A collaboration between developer Tiny Bookshelf and artist ♡-𝚖𝚘𝚡, Super Moxio Bros is a browser-playable version (links to game, Chrome recommended) of Super Mario Bros level 1-1 with graphics created using typewriter art. Not to brag or anything, but I just managed to beat the whole level without dying once.
This is a video of a middle school band performing an impressive cover of Gun N’ Roses’ 1987 banger ‘Sweet Child O’ Mine’ during their holiday concert at a nearby church. My only complaint is the sound technician should have done a better job of mixing their audio, because the
This is a video captured by a Circuit City employee in 2009 during the store’s final days in business. Ah, memories. I remember Circuit City. Not very well, mind you, but I’m pretty sure I went a few times. Or was that Radio Shack? *shrug* I’ll be honest — my
The 90’s, what can I say — I lived through them. Or, I should say, I survived through them, because I’m not sure what I was doing could be considered living. What I’m doing now either. This is a half hour mashup medley of 600 songs that were released from
This is a vintage video from all the way back in 1991 (30 years ago!) of a couple kids playing a variety of games in an Aladdin’s Castle arcade at the local mall. Growing up in Alabama we didn’t have any Aladdin’s Castles, but we had a Time-Out arcade at
This is a commercial for the Yomega Brain yo-yo (Amazon ad link) aired during Saturday morning cartoons in the 90’s. It perfectly encapsulates the nineties in a now painful to watch 30-second ad. God, I was one of those kids. Toss in a kid with terrible hand-foot coordination playing hacky
This is delightful outtake from Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood of Mister Rogers getting pranked by the crew with somebody else’s too-small shoes, and Mister Rogers reacting in the most wholesome way possible, even going so far as thanking the crew for the prank. Man, what a gem. Is Mister Rogers Neighborhood
This is what will now be known as the Spectrum Of Kindness, a barcode style chart created by data lover Owen Llewellyn Henry Jean Phillips to celebrate Mister Rogers’ birthday by presenting the color of every cardigan he wore on Mister Rogers’ neighborhood in chronological order from 1969 – 2001