A 1952 documentary showing small town 50's America from morning to evening. Many kinds of people doing many kinds of work, and then bowling. 1952, B/W.
Пікірлер: 5 900
@lizhoward97542 жыл бұрын
I was born in 1957 and grew up watching these types of films in school. Not to rain on everyone’s nostalgia parade but kids used to laugh at these back then because nobody had these “perfect” families and lives. There was a lot of sweeping things under the rug back then that today would be considered a crime or dysfunctional. The “old people” back then would talk about how “much better” life was in their youth in the 1890s and 1900s.
@filrabat19652 жыл бұрын
If your generation laughed at this Millwood film, then watching those character education films must have been a challenge - as in trying not to break out into fits of giggles in front of the teacher. Mystery Science Theater 3000 (MST3K) does a great job of spoofing those films (heckling, scoffing) - at least to my tastes.
@thecapone45 Жыл бұрын
For sure. It didn’t reflect the times accurately. It was idealistic.
@Naviolet Жыл бұрын
Your over 60 years old 😳
@lynnschopler2396 Жыл бұрын
Unfortunately- you missed the Cinderella syndrome. Everything we watched - in general - was from “fairytales to my next step is…” oh yeah, what I was programmed to do, and then take a look at what was supposed to work. I always bring up w/people who are divorced like me, “Wouldn’t it have been great, if we raised our kids with someone we were in love with?” It’s so true for many of us!
@lizhoward9754 Жыл бұрын
@@lynnschopler2396 BINGO!!! My husband and I talk about this ALL the time. Everything was checking a box..graduate at “x” age, marry at “y” age, have children at “z” age, etc. The problem with that is you end up regretting you didn’t marry earlier or later when you did meet the right person. That happened with my husband and me. We were high school/early college sweethearts who married the wrong people because they came along at the “right time.” We reconnected 40 years later. What we should have done is married in college but we didn’t because the “rule” was you wait until you graduate and get a job and then marry.
@dylswife80483 жыл бұрын
Never in my 58 years would I have thought a life like THIS would be my biggest fantasy.😞
@rayunseitig63673 жыл бұрын
the post war economy was good, and we did not know we were poor. LOL born in 48.
@joeyank24513 жыл бұрын
Same age and me to
@dylswife80483 жыл бұрын
@@joeyank2451 👍😊
@weedermann2 жыл бұрын
Current times are a literal golden age compared to the 50's. All in here are used to the convenience of a cell-phone and debit Visa card in their pockets...of getting virtually all you could imagine from anywhere in the world with a click of a mouse. It would mean giving up all you are now used to to return to a MUCH more primitive, provincial way of life . You'd lose your minds...ESPECIALLY those under 25.
@user39h2j8il2 жыл бұрын
@@weedermann ah yes. I would miss gmo foods, totalitarian governments, chemtrails, crime, plandemics and oh so much more. Not.
@catfish2411 ай бұрын
I should play this on the nights I have trouble falling asleep. The sound of this guy's voice and the back ground music makes me so relaxed and makes me wish the world was still this way.
@GamingTranceSeer10 ай бұрын
You should listen to solfeggio frequencies they'll do much more than help you sleep.
@rupertred74349 ай бұрын
You should let people do as they please he’s not doing anything to hurt anyone.
@stevenmeadows69179 ай бұрын
@@GamingTranceSeer ??? solfeggio frequencies? What is that?
@rmp74009 ай бұрын
David, Life in the 1950s was VERY hard, VERY DEMANDING In that era, life was healthier, yes Corporations were not yet mandated to poison food, water and health care workers were not yet incentivized to slaughter the very young, Or the old But all that was already planned just as wwiii was...
@MsRadar237 ай бұрын
Yeah the voice and the music etc is reassuring and relaxing
@ellesnyder9423 жыл бұрын
Kids didn't need to be rushed around to a laudry list of organized activities and sports. They went outside and played until dark.
@yamahonkawazuki3 жыл бұрын
no video games to veg out in front of the tv. if you were bored, go outside find something to do.
@obscurelyvague3 жыл бұрын
"Elle scooter" My dad was born in 1912. He spent his earliest years in Puerto Rico and when he was approximately 10 years old his mom brought him to the mainland where he spent his young adulthood and the rest of his life. He says that lived in New York and Arizona and traveled on trains during the depression. He said that times were dangerous when he was a young man in the 1920s and he saw gang fights, people getting stabbed and shot, and young girls getting kidnapped, women being assaulted by their boy friends, and he lived in places where people had to lock their doors and have a big stick near the door ready to use in self defense in case anyone breaks in. He said that vagrancy used to be against the law way back then, and if a cop thought you looked like a vagrant then that cop would strike you with his billy club or punch you in the face and it happened to my dad.
@yamahonkawazuki3 жыл бұрын
Well we had an atari 2600 in i believe 81. Spent some time playing it. But spent most of our time outside. Specially in winter. Drifts were in place october to early march. We dig tunnels at the fire station
@ioodyssey37403 жыл бұрын
@Conway Twitty flake lol
@terri57573 жыл бұрын
We went outside and played but we also gathered our friends to play games like baseball and football. We used our own brains. We sometimes had dads and older brothers as coaches but often we learned to settled disagreements among ourselves. Yes, we got mad but didn’t usually hold grudges. Not for long anyway.
@JennyWinters3 жыл бұрын
As a child of age 4, I remember my grandmother getting her milk delivered to the door by her milkman. Those bottles had a paper seal on them. We would have to hurry from the bus to get home to get the milk in the fridge. It was such a delightful life. Her groceries were delivered to her home. She had a vegetable and flower garden in her yard. We would get goodies from the garden and beautiful flowers. I loved staying with my granny. However I missed the whole decade of having a doctor visit the house. If you were sick you went to the hospital and they kept you in there till your stiches or staples were removed. You might stay 1 to 2 weeks. I remembering staying an entire week in the pediatric unit for a broken arm with bone chips that had to be removed. A whole entire week! Nowadays you can go home the same day. It was interesting to be able to pick what you wanted off the menu and they gave you shots every 4 hours for the pain. LOL not in these days anymore! But I decided as a child I wanted to be a nurse from that experience because I had wonderful and loving nurses take care of me. I went on to be an RN
@rayunseitig63673 жыл бұрын
We had an ice box, the fridge came later.
@terrapinalive61923 жыл бұрын
Jenny...There's something I didn't get:the milkman delivered the milk early in the morning to your granny.Unless she was unable to take the bottle in why did you have to hurry back home to get the milk in the fridge? Regardless it sounds a comfy life,if a little hard on women...'managing the house 'according to the comentary In Europe we didn't have it so good.We were deeply transformed by WWIi and would have been in a worse place had your country not come to the rescue.Thank you for that
@matrox2 жыл бұрын
Our MM delivered Milk and OJ in glass bottles. He put them in an aluminum insulated box on the back porch.
@lauriem41122 жыл бұрын
Love your story thank you
@johnforde80952 жыл бұрын
The best milk ever
@hoosierdeb216 жыл бұрын
•I was born in 1952. •My town had about 2,000 inhabitants . •We walked or rode bikes everywhere. •We ate together as a family every night. • we knew our neighbors • we never talked back to our parents
@garouuchiha40416 жыл бұрын
Deborah Troutman-Immink Never talked back?, no free speech. 😒😑
@cathyprichard74575 жыл бұрын
It was called respect for your parents and other adult relatives.
@garouuchiha40415 жыл бұрын
Cathy Prichard But still no free speech....i understand about it and i agree with it but still if their is a disagreement and the one that is disagree to the parent probably has a valid point of saying to make cuz maybe its true and the parents are wrong, not all the time but what if the child knows something legit and the parents wont listen and therefore cuz of rejection to anothers point of view, the issue of whatever it is will increase to be worse.
@fairy_dust65885 жыл бұрын
@@garouuchiha4041 talking back is worse
@karenlathim93795 жыл бұрын
Deborah Troutman-Immink We also respected our elders. We were very patriotic.
@Princeton_James9 ай бұрын
Literally a different world. The language. The attitude. The environment. The jobs.
@scottr34848 ай бұрын
The internet made the world so much smaller. Whoever thought a small device in your pocket can connect you to anyone when ever you want instantly.
@immortalobelisk63022 ай бұрын
The racism, the bigotry, the close-mindedness, the constant judgement of others. Thank gosh MAGA will force this on all of us again!!! Weeeeee! Don’t step out of line!!!!
