Author Topic: So who's watching the REAL Jersey Shore  (Read 965 times)

Offline DREDIOCK

  • Plutonium Member
  • *******
  • Posts: 17775
Re: So who's watching the REAL Jersey Shore
« Reply #15 on: September 22, 2010, 08:40:54 PM »
As for the show "Boardwalk empire" I watched it for the first time the other night. Seems like a GREAT show.

"Stop saying that. its #)@(@ distracting" lmao
Death is no easy answer
For those who wish to know
Ask those who have been before you
What fate the future holds
It ain't pretty

Offline Traveler

  • Gold Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 3148
      • 113th Lucky Strikes
Re: So who's watching the REAL Jersey Shore
« Reply #16 on: September 23, 2010, 09:23:45 AM »
I grew up on the Jersey Shore and understand completely the locals attitude towards the Benny and have seen it change over the decades.     I lived in Wanamassa, NJ,  Wanamassa was so small it had no schools so I attended Grammar School and High School in Asbury Park.  Going to High School 62 – 66 was very interesting.  I had two classes with Danny Devito , very funny kid.  Never saw him take gym.  Also watched  a young Bruce Springsteen perform for free at a little coffee house named “The Stone Pony”.  I worked summers on the boardwalk  selling crap to BENNY’s.  The owners of the Boardwalk attractions are like carneys or circus people.  Just another type of BENNY.  Only there for the buck and the summer. 

I worked for four summers in a Dunk Tank on the boardwalk where I’d insult the rube trying to hit a target that would dunk me in the water tank.  Three balls for a dollar.  The rube was told the distance was the same as a baseball pitcher’s mound to home plate, 60 feet.  It was actually 68 feet, and the baseballs were weighted and soaked in oil.  The trip plat needed to be hit with slug hammer to actually trip.  I got .25 of every dollar.  I worked from 7PM till closing got paid cash and generally went home with about $250 I was 15 years old.  I made the bulk of the money between 10PM and 2PM.  That’s when the drunks arrived and that’s when it became two balls for a dollar.  Just piss them off, insult their girl friend, wife, mother, whatever.  Call them “Mary”  “baldy”,  Or ignore the guy and chat up the hot girl friend.   Ask her why she’s out with her father, you get the picture. 

At one time, the board walk extended from SandyHook south a continues boardwalk to Point Pleasant .  The Hurricanes of the 40’s 50’s and 60’s reduced them to what we have in place today.
 I’ve lived for the last 38 years in Highlands, NJ on the bay side of Sandy Hook.  In the 70’s and 80’s Highlands, Labor day through Memorial  Day population was around 2,000 people.  Whereas the Memorial Day through Labor Day population was about 6000.  That means additional spending and an economy based on a migratory populations , little stability, little personal investment into the property, more rentals then home owners.  Oh yea, the owners of the rental property were mostly BENNY’s themselves.
What that means to a town is an influx of people spending and people selling, with very little change to the populist  base, so no real improvement for the town.  Highlands is .51 Square miles in size, has 38 Liquor licenses, no library or book stores.   Town had to triple in size during the summer and triple in services, garbage pickup, Fire protection, First Aid Services, Police services.  BENNY’s take it upon themselves  to drink to excess  and get in fights and generally be stupid at 3AM.  They brought many bad habits with them from the big city, drugs, prostitutes , illegal parking, death by auto, death by drowning, death by boating , Fire,  and for some reason the idea that common sense and civilized behavior no longer applied to them.  I was a volunteer Firemen, EMT on the First Aid Squad and Special Police Officer.  In the 70’s & 80’s The BENNY had to commit murder in order to be held for more than a few hours.   Because after all, the town fathers were under the impression that they needed the BENNY to survive.
The 90’s changed a lot of that for Highlands, we still have a lot of temporary summer only residents.  But in 1992 Fast Ferry Service between New York City and Highlands started operating.   A lot of transients bought property in Highlands, the town became a year round resident for over 6000.  The big change was the people now living there have a stake in the town.  Our Police force is full time, year round and well trained.  Our judge lives in town.  We still have 38 Liquor licenses, but  we now have a library. BENNY’s still act stupid and think civilized behavior does not apply to them , they’re easy to spot as you drive through Monmouth County, they’re  the ones dressed in the orange jump suites picking up the garbage on the beach and the side of the road.   


Traveler
Executive Officer
113th LUcky Strikes
http://www.hitechcreations.com/wiki/index.php/113th_Lucky_Strikes

Offline VonMessa

  • Plutonium Member
  • *******
  • Posts: 11922
Re: So who's watching the REAL Jersey Shore
« Reply #17 on: September 23, 2010, 09:59:01 AM »
I can't remember when going to the Jersey shore didn't suck.

They moved Lucy.

They started charging you to go on a beach with freezing cold, puke green water that (may or may not) be closed due to the amount of medical waste washed up on the beach.

The only half decent beach town left (Ocean City) is completely dry.  God forbid I take my wife out for drinks and dinner.

Jersey cops act like (and have uniforms akin to) the Gestapo.

It may have been a great place in the late 40's and 50's, but not so much these days.

I may take my Jeep to the Pine Barrens once or twice a year (and spend half my time picking up garbage), but that's about the extent of my forays into the People's Free Republic of New Jersey (unless I'm passing through on I-78 on my way to NYC.)

Boardwalk Empire?   :aok   :aok
Braümeister und Schmutziger Hund von JG11


We are all here because we are not all there.

Offline Chugamug

  • Zinc Member
  • *
  • Posts: 56
Re: So who's watching the REAL Jersey Shore
« Reply #18 on: September 23, 2010, 12:40:29 PM »
I caught part of the Boardwalk Empire and definitely will watch it from the beginning.

If you got to the beach, stay away from the boardwalk and go to Island Beach State Park. It's 10 miles of undeveloped barrier island just south of Seaside Heights. I live right across the bay and go all the time.
I have the mobile fishing permit for my 4x4 and drive onto the beach, it's absolutely best way to go. They sell yearly permits, and 3 day passes as well.
You can get into the park at any time with this permit, even when they close because the parking lots are full.
You can build fires on the beach in the southern half of the park and virtually camp out if you want.
The fall striper run should be starting soon, so I'll be going a lot more then I do in the summer.
Actually my wife was there yesterday, and since she's been laid off goes there at least twice a week on week days.