Great story Hep. Thanks for sharing. I would love to have seen Alice back then. Didn't the infamous "chicken" incident take place at a concert in Ontario?
I would love to have seen Alice back then. Didn't the infamous "chicken" incident take place at a concert in Ontario?
It's interesting you mention Canadian beer. That's a big deal for Detroiters. My dad used to drink Cinci....
I'm back in Detroit (this time for good i think) so I can consume all the Faygo, Vernors, and Better Made chips I desire.
My father's older brother and thus my uncle lived in Detroit. As a result we visited Detroit once or twice per year throughout my formative years until I finished school and moved to Toronto in 1977. As a result my Canada has always included Detroit (and now Buffalo as well). As a kid Detroit to me represented all the American big city "sophistication" that my home town of London (with it's population of 162,000 in the mid-1960's and 395,000 now) lacked.I still remember how delighted I was in the summer of 1964(?) to discover a Faygo pop machine outside the Marathon gas station at Seven Mile Road and Faust Avenue up the block from my uncle's house. It dispensed sixteen ounce Faygo bottles in about a dozen wondrous flavours (including some very exotic rarely found flavours such as rock 'n rye and red pop) for $0.15! And the Seven Mile Hobby Shop where I managed to score a Mad Mad Mad Scientist Laboratory, a Revell "Big Daddy" Roth Brother Rat Fink T-shirt Iron-On and a 1/24 scale Monogram Ferrari slot car kit and then a 1/32 scale "much improved" Monogram Ferrari slot car kit. Detroit was also where I got my first skateboard, a wooden one with steel wheels, at a K-Mart(?) store. Then there was the Broaster House selling fried chicken just down Seven Mile Road near the Southfield Expressway. Wow! Good times.London had its own small Vernors bottling plant and I still quaff Vernors on a semi-regular basis. Faygo is often "dumped" into Ontario and I still buy it when I find it selling at discount prices in convenience stores.Better Made chips are available at the convenience store just down the street from my sister's house in London. Uncle Ray's chips are more widely dumped into southwestern Ontario and I frequently buy them because I like the price.
The Clash-Tommy Gunhttps://m.youtube.com/watch?v=bFHEuKkTa5k
That's as good as it gets. "Give 'Em Enough Rope" is the hardest hitting Clash album, imo. Sandy Pearlman (Blue Oyster Cult) produced this this with a much appreciated metallic edge. Fantastic album (even sharper on vinyl).
I don't have the record. Today I will but it. Thanks Mord.
Downtown totally different these days. Downtown, Mid-Town, and Cork Town very hip now. A lot of development going on. Some hip restaurants and bars---even some retail now.
I’m sure it’s been posted before:https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=POw53fGtDjwSamhain - Archangel (Live ‘86)If you look closely you can see Danzig doing something that resembles...a smile.
en iyi bahis siteleri
https://diziizle.wtf/
totobo