1957 America. Some Call This Time PARADISE. Do You See It That Way?

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David Hoffman

David Hoffman

8 жыл бұрын

You are watching a clip from a 90 minute documentary feature film that I made on what happened in America after Sputnik was launched by the Russians on October 4, 1957. In order to understand that time, I made several sequences of what people's lives were like. This sequence presents how middle-class suburbanites were living during October 4th 1957 when Sputnik appeared in the skies. Other sequences in the film present how different segments of American society lived during those days. If you search the word Sputnik on my KZfaq channel you will find many other clips from my film which is titled "Sputnik Mania". The American middle class was a very real thing back then. Tens of millions of Americans moved to the suburbs and to their own home for the 1st time. Baseball was a big deal on TV. Baby boomers babies were everywhere and on My street in Levittown Long Island had at least one child growing up in every home. It was an amazing time from that point of view. When you view this clip please do not discount that many Americans did live this way and feel these things. And of course, many Americans did not.
To see what Black Americans were experiencing during the fall of 1957 go here:
• Video
#1957 #babyboom

Пікірлер: 19 000
@caveatemp
@caveatemp 2 жыл бұрын
The most difficult thing to grasp in this world is how things are getting better and worse- at the same time.
@winecrimesfoodandtime7119
@winecrimesfoodandtime7119 2 жыл бұрын
Precisely and odd indeed!
@1whowasNEVERhere
@1whowasNEVERhere 2 жыл бұрын
Getting more advanced and worse
@davitofarito
@davitofarito 2 жыл бұрын
As technology gets better, people get worse.
@gwho
@gwho 2 жыл бұрын
it's pretty easy. it's getting better in some ways and worse in other ways.
@leesog3203
@leesog3203 2 жыл бұрын
It's true, we have movies and music at our fingertips, but the quality of such is at an all-time low.
@robertthomas8448
@robertthomas8448 4 жыл бұрын
every 10 years it seems like living in a different world.
@hughjones4049
@hughjones4049 4 жыл бұрын
Each decade has a TOTALLY different vibe. '50s. Wholesome but with a little bit of rebellion. '60s literally EVERYONE tripping on LSD 24/7. '70s I just can't, I just can't, I just can't control my feet. '80s PHIL COLLINS SNARE DRUM SOUND. '90s Grunge. Don't remember the 2000s. 2010s: part 1: DUBSTEP. part 2: social justice warriors. 2020s: CORONAVIRUS. 2030s: flying cars. 2040s: flying cars on Mars.
@werrtuky5803
@werrtuky5803 3 жыл бұрын
im' lafonz it’s not idiot
@publikenemi49
@publikenemi49 3 жыл бұрын
Isn’t that the truth
@xxghost6109
@xxghost6109 3 жыл бұрын
Robert Thomas underaged comment
@publikenemi49
@publikenemi49 3 жыл бұрын
It’s a fine comment , Robert Thomas. Each decade not only brings about its own uniqueness , tech advances etc , but also its own travesties as well I’m in my 5th decade and have seen plenty
@76Titleist
@76Titleist 2 жыл бұрын
My dad born in 1934 would always remark that the fifties were his absolute favorite decade.
@mjk6949
@mjk6949 Жыл бұрын
My grandpa was born in 1935 but in Brazil... but he liked the 50s to
@kellykeller5741
@kellykeller5741 Жыл бұрын
.. My mom born in 34 and Dad in 36.. They both loved the 50s much better..
@unclecreepy4324
@unclecreepy4324 11 ай бұрын
I was born in 1951 but the 80s is my favorite decade.
@eddies366
@eddies366 11 ай бұрын
of course he did considering he was in his 20's. I was born in the 70's and LOVE the 90's
@leteyer
@leteyer 11 ай бұрын
That’s normal…I was in my 20s in the 70s and that was my favorite decade
@harper626
@harper626 11 ай бұрын
I was born in 1939 and graduated from high school in 1957. In looking back, growing up in small town America was like a Norman Rockwell painting. It seemed like a magical time. No mass murders, no drugs, no robberies, no shootings, only an occassional fist fight over a girl. The 50's were the greatest decade of all to me but maybe not others. Even political opponents were civil to each other. The teachers were in charge and we knew it. Would really like to relive those years.
@cht2162
@cht2162 6 ай бұрын
Not me. I was also born in 1939 and graduated in 1957. Narrow minded, bigoted, racist, simplistic idiots in control of morality and education. The interstate highway system, a gift to big business (General Motors and others ("See the USA in your Chevrolet") and the death of the railroads and trolley systems. Only the whitest of the white were in charge, not only on a national basis, but in my home town. I ought to know cause I'm whiter than white.
@CrossOfBayonne
@CrossOfBayonne 6 ай бұрын
True in some ways and so were the 60s 70s and 80s despite all the racial tension and Cold War paranoia, In other countries such as Britain and most of Europe they were still dealing with the aftermath of WWII as cities were destroyed by bombings and even rationing was still in place, I would argue in some ways the world would've been better off without war as technological advances would've happened quicker
@biran44r
@biran44r 5 ай бұрын
in all parts of the world, ages between 10 and 20 are the best years of our lives... you can hear the same stories from anyone of your age here in turkey too... there were always mass murders, drugs, robberies, and shootings but there was no MEDIA COVERAGE back then... and that is a good thing. media exaggerates and broadcasts only EVIL!
