Retro Teenage

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The Cowabunga Collection packs in 13 retro Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles games






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Michael McWhertor @MikeMcWhertor







Mar 9, 2022, 6:33pm EST
















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Relive the turtles’ 8-bit and 16-bit beat-’em-ups and console adventures
Konami, Nickelodeon, and retro-game collection expert Digital Eclipse is stuffing a baker’s dozen of classic Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles games into a single title. That package, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: The Cowabunga Collection , will let players relive the joy of Konami’s classic beat-’em-up arcade games, as well as the soul-crushing frustration of the original NES Ninja Turtles platformer.
A trailer for The Cowabunga Collection that premiered during Sony’s State of Play livestream on Wednesday offered a taste of what’s included in the 13-game collection. The Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles and Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Turtles in Time beat-’em-up arcade games will be joined by their console counterparts, TMNT 2: The Arcade Game and TMNT 3: The Manhattan Project for the NES, and Super NES sequel TMNT 4: Turtles in Time . The collection will also include three versions of Tournament Fighters , which came to NES, Sega Genesis, and Super NES.
Here’s the full list of games in the package, with their original platforms:
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: The Cowabunga Collection is coming to Nintendo Switch, PlayStation 4, PlayStation 5, Windows PC via Steam, Xbox One, and Xbox Series X. The collection will cost $39.99.
The new Ninja Turtles collection will round out a big year for the heroes in a half-shell, who are also getting a brand-new beat-’em-up, TMNT: Shredder’s Revenge , in 2022.
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We’re changing the way you hire photographers.
All creators appearing in this list are members of The H Hub creative network and are available for hire.
Retro photographers are taking over. The talent on the Hub spans far and wide. We are blown away daily by the work that our creators produce. There is a movement of retro style photography that depicts a bright and carefree lifestyle- a teenage dream if you will. These individuals are making magic by playing with colors, lighting, and styling! Both film and digital are included in the list. The following creators are owning their personal style, and we’re here for the ride! Here are 28 retro photographers that will make your teenage dream come true:
Highbrow / Editorial, Studio / Portrait
Highbrow / Editorial, Studio / Portrait
Highbrow / Editorial, Diversity, Studio / Portrait
Beauty / Makeup, Highbrow / Editorial, Diversity, Studio / Portrait
Highbrow / Editorial, Diversity, Lifestyle / Portrait
Highbrow / Editorial, Diversity, Studio / Portrait
Lifestyle / Portrait, Neon / Night, Urban / Streetwear, Wedding
Diversity, Neon / Night, Studio / Portrait
Location Milan, Metropolitan City of Milan, IT
Highbrow / Editorial, Studio / Portrait
Highbrow / Editorial, Diversity, Lifestyle / Portrait, Studio / Portrait, Wedding, Studio / Product
Highbrow / Editorial, Lifestyle / Portrait, Neon / Night
Highbrow / Editorial, Lifestyle / Portrait, Studio / Portrait, Wedding
Highbrow / Editorial, Diversity, Lifestyle / Portrait, Studio / Portrait
Highbrow / Editorial, Diversity, Studio / Portrait
Highbrow / Editorial, Diversity, Studio / Portrait
Highbrow / Editorial, Diversity, Studio / Portrait, Wedding, Studio / Product
Highbrow / Editorial, Diversity, Studio / Portrait
Highbrow / Editorial, Studio / Portrait
Highbrow / Editorial, Lifestyle / Portrait
Highbrow / Editorial, Diversity, Lifestyle / Portrait, Urban / Streetwear, Exteriors (Architecture)
Highbrow / Editorial, Fashionista / Blogger, Lifestyle / Portrait, Studio / Portrait
Highbrow / Editorial, Diversity, Lifestyle / Portrait, Neon / Night, Studio / Portrait
Highbrow / Editorial, Diversity, Studio / Portrait
Diversity, Lifestyle / Portrait, Wedding
Highbrow / Editorial, Lifestyle / Portrait, Travel / Outdoor
Highbrow / Editorial, Lifestyle / Portrait, Swimwear / Beach, Interiors, Mountains & Fields, Food
Highbrow / Editorial, Diversity, Lifestyle / Portrait

Teenage girls living in the 1940s enjoyed an independence that would make many modern teen envious.
They had been raised by parents and teachers who encouraged them to dress prettily so they could find a young man to marry, and to work a part-time job so they could buy expensive wedding china.
But by the time they were old enough to work part-time jobs, the young men were away at war and mom and dad were both working away from the home. With no young boys to impress and no parents to please, teenage girls, were left with an unexpected level of independence, and a lot of disposable income.
Ballet girls posing in their dressing room at the Cremorne Theatre, Brisbane, 1940.
Teenage girls gather around wearing their ice skates, c. 1944. Photo by Kirn Vintage Stock/Corbis via Getty Images
Smiling teen girl cheerleader wearing varsity letter sweater, Los Angeles, California, 1949. Photo by Camerique/Getty Images
At the Vermont state fair, Rutland.
Backstage at the girlie show at the Vermont state fair, Rutland.
Young fashionable women. Photo by FORTEPAN CC BY-SA 3.0
In school, they were expected to follow a strict dress code, which mandated everything from the type of blouse, skirt, socks, shoes and even type of jewelry and hairstyles they should wear.
But outside of the school, they had more choices about how to spend spare time and money. They bought the clothes they wanted to wear: knit sweaters, plaid skirts, bobby socks, loafers, and nail-polish-painted eye-glasses.
Related video: Great 1940s teenage slang:
Clothing designers were puzzled to find that these teenage girls picked different clothes than the conventional styles preferred by their mothers. Some of them picked more “masculine” styles, donning pantsuits, slacks, denim jeans, and even overalls.
When they weren’t working or at school, they hung out at movie theaters and soda fountains listening to Frank Sinatra, swing dancing and enjoying a carefree and independent life far from the troubles of war.
Students at Washington High School in class, training for specific contributions to the war effort, Los Angeles, California. Ralph Angar, instructor, explains propeller characteristics to students in the aeronautics class (LOC).
In bathing suits, North Africa, 1944.
On vacation at Lake Balaton in Hungary, 1939. Photo by FORTEPAN CC BY-SA 3.0
The teenage girls of the 1940s lived in an exciting and drastically changing world. By the time the war was over, and society started to get back to “normal,” these girls had already enjoyed a taste of independence that they weren’t ready to let go of.
Many of them would grow up to be part of the 1960s women’s rights movement, bringing a new level of independence to American women, for decades to come.
Marea Harris is one of the authors writing for The Vintage News
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