A few weeks ago, I rented the movie FROST/NIXON. Then, a few days ago, I rented ALL THE PRESIDENT'S MEN.* It was an entertaining movie--great actors (Redford, Hoffman, Warden, Robards) and a compelling story. But I couldn't help fixating on two other things that hit closer to home.
1) The fashion/technology of the Swinging Seventies.
Having lived through that era (albeit during my impressionable teenage years), I found myself getting quite nostalgic/embarrassed at some of the stuff Redford and Hoffman (as Woodward and Bernstein) wore and used. (I mean, knit ties? What were we thinking?)
Remember these?
- Corduroy suits.
- Polyester shirts with crazy collars.
- Knit ties with square bottoms.
- Fat, fat, fat regular ties.
- Dial phones.
- An entire storage closet with phone books from around the country.
- Typewriters on the desks.
- Smoking in the office, smoking in the elevators, smoking everywhere.
(With the exception of the smoking habit, I owned all of the above. Of course, the corduroy suit looked much better on Redford than on me.)
2) The Washington Post
Fifteen or so years after Watergate, I worked at The Washington Post as a summer intern. (It was between years of business school, and I worked on the business side, not the editorial side). As part of the program, I had the opportunity to learn about many different parts of the newspaper business. I sat in on a story conference, rode with a distributor at 4 a.m., worked the night shift in the pressroom, went on a sales call (or two), and got to chat one-on-one with Ben Bradlee** (as well as Donald Graham, David Ignatius, and others).
It was fascinating, to say the least.
It brought back memories to see the Post in the movie: the front of the building on 15th Street, the fifth-floor newsroom, even the parking deck next door (since replaced by an office building). One thing that didn’t change: the reporters’ zeal for getting the story.***
What groovy things from the Seventies do you remember, either fondly or not so fondly (beside disco)?
Footnotes
*For the third movie in my little trilogy, maybe I should rent THE JERK.
**If you thought Jason Robards's Oscar-winning portrayal of Ben Bradlee was larger-than-life, you should have met Ben Bradlee. In real life, he was larger than life.
***Now, of course, many of the mechanics of the newspaper business are different (computers, Internet, natural fibers), but the mission--reporting news--is essentially the same. I hope newspapers survive.
Okay, I was a kid in the 70s (born in 71), but I have lots of 70s memories: roller skating to disco music, wearing polyester sunsuits, listening to ABBA, Sit and Spins, Stretch Armstrong dolls, Big Wheels, etc.
ReplyDeleteI told my daughter she wasn't allowed to use the microwave when I wasn't around. She asked, "Mama, when you were a little girl, were you allowed to use the microwave?" Made me feel ooolllllddddd. Then she asked me what film was (we've had a digital camera since she was born.)
Elizabeth
Mystery Writing is Murder
Oh,honey ... the 70s was my era, sad to say. What do I remember? ''Do the Hustle,'' and did I ever.
ReplyDeleteEmbarrassed to admit it now, but I was a disco doll. Platform shoes, polyester, dance contests and everything. Think Saturday Night Fever, but without the Jersey accents.
Whenever I hear the opening strains of some Bee Gee's song, I get some nasty flashbacks.
ReplyDelete