@hlf_coder6272
@hlf_coder6272 4 ай бұрын
I wasn’t alive then, but I’d certainly trade places with that time compared to the malaise of today. I think it’s easily the worst time since at least the civil war. Freedom is long gone, the economy has been crushed by 60 years debt accumulation, constant ideological subversion. It’s miserable
@waynezahra9213
@waynezahra9213 3 ай бұрын
I’m so jealous. 🙏🏻❤️💔💔💔. I believe I was born in the wrong times.
@johnnymac8680
@johnnymac8680 5 жыл бұрын
My grandmother died in November 1957, just 5 days after my 7th birthday. On that day she lay in a hospital bed and took my hand, gave it a squeeze and told me that she loved me. That love has never faded on my part.
@johnnymac8680
@johnnymac8680 5 жыл бұрын
I was fortunate to find out at an early age that love is the most important reality. A child must have quality time with his/her parents so that the love bond is strengthened. I have such wonderful memories of camping and exploring with my dad and sitting around a warm fire listening to mum sing and tell stories. A child needs to know that they are loved.
@ojsilva1975
@ojsilva1975 5 жыл бұрын
😭😪 My great great grandmother died that year & the same month also. However she was born in Nicaragua 1890, luckily she got to see the U.S. what it was a glimpse of it and of course my mother as a newborn (August 1957) & a few months before her passing.
@johnnymac8680
@johnnymac8680 5 жыл бұрын
@@ojsilva1975 My grandmother was born in 1892 and spent her entire working life working in the same textile mill that's now an education centre and museum.
@gunnarthorsen
@gunnarthorsen 5 жыл бұрын
My mom died last year at the age of 98. She had lost her mobility, eyesight and some of her hearing, but she too, during my last, visit took my hand, squeezed it, and said she loved me. People from that generation had a grace and dignity under fire, a sense of self sacrifice that's lacking today. Your comment reminded me of my mom.
@ConnieM777
@ConnieM777 5 жыл бұрын
@@gunnarthorsen How true.
@urbanbraun6218
@urbanbraun6218 5 жыл бұрын
I was drafted into the Army Aug. of 1957 and discharged in 1959. Went back to my old job as asst. Purchasing agent but it had been filled. According to the law I had to be given my old job back or a better one. the company promoted me to a production foreman. My pay was 90 dollars a week. Got married and bought a brand new brick house and my payments were 90 dollars a month! I am still in the same house and I retired as a Vice President of Manufacturing of a local firm with a high school education. Those were the days. At 83 yrs of age I am satisfied.
@DrinkYourNailPolish
@DrinkYourNailPolish 5 жыл бұрын
Those were the good ol days when a man could support a family on his income alone. I hope those days return once more.
@jameszbierski391
@jameszbierski391 5 жыл бұрын
Urban Braun Good stuff mate. You definitely lived in the golden era
@bobriedel3277
@bobriedel3277 5 жыл бұрын
Sounds like you had a very nice, rich life. Thank you for sharing your thoughts!
@bobriedel3277
@bobriedel3277 5 жыл бұрын
I was born in '57, was the oldest of my siblings - 2 brothers and a sister. My mom was a stay at home mom and my dad was a local truck driver. We were by no means rich, more like lower middle class, but on my dad's salary we had a house in the suburbs of Long Island, N.Y., had a 2 week vacation on a lake in Vermont every summer and mom & dad made sure that our birthdays were made special. Christmas time was always awesome, we always had a roof over our heads and food on the table. In the last 2 years, both of my parents have passed. Thank you to mom & dad and the rest of the family for making sure we never went without ! Wish we lived now in similar, simpler times. 😧
@bobriedel3277
@bobriedel3277 5 жыл бұрын
@@nik5626 - I wish it was a little slower. I wish people were more civil with each other. I wish little kids couldn't find porn on the internet. I wish materialism wasn't so important to folks, and I wish cell phones had never been invented! LOL. We all have to do time in the time we live. As for me? Wish I had been born around 1940. I'd have been about 15 when Rock n Roll was born, early 20s when The Beatles hit the ground, I would have gone to Vietnam and I'd be ready to call it a day pretty soon, just in time to miss this country's coming civil war! 😎
@lolathedog3108
@lolathedog3108 2 жыл бұрын
In the 1950’s people were nostalgic about how much simpler life was in the 1890’s with no traffic jams, horses instead of cars, getting food from farmers you knew, being able to see all the stars at night, family nearby, neighbors who were lifelong.
@natasharules770
@natasharules770 2 жыл бұрын
Lol, I've always maintained the thought that in 30 years people will look at us now and think about how much better things were. As a gen z, most of us are nostalgic about 2016.
@martinramirezmi5457
@martinramirezmi5457 2 жыл бұрын
@@natasharules770 I hate to think about America getting any worse than it is currently. Can't possibly imagine a president worse than Biden.
@mosquerajoseph7305
@mosquerajoseph7305 2 жыл бұрын
There’s a twilight zone episode about that
@KDF54321
@KDF54321 2 жыл бұрын
@@martinramirezmi5457 Um well the previous president lost his re-election bid, then directed people to do a violent coup on January 6, 2021. Just my opinion, but Biden hasn’t done anything that bad🤷‍♂️.
@rainbowhause5918
@rainbowhause5918 2 жыл бұрын
@@martinramirezmi5457 Andrew Jackson personally wanted the trail of tears. Andrew Johnson took any meaningful progress the civil war had by allowing white oppression of all kinds besides straight up reinstating slavery. Millard Fillmore passed the fugitive slave act. By any human standards, three presidents that are far worse than Biden. I stayed away from presidents that existed within current humans life to avoid the whole “my team” phenomenon. If america can survive Ronald “Mush brains” Reaganomics and reality star/living joke since the 80’s Donald “common man with a small loan of a million dollars from daddy” trump than we’ll be fine with old Biden.