@Princeton_James2 ай бұрын
🤡🤡🤡@@immortalobelisk6302
@Princeton_James2 ай бұрын
@@immortalobelisk6302 words like toxic masculinity, gender affirming, DEI, social justice, are all part of your vocabulary. We aren't in the same league.
@hq93442 ай бұрын
@@immortalobelisk6302says the racist communist leftist who loves to lick big daddy government’s feet. The confusion and lack of what’s really going on by now makes your comment all that much more pathetic
@FreshCreativeFrog252 жыл бұрын
I love how this video emphasizes the importance of every person and their role in the world. So often today, it's easy for people to look down on those who work certain jobs and praise others who work certain jobs; even easier to forget that there are people working while you sleep to keep things running smoothly for everyone else. But this video emphasizes that each is equally important. I wish we were all as respectful and grateful as this video encourages us to be. Times were simpler then.
@Gr13fKvlt2 жыл бұрын
Have a blessed day.
@annanutherthing43732 жыл бұрын
It was a backward era - in terms of health, technology,gender, race ,cultural equality … esp with regard to women’s body rights & opportunities; and civil rights and equality for others who weren’t white .. let alone were not well off middle class males.. i.e. women and LGBTQI gender-wise; or ethnic communities ….Black Americans and CALD groups .. for ‘others ‘ to have a say and be entitled to any education & fair incomes & to be able to access a loan to buy their own house and not need to marry to survive or be able to co exist in society… It may have seemed simpler but it was very restricted & restrictive and one only flourished if you were white educated or aspirational &/ or middle class and accepted a racist patriarchy .
@adepressedcatwithabadnicot2462 жыл бұрын
easy now, that's communism. man, Reagan and McCarthy, really screwed this country.
@LynxSouth2 жыл бұрын
@@annanutherthing4373 It wasn't "backward". Every era has its issues, and people were working to address them. It was fine, it was hopeful, it was a society that was evolving and growing. No matter what you've been taught, the present has just as many problems, and that aggressive negative attitude that focuses only on the negatives creates even more and worse problems. You need an honest, balanced view to know that there was a lot worth keeping that's been destroyed or replaced by cheap imitations.
@weedermann2 жыл бұрын
@@LynxSouth QUITE provincial in the 50's/60's. But no one knew because it had ALWAYS been this way. Prior to the 70's, ONLY white men had full opportunity with no barriers and restrictions.
@carolynbrown33793 жыл бұрын
I was born in 42 and knew no one with a TV until I was in the 7th grade. We only had sweets on holidays and I don't remember knowing anyone with a weight problem young or old as fast junk food hadn't come into our town yet. People car pooled as there were no two car families. We entertained ourselves as parents weren't running kids to sports, dance, piano gymnastics etc. we had one pair of shoes and got a new pair when the old ones could no longer be repaired at the shoe shop or you out grew them. Our mothers cut and permed our hair at home. We brown bagged it to school and ate our pb&j sandwich, drank our thermos of milk finished with a piece of fruit at our desks before running out to create fun on a dirt play ground void of any playground equipment. Never heard of designer clothes and everyone wore whatever their parents were able to order for them out of the catalog. We had an icebox until I was 6 and then my parents were able to get a fridge with a freezer compartment large enough to hold an ice cube tray! Etc and etc. and if I was to go back the things I would miss the most: central heating and permapress clothes.
@Kelly-nm4kw2 жыл бұрын
Hello Carolyn, How are you doing?
@kelligarcia3122 жыл бұрын
Thanks for sharing!
@valeriebellomo35732 жыл бұрын
Yes..so many obese kids today. It's sad
@danielrochford91832 жыл бұрын
Wow what a time to be alive if I may add your TV was called your imagination when listening to the radio I know this because I love listening to Steelers on the radio Stay cool my friend ☺️😊☺️😊☺️☺️😊
@obscurelyvague11 ай бұрын
@carolynbrown3379 a friend of mine, I will refer to her as "J" who is now in her late 70s grew up in the 1940 and 1950s and one of her brothers had a severe allergy to wheat and back then it was not as recognized as it is now. Food labels could hide a lot of ingredients. "J's" brother's allergy meant that their mom had to go to special health food stores ( much more a rarity back then) to get wheat-free foods. Once "J's " aunt fixed dinner for the family and though she knew that "J's " brother had a severe wheat allergy she put some wheat in the gravy thinking that such a small amount could not do harm but "J's" brother then had to be rushed to the hospital and his parents were told by doctors that one second more the boy would not have survived. Some things are much easier for people born with food allergies now and the medical world has more knowledge about it.
@LAVirgo6710 ай бұрын
One thing that is true about the 'good old days' is that people were more involved in community, church & social clubs. They built communities & helped each other out. Nowadays, people isolate. Everyone wants to do their own thing. Love how the video honors those that are working to keep the community running smoothly. Again, it's about working together for a greater purpose.
@Wosiewose10 ай бұрын
I especially like the fact that this film recognizes that housewives were important members of, and contributors to, the community. By the time I was a housewife in the 90s and early 2000s, that respect was gone.
@jercasgav8 ай бұрын
I really think most moms staying at home the majority of the time rather than working full time facilitated this community engagement. When you have two people working full time with kids then the house still has to be dealt with there is no energy or time for as many social activities. This has hurt everyone as a whole. We threw the baby out with the bath water in many ways and denigrated the roles women had that really contributed to the functioning of families and society. If mom doesn't want to stay home and dad does, I get it...just speaking in generalizations quite obviously.
@BobMillington14 күн бұрын
the GOOD OLD DAYS.. were the ROOT systems of TODAY!.
@davidjones21103 жыл бұрын
I was born in 1953 and if I had a choice, I would most certainly go back to live in the mid-1950s. It was certainly a simpler time where stores only opened one night a week on Thursday and they closed early on Saturday and all day Sunday. Plus, you did not have all this technology. Back then we were out all the time either playing sports or riding our bikes Whenever I drive by the ball fields today, I hardly ever see any kids playing pick-up baseball or football. The only time we were inside is when it rained. We were even outside during the winter, sledding, and playing in the snow. Back then, there were individual movie theaters in the center of town. We had 5 movie theaters and each one had its own unique look, unlike the cookie-cutter megaplexes that you find today. I truly miss those days.
@210SAi3 жыл бұрын
This was about 1952 so not only were you not born yet but it would be a good 5-8 years before you’d actually be able to appreciate anything about that time as a young child
@weedermann2 жыл бұрын
Bye bye, David...
@alyssa9752 жыл бұрын
aw that’s so cool. I’ve always wished I was a kid back then. nowadays nobody really goes outside. i always wish my friends would ride their bikes around with me, but unfortunately their more prone to technology. the 50s seems like it was a golden age for the youth
@joegoldman3065 Жыл бұрын
Technology has messed us up? how about that fantastic MR or CT scan you now get at the hospital which enables super precise as super rapid diagnosis of a deadly cancerous mass sitting inside of you or inside of a loved one, enabling you to have an operation, and not fu king croak at an early age, let alone see this happen to your child. how about fantastic drugs like Prozac which has Unchained tens of millions of people from both depression and anxiety. diabetes treatments are way ahead ,leading to far longer lives. cell phones, and Google and computers are used by you yourself all the time as astounding and virtually cost-free Communications mechanisms, which we humans inherently adore doing. that's why you were able to post this message, you bonehead. air travel is vastly cheaper and I'm sure you make use of it , but Above All Else, advances in health care take the cake in terms of lifestyle improvements in our civilization. Be sure to say hello to the MRI technician when your neurologist suspects a brain tumor inside your skull. he might have a chance of treating it effectively. There were some treatments for cancer back then, but as a rule it and numerous other diseases were a goddamn death sentence you idiot . good old days my ass, especially if you are female, black, Mexican or Asian and wanted to get a position of leadership in this Society, let alone you had sexual orientations that deviated from the obsession with marriage and heterosexual Behavior
@Loots110 ай бұрын
@@alyssa975 what if you you could go back and be a kid BUT you had to be black, so your family couldnt vote, had to be subject to redlining, had to have segregated schooling which is paid through residential property taxes and you all had to live in the ghetto because thats where the government regulated your family to live, still want to go back?
@swimminwitdafishes80593 жыл бұрын
I was born in 48 so I remember the 50s very well. Parents still had to provide food and shelter for their families. Bills needed to be paid and it’s true things were much less expensive but wages were much much lower. Life was simpler but not necessarily easier and I think that is true for every generation.
