
Our Ginger Fuhrer says that he could still code up a simple game idea in Amstrad Basic, while I'm your man if you ever need to rebuild the suspension on an Austin Allegro (1750 Equipe version). This stuff doesn't leave your mind - tell us about obsolete talents you still have.
( , Thu 30 Jun 2011, 17:04)
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Having been a child in the 1980s, i now how to lie down and cover myself for a nuclear attack.
( , Wed 6 Jul 2011, 14:55, 24 replies)

( , Wed 6 Jul 2011, 15:00, closed)

( , Wed 6 Jul 2011, 15:02, closed)

was always the cheeriest bit of advice.
Along with warnings about anal bleeding. Oh! And remeber, you probably won't be able to cash a cheque, Boots will be shut and rubbish collection may be disrupted. So it's like Christmas really, only with more roasted meat.
( , Wed 6 Jul 2011, 15:17, closed)

When you tell youngsters about how we were sure we were going to die any minutes they don't believe you.
( , Wed 6 Jul 2011, 18:25, closed)

no sleepless nights for those children then.
( , Wed 6 Jul 2011, 15:19, closed)

Oh yes, every wednesday at 12.00 they tested the old WW2-style sirens. Nowadays, with the newfashioned electronic sirens, it's only once a year.
( , Wed 6 Jul 2011, 22:28, closed)

because i know what happens after a nuke goes off from watching threads at school in the 80s
( , Wed 6 Jul 2011, 15:21, closed)

...like Scotland.
( , Wed 6 Jul 2011, 15:42, closed)

Threads did show how to very quickly improve the living conditions for the average Sheffield family
( , Wed 6 Jul 2011, 16:16, closed)

Experts say that it is likely to have caused several billion pounds worth of improvements."
( , Wed 6 Jul 2011, 16:28, closed)

I saw it for the first time about 2 years ago... oh man is that film disturbing.
( , Wed 6 Jul 2011, 16:30, closed)

Grim times.
( , Wed 6 Jul 2011, 16:47, closed)

And I never saw the whole thing until last year. I managed to see a bit of the start by hiding behind the living room door. I got caught and sent to bed, but only after I'd seen Anne Sellors' pivotal scene.
( , Wed 6 Jul 2011, 17:19, closed)

If I saw that as a kid I'd have slept with the light on. Under the table. In the cellar.
( , Wed 6 Jul 2011, 18:31, closed)

I can't even watch it again it disturbs me that much. I know it sounds like I'm just a pussy, but fuck...
There was an American one called The Day After or something, but it wasn't nearly as scary.
( , Thu 7 Jul 2011, 12:53, closed)

I started school in 84 but don't recall any of that.
We were just shown videos about not playing on building sites / railway lines / electric substations and crossing the road while safely avoiding being abducted by the paedo in the glowing red ford capri.
( , Wed 6 Jul 2011, 17:44, closed)

We were all already dead from radiation poisoning by then.
( , Wed 6 Jul 2011, 18:15, closed)

( , Wed 6 Jul 2011, 18:52, closed)

The late 70s - early 80s were the Protect and Survive era. We didn't do "Hide under your desk" drills like I've seen them doing in America, but we were certainly well aware of the adverts the government put out on television outlining what to do in the event of a nuclear strike. Mostly what I recall about those adverts was that fallout appeared to be extremely noisy. But everyone seemed to assume that it was as likely to happen as not, at that time.
My father was pencilled in to be Middlesbrough's scientific advisor in their post-strike recovery phase. He declined in the end a) because it would have meant leaving his young family behind and b) because the "bunker" they were intending to use had windows facing out onto the street so it seemed a bit pointless. He did get to keep a bunch of secret calculators and documents though - secret at the time because if anyone saw just how horrendous the after effects were likely to be then they'd get rather upset. I must dig them out, actually, they were very interesting.
I now live just down the road from the remains of a sensibly-designed underground bunker - accessed only by ladder - which was permanently manned by the Royal Observer Corps; initially they would use a Bomb Power Indicator to measure overpressure from any bomb blasts, then they would monitor the air for radioactive particles, and use this to determine the extent of the danger zones. There were more than a thousand of these posts all over the country, which gives you some idea of how seriously it was all taken.
( , Thu 7 Jul 2011, 11:05, closed)

If like me you're interested in Cold War civil defence/Regional Government structures (and who isn't quite frankly), I would heartily recommend the SubBrit.org website.
They're a research group primarily dealing with researching man-made Subterranean structures. Amongst other things, they have a detailed list of all the ROC posts in the UK.
Incidentally, you can identify anyone who has lived in Sheffield before 2002 by showing them Threads. They'll cheer without fail when the Town Hall 'Egg Box' offices get hit by the blast wave...
( , Thu 7 Jul 2011, 12:10, closed)
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