If you grew up with these items, congrats, your childhood was awesome and/or frustrating. Welcome to WatchMojo, and today we’re looking at objects, places, or concepts that aren’t commonplace today and which many kids probably wouldn't recognize immediately.
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00:00 [Typing]
00:03 "I type almost every day."
00:04 Welcome to WatchMojo, and today we're looking at objects, places, or concepts that aren't commonplace today,
00:11 and which many kids probably wouldn't recognize immediately.
00:14 "And Anscomatic projects 'em, clear and sharp.
00:17 And Anscomatic runs itself, or with the remote control, you can control your slides from anywhere in the room."
00:24 Number 30, "Hanging Up."
00:27 "Goodnight, Richard."
00:28 "This isn't real."
00:29 [Phone ringing]
00:31 While the concept of hanging up a phone is something kids are obviously familiar with,
00:36 how many of them understand that the term used to have a literal meaning?
00:39 Before smartphones, we all had dial and rotary phones,
00:42 which required us to put the handset back on the body of the phone in order to end the call.
00:47 And if we want to go back even farther,
00:49 older rotary phones would literally require one to hang the receiver back on the device to finish a call.
00:55 But, perhaps the biggest thing kids today will never experience is the feeling of release
01:00 that comes from angrily slamming down the receiver to end a call.
01:04 Tapping that hang up button just doesn't provide the same satisfaction.
01:07 [Slamming]
01:09 "Goddammit, Tony!"
01:11 Number 29, "Slide Projector."
01:13 The first question some of you probably have is,
01:16 "What is a slide and why would I want to project it?"
01:18 To answer that question, we have to go back to a time before smartphones,
01:22 back even before digital cameras.
01:24 "It's wide angle lens shows your slides big and bright in full color."
01:28 Back to a time when we put a roll of film into a camera and then took that roll to have it developed.
01:33 Besides printing out photographs,
01:35 you could also turn those images into slides,
01:38 which were small mounted transparency versions of your photos.
01:41 "You can control your slides from anywhere in the room at any speed you choose."
01:46 And why would you do this?
01:48 Well, that way you could, with the help of a slide projector,
01:51 project your photos onto a wall or large screen and bore a large group of people with your vacation photos.
01:57 [Sounds of people struggling]
02:00 "Turn it off!"
02:00 Number 28, "Transistor Radio."
02:03 These days, the only connection most of us have with even the term transistor radio
02:08 comes from listening to Brown Eyed Girl on the Sirius XM oldie station.
02:11 Invented in the 1950s,
02:13 transistor radios were revolutionary because they switched from the old vacuum tube technology.
02:19 This allowed them to be made smaller, more portable, more durable, and mass marketable.
02:24 The truth is that if you see a radio these days, it's probably a transistor radio.
02:29 Although a non-digital standalone radio in the wild would probably feel like a museum piece to the younger generation.
02:35 Number 27, "Microfiche."
02:38 Listen up, kiddos.
02:39 There was a time when the internet didn't exist,
02:41 when you couldn't find anything you wanted with a quick Google search.
02:45 Back then, when you wanted to look at old newspapers or archived documents,
02:49 your best option was something called microfilm and microfiche.
02:52 Often found at libraries,
02:54 these teeny tiny scaled down document reproductions were viewable using a special projector or microfiche reader.
03:00 "He's no dummy, that's big bucks."
03:01 And as 90s movie fans will tell you,
03:04 microfilm played a key role in helping people solve various mysteries in films from that era.
03:10 Number 26, "Sanitary Belt."
03:12 Okay, so this one isn't just something kids won't recognize,
03:15 but there are gonna be plenty of adults confused by this thing too.
03:18 In fact, unless you're a woman who came of age prior to the 1980s,
03:23 sanitary belts were probably never a part of your life experience.
03:26 And you should probably be very happy about that.
03:29 You see, sanitary belts were what women used before tampons and pads came into being.
03:34 It was a literal elastic band with hanging clips in the front and back,
03:38 to which one would attach a towel or pad passed between their legs.
03:42 You can figure out the rest.
03:44 Number 25, "Payphones."
03:47 While mobile phones have pretty much taken over our lives,
03:50 every now and then we still see someone with a landline.
03:53 But seeing an actual payphone in the wild?
03:56 Now that must be a truly shocking experience for the younger generation.
