1979 Fun Facts, Trivia and History |
Quick Facts from 1979: |
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Top Ten Baby Names of 1979: Jennifer, Melissa, Amanda, Jessica, Amy, Michael, Chris, Topher, Jason, David, James |
The Hotties and Fashion Icons: Loni Anderson, Susan Anton, Barbara Bach, Catherine Bach, Kim Basinger, Valerie Bertinelli, Jacqueline Bisset, Christie Brinkley, Lynda Carter, Bo Derek, Farrah Fawcett, Erin Gray, Shelly Hack, Debbie Harry, Marilu Henner, Lauren Hutton, Kate Jackson, Cheryl Ladd, Olivia Newton-John, Stevie Nicks, Dolly Parton, Bernadette Peters, Victoria Principal, Diana Ross, Jane Seymour, Brooke Shields, Jacquelyn Smith, Suzanne Somers, Donna Summer, Cheryl Tiegs, Charlene Tilton, Mary Woronov |
Hollywood Hunks, Sex Symbols and Leading Men: Gregg Allman, David Cassidy, Patrick Duffy, Sam Elliott, Harrison Ford, Andy Gibb, Mark Hamill, Julio Iglesias, Kris Kristofferson, Lee Majors, Jack Nicholson, Ryan O’Neal, Burt Reynolds, Richard Roundtree, Davide Lee Roth, Sylvester Stallone, Rod Stewart, John Travolta |
“The Quotes:” “Have a Coke and smile” “Quality is job one” “Nothing comes between me and my Calvins” “Reach out and touch someone” |
Time Magazine’s Man of the Year: Ayatollah Khomeini |
Miss America: Kylene Barker (Roanoke, VA) |
Miss USA: Mary Therese Friel (New York) |
The Bad News: Ford’s Pinto automobile design allowed its fuel tank to be easily damaged in the event of a rear-end collision which sometimes resulted in deadly fires and explosions. It was first noticed by Ford in 1971 tests. The Three Mile Island Unit 2 reactor, near Middletown, Pa., partially melted down on March 28, 1979. This was the most serious accident in U.S. commercial nuclear power plant operating history, although its small radioactive releases had no detectable health effects on plant workers or the public. Its aftermath brought about sweeping changes involving emergency response planning, reactor operator training, human factors engineering, radiation protection, and many other areas of nuclear power plant operations. A combination of equipment malfunctions, design-related problems, and worker errors led to TMI-2’s partial meltdown and very small off-site releases of radioactivity. 52 Americans are taken hostage in Tehran, Iran for 444 days. Four days later, ABC’s Nightline premiered, centering on the crisis. NASA’s Skylab fell to Earth, landing mostly in the Indian Ocean. Rock and Roll Death: Sid Vicious (heroin overdose) 11 people were crushed to death outside of Cincinnati Riverfront Coliseum prior to a concert by The Who. |
Cleveland School Shooting |
The Cleveland School Shooting in San Diego, CA, is remembered as one of the deadliest school shootings in United States history. On January 29, 1979, 16-year-old Brenda Spencer opened fire on the Cleveland Elementary School from her house across the street with a rifle, killing two people and injuring eight others. Sge reportedly said she did it because “I don’t like Mondays.” In response to this shooting, schools have looked for ways to better protect their students; one such measure has been to install metal detectors at school entrances, though this can be costly and time-consuming. Schools have also turned to other measures such as improved surveillance tracking systems in order to better protect their students from potential threats. |
Pop Culture News: A song called ‘Ready ‘n’ Steady’ by ‘D.A’ appeared on several charts peaking at #102, but it is very, very hard to find. |