@kenaldri4923
@kenaldri4923 2 жыл бұрын
If anyone remembers the 60's - 70's period they will recall how newspapers were often filled with stories lamenting the nameless, faceless suburbs where nobody knew their neighbors anymore, and everyone was estranged from their extended family. My folks used to lament this also. Basically, we were all told that before the 50's, everyone lived close to their grandparents, aunts and uncles, etc and so you were never far from people who could help you at a moments notice. California was the model for this disconnected way of living. Once the kids left home, wives were left alone in empty homes. But the way this was talked about obsessively seemed proof to me that never in history had mankind ever been "required" to live like this before. Whoever came up with the idea of the "American Dream: life in the suburbs" then probably didn't know anyone whose lives had been torn apart by them. I can even think of a few rock stars who alluded to this in songs. But then so it took an organized, national effort to make the suburbs seem idyllic, and I guess maybe that's why we had all this promotion. It was about marketing a concept that had a lot of potential for profit. You were told you were fortunate as Americans to be yanked from your relatives back home where you grew up, and as proof you lived in brand new homes filled with the latest labor saving devices. And at least if you had participated in the war effort, that was a source of unity for people who felt alienated otherwise. You could still sit around and tell war stories. Anyway, for me visits from relatives when I was a child were usually strained since they often traveled from very far away and knew absolutely nothing about my town. But I still had a mostly happy childhood though and it helped that many of my neighbors were experiencing this same kind of separation anxiety we were all going through.
@jeffblanks529
@jeffblanks529 2 жыл бұрын
Of course, by now, scores of millions of Americans have grown up in those suburbs and never really knew any other kind of life. I'm one of them, of course. The subdivision in Atlanta where I grew up was built in 1964, and most of the community I lived in was built within four years either side of that, a community of tens of thousands of people. The street where I lived was made up almost entirely of young families, all but one from the South, many from Atlanta itself, so we didn't have much of a problem connecting with each other. We were real *neighbors*, sticking together for more than forty years--closer than much of our extended family, as you can imagine. I'm sure this is true elsewhere as well, but the TV never talks about that. The fact that our homes were nice enough to keep and improve for a lifetime plainly had a lot to do with it as well. The houses in Levittown in this video are "starter" houses, and people don't have much incentive to stay in starter houses if they can trade up. Subdivisions made of starter houses, at least down here, wind up either going downhill or being razed for something nicer--maybe a development of luxury townhomes. Anyway: As I said before, nice enough to keep and improve for a lifetime, but *not* nice enough to treat as an *investment*. Quite good enough, but not good enough for people who feel they always need to be "advancing", because the standard for that is, well, bigger. Our homes were just small enough (though they had large yards) and just, well, *homely* enough to *feel like homes*, to feel like places where you can put down roots, and developers don't build homes like that any more. They build starter homes and homes for investors. The houses where I grew up have apparently become "starter homes for the managerial class", whereas once they'd been that class's "forever homes". The widespread prosperity of the postwar era was built partly on a large managerial class, and we don't seem to have that now. We need some way to get back to the distribution of wealth we had between 1960 and 1975, and developers need to build *homes*, not just *housing* or *investments*.
@h.hickenanaduk8622
@h.hickenanaduk8622 Жыл бұрын
I've met your relatives - no great loss.
@wotawanancy3249
@wotawanancy3249 Жыл бұрын
900.00
@osaji922
@osaji922 Жыл бұрын
It's like this in many 3rd world countries. I spent time in the Philippines and it's like that there. They live with their families and stay close knit. I was even listening to the Lawrence brothers podcast and they remarked about this. They're a close family too.
@scrappydog7741
@scrappydog7741 10 ай бұрын
And the theme has continued with the media hating everything about middle class suburban American's. The 1960's with it's protests, assassinations and hippie movement was the worst decade of the 20th century.
@fob1xxl
@fob1xxl 4 жыл бұрын
I was 11 years old. I remember it all. It was a great time to grow up. I remember roller skating all around the neighborhood. My mom always would say, "Don't go too far" ! That meant I had about a 4 block radius ! Dinner with the family EVERY night as soon as my dad got home. We were a family. I wouldn't go back and change ANYTHING ! Thanks Mom and Dad 💙
@lightingboltzero8575
@lightingboltzero8575 4 жыл бұрын
And stranger danger should have been teached way more back then. I have been following a case that happened in 1957 which is about a 7 year old little girl named Maria Ridulph she was kidnapped and murdered while playing with her friend just outside her house when it was getting dark it had just started to snow and the children were excited to play in the snow, a young man gave the little girl a piggyback ride and then the 7 year old child was taken and the child's body was found 6 months later. The parents were so devastated and whole family. On a interview i watched on a documentary of the case the mother was interviewed on TV and she couldn't barely speak she was just so devastated and begged the kidnapper to please return her little girl, but 6 months later the child's body was found dead in the woods. In 2011 they arrested a man (who was 18 years old at the time) and believed he was this Johnny who gave the little girl piggyback rides and kidnapped her, back lack of evidence released him. Now her case remains unsolved once again.