04:00 Not only are these phones attached to a specific location without a touchscreen or apps,
04:04 but you have to actually deposit money into them for them to work.
04:08 "Excuse me, I'm trying to make a call here."
04:10 And they don't even take Apple Pay.
04:12 Back in 2002, the film "Phone Booth" lamented the disappearance of payphones.
04:17 So imagine how they must look to kids today, over 20 years later.
04:22 Number 24, "Travelers' Checks."
04:24 When it comes to traveling, there are some things that have not changed since the last century.
04:29 We still need to pack clothes and toiletries and make sure we have our passports.
04:33 However, back in the day, another important item on our pre-vacation checklist was get travelers' checks.
04:39 "In Hong Kong and in hundreds of other cities, you can find help with American Express travelers' checks."
04:45 Before everyone had a credit and debit card and ATMs were everywhere,
04:49 travelers' checks were the go-to money option for visits to foreign countries.
04:52 They were as good as cash and were guaranteed if lost or stolen.
04:56 "And it can't be used until you sign your name again here when you cash it."
05:00 It was a way to take larger sums of cash with you without having to carry lots of dollar-dollar bills.
05:05 "American Express travelers' checks, don't leave home without them."
05:08 These days, the idea of physical cash is shocking enough to the young folks,
05:13 let alone these archaic travelers' checks.
05:15 Number 23, "Typewriter."
05:18 While there are still those who love typewriters like Tom Hanks and John Mayer,
05:22 it's safe to say that they aren't as popular as they were before the personal computer hit the market.
05:26 "I've tried to foster a community of typewriting people."
05:32 However, we aren't saying that kids today wouldn't recognize a typewriter if one was put in front of them.
05:38 But whether they knew what it was or not, how many of them do you think would know how to actually use one?
05:44 Not only do you have to insert the paper yourself, but when you make a spelling mistake,
05:48 the typewriter doesn't even underline it in red to let you know.
05:52 "But listen to the, listen to the solidity of the action."
05:56 "This is a solid, solid piece of machine."
06:00 Number 22, "Manual Car Windows."
06:03 It's true, there was a time when you couldn't just push a button to open a car window.
06:07 You had to grab onto a crank-like handle on the inside of the door and use actual arm muscles to turn it around and around
06:14 until the window was as open as you wanted it to be.
06:17 "Crank down the windows and take off."
06:19 And while to some that may seem as ancient as churning your own butter,
06:23 manual windows have not been gone that long.
06:26 Even into the early aughts, many manufacturers were offering both automatic and manual window options on their automobiles.
06:32 "Every time I release the clutch pedal, my knee hit the window crank handle."
06:36 Number 21, "Record Adapter."
06:39 While the hipster revolution brought records and record players back into the pop culture scene,
06:43 both those items are probably still somewhat unknown commodities to young kids these days.
06:48 But even if records are popular again, record adapters are certainly odd-looking things to most folks under a certain age.
06:55 Throughout the history of the record, there have been 78 RPM, 45 RPM, and 33 RPM records available.
07:02 But the holes in records made to be played at 45 RPM were larger than those of 78 or 33 RPM records.
07:10 These adapters were necessary to play them on your standard record player.
07:14 Now, why the holes were different sizes in the first place is a whole other question.
07:19 Number 20, "Palm Pilots," PDAs.
07:22 Personal digital assistants or PDAs were essentially the first smartphones,
07:27 only you couldn't call or text or surf the internet.
07:31 Okay, let us explain.
07:32 If you wanted to do complex computing on the go, Palm Pilots were where it was at.
07:43 They allowed you to store contact info, plan calendars, send and receive emails, write up documents, you know, computer stuff.
07:50 The most popular of these devices were Palm Pilots, which pretty much dominated the market.
08:03 They were absolutely everywhere in the late 90s.
08:12 But with the advent of smartphones, PDAs generally fell by the wayside,
08:16 and even their attempts at smartphone versions couldn't compete with the likes of iPhones or Androids.
08:21 Unless their parents are tech buffs, we doubt today's kids have even heard of them.
08:25 Yes, kids can probably tell what a map is, but hear us out.
08:38 The ubiquity of apps like Apple Maps, Google Maps, and MapQuest has made paper maps nearly obsolete.
