The Usborne Book of the Future (1979) “A trip in time to the year 2000 and beyond” – #RetroFuturism #Futurism #Science #Tech #Technology #Wristwatch #TheFutureIsNow #ForwardIntoThePast

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The Usborne Book of the Future (1979) “A trip in time to the year 2000 and beyond” – #RetroFuturism #Futurism #Science #Tech #Technology #Wristwatch #TheFutureIsNow #ForwardIntoThePast
Sad when old music technologies are left to die on the streets, this reel to reel could have recorded some hits. . . . . . . . . . #analogtodigital #forwardintothepast #streettreasures #technology https://www.instagram.com/p/BnTm3kbl86o/?utm_source=ig_tumblr_share&igshid=ibbc80z74l35
Forward into the Past, Part Two
Modern Day Mr. Hooper
On the television show Sesame Street, Mr. Hooper was many things: inventor, mentor, employer, and friend but I remember him best as a corner shopkeeper, street sweeper, and stoop speaker. He had a place in the neighborhood people could drop by every day and he did things the old-fashioned way. He asked how people were doing, helped them when they needed it, encouraged kindness, did things by hand, and fixed stuff when it was broken. People did not need a reason to come by his store, they just kind of did; some got goods or drinks from the fountain, others just wanted to say hello.
Serendripity Spot, at the corner of 33rd and Lyndale Avenues North, tries to be a little bit “Mr. Hooper.” His store was stocked with jars of ingredients for making birdseed shakes and egg creams alongside newspapers, bulk candy, and other items. Back then there was less packaging of the stuff we buy, and I carry an admiration for those times and a kinship with Mr. Hooper as I move “forward into the past” in the way I do business.
Specifically, I avoid brand names, inflated pricing, and all that darned boxing, bagging, and wrapping. This might be called “precycling,” or eliminating trash before it is created, because if we do not use new plastic, paper, or metal to begin with, we will not have to dispose of it later. Energy, water, and raw materials are also saved when containers are refilled instead of using new.
I am now ready and interested in finding out what folks might like to get from this corner shop in bulk quantities so as to establish a small supply of staple goods that people can pick up and bring home using their own returnable refillable bottles and jars. Serendripity Spot is open to becoming a “mini mercantile” and could sell things like cooking oil, flour, grains, nuts, sugar, spices, and more. Some have already asked about coffee beans and loose leaf tea, and so it seems there may be a ready-made place to start.
There are two new nonprofit grocery stores coming to North Minneapolis and it is exciting to have additional resources that promise to 1) break up the federally designated food desert in this area; 2) be within walking or biking distance from the shop. I can get there easily for things I need to make drinks and snacks, and, if those nearby need to grab a pantry item here and there, Serendripity Spot can have things on hand and be place to service them too.
Kelley Skumautz, Shopkeeper