@lynnefuchs48643 жыл бұрын
I was so blessed to live during this time as a child. I miss it so much! 😢💔
@Kelly-nm4kw2 жыл бұрын
Hello Lynne, How are you doing?
@ashleytoalson14895 жыл бұрын
Im a 17 year old who grew up with technology. But watching these videos makes me want to live in the 50s.seems like a simpler time.
@prostratic Жыл бұрын
I lived through the whole 50's while giving your mother a decade's worth of sweet, greasy loving 😛💓🤏👌💦👄
@obscurelyvague11 ай бұрын
"@ashleytoalson1489" you would be so disappointed. If you are female you would not be allowed to play certain sports in school or have a girls' team like boys do. You would not be able to get a credit card unless your dad or other male relative approves of it. You would not be allowed in, or would find it very hard to get into certain careers or jobs other than kindergarten teacher, stewardess, or nurse. It would be a big price to pay just to pay 5 cents for an ice cream cone.
@WWG1WWGA11 ай бұрын
@@obscurelyvague exactly. and lets add the horrific sexual abuse that was occurring & being hidden. The alcolohism! The marital affairs, etc., etc. It was only this idyllic for very, very few. Sadly. Even the children of hollywood "stars" have their sad tales.
@kenfreeman888810 ай бұрын
Videos like these are sweet to watch. I try to make a life like that around me: appreciating people for their good work, whatever they do, friendly greetings, etc.
@kingforaday872510 ай бұрын
@@obscurelyvague Sounds good to me!!!! Hahahaha Does it suck to be you? You sound full of anger and hate!
@memeelfman3249 ай бұрын
Oh man ITS BEEN ONE OF THOSE DAYS Yes… Its been one of those days
@violetsky22253 жыл бұрын
the wonderful 1950s as a child was spectacular. Nice people, manners, dress up, respect and enjoy
@Loots110 ай бұрын
yes yes nice manners like denying minorities basic civil rights and services, thats respect in your brain?
@RowanMcKay10 ай бұрын
No diversity is our truly a strength
@RowanMcKay10 ай бұрын
100 percent @@Hidalgo-tg1ky
@KC739 ай бұрын
Segregation, racism, no rights for women. Yeah, it was so great.
@RowanMcKay9 ай бұрын
Yes@@KC73
@reverendbluejeans17488 жыл бұрын
Hard to believe that this life was 70 years ago. Many ways the 1950s is modern. 70 years from 1950 was 1880.
@hntrbr7 жыл бұрын
The 1950s WAS modern. The only significant difference now is computing technology which merely makes what was once expensive, cheap. You could get video calls in the 1960s - but it was a dedicated closed circuit system, and expensive. Take pictures - ditto. Movies - ditto. But in essence not a whole lot.
@reverendbluejeans17487 жыл бұрын
Did I say that or did you.
@saggyt54965 жыл бұрын
50s wasnt modern, how is slavery modern and oppressing women and gay people modern?
@Braeden20025 жыл бұрын
Saggy T there was no slavery in the 1950s dumbass that ended in the 1860s
@lenisbennett82855 жыл бұрын
Wow!! That is some great math. skills , you must have been educated in the U.S.A.
@greg337707 жыл бұрын
I was born in the 50's, and much of this can be from my childhood even thru the 60's. Ah...those were truly the good ole' days !
@jikoai87095 жыл бұрын
Your old as my grandma
@noturningbackever4934 жыл бұрын
Same here: born in 1955, husband born in 1952. Those who write this nasty, sarcastic posts have NO IDEA how it was to live back then. If I could, I would gladly go back and live during that time again. There are hundreds of thousands that think just like me, and agree with those times being much better than the trashy society we have now.
@noturningbackever4934 жыл бұрын
@@jikoai8709 And your point is?
@noturningbackever4934 жыл бұрын
@Dela Flowers Amen to that! It's just getting worse as time goes on, but that's all written in the Bible= End Times.
@noturningbackever4934 жыл бұрын
@Dela Flowers There is so much information on the internet regarding the current events and how close we are, both to the Rapture and the End Times, that it seems foolish for people not to believe it. We preach about it, pass out tracts, testify and witness to people, but sadly most have no idea about any of it.
@phyllischarpentier45852 жыл бұрын
I was born in 1952. This vid brought back so many memories of my childhood. We had a milk man, bread man, and paperboy to start the day. We lived in Long Island. In those days L.I. was still small townish. Simpler but great. We always ate dinner together every evening at 6:30. We always (mostly always) told our parents where we were going and who going to be with. We come home mostly when expected and my parents used to check my homework before I went to bed. Such a different world but I'm glad I grew up then.
@callumnye25622 жыл бұрын
Hello Phyllis, how are you doing?
@MichaelGunner1232 жыл бұрын
We CAME home mostly when expected....
@jamesslick47902 жыл бұрын
We don't think much about it now, (even in here in '52 it gets a passing glance.) But writing, editing, putting together, proofreading, typesetting, proofreading again, THEN printing AND distributing a daily PHYSICAL newspaper is actually an amazing achievement.
@phyllischarpentier45856 жыл бұрын
I was born in 1952. It's so interesting to see how much the world has changed. I'm not sure for the better.
@dontreadmychanneldescripti71044 жыл бұрын
Dann your old.
@charliemartin54823 жыл бұрын
So was i . i loved the 50s and early 60s .
@howellwong113 жыл бұрын
Yes, the world has changed and not for the better. I graduated from Purdue in 1955. I've seen it all.
@paleriedove33333 жыл бұрын
Not really
@patriciabilinkas39113 жыл бұрын
Phyllis Charpentier I was born in 1953, and I agree with you.
@RedAvery18 жыл бұрын
I'm so intrigued of the past. I always think about how it was back then living in it. it's like a different planet , seems really chill/cool
@karen4you8 жыл бұрын
It depended on the family, but growing up in the 1960s, it was a simpler time. We walked and carried groceries home, and there were cabs and buses. Doctors were inexpensive! There was crime etc, but as a rule, most people were more polite. There were neighborhood bars on every corner but I never did see anyone stagger out drunk. Seemed like people in my poorer class neighborhood set limits and behaved well. There were many Mom & Pop stores, so shopping meant walking from shop to shop. Quite delightful way to grow up. Walked to school as well.
@shellybane4198 жыл бұрын
+K San How did he say it really was?
@dianagruver57678 жыл бұрын
+K San I don't know where HE grew up, but where I grew up in the 60's, it was a lot like this.
@JohnSmith-io2iw7 жыл бұрын
Dude - - I remember the 50's - - no air conditioning anywhere except movie theaters - - if it was 90 degrees outside - - there was no relief - - the 50's were anything but cool !!!!
@Tubes12AX7k7 жыл бұрын
K San, it does depend on where you lived, I suppose. For my father, my in-laws, and even for me, it was like this. The biggest differences were that families were closer knit back then and people were generally more community-minded and more religious. Basically those factors made people more civil to one another and more interdependent. I'm going to agree with Karen and Diana's comments below. My town still had milkmen doing deliveries into the 1970's. Crime was a lot lower - you wouldn't steal from the person at the corner store because that person was your father's dental patient (or whatever) and everyone in the town knew everyone else. The erosion of these things plus the loss of stability from factories closing down made people more cynical and that's really too bad.
@starlightdreamer1999 Жыл бұрын
I love this but at the same time it makes me so sad how things have changed so very much not for the best .
@Yunafan29639 ай бұрын
Thanks cs188 for bringing me here
@danielsmithproductions9 ай бұрын
same XD
@Yunafan29639 ай бұрын
@@danielsmithproductions yeah
@greg337706 жыл бұрын
it's dated 1952....but I'll tell ya, I lived it and it was pretty much this same way right thru most of the 60's where I lived.
@dylswife80483 жыл бұрын
Same here.
@bonniebluebell59403 жыл бұрын
Same thing here in Canada. I grew up on a small family farm in the 1960's where we kids pitched in with the daily chores as well as the planting and harvesting...we were self-reliant but also a close-knit community that came through for one another when we needed extra help with just about anything that had to be done. (hay mowing, ploughing, planting, harvesting, butchering, etc) That's how it worked so well.
@obscurelyvague3 жыл бұрын
@@bonniebluebell5940 Social background matters
@artdecotimes29423 жыл бұрын
@@obscurelyvague sorry, I wasn't raised on Venus like you and your troubling life.
