labworm
US Veteran
In the 60's we didn't go to the drive in to watch the movie.
The trunk was able to only fit three of us.

The trunk was able to only fit three of us.

Love reading all these replies but I'm VERY surprised that nowhere yet mentioned are those absolutely sadistic tire shredding devices that allowed exit traffic with no harm but your tires were beyond a total loss if you even thought about driving in to the theater in a lane that was designed for exit.
I was a kid, years away from a driver's license. Surely you guys remember these shredders better than I can?!
Hmmn, wonder how that could have happened...Once I was at a drive-in with my girlfriend and she went into the snack bar to get us some popcorn. A girl behind her in line asked if she knew she had her sweater on inside out....whoops!
Love reading all these replies but I'm VERY surprised that nowhere yet mentioned are those absolutely sadistic tire shredding devices that allowed exit traffic with no harm but your tires were beyond a total loss if you even thought about driving in to the theater in a lane that was designed for exit.
I was a kid, years away from a driver's license. Surely you guys remember these shredders better than I can?!
A threesome in a drive in, in a trunk of a car, no less, even I never tried that one. [emoji1]In the 60's we didn't go to the drive in to watch the movie.
The trunk was able to only fit three of us.![]()
I met my wife in 56 she was 16 I was 18. Her mother was too strict to allow her daughter to go to a drive in.![]()
Not to mention those little packages, courtesy of Trojan.[emoji1]A warm summer evening at the drive-in theater with popcorn in paper sacks, hotdogs wrapped in wax paper, courtesy of mom, and an ice chest of soda pop supplied by dad.
We sat on folding chairs outside the car on those warm nights. It was a time to enjoy a movie and family time. Sometimes other families would join us and it became a party. It was like the tailgate party so popular today.
My brothers and I liked the westerns and action movies and would sit through the entire show. When there was a boring movie, more for the grown-ups, we would head to the area under the big screen. We were like tiny ants there, compared to the actors on the screen who looked fifty feet tall.
Swings and slides under the screen gave us a playground and it was there that we would meet other kids and enjoy ourselves while the projected images flickered above us.
During the 50s, there were many drive-in theaters. It's sad that, except for a few, drive-in theaters have disappeared from our culture.
The Chief theater in Midland, Texas was my favorite. It opened in the mid 50's and was demolished in 1983.
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I saw lots of movies at The Chief in Midland. A few at the Fiesta, too.
There is a newish drive in in Midland now called Big Sky. Somehow it just isn't the same as it was when I was a kid.