Skylab has left the building.
2. In June 1979, as the crash approached, Skylab-inspired parties and products were all the rage in the United States.
The imminent crash of Skylab midway through 1979 coincided with Americans declining confidence in their government. The stagnant economy and a second oil crisis dropped Congress approval rating to just 19 percent that year. Perhaps its no surprise, then, that many people took an irreverent view of the demise of Skylab, a government project.
The Associated Press reported several instances of Skylab parties occurring across the United States. In St. Louis, Missouri, the Skylab Watchers and Gourmet Diners Society announced plans to view Skylabs last orbit during a garden gathering at which hard hats or similar protective headgear were required.
The Charlotte, North Carolina, News-Observer reported that a local hotel designated itself an official Skylab crash zone (complete with painted target) and was holding a poolside disco party. Mocking NASAs inability to say precisely where Skylab would land, entrepreneurs across the country sold T-shirts emblazoned with large bullseyes.
Another enterprising individual took a different tack and sold cans of Skylab repellent.