@matrox2 жыл бұрын
It was pretty much still the 50s until around 63 or 64, Seems like around 67 or 68 everything just flipped to the turbulent 60s. By the mid 70s things were slowly changing with the fake gas crises, and coming off the gold standard and skyrocketing inflation. By the late 70s and early 80s America was is moral decay. Today America is a true and utter sh!thole.
@bcnicholas1238 жыл бұрын
why did every narrator sound exactly the same
@verticalhorizon46338 жыл бұрын
Same guy.
@SeniorAdrian8 жыл бұрын
they had a specific accent which was trending then i dont remembr the name, search for 50s narrators accent
@KiowaPilotWife7 жыл бұрын
Exactly!!!! Maybe it's the same guy narrating.
@IndieMusicTube7 жыл бұрын
Well, narrarators all sound the same today too, and news anchors
@IvanVcanadacoincollecting7 жыл бұрын
it was a liked accent for narrators at the time, plus the fact that the microphone made them sound similar
@Yukoner777773 жыл бұрын
Similar to early 60's. Around 1964, I was 8 years old, I remember the milkman, Murray, a few times getting me to help him on his route for the last couple of hours of his shift. It was fun for me and he paid me $5. Of course, I gave him back a bit of that to buy either chocolate milk or pink lemonade. LOL
@callumnye25622 жыл бұрын
Hello Rose, how are you doing?
@thevagabondsageinthewoods11 ай бұрын
I was born in 1962 and for a very short time, we had a milkman delivering to our home. I can remember when my parents had their first telephone installed. Me and my friends could go anywhere and all the neighborhood moms knew who we were, knew our parents and helped watch over us throughout the day.
@franklinstephen326810 ай бұрын
Hey there! I came across your comment and I just had to reach out and say hi. Your perspective really caught my attention and I would love to get to know you better. Would you be interested in chatting sometime? Looking forward to hearing back from you! 😊
@nicholasschroeder36788 ай бұрын
Also 62. Grew up in California on a street with tons of kids. Walked to school K-12, and even went home for lunch every day. Played all day, and was expected to be home for dinner. The one thing that really saddens me is how kids today--at least from what I see--don't hang out together and explore. They're never outside with each other just getting along and making their own entertainment: everything is orchestrated by their parents or their devices. Seems a horrible way to be a kid--if it's even being a kid at all.
@thevagabondsageinthewoods8 ай бұрын
@@nicholasschroeder3678 maybe one day things will go back to that. 😊
@mindsaglowin9 жыл бұрын
People dressed up for just about everything in the 50's. So classy.
@kathyoneill40115 жыл бұрын
mindsaglowin Did you notice the paper boy wearing a tie?
@TenshinhanIsKing5 жыл бұрын
Also very racist
@imtheduolingobird18385 жыл бұрын
@@TenshinhanIsKing um how
@edwardgaines65615 жыл бұрын
@@TenshinhanIsKing White people are just as racist today. It just mutates into a new form with the times.
@savannahcanfield71345 жыл бұрын
Dressing up to go take the garbage out, shoveling the snow, walking the dog 😂 Probably just a guess that they would
@LynnRedwine8003 жыл бұрын
I was born in 1956. I remember when the milk man would take our empty bottles and leave fresh milk. I remember the bread man and the smell of fresh baked goods. I also remember when it all ended. There was something magical about that era. I was sheltered from most of life's harsh realities until I entered my fourth year of school. That's when my parents made a decision about my education that would shape me and change the course of my entire life. I consider myself one of the lucky ones. I will forever be grateful to Mom and Dad for their wise decision. Life is what you make it.
@loveamerica572510 ай бұрын
What was the decision?
@MrCrowebobby10 ай бұрын
The only magic was you were young.
@RowanMcKay10 ай бұрын
After the civil rights act this country is done for. You have ruined for everyone.
@Mysticlees9 ай бұрын
@@RowanMcKay how did she ruin it for everyone?
@Azmina_the_warlock9 ай бұрын
@@MrCrowebobbythat's the thing all these boomers forget, when they bemoan the good old days are no more. They were children. Of course everything is simpler when you're a kid 🤦🏻♀️
@rosetoski4363 жыл бұрын
A wonderful time to raise a family. I relate to a lot of the comments mentioned below.
@sherriewilsey86132 жыл бұрын
I miss those days terribly. I remember the milkman, the mailman, the butcher behind the counter, the grocery story and the drug store. My mom's favorite gas station. I don't remember my mom wearing a pantsuit until my late teens then you couldn't get her out of them. I always loved the Sears, J.C.Penney and Montgomery Ward catalogs. They were my wish books. My mom was obsessed with green stamps, had books of them. My dad worked for the Post Office delivering mail so I never got to see him in the mornings except on his days office. We always had a real Christmas tree, smelled good. Life was wonderfully simple, why didn't we fight harder for it.
@kck9742 Жыл бұрын
Yup. Someone in another comment on another video like this mentioned this way of life "disappearing." Someone else replied, "It didn't disappear, it was taken from us." So true.
@parvezpatel126895 жыл бұрын
I wish I could have been born in 1950 when people cared for each other.thank u for sharing a good life of the 1950s.
@nicolasuribestanko7 жыл бұрын
This feel-good video has really struck a chord among senior citizens. I was born in 1949 and lived in a town exactly like the one shown - albeit in Canada (Dauphin, Manitoba). It was the best possible place (and time) to grow up in - even though I could not have known it at the time.
@ilanamillion8942 Жыл бұрын
I am in Winnipeg and had access to small-town village life where my parents grew up in SW Manitoba. I love this film - especially the emphasis on the importance of everyone's jobs and their contribution to the community. Its a lesson people so often forget.
@thos195010 ай бұрын
Chilliwack BC was a lot like this.
@RowanMcKay10 ай бұрын
Shame you boomers leave nothing but a ruined country for your grandchildren. You should have fought hard against desegregation
@Rowlandph3 жыл бұрын
I had a paper route...and clearly remember those days. And those things... Back then..and later..I thought EVERYONE..had a memory like I did..and still do...I later discovered. that everyone doesn't have a photographic memory!.. I treasure it.. For me, it's worth FAR MORE than money ever could be.
@pamelawood720010 ай бұрын
I loved this. Reminded me of the town I grew up in as a child. Simpler times back then ❤️
@MrMenefrego13 жыл бұрын
This reminds me of my own life, the town in which I was raised was Pecatonica, Illinois; named in honor of the Pecatonica Indians, who once dominated the area. As a boy I discovered many arrowheads and other relics from the Pecatonica Indian tribe. When my family lived there in the 1960's the population was less than two-thousand. We had one department store, which was owned by a rather grumpy man named Mr. Benedict, aptly named "Benedict's Dept. Store". There were two restaurants, "The Pecatonica Diner" and a bar & grill which I was too young to enter. 'Pop' was one of the best bowlers on the bowling league team to which he belonged. We kids spent a great deal of time at the YMCA swimming in their Olympic-sized pool, such fun! Our next-door neighbors were an elderly widow lady named Mrs. Anders and a widower named Rolland Dirkson (odd that they were both widowed) and his adorable daughter, can't recall her name just now, she was such a little beauty that she won many local beauty contests. When she was 16 she won the title of "Miss Winnebago County Fair". My father was a dairy products deliveryman, AKA "The Milkman". His great sales ability was noticed by a medical equipment company executive who offered my father a position as a sales executive in the mid-west, propelling my father into great success; he became the wealthiest man in town, "a big fish in a small pond". My eldest brother, Kurt joined the United States Marine Corps and was killed in The Vietnam War. Before his death in 1969, I spent the happiest days of my life in that wonderful Mayberry-like town, we even had a fishin' hole! Years later, when the trials of life would become a bit too much for me, I'd drive to this cherished haven in an attempt to recapture the happiness and peace which I once knew there; but, as Thomas Wolfe wrote: *"You can never go home again."*
@lizbrown72323 жыл бұрын
I am so sorry that your brother was killed.
@ioodyssey37403 жыл бұрын
In the 90s folks still got all the news and gossip while getting their mail at the post office. My first wife's grandparents lived there then. Pretty little town near Rockford/ hiwy20. Small world!
@summerrose42863 жыл бұрын
Was so sad to read your brother was killed in Vietnam. God bless his soul and God bless your whole family.
@MrMenefrego13 жыл бұрын
@@ioodyssey3740 It must have been either Seward or Pecatonica, Illinois.