08:45 While kids today probably know what they are, they might be hard-pressed to actually read one if the need arose.
09:03 Online maps can not only be optimized to filter in and out information,
09:07 but they also feature directions and routes overlaid right on the screen,
09:11 all read out by that sweet, accommodating Siri lady.
09:14 If you've ever had to navigate using a physical roadmap, especially if you're lost,
09:27 you definitely know all about the unique "joys" that come with it.
09:33 Mail-order Netflix
09:35 Netflix is everywhere these days. It's one of the biggest streaming services on the planet.
09:40 But what many children today may not know is that Netflix began as a DVD delivery service.
09:51 For a monthly fee, Netflix mails DVDs to your home in these letter-sized red sleeves.
09:57 This had no late fees. You know, it was nice and easy and simple.
10:00 When I see that new red envelope in the mail, it brings a sense of joy inside.
10:05 That's in present tense, by the way, because they still do it.
10:09 For people who don't have access to internet fast enough to stream, this is a pretty great option.
10:14 And for kids whose families do have access to high-speed internet,
10:17 they probably have no clue about the site of the company or its origins.
10:21 You know, you get your DVD, it shows up in your mailbox, and you have as much time as you want to watch it,
10:26 so it's really on your schedule.
10:28 Number 17. Church Keys
10:30 Keys to a church, right? Kids can figure that one out, so what are we talking about?
10:34 Not so fast, though.
10:36 "Church key" is an American term for an older type of bottle opener.
10:40 One end typically has a large loop for opening bottles, sort of like the large loops on old-fashioned keys.
10:46 And sometimes there's a piercer on the other end of these bottle openers,
10:53 which is useful for opening cans.
10:56 If your family is comprised of avid soda or beer drinkers,
11:00 there's a good chance there's one of these still lying around in a junk drawer somewhere.
11:04 And there's a good chance it's completely foreign to the little ones in the house.
11:08 Number 16. Rolodexes
11:11 Personal organizers are still around, sort of.
11:17 While kids typically use school agendas, most adults keep organized with their favorite handheld device.
11:24 Rolodexes, on the other hand, have largely spun out of use.
11:28 It was a spinning card organizer that held business cards or other contact info
11:32 that you could flip through to easily find the contact you needed.
11:36 It was sort of like a phone book, but with a lot more pizzazz.
11:44 At least it was until digital organizers took over.
11:46 You might come across one of these organizers in the odd workplace,
11:49 but for the most part, the term "Rolodex" just isn't something kids need in their Rolodex.
11:55 Number 15. Test pattern
11:58 Test patterns or test cards were signals broadcast on television
12:02 where the transmitter was active but there was no footage airing.
12:06 They might sometimes have been used if something needed calibration or general repairing.
12:13 Always use fresh macaroni. If the box rattles, throw it away.
12:18 In most cases, these were brightly colored and usually accompanied by a sine wave tone.
12:27 If you're sitting there thinking, "Hmm, I'm not sure what a sine wave tone is," trust us, you do.
12:33 These days, with the ever-evolving advances in technology, test patterns aren't broadcast as frequently.
12:38 The video drone signal, the one that does the damage, it can be delivered under a test pattern, anything.
12:45 TVs don't require troubleshooting as often, and airtime is more likely to be filled 24/7.
12:51 While today's kids might recognize the display of a test pattern as meaning something is wrong,
12:56 they won't ever hold our trauma for that seemingly endless radio tone.
13:00 What this thing needs is what we call a Brogain adjustment.
13:04 - What's that? You know how? - Yep.
13:07 [Loud bang]
13:08 [Loud bang]
13:10 [Laughter]
13:11 Again, we're fairly sure that most kids can figure out what a video game controller is, even with a wire sticking out of it.
13:22 But they definitely won't know the pain of perpetually tangled wires.
13:26 Modern video game controllers are gearing increasingly towards being wireless,
13:30 in favor of relying on battery power and infrared or Bluetooth, as opposed to plugging directly into the game console.
13:37 It honestly wouldn't surprise us if game companies stopped making wired controllers altogether at some point.
13:43 - The kick is away and the game is on!
13:46 While retro consoles would likely still require them,
13:50 there probably won't be a lot of demand for them from kids growing up on modern gaming alone.
13:55 Nostalgia is nice, but not having to untangle wires is nicer.