Eight “Sea Shepherd” activists were arrested in 1979 for violating the Seal Protection Act, for spraying a thousand seal pups with permanent red dye, which made their pelts useless for hunters. Scrappy-Doo was first added to the cast of Scooby-Doo in 1979. Hurricanes were traditionally named only after women. After feminist groups protested over the implied slur that women alone were tempestuous and unpredictable, men’s names were also used for such weather phenomena beginning in 1979. Australia Fined NASA $400 for littering after debris from the spacecraft “Skylab” landed in the Shire of Esperance, Western Australia. NASA never paid. 30 years later California DJ Scott Barley raised funds from his listeners and paid NASA’s bill. Scott got a key to the city for his efforts. The Guardian Angels were formed in New York City as an unarmed organization of young crime fighters. The eradication of the smallpox virus was certified. Black and Decker released the now-famous cordless mini-vacuum, The Dustbuster. 1979 -The film The China Syndrome, a movie about a nuclear meltdown caused by a faulty sensor reading and a stuck-open pressure release valve, was released only 12 days before the 3 Mile Island Meltdown on March 28, 1979, caused by a faulty sensor reading and a stuck open pressure release valve. Rhodesia became Zimbabwe The highest Nielsen rating (24.1) for any basketball game in the US, college or pro, is still the 1979 NCAA Championship between Michigan State, with Magic Johnson and Indiana State, with Larry Bird. The highest-rated and most-watched NBA Final game was Game 6 of the 1998 NBA Finals which averaged a 22.3 rating. Chrysler received a $1.5 Billion government loan guarantee from the United States government. Chip Shearin had to play bass and Bryan Horton had to play the drums for 15 minutes straight on the 1979 song “Rapper’s Delight” by The Sugarhill Gang because it was the days before samplers and drum machines. |
Tens of thousands of rock fans gathered at Disco Demolition Night was an ill-fated baseball promotion on July 12, 1979, at Comiskey Park in Chicago, Illinois. On The Day That Disco Died, the field was ruined and The Chicago White Sox had to forfeit the second game (of the doubleheader) to the Detroit Tigers. Pope John Paul II visited the United States. Elvita Adams jumped from the 86th floor of the Empire State Building in an attempted suicide, only to be blown back onto the 85th floor by a gust of wind. Her only injury was a broken hip. A (still) unknown group of people paid for the erection of the Georgia Guidestones, 6 granite slabs that instruct the survivors of an apocalyptic scenario on how to rebuild a better world. The builder was told that it was planned for 20 years, it was completed in 1980. The Surf Ballroom in Clear Lake, Iowa, is the venue where Buddy Holly, Ritchie Valens, and The Big Bopper gave their final performances on February 2, 1959. Each February, since 1979, the venue hosts a Winter Dance Party (the name of Holly’s final tour) in honor of the three stars. Pushing the Envelope is a reference to a World War 2 flight envelope. WWII pilots used it to describe upper and lower conditions at which the pilot could fly. To push those conditions increased capabilities and technology. The phrase was brought into the mainstream in 1979 by Tom Wolfe’s book, The Right Stuff. Cost of a Superbowl ad in 1979: $185,000 |
RIP: On January 25, 1979, Robert Williams became the first known human being killed by a robot. He was an American factory worker at the Ford Motor Company Flat Rock Casting Plant in Michigan. He was struck from behind and crushed by a one-ton cart moved by a robot arm, killing him instantly. The Who Concert Disaster: Eleven fans were crushed to death during a crowd surge for unreserved seats before The Who rock concert at the Riverfront Coliseum in Cincinnati, Ohio. When Australia abolished their inheritance tax in 1979, an unusually high number of parents died in the week immediately after the abolition went into effect, suggesting that many of their heirs were doing everything to keep them alive just long enough for the inheritance tax to expire. The Mount Erebus Disaster: A plane crash in Antarctica (Air New Zealand Flight 901) in which 237 tourists and 20 crew were killed on a sightseeing flight due to an error in flight planning and a phenomenon known as “sector whiteout” in which there is no contrast between the sky and the ground. |
