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ECK-2188 t1_j6psrwm wrote

Ho-ly-fuck this is a throwback

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queensnyatty t1_j6pvfyx wrote

I don’t want to wait …

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Yugegiraffe t1_j6pw4s7 wrote

For our lives to be over

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bekibekistanstan t1_j6q02z9 wrote

25 years this has been chillin there

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zo3foxx t1_j6qa3zg wrote

wait wut? this is still up now? holy shit ROFL

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AnacharsisIV t1_j6qjox1 wrote

I think they just put new papers up over old papers.

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Very_Bad_Janet t1_j6rvcb8 wrote

Yes, I've seen it, too.

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zo3foxx t1_j6ue135 wrote

Lol I'm about to ride past 23rd in a few minutes. I'm gonna be the only weirdo on the train staring at the walls lol 😆

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Guardiansvn t1_j6psbax wrote

Awesome, I think there is a Devil’s Advocate film poster from 97’ floating around.

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Unoriginal_UserName9 t1_j6q4z7o wrote

There's a Resident Evil: Apocalypse poster just chilling in plain sight at the south end of either 96th or 103rd st on 8th Ave.

Not sure why it's been forsaken

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RayzTheRoof t1_j6q1zrb wrote

dam this should be preserved

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drecklia t1_j6qawkx wrote

If a parking lot can be a landmark, so can this wall

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SexyPeanut_9279 t1_j6qtw5q wrote

For the curious- where is there a landmark parking lot?

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Marlsfarp t1_j6ruic2 wrote

There are lots of them! Abuse of "historic landmark" status is the bread and butter of NIMBYs everywhere. Googling "historic landmark parking lot" gives news stories from all over the country, and those are just the ones notable enough to get op eds about.

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Pennwisedom t1_j6s3062 wrote

I googled it and came up with exactly one example, because the parking lot is within a bigger historic area (the South Street Seaport), as well as one scholarly article from the National Council on Public History. The rest were mostly news stories which were either about claims that didn't happen or just the words "historic" and "parking".

I admit this isn't exactly a thorough search though, so do you have examples?

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bodypertain t1_j6qvcta wrote

I’m kind of obsessed with outdated subway posters. There were so many in late 2020 into 2021 for stuff that was over a year old. Anything older than that is incredible to see. The most ephemeral form of media preserved by pure accident or negligence. I love it.

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TheodoreColin t1_j6pug3v wrote

❤️ Katie Holmes

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jaytrade21 t1_j6s15jt wrote

She was really cute. Too bad being semi-kidnapped by Scientologists screwed up her acting career. Hopefully she pulls it around if she still wants to act.

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thejeffphone t1_j6q94os wrote

Omg Jekyll and Hyde the musical 👀

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squee_bastard t1_j6qw9ni wrote

Seeing posters from December 1997 or January 1998 when I was a freshman in college makes me feel old as fuck.

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CactusBoyScout t1_j6s8ebf wrote

They did some work on a subway station a few years ago and uncovered an old anti-apartheid protest flyer.

I recently found a flyer on the G train for a protest of the RNC convention in NY that happened in 2004.

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IceCreamMeatballs t1_j6qo28p wrote

Just think, last time these posters were visible the twin towers were still around

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Redditor_Kelby t1_j6qvpdr wrote

Sums up MTA in a nutshell. Make's you realize how's the infrastructure is holding up 🤦🏻‍♂️😂😂

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Araucanian_JerseyGuy t1_j6qhqzo wrote

This def brings me right back, I can smell the tracks right now...metal and grease.

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Saixcrazy t1_j6r8l3o wrote

No fucking way, 23rd n what?

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korpus01 t1_j6q51xn wrote

How is it there still?

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gcotw t1_j6q8lhj wrote

It's likely been covered up for years

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earlymountainrain t1_j6rguiy wrote

They probably installed some advertising frames or construction barrier over it, and then recently removed them.

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Cyril_Clunge t1_j6qb902 wrote

Michelle Williams was in Dawson’s Creek!?

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slayaboy87 t1_j6qhifx wrote

.... is this a real reply?

