Sunshine Band (7/31/76; #1)
- "I'd
Really Love To See You Tonight" - England Dan & John Ford Coley
(7/10/76; #2)
- "Sara
Smile" - Hall and Oates (8/14/76; #7)
- "Boogie
Fever" - Sylvers (3/13/76; #1)
- "Afternoon
Delight" - Starland Vocal Band (6/5/76; #1)
- "Misty
Blue" - Dorothy Moore (4/10/76; #3)
- "Disco
Duck" - Rick Dees and His Cast of Idiots (9/4/76; #1)
- "More,
More, More" - Andrea True Connection (4/24/76; #4)
- "Love
Is Alive" - Gary Wright (5/15/76; #2)
- "You'll
Never Find Another Love Like Mine" - Lou Rawls (7/10/76; #2)
- "I
Write The Songs" - Barry Manilow (11/22/75; #1)
- "You
Don't Have To Be A Star" - Marilyn McCoo and Billy Davis (10/23/76;
#1)
- "Dream
Weaver" - Gary Wright (1/31/76; #2)
- "If
You Leave Me Now" - Chicago (8/21/76; #1)
- "Fly
Robin Fly" - Silver Connection (10/25/75; #1)
- "Rock'n
Me" - Steve Miller Band (9/4/76; #1)
- "Get
Closer" - Seals and Crofts (6/5/76; #6)
- "Bohemian
Rhapsody" - Queen (2/7/76; #9)
- "Welcome
Back" - John Sebastian (4/10/76; #1)
- "Theme
From S.W.A.T." - Rhythm Heritage (1/10/76; #1)
- "Get
Up And Boogie" - Silver Connection (4/17/76; #2)
- "Hot
Line" - Sylvers (11/13/76; #5)
- "Wreck
Of The Edmund Fitzgerald" - Gordon Lightfoot (9/25/76; #2)
- "You
Sexy Thing" - Hot Chocolate (12/6/75; #3)
- "Let
'Em In" - Paul McCartney and Wings (7/17/76; #3)
- "Love
Hurts" - Nazareth (1/3/76; #8)
- "You
Should Be Dancing" - Bee Gees (7/17/76; #1)
- "Rubberband
Man" - Spinners (10/2/76; #2)
- "Take
It To The Limit" - Eagles (1/17/76; #4)
Top
Albums of 1976:
20
Popular Movies of 1976:
Other
movies that were popular with teenagers in the 70s: Jaws, Star Wars,
Tommy, The Groove Tube (isn't this the first R-rated movie you snuck
into?), and anything with Cheech & Chong in it (and don't try to tell
me you didn't inhale).
The
Top 20 Television Shows of 1976:
News
Highlights of 1976:
- Military
spending in the world skyrockets to $300 billion a year.
- The
Winter Olympics are held in Innsbruck, Austria.
- Barbara
Walters is the first broadcaster to be offered a $1 million per-year
contract to cohost the nightly news.
- Racial
violence in black townships outside of Johannesburg, South Africa
is the worst in 15 years.
- Jimmy
Carter, a "born-again" Baptist from Georgia, is the presidential
nominee of the Democratic Party.
- From
coast to coast, the United States celebrates its 200th birthday.
- Gymnast
Nadia Comaneci of Romania is the darling of the Summer Olympics
in Montreal. (Even the theme music played during her performances,
released as a single, goes gold).
- In
Philadelphia, 28 people die of a mysterious virus dubbed "Legionnaire's
disease."
- In
a close election, Jimmy Carter is elected president over incumbent
Gerald Ford.
- Austrian
Kurt Waldheim begins serving his second term as secretary general
of the United Nations.
Sports
Winners of 1976:
- Baseball:
The Cincinnati Reds beat the New York Yankees 4 games to 0.
- Football:
The Oakland Raiders beat the Minnesota Vikings 32-14 on January
9, 1977, at the Rose Bowl in Pasadena, California in Super Bowl
XI.
- Basketball:
The Boston Celtics beat the Phoenix Suns 4 games to 2.
- Hockey:
The Montreal Canadiens beat the Philadelphia Flyers 4 games to 2.
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