@fob1xxl
@fob1xxl 4 жыл бұрын
@Karen Reed I know bad things happened to kids back then. My folks taught me the whole thing about not accepting things from strangers, or to go with a stranger for any reason. I realize most kids didn't have the same upbringing that I did, but if you want to call it "TV program" then go ahead. All I can do is tell you MY experience as a kid growing up in 1957 !
@fob1xxl
@fob1xxl 4 жыл бұрын
@John Saunders You're welcome "Wally" !
@adamquirke6024
@adamquirke6024 3 жыл бұрын
@John Saunders be quiet. There’s nothing wrong with being sentimental and remembering ones childhood with happiness.
@adamquirke6024
@adamquirke6024 3 жыл бұрын
@John Saunders I beg to differ on that. Sentimentality of childhood is brought on by joy and happiness.
@OldDogNewTrick
@OldDogNewTrick 4 жыл бұрын
I was 17 years old at this time. A rough and ready farm boy heading down the road of life. It was a good trip.
@presence9745
@presence9745 4 жыл бұрын
I'm 49 and i remember the 70s and 80s well. You're my fathers age and i was just talking to a friend about how are time is coming to grow old.
@sjnmhn
@sjnmhn 4 жыл бұрын
1:13, this boy is now in his 70s, time flies
@sjnmhn
@sjnmhn 4 жыл бұрын
2:48 is that a baby doll in the crib? LOL Baby boomer at its peak
@Skiskiski
@Skiskiski 4 жыл бұрын
You are 79? Wow!
@OldDogNewTrick
@OldDogNewTrick 4 жыл бұрын
@@Skiskiski Sure am. This was taken a few days from my 79th Birthday. (scroll down to the notes for an earlier version) flic.kr/p/2gYzVrW
@leecorbett9985
@leecorbett9985 11 ай бұрын
The narrator makes this AWESOME!
@masonmanna829
@masonmanna829 22 күн бұрын
If your wondering the narrator name is Peter Thomas he’s the narrator of the original Forensic Files
@joesmith201212
@joesmith201212 2 жыл бұрын
What a wonderful time I'd give anything to have a time machine to go back to the 50's
@n40tom
@n40tom 5 жыл бұрын
1957 a friend that I have known for about a year took me to his house and I met his sister. My friend didn't stand a chance after that , I was smitten by this young lady and we're both 12 years old. Her father was the commander at a VFW Post and we used to go with him and dance to Tunes on the jukebox from the 40s and 50s. The World War II vets used to tease me hey kid when are you going to make an honest woman out of her, Hey kid when are you two going to get married. I never got embarrassed I was crazy about this girl even at this young age. Eventually we did get married and she was the best thing that ever happened to me in my life. Cancer stole from me my beautiful bride of 47 years and life will not and cannot never be the same . I miss her so. It is so hard being half of what you used to be.
@porkchopspapi5757
@porkchopspapi5757 5 жыл бұрын
Your a grown man. You should be grateful for 47 years of wonderful. Did you think she was going to live forever? Should you have gone first & left her behind instead? Your a very fortunate man.
@thealvarezshow3361
@thealvarezshow3361 5 жыл бұрын
Porkchop's Papi oh shut the fuck up! Fucking cancer took her. A unnatural death. What if the person you spent all your life with dies way before you and your barely 65. I’m sorry man but you’re a dumbass 🤦🏻‍♂️
@cinnamoncider9167
@cinnamoncider9167 5 жыл бұрын
I'm so sorry for your loss! She must've been a wonderful person. God bless you! 💕
@nabadon2853
@nabadon2853 5 жыл бұрын
Sir am sorry for your loss, and am happy for 47 years of happiness. Love from Somalia.
@jasonadkins8894
@jasonadkins8894 5 жыл бұрын
@@porkchopspapi5757 first off you inane inbred jackanapes, it's you're not your. Second . Disrespect this man and his wifes marriage and memory just shows you are lower than whale dung. Want to put a face to your comment I'd be happy to show you mine... Toe to toe... What do you say? Snowflake
@1matsg
@1matsg 4 жыл бұрын
My Dad grew up in the 50's and all the coolest things he would tell me about his childhood in that decade.
@engineeredarmy1152
@engineeredarmy1152 3 жыл бұрын
How old are you now?
@1matsg
@1matsg 3 жыл бұрын
@@engineeredarmy1152 I'm almost 30. My Dad was born in 1945 and and I was born in 1991.
@boblackey1
@boblackey1 3 жыл бұрын
@@1matsg I was born in 1946. I remember the 1950s well. The cars of the late 50's had those fins and rocket look. Many of the shows on TV were westerns.
@aneggtm8433
@aneggtm8433 3 жыл бұрын
@@boblackey1 wow how was your life
@benjaminmendezz
@benjaminmendezz 3 жыл бұрын
@Kathryn Dennis fuck you boomer
@Baer79
@Baer79 2 жыл бұрын
I'm 42 you can take my ass out of 2022 and drop me right back in those times and the smile on my face would be classic! This world today makes you want to throw up!
@bzb500
@bzb500 2 жыл бұрын
Simplicity is the key for a decent life. I remember when I could fill my gas tank up with $7.00 and get my gas and pay after. It was a very unique and special time. There was hardly any stress. I am blessed that I have seen better days.
@67hoursAndCounting
@67hoursAndCounting 2 жыл бұрын
Sure gas was cheaper than today but that's just inflation - your salary would've been smaller too. If you Google how much $7 in 1957 is worth today, it's around $72, so it was actually similar to today, maybe a bit more expensive
@7316bobe
@7316bobe 4 жыл бұрын
A husband and wife could pay the mortgage on there house send there kids to school have a car and a dog and a cat all on 1 wage. I really do miss 1957. The music was good as well.
