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The Oracle

Pronouns: Who/Cares
Mar 8, 2004
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On the slopes of Mount Parnassus, Greece
Family friend is a retired pilot and no doubt has some pics of the city, I'll post them when I get them. Great pics, Toronto really was amazing from the 60s on up until the 2010s.
The best decades were 70s +, I wasn't around then but it seemed edgy but with personality compared to today's stressed out clinical look.
Young street was pretty edgy during the 70's...Then came the Emanuel Jaques murder. The fallout changed Toronto forever. del.jpg
pleas.jpg sheba.jpg
 

eddie kerr

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Jan 16, 2004
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First strip joint I went to in Toronto was the Upfront Lounge on Front St near Church St. many years ago. There were no VIP rooms back then and the girls would come on a stage to do their thing and we sat on a seat on the front row of many rows of seats. Girl came on the stage, most beautiful girl and did a karaoke song showing of her body at the same time. After she finished I waved at her to join me and she did. Turned out she was from Georgia with the most beautiful Southern accent. She sat with me and talked for 10 minutes, had to leave, kissed me on the cheek, fell in love forever.LOL.
 
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onomatopoeia

Bzzzzz.......Doink
Jul 3, 2020
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Cabbagetown
First strip joint I went to in Toronto was the Upfront Lounge on Front St near Church St. many years ago. There were no VIP rooms back then and the girls would come on a stage to do their thing and we sat on a seat on the front row of many rows of seats. Girl came on the stage, most beautiful girl and did a karaoke song showing of her body at the same time. After she finished I waved at her to join me and she did. Turned out she was from Georgia with the most beautiful Southern accent. She sat with me and talked for 10 minutes, had to leave, kissed me on the cheek, fell in love forever.LOL.
An eyewitness to vaudeville. Props.

I'm guessing that when the belle was fully undressed, she was still wearing underpants and pasties with tassels on the ends.
 
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mandrill

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Aug 23, 2001
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Family friend is a retired pilot and no doubt has some pics of the city, I'll post them when I get them. Great pics, Toronto really was amazing from the 60s on up until the 2010s.
The best decades were 70s +, I wasn't around then but it seemed edgy but with personality compared to today's stressed out clinical look.
70's, the downtown "cool" areas were still undeveloped. No Queen West. No Cabbagetown. Yorkville was still scruffy. High crime and general street sleaze.

The 50's and 60's had a lot of middle class relocation to the burbs. The middle class move back to the downtown core starts to happen in the late 70's and 80's.
 

canada-man

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Jun 16, 2007
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Toronto, Ontario
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What happened to the ,convenience shop at finch bus station where you can get the YRT buses? It is now closed and empty .20 years ago There was a shop where you can get snacks, and bus tickets
 

onomatopoeia

Bzzzzz.......Doink
Jul 3, 2020
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Cabbagetown
gm8.png

I lived at the point of the red dot in the late 1960's. The prominent east-west street just above the words 'Balmy Beach Park' is Queen Street East; the north-south to the left of 'Fallingbrook' is Victoria Park Avenue. That area was almost exclusively residential, with mainly sole proprietor small stores on that stretch of Queen, plus The Fox rep theater and 'The Goof'. Right around the knife and fork icon is a grocery store. It might possibly still have the horse ride machine in the front of the store, but if it does, it costs more than ten cents for the ride.
 

Jubee

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May 29, 2016
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70's, the downtown "cool" areas were still undeveloped. No Queen West. No Cabbagetown. Yorkville was still scruffy. High crime and general street sleaze.

The 50's and 60's had a lot of middle class relocation to the burbs. The middle class move back to the downtown core starts to happen in the late 70's and 80's.
Compared to today's clinical looking downtown? I say it's cool. Maybe you didn't like it growing up then. lol
But going by comparisons of images from back then to today? Back then seemed liked it had a caricature vibe to it.
 
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jeff2

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Sep 11, 2004
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70's, the downtown "cool" areas were still undeveloped. No Queen West. No Cabbagetown. Yorkville was still scruffy. High crime and general street sleaze.

The 50's and 60's had a lot of middle class relocation to the burbs. The middle class move back to the downtown core starts to happen in the late 70's and 80's.
I was far too young to get a job during that brief mid 1970s halcyon period when Canadians took their standard of living for granted. Lots of boomers on drugs.
Factory workers not yet hammered to death by automation and Japan, Germany, etc. High commodity prices also aiding the Canadian standard of living.
The 1980s was a period for professionals and high unemployment.
 

eddie kerr

Well-known member
Jan 16, 2004
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Family friend is a retired pilot and no doubt has some pics of the city, I'll post them when I get them. Great pics, Toronto really was amazing from the 60s on up until the 2010s.
The best decades were 70s +, I wasn't around then but it seemed edgy but with personality compared to today's stressed out clinical look.
I took a pic of the Sikorski Helicopter dropping the final top piece on the C N tower way back in the day. Must go through my library to find it. What year was that anyways??
 
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eddie kerr

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Jan 16, 2004
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View attachment 305158

I lived at the point of the red dot in the late 1960's. The prominent east-west street just above the words 'Balmy Beach Park' is Queen Street East; the north-south to the left of 'Fallingbrook' is Victoria Park Avenue. That area was almost exclusively residential, with mainly sole proprietor small stores on that stretch of Queen, plus The Fox rep theater and 'The Goof'. Right around the knife and fork icon is a grocery store. It might possibly still have the horse ride machine in the front of the store, but if it does, it costs more than ten cents for the ride.
Loved in the beaches as a school kid went to Kew Beach School, Lakeshore Blvd. ended at Coxwell Ave. and east of that was a wooded area called the Cut. Balmy Beach was great and hed Lacrosse Baseball and Soccer. Queen St. ended at Falling Brook Ave, and the corner lot which was fenced in was owned by the Seagram family. To bad my father sold our beautiful house on Kenilworth Ave. and bought a home in Cabbagetown. LOL
 

shack

Nitpicker Extraordinaire
Oct 2, 2001
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Toronto
I took a pic of the Sikorski Helicopter dropping the final top piece on the C N tower way back in the day. Must go through my library to find it. What year was that anyways??
I may be way off, but I'll say '87.
 

eddie kerr

Well-known member
Jan 16, 2004
1,708
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70's, the downtown "cool" areas were still undeveloped. No Queen West. No Cabbagetown. Yorkville was still scruffy. High crime and general street sleaze.

The 50's and 60's had a lot of middle class relocation to the burbs. The middle class move back to the downtown core starts to happen in the late 70's and 80's.
Toronto in the 60s was the rock and roll capital of North America, Yonge St has great bars featuring great entertainment such as the Colonial Tavern. Friars, Le Coq Dor, Sapphire Tavern, Upfront Lounge, Malloneys Tavern which was the first bar that allowed patrons to carry a beer from one table to another. Concord Tavern on Bloor St that featured bands like Ronnie Hawkins, Levon Helm and the Band. So many more. Also had some dance halls such as the Maseryck on Queen West, Club Trocadero on Dupont St. which had the best R & B dance music, The Avenue Rd Club in Yorkville had 2 dance floors, and they all had lots of gorgeous girls. Pretty well, got to take a girl home most nights. Aw, THOSE WERE THE DAYS.
 
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The Oracle

Pronouns: Who/Cares
Mar 8, 2004
23,449
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On the slopes of Mount Parnassus, Greece
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Zanzibar Tavern was opened in 1959 by David Cooper, who said: "You used to be able to hit 12 strip bars between Bloor and Queen." The bar originally opened as a live music venue, one of several on Yonge Street, between Gerrard and King, in the 1950s and 1960s.
 
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