Video: Pussy Palace 1985
Before Blockbuster homogenized the experience, independent video stores like "Palace Video" (a common name for rental chains across the UK and the US) were dens of curated chaos. specifically references the aesthetic of that year: the neon-drenched cover art, the synth-heavy soundtracks, and the transition from the gritty 70s hangover to the polished, cocaine-fueled optimism of the mid-80s.
Founded in 2009 by Lev Tanju, Palace Skateboards has turned the "Palace 1985" vibe into a global lifestyle. The Story Behind Palace Skateboards Pussy Palace 1985 Video
The phrase "Palace 1985 Video" bridges two distinct cultural eras: the mid-1980s peak of the distribution label and the modern Palace Skateboards brand, which uses 1980s VHS aesthetics to define its "lifestyle and entertainment" identity. The 1980s Original: Palace Video The Story Behind Palace Skateboards The phrase "Palace
Palace 1985 Video was not merely a distributor; it was a lifestyle architect. In the chaotic, big-hair, shoulder-pad madness of the mid-80s, Palace offered a sanctuary of cool minimalism. It told the viewer: You are not just watching a movie. You are attending an event. You are cultivating your taste. It told the viewer: You are not just watching a movie
For modern viewers, the video is a grainy, neon-soaked reminder that the fight for sex-positive spaces has long roots, and that joy and pleasure are, in themselves, forms of resistance.