@NorceCodine Жыл бұрын
Of course back then people would say "them redskins". Those were the times!
@jimdandy96713 жыл бұрын
Sadly, nowadays children have very little sense of how a successful civil society functions consequently, there is little appreciation for all our blessings.
@normalnick96933 жыл бұрын
more like you screwed it all up now
@greg337703 жыл бұрын
Jim Dandy, sadly, they are taught just the opposite in schools these days....
@colonelautism99573 жыл бұрын
@@normalnick9693 Social media screwed things up for good people are busy calling each other names instead of bettering their own lives
@brrtool3 жыл бұрын
@@colonelautism9957 the leftists or commies or what ever you want to call them took over much of the education system and big city government. that was their plan and it was very successful, That was this countries downfall
@colonelautism99573 жыл бұрын
@@brrtool They worship failure, they love to stew in it eternally, they think anything that's healthy and successful = fascism.
@BlueThunderboltsiren Жыл бұрын
As someone born in the 2000s, I can't believe I missed a lot of this awesome looking stuff :( Gosh, I'd do anything to live in those times over these times.
@SaraH-jn5db Жыл бұрын
You know black people couldn't use white water fountains in 1952
@Thomas-yr9ln Жыл бұрын
@@SaraH-jn5db only in the southern states.
@obscurelyvague11 ай бұрын
"@BlueThunderstorm" you can join the Amish or the Hutterites.
@Loots110 ай бұрын
@@Thomas-yr9ln you think there wasnt incredible amounts of redlining and racial discrimination in the north? read a book , i know youre american so being uneducated is expected of you, but try it some time
@nimp18279 ай бұрын
I know, awesome right!
@DaisyAnnabelle6510 ай бұрын
I was as born in the late 1950’s. If I could I would certainly go back to the 50’s, 60’s and 70’s. Some towns in Mexico are reminiscent of the 1950’s and I love it there. I really miss those days gone by.
@sarahlizabethk10 жыл бұрын
In modern times most of these jobs have either been outsourced or turned into crappy minimum wage part-time jobs. This video talks about the importance of all workers and how they help their community, but this totally goes against the grain of modern America where labor is looked down upon, big corporations treat workers like expendable trash, and nobody cares about helping other people in their community. Ah, progress.
@msuperskarmory10 жыл бұрын
Man has a dream and that's the start! He follows his dream with mind and heart! And when it becomes a reality theres a great big future for you and me! Oh there's a great Big, Beautiful, Tomorrow!
@LoveYourEnemyMat5445 жыл бұрын
The idea that a shop keeper could make a descent wage had me comparing retail workers today to then. Minimum wage, part time, no benefits, varying hours, no job security.... Some of the jobs such as linemen and firefighters still pay well thanks to unions.
@maddie91172 жыл бұрын
I think I watched a history/prediction video regarding each revolution, and he was saying how it took many generations of people to learn how to farm and that it was a bloodbath; in that regard I hope the same can go for technology before we kill ourselves (figuratively or literally).
@buddyfaya8631 Жыл бұрын
Your right. And this is also the era before American colonialism
@obscurelyvague11 ай бұрын
@@maddie9117 ?
@floxy203 жыл бұрын
Yes, so many happy memories of rushing home from school and turning on the television and staring at the test pattern until the programming day began.
@DanandDonna13 жыл бұрын
I was very small back then. I remember when you took the car to the gas station, there was a rubber line on the ground at each pump. You would roll over them and the bell in the station would go ding. Letting the attendants know that someone was waiting at a pump. LOL SO many memories.
@Lee-jh6cr10 ай бұрын
I can still hear that bell!
@shawncooper708610 ай бұрын
I miss the small town life. I miss walking in the woods and watching all the wildlife coming out with the new born baby animals 😊
@gogussie4 жыл бұрын
Remember penny candy ? Oh and the smell of the small neighborhood store when u entered...candy smell ..heavenly 🙌. Halloween wax candy smelled the best lol
@tapeize4 жыл бұрын
What a great smell that was! Kinda like Woolworth's, had it's own great smell.
@sharonolsen65792 жыл бұрын
Yes !! There was a store called "The Party Shop" .. rows and rows of penny candy.. and some were like 3 for a penny.. ! We went with a quarter each and came out with a BAG o CANDY !
@jeaniechowdhury67394 жыл бұрын
My mom was so lucky to have grown up in the 59s. I think that she was a especially wonderful person because of it.
@dianahuarneck5849 Жыл бұрын
It was a better world back then .....😊 lots of respect and peace ❤
@laurijohnson775410 ай бұрын
I do like how this video shows how everyone who works is an important part of a community. Today we have lost sight of this!
@u.s.militia76823 жыл бұрын
If you veer far off the interstates you can still find towns like this. It’s truly worth the trip.
@donnarichardson72143 жыл бұрын
Jobs that don't exist: Milkman. Newspaper men and women. Baker. Paper delivery boy. Railroad station workers. Beat cop/cop directing traffic with NO GUN or military paraphernalia. My favorite: exactly what my parents told me--the kids' job is to go to school and learn to be a good citizen. Different universe.
@greg337703 жыл бұрын
and i remember as a kid, all the mom and pop stores, from paint, hardware, grocer, hobby, to shoes, to clothing, everything and anything, A & P was the biggest grocer we had, no malls, nor super stores ! Can't forget about the doctors that made housecalls.
@utubeviewing13 жыл бұрын
@Lyndon Tree It wasn't the communists (they were a tool only). The same group that funded the Russian revolution was working behind the scenes spreading socialism, destruction of middle class values, and removing prayer from the schools in the 1960's. It's called the dialectic (please watch an interview with congressional investigator Norman Dodd-The Reese Committee into tax exempt foundations to learn more). Our failure to understand the dialectic, and the failure of the media to report it is why our country (and the world) is experiencing culture cancel. Please learn from this that life can be what we the people choose when directed by God's values, and not what is given us from the top down. Once God is removed, the country falls. Evil reigns. What was good is now called bad, and what was bad is now called good. The Bible teaches these will be the coming days.
@emsavings3 жыл бұрын
Plenty of bakers, even baker's unions.
@lizbrown72323 жыл бұрын
Go to school and not be taught that your country is horrible and evil in every way, and you should be ashamed of it and work to destroy it.
@rrichards33993 жыл бұрын
absolutly right
@jayycash2129 ай бұрын
All night long, Richard's doing things... DOIINNG THIIIINGS
@usroze28063 жыл бұрын
The year I was born; so blessed to grow up then. Such a peaceful period, never to be seen again.
@johnslatin46463 жыл бұрын
It will happen again. This entire world is coming crashing down and the only people left will be those who understand that this was the zenith of civilization in modern times.
@usroze28063 жыл бұрын
@@johnslatin4646 I sure hope and pray it does. Thank you
@franklinstephen326810 ай бұрын
@@usroze2806 Hey there! I came across your comment and I just had to reach out and say hi. Your perspective really caught my attention and I would love to get to know you better. Would you be interested in chatting sometime? Looking forward to hearing back from you! 😊
@verticallogic59095 жыл бұрын
ah yes, the 40s and 50s. Now those were the days. I would love to return. I loved them then and would love them again........
@themaskedman2212 жыл бұрын
I think that the 30s and 40s are usually considered a more appropriate grouping. Unless you think that World War II was the good old days.
@James-gk8ip2 жыл бұрын
Very odd. Life expectancy was about 20 years shorter.
@CrossOfBayonne2 жыл бұрын
@@themaskedman221 I agree because there was also the Great Depression which most people around the world including in the US were economic trouble then came the war which killed millions
@ashegheaty9 жыл бұрын
Richard should be around 73 these days .
@JetBob847 жыл бұрын
Richard is now in a state of technological shock!! 😂
@StoicContrarian5 жыл бұрын
Trump’s age.
@robpivcevich67935 жыл бұрын
He got hit by a car hes dead
@markbajek25413 жыл бұрын
If he made it through Vietnam alive.
@reaper88.2 жыл бұрын
@@StoicContrarian We Wuz Anglo Saxons N Shieeet Dawg!!!
@salleymudd54882 жыл бұрын
Imagine a time where most of our food, clothes, and products were made right here in America.
@user-hj7ps6mq1o10 ай бұрын
Yeah, now you want cheap stuff from China.
