The kids know how to use the Google and Wikipedia. Plus I've been
watching a fair amount of old TV on MeTV and while obsolete things
like pay phones, men wearing hats, and social smoking appear, they
don't keep anyone from figuring out what's going on in the episode.
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You can try to look through Celebrities with Phones: http://www.phonelosers.org/cwp/ - and go through there. Hasn't been updated in a long time but interesting.
A few thoughts at the end of the day. And – combining two threads.
Let’s take one series: Beverly Hills 90210
First, it’s interesting to note that in the first series, no one had a cell phone. What a contrast with the current version.
Secondly, I’m really only half paying attention to the talk of characters showing up in different versions of the same show, which means I probably haven’t read some posts – and that I don’t find the subject particularly interesting. But although I haven’t watched the current version of 90210, that series is a good example, I think, of a character or two showing up in both series.
BTW I just read a review in the NYT of a new book about Bell Labs. Interesting stuff. I’m reminded of a lecture I attended in the early 1980s by a scientist with Bellcore, the Baby Bells answer to Bell Labs. He “warned” us of the coming paradigm shift in telephone usage, how we would be calling individuals, not specific locations. I remember my colleagues and I laughing afterwards. Because at that time we couldn’t grasp the significance of what he was talking about.
Melissa
Curious about the email address? Listen to the most beautiful song ever sung.
That helped a little.On Tue, Mar 20, 2012 at 2:41 PM, Hank Fung <calw...@gmail.com> wrote:You can try to look through Celebrities with Phones: http://www.phonelosers.org/cwp/ - and go through there. Hasn't been updated in a long time but interesting.
I see Courtney Coz on a corded phone in 1994's "Ace Ventura: Pet Detective". I see Drew Barrymore in 1996's "Scream" in two phone-photos, one corded, the other (apparently) cordless. I see Fran Drescher as "The Nanny" with a corded phone, but undated, so could be anywhere from 1993-1999. I see Rene Z. in 1996's Jerry McGuire with a corded phone.
I am going to tentatively concluded that corded phones were used most often in movies/TV through around 1996, which is when I see the first cordless appearance. It may have been a few more years before they were ubiquitous.
Let's see. Mannix' original run is the first place I remember seeing a
mobile phone. It's also popped up in Paul Drake's (Perry's
investigator) car on Perry Mason, which I've seen in reruns. Those
phones involved calling the mobile operator and having her make the
connection. I'm inclined to agree with Tim about the likely costs, but
it was something interesting and exotic for the time.
> Let's see. Mannix' original run is the first place I remember seeing a
> mobile phone. It's also popped up in Paul Drake's (Perry's
> investigator) car on Perry Mason, which I've seen in reruns. Those
> phones involved calling the mobile operator and having her make the
> connection. I'm inclined to agree with Tim about the likely costs, but
> it was something interesting and exotic for the time.
Not a TV show, but Denise Crosby's character in the 1988 movie "Miracle Mile" has a brick-style cell phone -- that's the earliest "Hollywood" example I can think of.
And I happen to know, because I just watched it, that there's a cordless landline phone used in 1992's "Love Potion No. 9." They do seem to be relatively rare in movies and TV; I wonder if it was felt that they don't "read" as being telephones as well as the old reliable corded type, and if there's no reason to have a character walking around their home with a phone, then they might as well just use a corded model.
--
Jim Ellwanger <trai...@ellwanger.tv>
<http://www.ellwanger.tv>
>This is a bit of a tangent, but I have been wondering if there is some
>summary of when changes in phone technology began showing up in television
>and movies?
To continue the technological march, I flipped by "General Hospital" last
night, and noticed that characters were reading not a paper, but their
tablet with the home page of the paper prominently displayed.
_ _
|_>|_> Brad Beam- Belle WV
|_>|_> http://www.facebook.com/74bmw
-Stan
In the Seinfeld episode "Thr Alternate Side", Jerry talks to the person who stole his car via the installed cell phone. This episode aired in 1991.
-Stan
A lot of what I remember about that concept, up to the days when cell
phones were beginning to really take off (some time circa the mid 90s)
was not a prediction that you would take your primary phone with you,
but that the telephone network would route calls to your physical
location, and we've never really gone there beyond things like Google
Voice and the occasional tech firm that uses it as a whiz-bang feature
to show off how cool they are.
--
David J. Lynch
djl...@gmail.com
There is a lag between the introduction of a technology and its
mainstream adoption. When a new technology is used for the first time
in a movie or TV show, it has to be done at a time when the viewer can
recognize the object and know what it's used for, and if the writer
waits to long to adopt the object, the viewer will think, "Why's (the
character) doing that? Doesn't he have a cell phone?"
Years ago I saw a documentary about telecommunications where they
showed old footage of a rotary phone switching station and described
how it worked. There were long rows of vertical rods and when you
picked up your receiver and got a dial tone, you enabled a rod. There
were seven wheels encircling the rod and as you dialed a wheel would
turn according to the number of pulses. When you finished dialing the
number the wheels would be aligned for the number you were calling and
the connection would be made. When the rotary telephone was first
introduced, most telephone exchanges did not have this infrastructure
and Bell Telephone (who had a phone monopoly and rented phones to
households, for you young'uns) would not make rotary telephones
available in an area until they installed the new exchange. So if New
York had rotary phones, it would not be in movies if people in
Cleveland could not recognize the technology.
