@@deniseherud nope they wanted to make single servings only now to make people spend more money. Id gibe anything to go back in time to 1995 through 2000
86 was one of my favorite years! Graduated HS & went on to college! Thanks! Anybody else think that just might be Eli Wallach narrating those Toyota Commercials? (& I totally had a crush on the Sea Breeze Girl!)
1:59 Every minitrucker’s dream to see. They were a hit back then during the good ol days of the mini truckin’ scene. Still is to this day. Bringing back that OG goodness.
That Toyota commercial.... because who wouldn’t want an ice maker in their car, right? Anyway, You Can’t Do That On Television was such an awesome show, Barths Burgers still comes to my mind when I eat out to this day! Thanks Dave!!
11:04 George Coe on the Toyota voice over. He appeared in several skits during SNL's first season. 8:03 and here is Eli Wallach voicing a Toyota commercial.
YCDTOT💗 Lisa and Moosey💗 I got Lisa’s new-wave punk cut and my mom nearly died. She was expecting more, the sister from “16 Candles”.... 🤷🏼♀️😂 Hella easier to care for tho...just tons of product and mush it all up all messy...moms everywhere hated it 😂
You can’t do that on television and that firing squad gag.....amazing how stuff stored in the back of our minds and not accessed for years can come flooding back all at once. Thanks!
Sweet collection of memories! Thanks for your upload. Now if you excuse me, I'm gonna buy a Toyota mini truck and drink my decaffeinated Folgers crystals.
I'm sure it's just my birth year, but man oh man, I'm all about the 70s and 80s commercials. Somehow, the 90s commercial aesthetic just offends my sensibilities
had to stop and do the maths to remember how old I was in 86. so much brain damage. so much ''partying'' uh, You Can't Do That On Television. no really, You Can't Do That On Television.
I want a Toyota turbo 4×4 and some rocks to bounce on, I could ask for more but I'm not going to ask for anything more. Hair loss was as grave as child trafficking is today based on the grime severity of Ron sperling's pleas for action in his commercials.