The Oldies Thread

Didn't SFX go on to win the national? Can remember playing against Roughwood in Kirkby and having to climb down into a stream to get the ball. SMA were one of the better sides in my day,they put us out of the Echo Cup.Went to Penny Lane for Liverpool Schoolboy trials but the Kopite saunders just told the three of us from my school to go off and practice two touch and never really spoke to us much again.
I went to Penny Lane for Liverpool Schoolboy trials. Played in a proper match (1949) but still didn't hear anything further. My excuse was that I was only 13 and the older lads all looked like men!
 

A familiar tale from an oldie.
Half term adds an extra level of grandparent duties. You're expected to dig a bit deeper in your pocket and keep the children amused for the whole day, not just pre and post school time.
So this week I've had two trips to the cinema and this is for me, the real eye opener. Tickets are cheap enough, but boy, talk about the extras.
Slush, popcorn, meal deals (doritos with nachos chilli and jalapeños at 1030 in the morning?) exorbitantly priced sweets, hot dogs, drinks and the novelties associated with the film itself, the list is endless. The kids queuing up seem to rattle off these requests at machine gun pace seemingly talking another language. What an experience.
And I don't know if I should put this in the "last film you watched" thread, but Alladin despite the presence of Will Smith was a good watch, but give Pokemon Detective Pikachu a miss.
 

Eggs, In about 1983 I was in Liverpool doing some business with Mersey Docks and Harbour Board. I finished a bit earlier than I expected and decided to call in at St Matthews on my way back down south. It was a Thursday and the headmaster invited me into his study. He then told me that the school was closing for good the very next day. 30 odd years since I left and I made it with 24 hours to spare! Coincidence or what! You are dead right about the teachers.

...the goalie in the Liverpool Boys team I played in went to St Matthews, he went on to be a professional in the lower leagues. Sadly, many of those great old schools have gone now.
 
A barber's also I remember.

Short back and sides, then he would whack on the Brylcreem, even if you didn't want it.

Don't remember the barbers Leonard. The barbers we used was the one near the railway bridge in Walton Village. I have nightmares about Walton Village. About 100 yards from the barbers there was a butcher's shop. Me and my brother used to have to go there to get a couple of rabbits (rabbits were off ration during the war). The queue used stretch about a dozen yards outside the shop and the butcher used to 'dress' the rabbits one at a time for each customer. It took ages and we used to stand in the rain and freezing cold. Mum used to cook good rabbit stew though, tender like chicken.
 
I went to Penny Lane for Liverpool Schoolboy trials. Played in a proper match (1949) but still didn't hear anything further. My excuse was that I was only 13 and the older lads all looked like men!
Same with us,probably why Saunders didn't bother looking too closely. Although one of the three made it to the squad stage,but that was only because they found out his Dad was an ex-pro and his brother was at Everton.The one good thing that came from it for me was meeting Ronnie Goodlass and Alan Wilson,so getting a good acces to tickets a few years later.
 

Used to go there every Saturday morning. There used to be a shop round the back that sold sticky lice.
The Garston Empire was a bit of a flea pit, compared to the art deco splendor of the Gaumont on Allerton Rd...(or as my Gran used to call it The Plaza, not sure when it was renamed ) but then if funds were short we'd go to a proper flea pit - The Lyceum on St Marys Rd - 4d instead of 6d
 
The Garston Empire was a bit of a flea pit, compared to the art deco splendor of the Gaumont on Allerton Rd...(or as my Gran used to call it The Plaza, not sure when it was renamed ) but then if funds were short we'd go to a proper flea pit - The Lyceum on St Marys Rd - 4d instead of 6d
Our two were the Victoria and the Regal (Broadway). Not bad cinema's actually. Used to go with my brother - 'take two in please'. Six of us from 'our gang' went once, we quickly found out that 'take six in please' didn't work!
 
....there was virtually a pub and cinema in every couple of roads. We had the Hippodrome cinema at the top of our street and the Lytton cinema in the next. The Boars Head pub a few doors up.
 
When we moved to Leeds, one of our local cinema's was the Hyde Park. It is still there and has been used in many TV programs and films. Before I went in the army, in the early 1950's, if there was a film on at the Hyde Park that I wanted to see, I phoned and booked. Otherwise, you were queueing for ages. A week after I was demobbed in 1957 I noticed that there was a film on I wanted to see. I phoned to book and there was silence at the other end. Finally, the bloke said 'you don't have to book'. When I got in, it was half empty. The effect of Television in the two years I had been in Singapore. My parents didn't have a TV before I went in the army but like millions of others, they had one when I came out. Social history that.
 

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