@salleymudd548810 ай бұрын
@@user-hj7ps6mq1o Now there's not really much choice - most stuff ppl use on a daily basis is made in China or Mexico. American Manufacturing is in decline - although it did rise when Trump was president but is back down agin with Joe Bidumb- so American made products are scarce and expensive because of the high ass taxes and inflation cost of labor on American businesses.
@user-hj7ps6mq1o10 ай бұрын
@@salleymudd5488 did you know the decline, the auto industry had been in decline for decades? Stop buying cheap products from China. Y'all love your Walmart. You don't want to pay fair prices for America made. Even trump's hats and ties were made in China. 🤣🤣
@salleymudd548810 ай бұрын
@@user-hj7ps6mq1o I shop local whenever I can. I don't wear political gear but the Official Trump MAGA hats and gear are NOT made in China - you are referring to a meme that shows an unofficial knock-off MAGA hat that was indeed made in China as are most cheap imitation items sold on Amazon. The actual Official MAGA gear used in Trump's campaign ARE indeed manufactured right here in the USA in Carson, North Carolina. I work as a Media Producer and research is 90% of my job. Also many fact-checking sources including SNOPES verified the "China MAGA hat" meme as False - which is shocking for SNOPES, a well-known left-leaning "fact checking" source that routinely skews in favor of the left. While Snopes had no choice but to admit that the Official MAGA merch is manufactured here in the US, it does reiterate that many unofficial third-party MAGA merch is manufactured overseas. All of this notwithstanding, has no bearing on the fact that our sitting president is in openly bed with China (currently under investigation for such)- which has had a far greater impact on the current economic condition of our country than a couple of knock-off 2016 MAGA hats.
@Lizzy5149 ай бұрын
@@salleymudd5488 everything is global. Apples from Chile. The globalists are only afraid of climate change just so much, until it comes from fruit from Chile.
@mcunard25048 ай бұрын
Ironically, this is kind of the life I live now. I am a homemaker. My husband works in a Papermill and our daughter goes to high school we’ve been married 21 years and it’s just very ordinary.
@donnashore28598 жыл бұрын
sure miss those deliveries of milk and bread. those were the days!
@karen4you8 жыл бұрын
Small town here. Grocery just started delivery, and I am like so pleased! Reminded me of 'the old days'.
@noturningbackever4934 жыл бұрын
so do I...Mr. Dugan the bread man. Put the orange sign in your front window, signifying that you need him to stop. Open your back door before 7:00 a.m., and there inside your milk box was fresh, cold milk waiting for you to bring in...in GLASS bottles! You could also order orange juice, eggs and cheeses. We had a milkman until the late 60's. REAL milk with the cream on top, not this white colored water like today... Miss those days.
@riggs204 жыл бұрын
Try Shipt or Instacart! They'll bring you your milk!
@marycull36072 жыл бұрын
Those were the days my friend, we thought they'ed never end. I cherish my memories of the late fifties and sixties. Everyone was a neighbour and friend in our small town.
@romantisanon46475 жыл бұрын
It seemed like everyone had a place, every place was important, and everyone was content with their own. Harmony.
@LadyLakeMusic10 ай бұрын
This is pretty much how it was when I grew up in Park Heights Baltimore in the early 1960s. Lovely
@tymaketheworldabetterplace42472 жыл бұрын
I was born in the Late 70"s, but oh man, I would have loved to be part of this simple life.
@roseb.15376 жыл бұрын
I would love to live in the 50's.
@tximeleta354 жыл бұрын
But being White, right?
@roseb.15374 жыл бұрын
@@tximeleta35 I do know what you mean and feel so sad for the racial discord in many areas back then. Where I lived I didn't see that, but I was fortunate. There are no excuses for people to treat others badly because of race, religion or because someone is different.
@roseb.15374 жыл бұрын
@2025 Sebastian Silva I did live in the 80's and 90's and was young and have great memories. Every decade offers something good , I think. I guess it's the nostalgia of the 1950's that I want to experience. I truly wish time travel really existed.
@dona628513 жыл бұрын
@@roseb.1537 if you didn't see signs of racism it was most likely because yours was as exclusively white area. If you think about it THAT is probably the most exclusionary form of racism. There were no confrontations because the non white population "knew their place and knew to stay there".
@ReyBanYAHUAH3 жыл бұрын
Rose B. Always remember to repent of your sins (sin is transgression of YAHUAH’S LAW: Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, & Deuteronomy) And Have Belief On YAHUSHA HAMASHYACH. HE Died and Rose Again On The Third Day So that you can be forgiven of your sins! HE Loves you! Come to HIM!🙂
@dannyleo47919 жыл бұрын
Wow, that is one nice looking neighborhood. Wish I could have lived in that era.
@swabby4293 жыл бұрын
I grew up in that era, only the elite lived in such neighborhoods.
@valentinastanojcic78762 жыл бұрын
@@swabby429 where is it?
@kingforaday872510 ай бұрын
@@swabby429 So what? Sucked to be you I suppose!
@Bradytheawesomeman7779 ай бұрын
Many kinds of people keep the cities reservoirs filled with pee ⭐️
@richardgadberry83989 ай бұрын
And there is a city dump. so the city will look like a dump.
@Bradytheawesomeman7779 ай бұрын
@@richardgadberry8398Coffee guy: AHH SMELL IT
@danielsmithproductions9 ай бұрын
@@Bradytheawesomeman777 The mayor was chosen by the mayor
@Bradytheawesomeman7779 ай бұрын
@@danielsmithproductions”The city hires men to jizz on sidewalks”
@jflsdknf10 ай бұрын
I wish I'd experienced this kind of slow simple life. At least I got to experience the last of it, the 90s as a kid. It feels like this was a different world
@victoriacrompton37603 жыл бұрын
Wonderful film! It encourages children to appreciate the people who work hard to make their communities better places.
@weedermann2 жыл бұрын
Does it? Really?
@theresahron30 Жыл бұрын
@@weedermann yea dick
@sharimason297710 ай бұрын
I was born in the sixties and in my own way I replicate some of the small town experiences. I go to the same neighborhood grocery store every week where the bakery sees me coming and has a fresh loaf of sourdough bread waiting for me. (I go to Costco every couple of months too). My local hardware store asks me upon arrival what I'm looking for and directs me to it. I know my five neighbors and we help each other mow the grass and shovel snow. Connection is a big part of these old films. Look up from your phone and say hello, hold a door open- that's how community is built
@SantaClarahotdogdude3 жыл бұрын
The part where they are showing all the little stores the little town I grew up in had those. Now everything is Amazon goodbye America. Support small business
@themaskedman2212 жыл бұрын
This is possibly the most ignorant economic argument ever. People should purchase the best quality products at the lowest prices possible, not just local products no matter the quality or price. What you're essentially saying is that everyone should have a higher cost of living, and that this is the path to prosperity for all Americans. No, it's not. Buy low, not local.
@smakkdat2 жыл бұрын
What’s wrong with Amazon? They are a platform for independent sellers as well.
@James-gk8ip2 жыл бұрын
Yes vulture capitalism has made it very difficult to run a small business. Everyone works for a "company." Sad.
@James-gk8ip2 жыл бұрын
@@smakkdat They are killing their workers. Underregulated.
@thomaslucas64032 жыл бұрын
Richard is around 78 if he is still alive. This time and town seems so peaceful I wish I could live there.
@janetrichardson26442 жыл бұрын
As a young child in the early 60s, it was like this growing up in my hometown. We had mild delivered several times a week and the mailman, Mr. Paul, came in through the back down in the morning usually as we were eating breakfast exchanged pleasantries with my mom, patted us on the head and and went and put the milk and any other dairy products my mom ordered in the refrigerator. We also had a vegetable man, Mr. C, who came in a van on Wednesday with all the fresh fruit (seasonal) and vegetables for our needs that my dad didn’t grow in the garden behind our garage. Mr C always saved a few “samples” of the best fruit for me and my brothers. We walked to the drug store, butcher shop, hardware, schools and library. We road the bus to go downtown or further distances. It was much simpler then.
@callumnye25622 жыл бұрын
Hello Janet, how are you doing?
@anthonyowens23248 жыл бұрын
It's amazing how different things where when we produced our own things
@nancyhopple81384 жыл бұрын
As wonderful as our current day advantages are, there is much to be missed from the days of the 1950's. For those of us who can remember such days, we should consider ourselves blessed to have the memories.
@callumnye25622 жыл бұрын
Hello Nancy, how are you doing?