@biggawinnacrapsa3870
@biggawinnacrapsa3870 4 жыл бұрын
Did they teach the difference between 'there', 'their', and 'they're' back then?
@cashmoneychanel1209
@cashmoneychanel1209 4 жыл бұрын
Bigga Winna Crapsa lol
@D098zxcv
@D098zxcv 4 жыл бұрын
@@biggawinnacrapsa3870 It was a wonderful time compared to now. You probably would not have liked it. Too much common courtesy for you.
@D098zxcv
@D098zxcv 4 жыл бұрын
Born in the 60s. Wish it had been then.
@biggawinnacrapsa3870
@biggawinnacrapsa3870 4 жыл бұрын
@@D098zxcv - Forced common courtesy - by the church. And remember, don't eat meat on Friday - What would Jesus do?
@whitsundaydreaming
@whitsundaydreaming 2 жыл бұрын
This was narrated by the incomparable Peter Thomas, one of television’s most iconic voice talents for 70 years.
@valerieodonnell6764
@valerieodonnell6764 2 жыл бұрын
I feel like I’m watching forensics files.
@buddysteele7624
@buddysteele7624 2 жыл бұрын
are you qualified to bestow such a superlative
@kingofallwhites
@kingofallwhites 2 жыл бұрын
N-n-n-nineteen. Nineteen!
@whitsundaydreaming
@whitsundaydreaming 2 жыл бұрын
@@buddysteele7624 Yes.
@JColeComedian
@JColeComedian 2 жыл бұрын
I know, I keep waiting for someone to disappear...and the creepy music to kick in!
@_knightsbane_3615
@_knightsbane_3615 2 жыл бұрын
Paradise is a strong word
@lowbridge7070
@lowbridge7070 2 жыл бұрын
I was born in 1969. So, I grew up in the 1970s when 1950s nostalgia was very popular. And I was swept up by it. I just fell in love with the 1950s decade. By the early 1980s I was in high school and being raised in an abusive, dysfunctional household. One day during class for reasons I cannot recall, they rolled in the school 16mm movie projector and played for us kids a few of those old, antiquated 1950s short instructional films on how to date, how to be polite, etc. My fellow classmates laughed through them. The wooden acting, the cheap production values, the over-politeness, the innocent slang of the time (golly, gee, swell, etc), the squeaky clean activities (a picnic, a carnival, bike riding, dinner with the family, etc.) I on the other hand wasnt laughing. I found these films to be quite sweet and charming. A sort of time capsule of a more kinder, innocent era. Don't get me wrong. I had no illusions. I was well aware that the 1950s weren't so perfect and innocent. No decade is. All decades have their faults. But it seems to me that there were so many things they were doing SO RIGHT in the 1950s that we were doing so horribly wrong in the 1980s as well as today
@MustacheDLuffy
@MustacheDLuffy 2 жыл бұрын
I’m honestly fine not living in that era
@Ty-vj4wg
@Ty-vj4wg 2 жыл бұрын
I really can’t think of anything the 50s did right. It was an awful time. Racist, reserved, sexist, forcing people to suppress themeselves, etc. Sure, it had its charms with music and fashion but was really an awful time for anyone who was different and wanted to live their own kind of life.
@reddykilowatt
@reddykilowatt 2 жыл бұрын
@@Ty-vj4wg yeah back then abortion was illegal, cops shot black people for no good reason, people couldn’t say they were gay, the air and water were polluted, people were obsessed with acquiring empty status symbols. good thing today is nothing like that. 🤣🤣🤣
@Sonny2299
@Sonny2299 2 жыл бұрын
@@Ty-vj4wg yea i agree. The world was in shambles but the charm is unique and cool, i can see why people could fall in love with it.
@SpiritusMundi4EVER
@SpiritusMundi4EVER 2 жыл бұрын
Enjoyed your post. You would like this song by The Judds called "Grandpa".
@lauren-ir3sz
@lauren-ir3sz 4 жыл бұрын
Last year, my first year of highschool, I found no interest in a single class. I got to second semester, and my first hour was U.S. history. This class was different, I was actually excited to show up everyday. When we got to WW2, Great Depression, and the atomic age, it was a different feeling. I’ve never felt so captivated to learn about America in the 1930’s-60’s. I just feel like I’m time traveling when I learn and watch videos like these. I want to take more classes where I can learn more about this. It’s just so interesting. I want to sit down with somebody from that time period and just ask so many questions.
@amirabans1127
@amirabans1127 4 жыл бұрын
Im 19 rn. I cant believe my grandparents grew up in the 40s and 50s for some reason
@ArsPraestigium
@ArsPraestigium 4 жыл бұрын
There are quite a few of us left. Try visiting a local retirement community. Most older Americans enjoy sharing memories.
