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Kids today, you dont know you are born

Discussion in 'Sunderland' started by Steven Royston O'Neill, Jul 2, 2011.

  1. Wherewereyou

    Wherewereyou Guest

    That's what I meant by raw! Don't know about Stornaway, but a mate did bring me some from Scotland once and it was fantastic. I found it very similar to the Irish.
     
    #61
  2. Steven Royston O'Neill

    Steven Royston O'Neill Well-Known Member

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    please log in to view this image
     
    #62
  3. Nads

    Nads Well-Known Member

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    I hope not, as all Sunderland numbers start with a 5..... ;)
     
    #63
  4. Wherewereyou

    Wherewereyou Guest

    Did Osca do that?
     
    #64
  5. CyprusMackem

    CyprusMackem Active Member

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    Not in the old days they didn't.
    I made that number up but when I was a kid it was 2582261
     
    #65
  6. Commachio

    Commachio Rambo 2021

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    please log in to view this image
     
    #66
  7. Steven Royston O'Neill

    Steven Royston O'Neill Well-Known Member

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    he is clever, the way he garnishes his ****
     
    #67
  8. Nads

    Nads Well-Known Member

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    Christ how old are you?

    I remember the numbers being shorter, mine was 79731.

    They added 5* to all the numbers, but starting 2 is a Newcastle or Shields exchange, surely?
     
    #68
  9. Pontsafc

    Pontsafc Active Member

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    You lot had TV!!!!
     
    #69
  10. Steven Royston O'Neill

    Steven Royston O'Neill Well-Known Member

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    I remember my mothers divi number at the coop if that helps, 20298
     
    #70

  11. SolmanToujours

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    George Taylor used to present matches for TTTV. Talked like he had a gobstopper in his yap.
     
    #71
  12. Steven Royston O'Neill

    Steven Royston O'Neill Well-Known Member

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    Shoot

    When Tyne Tees first started covering football, with Saturday night highlights in the early Sixties, "Shoot" seemed a snappy and appropriate title for the programme. It was one which would continue for another 20 years and also be adopted by an even more long-running juvenile football weekly.

    Early coverage used film cameras, with the ever-present risk that a goal might be scored whilst the film was being changed. Tyne Tees later acquired a more professional outside broadcast unit, but "Shoot" never entirely shook off its shoestring image.

    The programme's first commentator was George Taylor, TTTV's long-serving Sports Editor, and someone still involved in football today, as head of Player Liaison at Newcastle United FC. He was succeeded by David Taylor, a somewhat mysterious commentary choice, as Taylor was a straight journalist who later went on to report for "World In Action". Taylor took the helm throughout the early Seventies, bowing out at the end of the 1973-74 season, his last commentary was a 1-1 draw between Newcastle and Birmingham.
     
    #72
  13. Billy Death

    Billy Death Guest

    Happy days.

    Some of you on here are older than me but when I started going to games in 78/79 season football was a working mans sport.

    When I got to 16, 82/83 season we used to go for a drink in the Glue pot bar at the Roker Hotel. 10p off a pint on match days cost the princely sum of 48p.

    20 Gold Mark for 99p then off to Roker Park, squeezing in the under 16 turnstile stinking of beer for £1.60.

    Bovril so hot you could use it as napalm, pies so chewy they could bounce to the moon.

    Nee bolt or paper in the Fulwell end bogs.

    Wish those days were back.
     
    #73
  14. Billy Death

    Billy Death Guest

    Mick MacManus & Kenyar Nagasaki, the guy with the mask.
     
    #74
  15. Billy Death

    Billy Death Guest

    Aye, bomber Roach, big ****er from Bristol, strong as a ****ing ox that bloke.

    Died of a heart attack poor bugger.
     
    #75
  16. Billy Death

    Billy Death Guest

    Raw black pud.......lush!
     
    #76
  17. bald-in-guelph

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    Aye Kent Walton "Have a good week till next week." 4-5 on Saturday afternoons. The Royle Brothers, Mick McManus and Les Kellett. Great days.
     
    #77
  18. FlagFlyingHigh

    FlagFlyingHigh Active Member

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    Always remember me mother answering the phone like that, strange as I'm sure the person calling knows what number they've just rang!

    On a side note, black pudding is vile ... end of! :mad:
     
    #78
  19. Nads

    Nads Well-Known Member

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    You're wrong on this.

    End of back...
     
    #79
  20. Steven Royston O'Neill

    Steven Royston O'Neill Well-Known Member

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    this could be a first for us, a black pudding fight
     
    #80

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