Touch tone, or push button, phones used electronic switches instead of
mechanical ones which were much less expensive, much faster, and more
reliable.
This feels wrong. I remember quite a lot of cordless (landline, not
cellular) phones from TV and movies from the mid-to-late 1980s. I know
the technology had spread to my decidedly middle-class neighborhood by
the mid-'80s. Indeed, I found a 1986 article that says the "fad" of
cordless phones was "on the ropes".
http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=z1spAAAAIBAJ&sjid=k6UEAAAAIBAJ&pg=6723%2C2642658
This is far from exhaustive, but there are mentions of "cordless
phones" in reviews for 1986's 'Down and Out in Beverly Hills' ("...at
home among hot tubs, cordless phones and animal psychologists."),
1991's 'Julia Has Two Lovers' ('Not even the mobility provided by
cordless phones can prevent tedium from setting in."), 1992's 'Patriot
Games' ("...a smashing kitchen and squadrons of cordless phones and
computer terminals."), and 1993's 'The Beverly Hillbillies' ("Erika
Eleniak is fun as Elly May, especially when she tries to acclimate
herself to Beverly Hills High, where all the girls pack cordless
phones.")
I did find a few fun related articles:
San Jose Mercury News (CA) - March 12, 1986 - 1A Front
PHANTOM CALLS HAUNT POLICE PHONES DIAL 911 ON THEIR OWN
Something is making cordless telephones dial 911, the nationwide
emergency number -- and it's not human fingers. Whatever it is, it's
driving police and emergency personnel crazy here and across the
country. A study done in Santa Clara County suggests that when their
batteries get low, cordless phones pick up frequencies given off by
household appliances such as microwave ovens, vacuum cleaners,
blenders and refrigerators...
The Advocate (Baton Rouge, LA) - September 27, 1996
IN PRAISE OF CORDED PHONES
Perhaps I belong to the last generation that will be able to remember
a time when telephones were strictly stationary objects. Now that
mobile and cordless phones are commonplace, children of today will
grow up in a world where telephones can routinely be found in gardens
or cars, in patios or garages, on porch swings or the side of a tub.
They will need to be reminded that it was not always so...
--
Ed Dravecky III
http://www.fencon.org/
PGage <pga...@gmail.com> wrote:This feels wrong. I remember quite a lot of cordless (landline, not
> 1996: Cordless Phones (based on a non-representative sample of films
> using corded films around 1994, but not in 1996 and after. I probably don't
> have enough real evidence to give different dates for the routine use of
> cell phones and cordless phones).
cellular) phones from TV and movies from the mid-to-late 1980s. I know
the technology had spread to my decidedly middle-class neighborhood by
the mid-'80s. Indeed, I found a 1986 article that says the "fad" of
cordless phones was "on the ropes".
http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=z1spAAAAIBAJ&sjid=k6UEAAAAIBAJ&pg=6723%2C2642658
This is far from exhaustive, but there are mentions of "cordless
phones" in reviews for 1986's 'Down and Out in Beverly Hills' ("...at
home among hot tubs, cordless phones and animal psychologists."),
1991's 'Julia Has Two Lovers' ('Not even the mobility provided by
cordless phones can prevent tedium from setting in."), 1992's 'Patriot
Games' ("...a smashing kitchen and squadrons of cordless phones and
computer terminals."), and 1993's 'The Beverly Hillbillies' ("Erika
Eleniak is fun as Elly May, especially when she tries to acclimate
herself to Beverly Hills High, where all the girls pack cordless
phones.")
> This is far from exhaustive, but there are mentions of "cordless
> phones" in reviews for 1986's 'Down and Out in Beverly Hills' ("...at
> home among hot tubs, cordless phones and animal psychologists."),
> 1991's 'Julia Has Two Lovers' ('Not even the mobility provided by
> cordless phones can prevent tedium from setting in."), 1992's 'Patriot
> Games' ("...a smashing kitchen and squadrons of cordless phones and
> computer terminals."), and 1993's 'The Beverly Hillbillies' ("Erika
> Eleniak is fun as Elly May, especially when she tries to acclimate
> herself to Beverly Hills High, where all the girls pack cordless
> phones.")
Seems like the "Beverly Hillbillies" review is actually talking about mobile phones/cell phones rather than cordless landline phones -- it wouldn't make any sense for students at a high school to be "packing" the latter.
Although the "Down and Out" review probably is talking about cordless landline phones.
I can't tell about the other two -- seems like it could be either one.
So now we need to figure out when movie reviewers finally got their terminology straight!
>This is a bit of a tangent, but I have been wondering if there is some
>summary of when changes in phone technology began showing up in television
>and movies?
Which "Superman" movie was it that Clark Kent was looking for a phone booth
to change in, but, finding none, used a revolving door instead?
----- Original Message ----- From: PGage
Which "Superman" movie was it that Clark Kent was looking for a phone booth to change in, but, finding none, used a revolving door instead?This is a bit of a tangent, but I have been wondering if there is some summary of when changes in phone technology began showing up in television and movies?
Yup.
> ...So, that scene is probably not a comment on cell phones replacing phone
> booths.
It was a comment about how the old booths with the sliding doors had
been (for the most part) replaced by less private pay phones, and how
that would affect the Superman convention of changing in a phone
booth.