@paulyakaitis3352
@paulyakaitis3352 4 жыл бұрын
I experienced everything in the 60’s
@original_kelley
@original_kelley 4 жыл бұрын
lauren I was the same way I had us history my junior year and man let me see best class and teacher ever I had in the morning time which everyone feel asleep and I would be the only excited to learn and watch stuff like this, learning about ww2, ww1, just everything in the early age was amazing I’ve only met one ww2 veteran and I’ve always wanted to met a ww2 veteran and sit down and have a conversation with, my grandpa (never met) was in ww2 Pearl Harbor
@bereancall6859
@bereancall6859 4 жыл бұрын
Too bad that history is complete bullshit. All wars for 500 years have been to expand central banking into every country, lead by our Jesuit controlled military for the Pope. George Washington was a satanic Freemason and died a Catholic, and now is deified as Zeus (found in the Smithsonian) and in the nations capital dome with fallen angels like poseiden and columbia. His phallic symbol, called the Washington Monument, is really a depiction of Nimrod's penis and it stands 6666 inches high and 666 inches wide. Our country has been used by Jesuits for them to take over the world, in this world's last New World (covert) Fascist Order. When we won the American Revolution, supposedly, we decided it would be a good idea to have the exact same colors on our flag of our enemy. Makes perfect sense heh? The public fool system is just that.
@julia9991
@julia9991 4 жыл бұрын
The 1950’s, when there weren’t cameras everywhere and privacy still existed.
@rahmel2009
@rahmel2009 4 жыл бұрын
Julianne Demse-Manly and nobody was playing Fortnite and making cringy TikTok Videos.
@Alex-ky8bw
@Alex-ky8bw 4 жыл бұрын
And when blacks couldn't use the same bathrooms as whites
@ronh.798
@ronh.798 4 жыл бұрын
No Google tracking your every move.
@SoloTravelerOffTheBeatenPath
@SoloTravelerOffTheBeatenPath 4 жыл бұрын
@@Alex-ky8bw Someone like you ALWAYS has to bring up racism in every single positive comment about the 50s. It gets so old. How is that even relevant to this comment?
@Alex-ky8bw
@Alex-ky8bw 4 жыл бұрын
@@SoloTravelerOffTheBeatenPath because it's true?
@franksullivan1873
@franksullivan1873 2 жыл бұрын
I was born in this time and my parents,who were just ordinary folks actually made a good life for our family.The housing was affordable and jobs plentiful.A working man’s dream,the American Dream.
@alekseicarpenter3359
@alekseicarpenter3359 2 жыл бұрын
Unless you were black.
@franksullivan1873
@franksullivan1873 2 жыл бұрын
@@alekseicarpenter3359 Depends on where you were and the parents you had.Good hard working people always do better.Black people were actually moving up in those days until President Johnson declared The coming of his “Great Society “which put people on the welfare rolls .However if you do not offer training in the society,you get dependency.Nanny State control.We are still stuck in that system today.Prior to that event Black kids had a two parent home now Many only have one parent or Grandma to raise them now.The more responsibility you take from people for actions on this Earth,the weaker they get.White people have suffered from this too and in larger numbers but not as a greater percentage than the number of Black people have.Goverment sucks.Goverment is the only entity that creates inflation.It causes most of the problems we have today.
@jackspring7709
@jackspring7709 2 жыл бұрын
@@alekseicarpenter3359 The black community was actually doing very well: your real problem is that, by that stage, the Deep State was already busy dismantling America so it could control it. Divide and Conquer was a very important part of it: many of the bloodline families that ran the slave trade now control the politicians who are telling you that innocent white men were responsible for enslaving your ancestors. Then they asked you for your vote. Unfortunately it worked and continues to work. I'm white - I was born in Ireland in the 1960's: Irish Catholics were not even allowed to VOTE in Northern Ireland back then - regardless of whether they were white or men. Know your enemy - because I can guarantee you your enemy knows you better than you know yourself.
@nooux1966
@nooux1966 2 жыл бұрын
@@alekseicarpenter3359 Ah yes, living in America in the 1950s as a black person must of been horrifying compared to starving in Africa, living in a straw mud hut wondering when the neighbouring tribe is going to come and butcher you with machetes, damn white people! Favour please, stfu.
@ok-ts4bt
@ok-ts4bt Жыл бұрын
@@franksullivan1873 You are just preaching racist stereotypes. I guess it really shows the era you grew up in. The fact that you are saying that black people were "moving up" and that they were better back then because of having two parents at home is just horrible. And saying "Good hard working people always do better"???? No matter how hard black people worked back then, they would be murdered and segregated because of the color of their skin.They were not able to move up and get as good educations because they were only recently allowed to be taught in the same schools as white folk. Clearly you grew up privileged, white, and have no real sympathy for anyone else. How disappointing that racists like you exist. I guess it is good that this older generation is dying off. Its a shame for all the good people, but I am relieved for all of the ones stuck in the past and unable to progress and move on.
@billiehaley2816
@billiehaley2816 2 жыл бұрын
It was a wonderful time. I am so lucky to have grown up in the era.
@commonsense3921
@commonsense3921 Жыл бұрын
As a Black American these comments are amazing.
@splash2849
@splash2849 Жыл бұрын
@@commonsense3921 i’m young as hell and black and confused lmao, were most of the ppl in these comments not aware of the issues or was it just like a universal thing that they didn’t have to think about so they don’t associate it with their childhoods? genuinely wanna know the climate/dynamic
@jalenmitchell9218
@jalenmitchell9218 Жыл бұрын
Yeah they were great for us because we're both white people
@marycarroll-uf4jj
@marycarroll-uf4jj Жыл бұрын
Me too!!
@Marth8880
@Marth8880 3 ай бұрын
​@@splash2849 they like to not think about it most likely
@pennynorthcutt5833
@pennynorthcutt5833 5 жыл бұрын
I was born in 1948. My mom didnt work outside the home and she and daddy raised me and my brother, bought a house, and sent me to college all on my dad's salary. Those were the days.