14:00 Number 13. Cassette tapes.
14:02 - Hey, I had the show of my life last night. I had lived like 10 new minutes. - Yeah, but did you tape it?
14:07 While nostalgia and some help from Guardians of the Galaxy has promoted the recent revival of cassette tapes,
14:13 there are many in the newer generation who didn't get to experience them the first time around.
14:18 - What's that? - Walkman. Looks like a stereo. Play your own cassette tapes. You wanna try?
14:24 Before CDs, cassette tapes were the go-to medium for playing audio.
14:28 They work a lot like VHS tapes, which kids actually do know about.
14:32 At least, that's what they told us on our last list like this.
14:35 Cassette tapes play music and other recordings in a cassette player,
14:38 and then need to be rewound, physically, to be played again.
14:42 - $3.49, it says $1.49. - Well, you didn't rewind it. There's a $2 charge for not rewinding.
14:47 - But there's no signs here! This is an outrage! - Charge.
14:50 While they've largely been replaced by the modern smartphone, there's still something special about a classic mixtape.
14:56 [Cassette tape playing]
14:59 [Music]
15:07 Number 12. Library card catalogs.
15:10 Libraries in general are sadly seeing less and less traffic,
15:14 but one aspect of their operation has also become nearly obsolete. Card catalogs.
15:19 Before computer databases, records of the library's contents were kept in huge drawers full of cards.
15:25 These listed all the books in the library and where they were located.
15:29 - Okay, Bart, this is the card catalog. Let's see.
15:33 Golf, anecdotes, Eisenhower and, fashion, humor, Japanese obsession with.
15:39 Finding a specific book almost always meant getting help from the librarian.
15:45 - You did start that rumor about Ross making out with Mrs. Altman, our 50-year-old librarian.
15:51 While card catalogs are still around, either as a backup or in lieu of a computer database,
15:57 most kids probably don't know what they are, unless they're in good with their local librarian.
16:02 - I saw you guys going at it behind the card catalog.
16:06 Number 11. CD/DVD storage binders.
16:10 While CDs and DVDs are themselves becoming less common these days,
16:14 even less well-known to youngsters is one of the methods for storing them.
16:18 Binders, but not your school kind. These binders have sleeves, a little like photo albums,
16:24 which the discs are slipped inside.
16:26 They can also be zipped shut around the border to keep the CDs or DVDs from falling out.
16:30 It was a more compact way to store your music and movies than, say, hundreds of individual sleeves.
16:36 Although storage binders are still around, the average kid doesn't really have a need for them anymore.
16:42 Their movies and music are mere clicks away.
16:45 Video game discs might be the worthy exception though.
16:49 Number 10. Phone books.
16:51 - What the...
16:52 - What?
16:53 - Hey, man. You've got a serious attitude problem.
16:57 Quick, think of your friend's phone number. Did you know it right away?
17:00 Probably not, 'cause these days, names and numbers are in our contact lists,
17:05 and a phone call is a push of a button away.
17:08 Gone are the days when you actually had to hunt down the person you wanted to call
17:11 by finding his or her city and his or her last name in the phone book.
17:16 - When you need to know who, what, where, when, and why,
17:21 let your fingers do the walking through the bell system yellow pages.
17:24 - You also had to look up businesses rather than Google the name and follow the phone number.
17:29 - Soon Fat Chinese Takeaway.
17:32 728-9630.
17:37 - Do we not need area codes? Or are there probably no area codes so they don't call these?
17:42 - In fact, it seems like these days, phone books are more often used as fodder
17:46 to show off your inhuman strength than anything else.
17:49 - Come on, you're stronger than me.
17:51 - What, you gonna let me show you up on television?
17:53 - You wanna get whacked in the head with a phone book?
17:56 Number 9. TV guides.
17:59 Ah, the TV guide.
18:01 Yeah, even watching TV used to involve a lot more effort,
18:04 as you had to look up each specific day, find out what was playing,
18:07 what channel it was on, and plan your schedule accordingly.
18:10 - The fun, all the shows hate to see, and the facts, what's behind what you see?
18:16 - Before the internet, pirating and streaming services were not around
18:20 to allow access to whatever shows and movies you wanted whenever you wanted them.
18:24 Not to mention that now, cable boxes come with a guide that's just a push of a button away.