Cold War: NORAD experienced a computer glitch that alerted technicians of a widespread Russian nuclear attack on North America. The U.S. air defense program ordered the president’s “doomsday plane” to take off, and warned launch control to prepare for a retaliatory attack. |
Nobel Prize Winners: Physics – Sheldon Lee Glashow, Abdus Salam, Steven Weinberg Chemistry – Herbert C. Brown, Georg Wittig Medicine – Allan M. Cormack, Godfrey N. Hounsfield Literature – Odysseas Elytis Peace – Mother Teresa Economics – Theodore Schultz, Arthur Lewis |
The Habit: Jogging while listening to tapes on your Sony Walkman and wearing a Lacoste preppy shirt with the famous alligator on the left side and designer jeans. |
1st appearances & 1979’s Most Popular Christmas gifts, toys and presents: Walkman cassette/radio |
More Firsts: ESPN (Entertainment and Sports Programming Network) began broadcasting on September 7. April 1st – Nickelodeon TV cable network began. Victoria’s Secret stores opened in 1979. It went national in 1982 after being acquired by Limited Brands. The McDonalds Happy Meal first went on sale in 1979. Debuting on PBS as a one-time, 13-part series, This Old House with was one of the earliest home improvement shows, and is arguably the most well known. The first use of the phrase “May the Fourth Be With You” was by a Danish political party which placed a congratulatory advertisement in The London Evening News when Margaret Thatcher took office as Prime Minister on May 4th 1979, “May the Fourth Be with You, Maggie. Congratulations.” Etan Patz was the 1st missing child to have their picture on milk carton in 1979 and that the murderer wasn’t caught till 2012. |
Best Film Oscar Winner: The Deer Hunter (presented in 1979) |
Broadway Show: They’re Playing Our Song (Musical) Opened on February 11, 1979, and Closed: September 6, 1981 Evita (Musical) Opened on September 25, 1979, and Closed: June 26, 1983 Sugar Babies (Review) Opened on October 8, 1979, and Closed: August 28, 1982 |
Popular and Notable Books From 1979: 1985 by John Hackett A Wizard of Earthsea by Ursula K. Le Guin The Bloody Chamber by Angela Carter Chesapeake by James Michener The Dead Zone by Stephen King The Establishment by Howard Fast The Executioner’s Song by Norman Mailer Flowers in the Attic by V.C. Andrews Good as Gold by Joseph Heller The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy by Douglas Adams Jailbird by Kurt Vonnegut Kane and Abel by Jeffrey Archer Kindred by Octavia Butler The Last Enchantment by Mary Stewart The Matarese Circle by Robert Ludlum Memories of Another Day by Harold Robbins Oh Say Can You Say? by Dr. Seuss Overload by Arthur Hailey Smiley’s People by John le Carré Sophie’s Choice by William Styron Triple by Ken Follett War and Remembrance by Herman Wouk The White Album by Joan Didion |
1979 Most Popular TV shows: 1. 60 Minutes (CBS) 2. Three’s Company (ABC) 3. That’s Incredible! (ABC) 4. Alice (CBS) 5. M*A*S*H (CBS) 6. Dallas (CBS) 7. Flo (CBS) 8. The Jeffersons (CBS) 9. The Dukes of Hazzard (CBS) 10. One Day at a Time (CBS) |
1979 Billboard Number One Songs: January 20 – February 9: February 10 – March 9: March 10 – March 23: March 24 – April 6: April 7 – April 13: April 14 – April 20: April 21 – April 27: April 28 – May 4: May 5 – June 30: June 2 – June 8: June 9 – June 15: June 16 – July 29: June 30 – July 13: July 14 – August 17: August 18 – August 24: August 25 – October 5: October 6 – October 12: October 13 – October 19: October 20 – November 2: November 3 – November 9: November 10 – November 16: November 17 – November 23: November 24 – December 7: December 8 – December 21: December 22, 1979 – January 4, 1980: |
Sports: World Series Champions: Pittsburgh Pirates Superbowl XIII Champions: Pittsburgh Steelers NBA Champions: Seattle SuperSonics Stanley Cup Champs: Montreal Canadiens U.S. Open Golf Hale Irwin U.S. Tennis: (Men/Ladies) John McEnroe/Tracy Austin Wimbledon (Men/Women): Bjorn Borg/Martina Navratilova NCAA Football Champions: Alabama NCAA Basketball Champions: Michigan State Kentucky Derby: Spectacular Bid |