@edwardanthony7283
@edwardanthony7283 5 жыл бұрын
NY city college was free too.
@billbill2214
@billbill2214 5 жыл бұрын
My mom was a stay-home mother. My dad worked 9 hours every day Monday-friday good ole 50s and 60s
@edwardanthony7283
@edwardanthony7283 5 жыл бұрын
@@billbill2214 Born in July 1958 & 4 years prior to that my mother worked on Wall Street as a legal secretary [before stopping for good in mid '58] and my father worked full time days for a pharmaceutical outfit while getting a free Bachelor's degree from Brooklyn College @ night after his 2 year stint in the Korean war. The $ my mother made was banked and his $ paid the $30.00 a month rent etc. and by 1961 with 3 kids they waltzed into a mint [built in 1954] $12,000.00 4-5 bedroom house in Bethpage, NY [with dad making over 8k per year @ the time] with roughly 70% down & a very low monthly mortgage + fully paid off a few years prior to selling it in 1967 for 17k & buying a brand new bigger home in Suffolk County for 38k with the 17k rolled over as the down payment leaving a 21k mortgage @ 3% & a puny $130.00 monthly payment. It was easy to buy decent homes at the salary to price ratio back then & most homes were recently built like the Bethpage home. He got a higher paying job during the final years in Bethpage and reached 6 figures during the 70's & on up to retirement in 1998. If people had a game plan & were able to stick to it they had a good chance of getting where they wanted to be back then & with plenty of $$ left over!
@johnrobinson4445
@johnrobinson4445 5 жыл бұрын
Those glory days courtesy of the Democratic Party and the "great compression", when rich people didn't make all the rules for awhile and the Middle Class was enormously expanded.
@billbill2214
@billbill2214 5 жыл бұрын
@@edwardanthony7283 Wow seems like successful parents. Took me awhile to read because i have no glasses.
@tjmichael8773
@tjmichael8773 2 жыл бұрын
my parents and grandparents experienced alcoholism & severe mental health issues in their families. Lots of people suffered in silence back then no one could talk about issues.
@b.gailcooper7530
@b.gailcooper7530 2 жыл бұрын
But that is always the case in any time.
@tjmichael8773
@tjmichael8773 2 жыл бұрын
@@b.gailcooper7530 agree absolutely. too many people want to go back to old times and believe the grass will greener for them. it's not that green now and wasn't then either for many people
@savagetv6460
@savagetv6460 2 жыл бұрын
@@tjmichael8773 it was greener
@tsrmmercy836
@tsrmmercy836 2 жыл бұрын
@@tjmichael8773 they did not live in fear that their rights may be torn apart by a mob that relies solely on feelings. I'd rather be extinguished three fold of atoms than stand and witness what the forefathers have built get set ablaze.
@kruggsmash
@kruggsmash 2 жыл бұрын
@@savagetv6460 theres an irony to being on this side of the fence and insisting the grass WAS greener over there.
@ikGREENY
@ikGREENY 3 ай бұрын
Wow, what a beautiful vision of America. I love my country
@shakhmoroff123
@shakhmoroff123 2 жыл бұрын
We came to America in 1957. My Dad had a job waiting for him. My mother found a factory job. They worked hard. We became members of the middle class. Contrast this to the fate we would have had if my family stayed in Russia under communist rule. So grateful to be living in this great country God bless America
@t2216
@t2216 Жыл бұрын
Very lucky. How did they manage to escape ? My Grandfather went to GULAG and got out when Stalin died. Tried to escape but never had a change again
@shakhmoroff123
@shakhmoroff123 Жыл бұрын
My families left Russia during the Bolshevik revolution. They eventually made their way through many middle eastern countries until my Dad was offered a menial job in New York by his brother.
@Mavarla
@Mavarla Жыл бұрын
I, too, emigrated from Japan to America, in 1957. My Dad was an American Navy man and met my Mom while stationed there. We lived in Tokyo until 1957 but my Dad got homesick so off we went. I was 3 years-old but I remember it all like it was YESTERDAY. There was SO MUCH SPACE, land, and food was so different. My 5 Y/O Sis and I fell in love with "Rice Krispies," "Ovaltine," "TANG," "KOOL-AID," and don't get me started on all of those CANDY BARS!!! Television in America was very different from what we watched in Tokyo...you know which shows I'm talking about...! When the "Barbie" doll debuted, two years later, of course, us girls just HAD to have them. Life in America was SO MUCH FUN: my Dad's American family was so kind and good to us; everybody laughed, it seemed, all the time. We arrived in the U.S. on October 31, 1957 and I'll never forget all the children knocking on the door dressed all kooky and wanting candy. They didn't celebrate Halloween in Japan, of course. To this day, Halloween is my favourite holiday, even over Christmas. Glad you and your family made such a great life here, Sarah.
@t2216
@t2216 Жыл бұрын
@@shakhmoroff123 It took then 40 Years to reach America. I am from Estonia here last time to escape was 1944 autumn. After that our country got fully controlled by USSR. We got communism much later than 1917 revolution in Russia
@shakhmoroff123
@shakhmoroff123 Жыл бұрын
@@t2216 My family lived in Asiatic Russia Samarkand Region. I was told that the Bolsheviks came knocking on my Grandparents door in the 1930s. It was then that my Grandmother took her family over the mountains into Afghanistan. They traveled across 5 Islamic countries to finally arrive in Jerusalem in 1939 where they had family. They had to pretend they were Islamic and bribed border guards to make it across country to country.