18:29 - Record up to six shows at the same time. Plus, you can record in one room and watch in another.
18:33 - Too bad though. We kinda liked seeing which celebrity was on the cover of this week's issue.
18:37 - The stars underneath all the glow and the news from the people who know...
18:43 Number 8. Rotary phones.
18:45 - What's the very first thing you'd have to do to use that phone?
18:48 - I have no idea.
18:49 - We're going way back for this one.
18:51 Even before push-button phones, there were rotary dial phones.
18:55 They featured a finger wheel with holes that represented individual numbers.
18:59 To input a number, you would put your finger in the corresponding hole and rotate the dial,
19:05 which would then spring back to its starting point.
19:07 - For convenience in dialing, the letters go around the dial in alphabetical order.
19:14 And the numbers are in numerical order.
19:18 - Now, imagine doing that again and again for every digit in someone's phone number.
19:23 Unsurprisingly, they started going out of style in the 1970s, when touch-tone phones took their place.
19:29 - Touch-tone service gives you faster calling and future technology, like banking by phone.
19:34 While there's something tactile and satisfying about spinning that dial,
19:37 it is definitely time-consuming and a lot less convenient.
19:41 - There was a rotor, and you had to turn it and go...
19:48 You actually hated people with zeros in their numbers.
19:51 Number 7. Encyclopedias.
19:54 Kids today may wonder what that row of identical, Bible-sized books titled Britannica are doing on their grandparents' shelves.
20:01 For those of us who didn't grow up with the Internet, we know all too well.
20:04 - What else you got in there? - Let's see, uh...
20:08 - Where does the Pope live? - In the woods.
20:12 - No, wait, wait, that's the joke answer.
20:14 Before the Internet, books were the best and only standardized form of information we had.
20:20 While many of us today use Wikipedia, the website is the humble descendant of encyclopedias far and wide.
20:27 Although encyclopedias are still around, print versions are far less common than they once were.
20:32 - Dean Smith also says you're an encyclopedia of football. Where does that come from?
20:37 - A what? - An encyclopedia of football.
20:39 - I don't know what that means.
20:41 Even Britannica has moved online, and you definitely won't see them being sold door-to-door anymore.
20:46 - For 50 bucks, you can get one book. What'll it be? A, B, C?
20:52 - I think I'm gonna stick with the V. I wanna see how this bad boy turns out.
20:56 Number 6. Pagers, aka beepers.
20:59 - You got 'em? - Hey, yo, find the phone real quick.
21:04 - Looks like my man D got himself an emergency.
21:06 Until the early '90s, there were tons of different pagers on the market.
21:10 But once cheap and reliable cell phones came along,
21:13 these wireless telecommunication devices all went the way of the dinosaurs.
21:17 [Beeping]
21:21 - You can switch off, Nigel. - I wish I could.
21:27 I've been waiting for a phone call for seven years.
21:30 Which, funnily enough, is what you'll be called if you still use one.
21:34 Alphanumeric pagers simply displayed a phone number that you had to call back,
21:38 while more advanced ones, like the two-way QWERTY pagers,
21:41 could send and receive early forms of text messages.
21:45 - Stay in touch without disturbing anyone. A two-way paging and email from Skytel.
21:49 Number 5. Portable audio players, Walkman and Discman.
21:53 - Sony introduces the only cassette player as small as a cassette case.
21:59 The incredible-sounding Super Walkman.
22:02 Walking down the street with one of these bad boys brought an instant feeling of cool.
22:06 Looking back? Well, hindsight is 20/20.
22:10 [Music]
22:16 A Walkman or Discman is a portable audio player,
22:18 with the former for cassettes and the latter for CDs, that would sometimes fit in your pocket.
22:23 - I could just imagine you guys, like 13-year-olds, just like, "Thug life represent."
22:28 If we're talking a Walkman, then we'd have to deal with turning over the cassette tapes
22:32 once you'd reached the end of one side.
22:34 - So today, you could fit thousands of songs on a phone,
22:36 but on a cassette, you could only fit up to about 30 songs.
22:39 - I feel bad for the people who lived in the '90s. I really do.
22:42 When it comes to a Discman, it would seem that it always started skipping
22:46 at the most inopportune times, because, well, they sucked.
22:49 [Music]
22:53 In reality, these portable music players were usually bulky and inconvenient.