@claytonjones835810 ай бұрын
Would have LOVED to love then. Working hard and being a good person still got you somewhere!!
@luongo788611 ай бұрын
Ohh, what I would do to experience life in the 1950's America. Those times must have been great, simple and easy.
@sharpthingsinspace972111 ай бұрын
White privilege at its finest, 2045 baby.
@LivingWalks4 жыл бұрын
What an interesting peek into the past. Most enjoyable to watch. The innocence made me smile.
@theunknown45708 жыл бұрын
They sure do seem to care alot about. richard.
@Perktube18 жыл бұрын
he'll grow up to be an appliance salesman.
@John-dk7nx8 жыл бұрын
Look at his delivery truck, "Black Hawk Meats"
@markmnorcal8 жыл бұрын
Not now that he's a dick.
@JackF998 жыл бұрын
+Neil Tipton Yep too bad he wasn't named Donald.
@Perktube18 жыл бұрын
+beloog99 lol exactly.
@MartinSage10 ай бұрын
I was born in 1951. Lived on a small horse ranch in Alta Loma, California. Walked 4mi to school. Bought eggs at the local chicken ranch. Rode my horse to Market to pick up vegetables and fruits paying with a check my Mom signed. The owner knew my family and trusted us. At the Lumber yard or Savings + Loan our family was known and trusted. My uncle was a HS counselor. My math teacher came to our home for dinner. Our front door was always open just like all our family homes. At night I read books or listened to radio drama. Our B+W TV had 3 stations and we all watched Ed Sullivan or Jack Benny. Our town had only 1 sheriff. Our family had lived here since 1890 as Citrus Farmers.
@maggieoakley90202 жыл бұрын
Such a similar life that we had in the UK the best times 💕💕🇬🇧
@thomasdonohue18337 жыл бұрын
The coolest thing about the 50's was there wasn't a regressive tax code that taxed families into poverty. In the 50's a man could graduate high school and get a good paying job that would support his wife and three kids. Now we have so many taxes at the federal and state level it takes both parents holding down full time jobs to make it. Most modern women wish they could live like women did in the 50's but they work because they have no choice
@fargeeks7 жыл бұрын
wanna know what really sucks?? my grandpa bought a 4 bedroom 2 bathroom house back in the idk 60s and has lived in that same house up until 2 months ago that house was bought for under $170,000 unfortunately because of his passing we can NOT inherit his house you know why?? because the house is now valued at half a million dollars and the property tax is over a thousand a month we cant handle paying that much a year so therefore it has to be sold to a BIG time middle class family who can afford the property tax and the house payments and once that happens that house will no longer ever be stepped foot into again turns out its expensive because its in a nice neighborhood ( with alleyways) and it has a Huge backyard my mom grew up in that house as a child i can see why people say we cant have nice things
@marissabarnett54957 жыл бұрын
fargeeks damn that's messed up I'm sorry
@fargeeks7 жыл бұрын
yeah no problem i will say grandpa had no problem with buying the house (although he did say that was a big risk he took) as he told me that right after high school he joined the air force so i guess back then his intelligence is what made him able to buy the house since everything was cheaper back then but also the payment on everything so it may not have made that much difference to a homebuyer now like it was back then
@susiefisch7 жыл бұрын
Thomas Donohue do you really believe that "most modern women" don't want to have an education, and be paid for the contributions they make to society? When was the last time you stayed at home taking care of preschool kids, cleaning the house, doing dishes by hand and laundry with an old wringer washer and clothesline? All for the sake of marriage to some entitled man who expected his slippers, his pipe, or a cocktail when he got home at 5pm. Many housewives in the 50's had serious mental health problems or addiction due to the boring drudgery of their lives. And no personal freedom, either.
@alexvolkov2237 жыл бұрын
I disagree that most women want to stay as house-wives, and if you think about it in our modern context it makes no sense to do so either. The partner + kids will be at work/school 8 hours a day, why should a woman waste her life at home doing nothing when she has the potential for so much more during that time? Many women of those times had serious psychological problems from boredom, apathy etc. it's not natural or healthy for any person's to stay immobile for long periods of time and be confined in the same space. Just like prison isn't healthy either.
@GeorgeVreelandHill8 жыл бұрын
I see people talking to each other and being respectful. No overcrowding or trash everywhere. No pants below the underwear or rap music. Fathers with their children and kids running to school. Mothers staying home? Church on Sunday too? I want to move there. It sure beats any place I have been to lately.
@niksklavins96708 жыл бұрын
yeah those seem like good times
@getbent73048 жыл бұрын
Would be great except I would miss today's technology, the racism and lack of medicine for of sicknesses and disease.
@Dirtysweatsuit8 жыл бұрын
+TheNauseator this wasnt a type of life in america. Its an idealistic view. Theres always going to be problems. And there is nothing wrong with gay families or single parent households...
@getbent73048 жыл бұрын
+TheNauseator 1950's were far from perfect if they would of had today's technology bet would be same as today. just as many sick, twisted, loud mouthed, ignorant, perverted people them as now.
@Mumbabeal8 жыл бұрын
Things were different but not a perfect world like others would believe. The 20s had the mob shooting up the streets during prohibition, I wouldn't quite call that respectful.
@rckkeller94377 ай бұрын
We got our milk delivered until around 1967. My neighborhood was a lot like this. The rec center is still there and so is the original library. We walked around two each others homes and to school. We were never afraid. It was idyllic. I was born in 1953.
@sarahconklin3202 жыл бұрын
I watch a lot of these videos from the 40s and 50s and it all seems so idealic and simple. I then read the comments and see so many remenisce their childhood. I wonder if people really lived like that or if the videos make them seem so perfect and people's memories only allow them to remember it as good due to the innocence of youth.
@Nightdog19783 жыл бұрын
I was born in 1952 and grew up in Forrest City, AR. Population about 10,000 to 12,000 then and now. Born in Memphis, Tn. but raised in FC, AR. I wouldn't change my upbringing in any way. My Momma was an R. N. and my Dad was a policeman! Love those small towns and yes we rode bikes everywhere and I could take a sack lunch and my collie dog and shotgun and go off into the woods and tell Momma I would be back before dark and no one thought a thing about it.
@bennorwood84332 жыл бұрын
How are things in Forest city now
@supercoolyguy11 ай бұрын
🤜🤛 best comment right there.
@obscurelyvague11 ай бұрын
"@Nightdog1978" there were a lot of cold cases from way back then.
@dannyleo47918 жыл бұрын
I am so jealous of the people who lived in that era. Things looked less complicated back then and there were many jobs. Would have been awesome to live in the 1950s.
@madison39648 жыл бұрын
How I feel all the time. I'm forever in love with a decade I'll never be in!
@legendaryprotectronwatcher57088 жыл бұрын
agreed, however it wasn't the same politically. This was the transition from WW2 - Cold War - to Vietnam war. But yes, much more relaxing for the citizens.
@karen4you8 жыл бұрын
Well it wasn't always so heavenly, but life was slower paced. We seemed to have more routines. You knew what to expect. But factory work was gruelling, and no air conditioning. But the old cook stoves and refrigerators lasted forever! Well made products. That is what I really miss. But the freezer in a 50s fridge was very very small. They expected ladies to go shopping almost every day. Most jobs just brainless grunt work, as I called it. But it paid, and one was glad to work. Now more automation. Less unskilled jobs.
@inkey28 жыл бұрын
your grandfather IS WRONG
@LucasFernandez-fk8se6 жыл бұрын
Danny Leo it looks like a nice place to visit but the "easy jobs" would be in a full factory and the Internet wasn't around so that would suck super hard also there were a lot of social problems
@gitouttamyway76113 жыл бұрын
Had an older friend of mine tell me they would take their shotguns to school and leave in the principles office and pick them up at the end of the day to go hunting before dark. Can you even imagine that?
@mrsTraveller6410 ай бұрын
I was born in the 60's, we allways had dinner at 5 in the evening, all the family together. Only if my dad had to rork late we ate without him but that was seldom. We moved to our summer cottage the same day the school finished each summer. Then we moved back to town(apatmentbuilding) the day before school started. We never had a car,we went everywhere by bus,train,tram or by bicycle. Our whole family had bicycles. It was a happy childhood in Scandinavia.
@georgemoynier42853 жыл бұрын
A Great time for me to come around in 1955.. Grew up In Anaheim California in a orange grove community.. walking to school safely .. and riding my bike around neighborhood .. neighbors ,and family friends over often to visit my parents .. and kids to play with .. loved going to the market w my mom in her huge 57 Buick station wagon .... those days !! A dream now !!!
