Is your graduate worth it?
Is your graduate worth it? Of course! Have fun & make long-lasting memories with our photobooth bus. We can stage the bus in many locations but if it does not fit, you must equip. We can stage our equipment almost anywhere. It has a small footprint. Backyard, alley, garage, living room, we can do it. Call today, dates are booking up fast.
Do you know what season it is??? Block Party Season!!!
Break out of Covid restrictions with style and bring the hit of the block party to the block. Bob’s Photobooth Bus is a unique way to bring lasting memories and a ton of fun to your block party. By dividing the cost between several families, make it an incredibly affordable addition.
Dates are filling up fast, so contact us today to secure your date.
NEWS FLASH: Bob’s Photobooth Bus Without The Bus! SAY WHAT???
Where was my 1967 VW Bus “Spicoli” 50 years ago today? Woodstock?
If he was, I’m sure he didn’t remember. I was a sprite 6 years old then and “Spicoli” was only 2 ½ years old. There were approx. 400,000 people who attended but shortly after you could probably count 2 million people who claimed they were there but I can tell you, I was not.
While the Anniversary Concert got cancelled, you can transport yourself back to the 60’s by renting my hippie photobooth bus for any occasion. Get On The Bus and Rock On!
Woodstock was a music festival held August 15–18, 1969, which attracted an audience of more than 400,000. Billed as "an Aquarian Exposition: 3 Days of Peace & Music", it was held at Max Yasgur's 600-acre dairy farm in Bethel, New York, 43 miles southwest of Woodstock
VW Bus Plays Role In Civil Rights Movement
The iconic VW Bus always seemed to be involved in doing good (See Below). I try to continue that tradition by donating or discounting my services when I can afford it. So book us for an event and help us “keep doing good”.
From: https://www.historicvehicle.org/2019-cars-at-the-capital/
DATES & EXHIBITS: The 5th annual Cars at the Capital - September 12-27, 2019 in Washington, D.C.
LOCATION & DETAILS: The National Mall - The exhibit is located between the National Gallery of Art and the National Air & Space Museum
1966 ESAU AND JANIE B. JENKINS VOLKSWAGEN TYPE 2 DELUXE STATION WAGON
Esau and Janie B. Jenkins were pioneers before and during the civil rights movement. As business owners, community organizers, and founders of organizations and institutions, together they dedicated their lives to providing opportunities, and hope, to the people of Johns Island, SC and beyond.
In the 1940’s, using money from farming and selling produce, they would purchase buses to transport children to school and workers to jobs in Charleston, SC. During the bus rides, Esau and Janie B. would teach their adult passengers the information needed to pass the literacy exam so they could become registered voters. Along with others, they were responsible for The Progressive Club, a co-op started in 1948 that housed a grocery store, gas station, day care, and classroom space. Leaders including Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., and others, participated in workshops there.
The 1966 VW Deluxe Station Wagon they drove was an icon throughout their community and throughout the South. On the back panel of the car was painted the infamous saying of Mr. Esau: “Love is Progress, Hate is Expensive.” In 2014 the family donated the back hatch, along with the engine cover, to the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture where it remains on permanent exhibit.
“The automobile has left an indelible mark in our culture and we believe America’s automotive heritage should never be lost nor forgotten,” said Diane Parker, Vice President of the Historic Vehicle Association. “To support that belief, our mission is to share America’s automotive heritage and to tell the human-interest stories behind the horsepower, share their cultural impact, and to ensure their histories are captured in perpetuity.”
Donation of our services for Lurie Children’s Hospital “Run for Gus” fundraising event -7/26/19
Happy 4th of July from Jeff & Jerry.
Thanks to those that sacrificed for our freedom.