22:57 And there was no shuffle on a cassette, so you better have made a really good mixtape.
23:02 [Music]
23:08 You darn kids with your 128-gig iPods and phones.
23:12 - I'd take this in a heartbeat now. I'd want my phone.
23:16 Number 4 - Fax Machines, Telecopiers
23:20 Ask anyone born after 1990 if they've ever owned or even just used a fax machine,
23:26 and the answer will probably be a resounding "no."
23:30 - How lovely, darling. What is it?
23:33 - It's a fax machine, Mother. You can send us letters by phone.
23:37 - Hmm.
23:38 Faxes, short for facsimiles and sometimes referred to as telecopying or telefax,
23:44 are images transmitted through a phone line and then printed out.
23:48 Prior to the rise of email, fax machines were the fastest way
23:51 of transmitting printed information over long distances.
23:54 Although fax machines still see some use in the business world, to a lot of kids today,
23:58 they probably just look like a printer with a phone mysteriously attached.
24:02 - Boyle, why don't you show Donger what a fax machine is?
24:05 - Okay.
24:07 - Okay, imagine a letter had unprotected sex with a phone.
24:11 Number 3 - Developing Photographic Film
24:14 Even today, there's a lot of people who love shooting on film.
24:17 - Wait a minute, isn't this thing even on?
24:20 But digital cameras definitely dominate the market.
24:23 - But first, let me take a selfie.
24:27 For some kids, used to pointing and shooting and sharing their photos straight away,
24:30 it must seem bizarre that back in the day,
24:32 you'd have to choose your shots carefully to avoid wasting film
24:36 and then wait for them to be developed.
24:38 - ♪ ...deserves what the moon is long for ♪
24:44 And you wouldn't know how your pictures turned out until you got them back.
24:48 Only then would you realize that the flash or some other setting
24:51 had ruined half your masterpieces.
24:53 - Four full-power flashes in one tiny cube.
24:56 Number 2 - Dial-Up Internet Access
24:59 - Now that I've gotten on the internet, I'd rather be on my computer
25:02 than doing just about anything.
25:04 - It's really cool.
25:05 Isn't it amazing that you can watch this video in HD
25:08 without having to suffer through buffering
25:10 or having to make a sandwich while it loaded?
25:12 Yep, this was absolutely not possible in the 1990s.
25:16 Thanks, broadband!
25:17 - Now, let's look up dinosaurs.
25:19 What do you think, Compton's Encyclopedia or National Geographic?
25:21 Back in the day, though, we once had dial-up internet access.
25:26 Which would make an awful mechanical noise
25:28 when it connected to an internet service provider
25:30 and would be painfully slow when you actually got online.
25:34 - Now, I wanted to pay for dial-up modem impression classes, see?
25:37 And God forbid your mom needed the phone,
25:39 'cause if she did, it was back to TV for you.
25:42 As of 2013, only 3% of internet users still use dial-up.
25:47 - Once selected, close your eyes and relax
25:50 to the soothing, familiar sounds of a 56k modem.
25:55 We feel for you.
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26:08 and switch on notifications.
26:10 Number 1. Floppy Disks
26:15 Today, the floppy disk lives on as the icon you click on
26:18 when you want to save your file.
26:19 - Click the save button, you'll find it on the quick access toolbar.
26:24 But few kids would actually be familiar with the object itself.
26:28 - Why panic when you can rely on Maxell Super RD2 Floppy Disks?
26:34 In fact, one viral tweet even wondered why the save icon is a "beverage dispenser."
26:40 Prevalent in the 80s, the floppy disk was the precursor to CDs,
26:44 memory cards, and flash drives.
26:46 - They actually call that a floppy disk.
26:48 - [laughs]
26:49 There was the 8-inch, the 5.25-inch,
26:52 and then the 3.5-inch disk,
26:54 which could hold an astounding 1.44 megabytes of data.
26:59 That's pretty crazy considering there are thumb drives today
27:03 that can hold terabytes of information.
27:05 Maybe in a few years, we'll be laughing at our measly terabyte flash drives.
27:09 Who knows?
27:10 Do you still come across any of these kid-confusing items these days?
27:19 Let us know in the comments below.
27:20 - There's I Love Lucy, the Lucy Show, here's Lucy.
27:28 Did you enjoy this video?
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27:36 [music]