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Cyril_Clunge t1_j6qmu3t wrote

Dawson's Creek was one of those shows I was only vaguely familiar with. I know the other lead actors and associate them with the show but honestly didn't know it was Michelle Williams' breakout role.

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lilmixedbunny85 t1_j6s0249 wrote

a comedy about Jackie Kennedy? I wonder how well that did

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impatientlymerde t1_j6sbnt2 wrote

Was in the Paris metro and they were doing this and there were pristine advertisements from the 1950s on the wall. I teared up when they started scraping them off the wall into the rubble.

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tompetreshere t1_j6riodn wrote

Can posters in this condition be restored?

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-Handsome-Jim- t1_j6tmzfq wrote

I miss The WB, especially the very early years.

I was too young to see the very beginning of Fox but it was fun to see a new "major" network pop up. Dawson's Creek and Buffy were huge, of course, but I loved Hyperion Bay, Roswell, Popular, Unhappily Ever After, and oddly enough Savannah.

For some reason I always remember Savannah. It was a soap opera aimed at adults that my mom liked. My dad took a second job at one point so he was gone most nights and I felt bad that my mom was by herself so I'd sit next to her and watch.

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wellboys t1_j6r8bx0 wrote

VAN DER BEEK 2: THE SLASHENING

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mbhnyc t1_j6sd725 wrote

Dammit pacey.

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PZinger6 t1_j6sdffi wrote

It's kind of weird that Dawson ended up having the worst/least accomplished post Dawson's Creek career out of the 4

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Jack_Sandwich t1_j6sj4tz wrote

Not for nothin' Desperate Measures is an unfairly forgotten but decent thriller. Michael Keaton does a good bad guy.

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Strong_Camel_1226 t1_j6spvjp wrote

I confess I was a poster poacher in the 70s and 80s. I took the IRT at odd hours and posters were fair game. I poached posters for Alien, Sheena, School of Visual Arts Shakespeare in the Park and the Globe and the World exhibit.

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Eviana27 t1_j6supcm wrote

I love this so much 🙏🏻 I’ll have to go observe this incredible relic

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Pork-Roll t1_j6u1nzn wrote

Anyone remember the posters with money coming out of the guy's ears and mouth? Always was the most ridiculous one and never knew what it was advertising because at the time I didn't really speak even the most basic Spanish.

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Sere_C t1_j6y1xlg wrote

I remember even back then thinking how the cast of Dawsons Creek looked way too old to be teenagers. But then I found out Michelle Williams was a legit teenager at the time. Everyone looked so much older in the 90s.

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Grass8989 t1_j6qr886 wrote

Pre-9/11, the city was so innocent.

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HiddenPalm t1_j6r67hi wrote

Innocent?????!!!!!!

LMFAO!!!!!!!!

Far from it.

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Grass8989 t1_j6rmv8s wrote

Bruh there was an innocence to the city in the late 90s/00 that will never be replicated. Did you live in the city pre 9/11, I’m assuming not.

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BetterSnek t1_j6rrluc wrote

It isn't like there was no crime, that still existed, but there was definitely less existential paranoia. No "see something, say something". A less powerful police state.

I never saw a gun bigger than a handgun IRL until the cops started wielding those huge things (who knows what, I don't care, might have non lethal rounds but they sure look huge) in train stations post-9/11.

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arthuresque t1_j6s06hq wrote

Yes, for sure, but that’s not unique to NYC. That’s the post-9/11 world.

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BetterSnek t1_j6v2yca wrote

All right, but if you're on r/nyc, and you're talking about recent history, you're probably going to be focusing on the history as experienced in NYC.

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HiddenPalm t1_j7753hx wrote

There was more crime than today. Way more crime. We didn't just have insanely more street gangs than we do today, it was NYC culture for all group of kids to become a gang the moment a group of kids growing together turned 13. On top of that we also had mafias. The mafia was everywhere.

Less powerful police state? The police state was never as bad as it was during Mayor Giuliani. That was the worst NYC has even seen to this very day. Every ten days the NYPD murdered a Latino, Black or Asian civilian.

