|
Dating In Hong Kong On FirstClickFriend.Com Offers Online Dating Services And Online Personals For All Regions In Hong Kong. Dating In Hong Kong Can Be Really Successful Ith FirstClickFriend.Com 
Yes, it's Jimmy Tarbuck, advertising Sharp's range of microwave ovens.
He's basting a chicken, on which one of the previous owners of the book
has drawn a face. What did Jimmy Tarbuck actually do? For that
matter, what did Ken Dodd do? They were both always around in the 80s,
but what did they... do?
If one piece of domestic technology could symbolise Britain's consumer
boom in the 80s, it's the microwave oven, although they had been around
since 1947, when Raytheon's five-feet-tall 'Radarange' hit the market
with a gigantic exploding noise. Derived from radar technology pioneered
in the Second World War, the microwave was a space-age miracle of technology
which ended up being used to heat pies and warm up takeaways. Nonetheless
it is an essential part of many people's lives and I, for one, would be
dead without it.
The first compact model - by Amana, also called the 'Radarange'- went
on sale in 1967, but it wasn't until the 1980s that the ovens became popular
in the UK. They spawned a mini-industry of books teaching people how to
cook things with one ('insert your food, turn the dial to the appropriate
time, press start, and wait!'), and also led many a child to wonder what
would happen if different objects - compact discs, bugs, rats, one's younger
sister - were microwaved. Some people see the lack of effort associated
with microwave cooking, and the general blandness of most ready-prepared
microwaveable good, as symptoms of a catastrophic decline in society..
I don't know if there's a collector's market for old microwaves. The Sharp
R9600 Carousel pictured on the opposite page of the book (with browning
lever) is presumably still useful as a cooking device. There's no indication
of how powerful it is, although 650 watts would be about right for a top-of-the-range
model in 1983. It can be programmed to cook something up to 12 hours in
advance.
This picture bookends an article about how microwaves work, which I found
genuinely interesting because it's not the kind of thing they teach in
schools. There's a story, possibly apocryphal, about how microwave cooking
was discovered when some puzzled radar technicians noted a lot of dead
birds around their antennae. It therefore seems right to say that, sometimes,
you can't make an omelette without killing a few birds.
|