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Tusko the Elephant
Tusko, build as "The World's Meanest Elephant," arrived in the U.S. from Thialand in 1898. After touring the country, his keepr George "Slim" Lewis, tried to get him into a circus but none wanted him. Tusko lived out his final years at the Seattle... -
Reddy For Christmas - Reddy Kilowatt
Reddy is ready for Christmas! Are you....? -
PM Magazine
PM Magazine was a news and entertainment magazine produced in several markets throughout the United States from 1978 to 1991. -
I Survived Y2K
If you survived Y2K, you can survive anything! -
USA Hockey
There have been some exciting games, moments, and triumphs in the history of USA hockey. -
Playland Roller Rink
Playland Amusement Park opened in 1930 on Bitter Lake. A popular entratianment spot into the 1950s, it featured a roller coaster, Shute the Shoots, and roller rink among other attractions. It closed in 1961, the land aquired to build a school. -
Nightmare Theatre
Nightmare Theatre??was Seattle's signature late night horror movie program. Airing from 1964 to 1978 on KIRO-TV, Channel 7, its cast was mostly made up of performers from the PJ Patches kids show. Nightmare Theater host The Count, became a cult celebraty in the Pacific... -
Seattle's Everett Hawks
The Everett Hawks was first a professional and then a minor-league arena football team based in Everett, just outside Seattle, Washington from 2002 to 2007. -
King's Klubhouse
What's the password to King's Klubhouse? -
Luna Park
Luna Park operated in Seattle from 1907 until 1913. It was designed by Charles I.D. Loof, who built the first carousel at Coney Island in New York City. -
Turn Out the Lights Seattle
In April of 1971, real estate agents Bob McDonald and Jim Youngren erected a billboard just outside of Seattle-Tacoma International Aiport during a breif economic downturn for the area. It read, "will the last person leaving Seattle turn out the lights." Though it was... -
Public Market Center
The world famous Pike Place Market overlooks the Elliott Bay waterfront in Seattle. It opened in 1907 and is one of the oldest continuously operated public farmers' markets in the United States. -
Totem House
Totem House was a Seattle, Washington restaurant known for it's fish-and-chips, totem poles, and Northwestern art. It opened in the 1940s and closed in 2021. -
Mid Century Leprechaun
Go retro with this mid-century leprechaun. -
Eagles Auditorium Building
The historic Eagles Auditorium Building has stood at 1416 7th Avenue in Seattle since 1925. The building's colorful history has included everything from Grateful Dead concerts to a speech by Martin Luther King Jr. -
Chess King
A mall staple in the 1970s and 1980s, Chess King was founded in 1968 in Boston. At its peak it had over 500 stores. However, it was so closely identified with those two decades, soon into the 1990s it was no longer considered hip. -
The Nice Price
This was always one of the best deals in the record store, especially if you catching up on an artist's catalog. -
120 Minutes
The program known as 120 Minutes ran on Music Television from 1986 to 2003. It was cancelled abruptly but returned in 2011 on the channel's sibling feed where it ran for two more years. After the channel became more mainstream in the 1980s, thanks... -
Former All-American Handheld Electronic Football
Were you a champion of handheld football. Relive those glory days in this shirt from Old School Shirts! OS15051