Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Who else eavesdropped on their family members phone calls? You answer the phone, holler for mom, sister etc to pick up, and then quietly cover the mouthpiece and listen to them spill the tea?
hahaha, yes, and my sister and I used to call it "monkey-looking" instead of eavesdropping. :p
Anonymous wrote:Let's say you didn't know what time it was. There was a phone number you could call to give you the accurate time:
"At the tone the time will be [beeep] 8:26 PM"
I think there was maybe another number for the weather. Anyone remember this?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Who else eavesdropped on their family members phone calls? You answer the phone, holler for mom, sister etc to pick up, and then quietly cover the mouthpiece and listen to them spill the tea?
Larla are you listening?? HANG UP THE PHONE!!!
Anonymous wrote:Who else eavesdropped on their family members phone calls? You answer the phone, holler for mom, sister etc to pick up, and then quietly cover the mouthpiece and listen to them spill the tea?
Anonymous wrote:Who else eavesdropped on their family members phone calls? You answer the phone, holler for mom, sister etc to pick up, and then quietly cover the mouthpiece and listen to them spill the tea?
Anonymous wrote:I remember trying to meet people and changing my voicemail to say where I was. “Hi, you’ve reached so and so. If this is John, we left xyz club and are heading to…meet us there!”
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So, so many!
My grandparents often made a three hour drive to visit us. My grandmother always wrote out a note and pinned (with a straight pin) it to the rear passenger seat:
“We are Lyle and Lily Larlo, ages 76 and 77, on our way to visit our daughter Jane at 123 Main St, Rico Suave, CA. Her phone number is (123)456-7890.”
Also, before my grandparents would leave their house, my GF would call the State Police barracks adjacent to a steep mountain pass to ask for a weather report. This was a common customer question as the location was prone to becoming impassable during high winds, snow or rain. If the trooper at dispatch gave the all-clear, they’d leave.
But, they’d call our house phone and let it ring 4 times and hang up - our signal that they were leaving and so we could start timing their arrival.
We’d do the opposite when we’d arrive safely home - let their house phone ring 4x and hang up. No long distance charge this way.
How would the family know not to pick up the phone if your grandparents were calling to let it ring 4 times?
This PP. Phones didn’t ring all the time. We’d generally know that our grandparents would be home 4 hours later. So, if our phone rang 4 times and stopped, it was our grandparents. If it rang a 5th time, we’d pick up.
DH family took it a more complicated step further; his grandparents and parents would collect call using a code name. The operator would call, someone would answer and then the operator would announce “Collect call from Mr. Crabapple, will you accept the call?” You’d say no that you wouldn’t accept and no charge for the call. Sometimes, you might be able to talk over the operator and get in a quick “love you!”
Anonymous wrote:Brady Bunch re-runs keep popping up on me FB feed and I just watched an episode where they are fighting over the single phone that all 8 of them share.
("Marsha...get of the phone I'm expecting a call!") No call waiting even!
It was interesting to me that they budgeted for a phone bill of $40 per month. Made me feel pretty good that I pay about the same for phone, unlimited 4G, text, and long distance fifty years later!
(Also - Mr. Brady calls the phone number to get the time pp!)