We had massive protests against police brutality. We had massive protests against the IMF, World Banks, WTO.

Before that we had even more antipolice brutality protests. Watch old Public Enemy videos. We had we had protests for housing, education, Lesbian and Gay rights. Infact the biggest LGBT protests took place on the 1970s.

The 1970s was a whole other era. We had the Black Panther Party, the Young Lords Party. The South Bronx wad in never ending fire, with gang wars that had hundreds of participants.

We lost innocence? That is such a disassociated comment if I ever saw one.

The generations today are by far a TRILLION times more innocent than generations prior. We used to break your car window with sparkplug bits just out of boredom. Throw tires over bridges at unsuspecting cars. Shoot people with shotguns just to see them fly back and jump up. Throw kids off roof tops. The NYPD this too. Watch Serpico.

There would be explosions in Queens thanks to the Colombian mafia. Dead bodies found in cars with hundreds of thousands of dollars in the trunk. Bricks would be thrown from rooftops at cop cars. Buildings taken over to make crack. And that's just Queens!!!

The crack epidemic! Young women with multiple children visibly dying from AIDS in our subways. Your generation never saw a sadder sight.

You think homelessness is bad now???? There would be about a dozen to two dozen homeless people in every single park in NYC in the day time. At night time the parks were full of extremely armed street gangs armed with uzis to shotguns. Kids would often help the homeless sleep in building basements and help feed their homeless dogs. Yes children hanging out with the homeless was the norm. Kids never stayed home, we grew up in the streets and the homeless was everywhere.

If you were young and you didn't do graffiti, you really weren't a normal kid. Because that's what normal kids did, write up. Many kids became really amazing artists, and the beautiful epic graff murals EVERYWHERE, were the results. And when we weren't fighting, we had serious dance battles where kids often ended up in hospitals with stab wounds, over dancing.

Needles and pcp in Halloween candy was the norm. Keeping your kids away from windows so they don't get a stray bullet was the norm.

Don't give me this crap that we are less innocent now. That's just so insane. We were called the Rotten Apple with good reason. People who think things are bad now as compared to before, have absolutely no idea what on Earth theyre saying.

Stop pretending like the 1970s and the 1980s or the early 1990s never happened. Just because you're a certain age, doesn't mean everyone else is. Everyone older than you knows how bad things can get. And believe me, not single person on this thread would last a day in NYC 1986 or NYC 1978 or NYC 1991.

Y'all wouldn't survive a single day.

BRRRRAAAAAAAAP!!!!

Things only calmed down, when the whole country started doing better around the mid-later 1990s. And today for the most part, everyone is so innocent they don't remember how things used to be. Much of the csenseless shootings and stabbings we saw rising when covid started came from 50 and 60 year olds relapsing to the old ways.

People don't walk around with gold chains no more, because the memory of old New York lingers.

"Ir isn't like there was no crime, it still existed"

HAAAA!!!!!! You don't know crime. Crime was culture. We weren't home playing Atari and Coleco Vision all day. We were in the streets robbing your parents or running with your parents robbing other parents, at gunpoint or knife point. Your car, gone, to ride to better neighborhoods and rob them.

The biggest and longest student takeovers took place in the late 1960s and early 1970s. Most activists called themselves, revolutionaries. And we believed, the United States was near collapse. This was a common perspective in the 1970s.

In 2020 people were freaking out over statues being taken down. In the 1970s we used to bomb statues and blow them up in solidarity with radical people of color being arrested for standing up for civil rights and against imperialist wars. Todays activists argue about social democrats saying words.

If I can drag y'all to old New York and give you a tour, y'all would piss your pants and beg me to bring you back to modern day NYC as you run away for your life from the children from the 1980s.

I'm done.

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arthuresque t1_j6s02az wrote

Maybe you were innocent because you were younger?

Born and raised here. Def changed, but innocence wasn’t one of them.

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Grass8989 t1_j6s7nk5 wrote

Same, I guess the perspectives different when you have friends who lost their parents and watched the towers collapse for your classroom.

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Thanksss123456789 t1_j6q6vgg wrote

Are the migrants protesting Dawsons Creek now?

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