@15crabtree Жыл бұрын
I grew up in Anaheim near Disneyland in the 1970's, we still had orange groves everywhere. It was a beautiful area and was very safe for kids...Everything started going downhill in Anaheim in the 90's, that's when my family got the hell out. What a shit hole Anaheim has become now...actually most of Orange County sucks now.
@ewiem43517 жыл бұрын
Life in America before the decline.
@theofficialphoenixtv57654 жыл бұрын
yep Reagan, Bush and Trump really bruised America's Bossom
@GeneralAlex44 жыл бұрын
@@theofficialphoenixtv5765 Don't forget all those shit Democrats too!
@jacksons10104 жыл бұрын
Life in America as the sole developed nation to come out of WW2 nearly unscathed. People of those days appreciated their situation, while the fat, dumb people of today haven’t the slightest clue and complain incessantly.
@MTknitter224 жыл бұрын
Yes - and many of us older people realize it is WTP who did not take care to see it didn’t change. We let DC and career politicians run amok. WE did. 😢
@MTknitter224 жыл бұрын
TheOfficialPhoenixTV Scuse me - CLINTON had a merry band of crooks filling their pockets, Obama was in a corrupt ANTI AMERICAN Marxist category all his own
@fade2blk2893 жыл бұрын
I want to go back to those days, when things were so much more "normal" and kids could go to sleep at night and not think about what a mess we're now living in. When the milkman used to bring the milk to our house, and we'd never ever imagined a world with drive-by shootings/gangs, drugs all over out street corners, screwed up politicians and the GREED OF TODAY.
@hshshshshshshs88313 жыл бұрын
You seem racist.
@BPond73 жыл бұрын
@@hshshshshshshs8831 When your demand for racism exceeds the available supply, you’ll always come up with ways to find it.
@ocean78493 жыл бұрын
Every Generation has it's charme and bad sides of course. Gen Z has to deal with the new snowflake generation, climate change, future water shortage and the unnecessary and inhuman developement of technology. In the 50s as a teen you would be extremely limited in your freedom and spare time. Also, in the 50s the USA was in an extreme anti-communist state, thus arresting any potential non-capitalist. Still both the 50s and 2000s are beautiful in their own way. The 50s because of their classiness and "simple" life, the 2000s because of better access to knowledge, equal rights, generally more freedom/less stigma
@Stri4ker212 жыл бұрын
@@hshshshshshshs8831 you seem non-white.
@granolagirl712 жыл бұрын
You obviously are not a person of color.
@Draugluin99910 ай бұрын
my dad was born in 52' its nice to here him talk about the 50s how things were in those days..
@negvey8 жыл бұрын
its funny how all the jobs payed you well, unlike today
@robertmasina46105 жыл бұрын
true. today a household needs two incomes to get by.
@KayInMaine5 жыл бұрын
Yes, the dad could work at the local grocery store and be able to afford to have a place for his wife and kids to live in, a car, and they would be able to take a vacation.
@jpmonin74295 жыл бұрын
Its the Federal Reserve's problem. Its a non Gov agency that control's the USA money supply.
@michaelbarnhart25935 жыл бұрын
In a post-WW2 world when America produced 80% of the world's good due to destruction of factories in other countries, it was an economic boom.
@billyedd14474 жыл бұрын
That's because of unions and government regulation making it hard to run a business so companies leave and take jobs with them government is the problem they need to be made way smaller
@johnallen27713 жыл бұрын
I was born in 1950 and grew up in Ohio in a small town just about like this one. Everything they talk about in the video was true. People attended community events together, like the 4th of July dance and picnic. You saw all your neighbors in church and at school. Everybody knew everybody else. It was a small microcosm of a world. Of course there were a lot of problems, like race relations and the fighting of small wars all over the place just to name a few, but people generally got along with each other. Everything was cheap back then and our father's were making good money in the steel mills and rubber factories. I remember 12 ears of corn for $1. A Pepsi was 10 cents, not $3.29 like I recently paid for one.
@obscurelyvague11 ай бұрын
"@johnallen2771" Wow you could write a book. It would be important for history.
@AniGstring10 ай бұрын
Crazy how you were born in 1950 yet my parents born in 1954 don't even use email 😅🤭
@Crush4410 ай бұрын
And you boomers ruined it
@douglas_drew10 ай бұрын
@@Crush44"RUINED IT"?!?! Why you young whipper-snapper, I've a good mind to take you over my knee and teach you some respect for your elders! By the way, did you catch the cop littering at 6:06...
@Poppyseed099010 ай бұрын
I remember it being like this when I was little. Only for a short time until the internet became really popular. I miss it.
@user-cz2bh3yl9y10 сағат бұрын
I can remember this time - for me it was a sweet & positive time. But was not a positive time for others……… thank you for this amazing look back.
@abeliever34593 жыл бұрын
We didn't realize how good everything was back in the 50's. Sure we have better medical treatments today but the quality of life back then was much simpler. I remember having milk, ice, and coal being delivered to my home. And yes, we actually had doctors come to our house. I also remember watching Howdy Doody back then. I was born in 1948. After what we have been going through in 2020, this film clip brought tears to my eyes. I am so worried for my 2 young granddaughters for the world they are growing into. Just imagine, no cell phones, less violent crime, and no masks!!!!
@dominicdelgado16542 жыл бұрын
racism was rampant in the 50s
@MaximusOrthodox2 жыл бұрын
You are right.
@whatever75882 жыл бұрын
@@dominicdelgado1654 exactly that whole less violent crime thing is the opposite with what they did to black people back then
@James-gk8ip2 жыл бұрын
Masks are a problem for you? Seriously? Back then, at least people were willing to make sacrifices. But you won't even put a 1-ounce piece of cloth on your face to save lives?
@88hyperman2 жыл бұрын
It’s worse now
@heatherwynn84524 жыл бұрын
These 1950's videos are my asmr for going to sleep, love hearing them as I go to sleep. :)
@mariebrown56815 жыл бұрын
I would love to have grown up in a small town like that, during that era.
@patriley94499 ай бұрын
I was born in 1951 and lived in various countries and states as a child because my father was a soldier. When he retired in 1968, we moved to a small farm town in northern California where I attended the high school. After graduation, I got married to a local girl and we both attended the nearby university. After college graduation we had 2 children who were raised in that small town as well. It was a great place to live and raise children. Everyone knew everyone and most were involved in school, church or service organizations. As time went by the town grew and became a bedroom community for those commuting to Sacramento or Bay area. Everything became less personal, traffic grew worse as did petty crime which used to be non-existent. I finally left the town I used to love because it was so different than it used to be. I now live in a different state and live in the suburbs which is not really suited to me. I should have moved into another small town.
@oluwashinaomisanya74872 жыл бұрын
I love this. It highlights the town planning of yesterday.
@mindsaglowin9 жыл бұрын
People didn't even have to lock their doors at night, or much of the time during the day. Public civility was at an all-time high, and small children could roam their neighborhood all day far from home without worry. Everybody's boat was floated higher by these values, I doesn't matter who you were.
@thegreengrovecomedian9 жыл бұрын
mindsaglowin So there was no such thing as criminals and voilence in the 50s? Doubt it
@xplode11699 жыл бұрын
Sean Haney S Actually its true back then a murder was rare
@thegreengrovecomedian9 жыл бұрын
Maybe in the "perfect" suburbs.. not in other areas of America/the world
@cnichels8 жыл бұрын
even the minority groups were happy?
@martinhill95618 жыл бұрын
+TheZocky i'm gonna trump your reasoning right now. it was white's that brought them here in the first place against their will.
@johnnyboy51425 жыл бұрын
I loved the 50s, but I can't let yesterdays take up too much of today.
@albertpatterson3675 Жыл бұрын
I just got back from a funeral of a soldier killed in Germany in October of 1944. He was just identified in 2022. I was a year old in 1944 and thought on the way home about all that this soldier had missed in those years: good and bad. He never knew that the Allies were victorious. He never got married, had children, gone to college, or had a career. His nieces and nephews were there, but his sisters had all died. He missed the '50's boom era that is depicted in this film.
@obscurelyvague11 ай бұрын
"@albertpatterson3675" Interesting perspective
@abhinavbalasubramanian339911 ай бұрын
i really miss good old days.. so simple.. so modest.. so grounded.. its much scary world now..