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This shit spread like herpes. |
Kids today just don't know what they're missing sometimes. I see the youth wax nostalgic for things like the '80s from time to time but they don't know the half of it. The '80s were OK, I suppose, but nothing could beat the '70s and its fascination with "simulated wood grain finish." A wood finish was the mark of having really made it back then, much more so than fine Corinthian leather or even a coke spoon. No, man. Wood grain was where it was at, and the best thing was you didn't even have to be rich to be able to afford its luxury. Hence, "simulated wood grain finish."
TV manufacturer Zenith really stood by the simulation. Hell, my folks had a big-ass Zenith color TV that came in a huge chunk of simulated wood destined to give everyone else on our street wood grain envy. Even stereo manufacturers were getting in on the sexy faux wood action. Lord knows all of this crap really went well with the vomit-colored shag carpeting and simulated wood grain walls we had in the den back in those days.
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You could even wear it on your skull. |
Some dudes even began sporting
simulated wood grain hairdos. Crazy, I know, but this stuff was blowing up and people were cashing in. Hell, even auto makers were putting strips of the shit on the sides of their models to attract the discriminating driver. You weren't anyone if your ride wasn't sporting some simulated grain, even if it made no sense whatsoever.
But my very favorite item that had simulated wood grain finish was the original Atari VCS. Oh yes, I knew I was in the big time because my console looked like a fancy piece of furniture! Screw Intellivision and ColecoVision and Magnavox's Odyssey 2. Who cares which one had better graphics or games? The Atari had the grain, baby, and that's all that mattered. Of course, sometime in the early '80s there Atari decided to ditch the grain and go with a shinier black trim on the front. It made sense, but it wasn't as swank.
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The sexy beast. |
Nowadays you can buy all sorts of cheap fiberboard crap (mainly at IKEA) that sometimes sports simulated wood grain, but it's not the same. No one equates the stuff with awesomeness anymore. You just look at it and go, "No, I want some real wood." I can't blame anyone with this attitude. I just hope it doesn't all make an ironically nostalgic comeback and begin getting popular with kids who shop at Hot Topic. That would certainly signal the end of days right there.
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