The scene
Hawkins, Indiana, 1986. Inside the WSQK radio station, a pair of Technics turntables sit on a worn wooden desk alongside a broadcast microphone, reel-to-reel tape machine, and stacks of vinyl records. The production design is meticulous — every piece of gear in the station is period-accurate, down to the cork bulletin board and the eerie green-blue glow through the window that signals something isn't quite right in Hawkins.
The Technics decks also appear in the Snow Ball dance scene and in the Byers household, making Stranger Things one of the most turntable-rich shows on television.
The gear
The turntables are Technics SL-1200MK2 units — the most iconic turntable ever made. Originally released in 1979 as a high-fidelity home audio product, the SL-1200 was adopted by hip-hop DJs in the early 1980s and became the global standard for DJ turntables. Its direct-drive motor, rock-solid build, and pitch control slider made it the tool that built an entire culture.
Stranger Things also features a Victrola x Stranger Things collaboration turntable — a licensed product that became a real collector's item outside the show.
Why it matters
The SL-1200 is arguably the most important consumer audio product of the 20th century. Over 3.5 million units were produced between 1972 and 2010. When Technics discontinued the line, the used market exploded. When they relaunched with the SL-1200GR in 2016, audiophiles and DJs alike lined up.
In the context of Stranger Things, the turntables serve double duty: they're period-accurate set dressing AND they're aspirational gear for anyone watching. The show drove measurable interest in both vintage turntables and vinyl records, contributing to the vinyl revival that's been building since the mid-2010s.
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