@rickarnold6825
@rickarnold6825 3 жыл бұрын
Seeing the homes, cars, and people in this video, I've come to realize that my family was not as well off as many of these people.But then again, I remember that my two sisters and I were happy, and our parents gave us a nice home and a nice life. It seems that back then, you didn't need as much money to be happy as you do now.
@penderyn8794
@penderyn8794 2 жыл бұрын
Because its clever propaganda
@The_DC_Kid
@The_DC_Kid 2 жыл бұрын
Remember when families would play board games in the evening instead of watching the "idiot box"?
@MackNcD
@MackNcD 2 жыл бұрын
That’s because people lived with less charges and fees. This isn’t clever propaganda, it’s the way it was. It amazes me that people no more than 20 years old think rright now, is how things always were. They can’t see how dark a time is because they born were in it.
@cathymeyer3760
@cathymeyer3760 2 жыл бұрын
That's all you needed.
@spaceknight793
@spaceknight793 2 жыл бұрын
I would phrase it as we didn't need as much "stuff" to be happy. I recall when a room had maybe two or three plug-ins, enough for a tv, a lamp, and a clock. Today I need power strips in every room. For a tv, cable box, Xbox, desktop computer, monitor, printer, router, phone charger, plus any other devices. And that's for several rooms if not every room (excluding router)--plus service fees for the phone, cable, internet, and streaming sites. It's crazy the amount of tech devices we "need" today on a daily (every minute!) basis. And are we happier than we were back then? Sure doesn't seem like it.
@2liter8
@2liter8 2 жыл бұрын
For me I remember the year 1954. I was 6. and during that year I remember thinking what a wonderful year it was. Probably because I had a good home with good parents who bought me toys. The fridge was always full of good food. Mom made popcorn and brownies and all the rest. My sister was older and soon went away to college so I was an only child. Didn't even have a tv until a few years later. I'd sit on the bed with my dad and listen to Ed Murrow and the evening news. He'd say how Murrow was a great newsman and if there was no news he'd just say 'well there's no news tonight'. Dad would read me the comics in the paper. Blondie and Dagwood, others popular at the time.
@mortsnerd5100
@mortsnerd5100 2 жыл бұрын
Now the corporate media fabricate the "news".
@Number6_
@Number6_ 2 жыл бұрын
Yea, everything stopped for the 6'o clock news with Huntley and Brinkley. Now they just make it up, so to coverup news or for propaganda and people aren't interested.
@batmanandrobin250
@batmanandrobin250 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you for sharing. I gotta get up and pave my own path in life for real
@LoneLee2022
@LoneLee2022 2 жыл бұрын
Not me. My Mom was a mentally ill alcoholic.......we used to starve..............
@DrBaronMunchausen
@DrBaronMunchausen 2 жыл бұрын
@@LoneLee2022 Sad to hear. Hope your life became much better
@vecernicek2
@vecernicek2 8 ай бұрын
Compared to what we had in the Eastern Bloc during this era - yes it was a paradise.
@Melissa0774
@Melissa0774 2 жыл бұрын
Any era in history is a good time to be alive, as long as you're not part of an oppressed minority group, have money, are physically and mentally healthy, and have a good relationship with your family.
@franksullivan1873
@franksullivan1873 2 жыл бұрын
I know anytime in history has its joys and sadness.But to have a chance just to live is a chance we are given and not chosen.Despite the times that those days were for folks of Color,it was a time for a new beginning and the coming of Civil Rights for all.The people born in those times helped to change the World.Life is important,always cherish it,live to learn and anyone can flourish.
@studiowagga1642
@studiowagga1642 2 жыл бұрын
Amen
@Robin-sv7mr
@Robin-sv7mr Жыл бұрын
So true
@eddies366
@eddies366 11 ай бұрын
I think you got the just of it. short and sweet.
@hothemeep1219
@hothemeep1219 5 ай бұрын
Like most people
@oscarjetson128
@oscarjetson128 4 жыл бұрын
A time when any honest man who wanted to work hard, could find a job that would support a family.
@zarategabe
@zarategabe 3 жыл бұрын
well.....only if you were white
@mikesully110
@mikesully110 3 жыл бұрын
Very soon there aren't going to be many jobs left, especially if they are workers without skills. In the 1950's, even if you didn't do so well in high school, you could easily find some blue collar work and make enough to support a family by yourself. Now if you have no skills, good luck finding decent paid work, and good luck trying to raise a family, buy a house, and have a nice car in the driveway that isn't on credit. At my first job, at a phone based ISP callcentre; they shut the entire 200+ people based operation down, and replaced it with a web portal + 20 people taking calls. At my current job, there used to be 3 of us and one was classed as management on quite a high wage. Now, only 10 years later, I am the only one needed and due to automation and improved software I am only part time. Look at all the unmanned kiosks in supermarkets, McDonalds is testing computer kiosks, at the moment this stuff is crude but before long it'll take many more jobs. Automated burger making machines are being tested. Self driving truck convoys. Hell the other week I went to a gas station at 2am and it was 100% automated, had nobody on the premesis at all. In 50 years the only jobs left will be ones we don't want robots doing. Such as fitting shoes on children, or child care, or doctors. But even so healthcare is being automated, in the near future a doctors visit will involve being scanned by a machine and the doctor will just read the printout. There will be millions unemployed. So a Basic Income / Citizens Wage is the only thing I can think of to avoid collapse. We are not there yet but in 20 years I think we could be.
@rickarnold6825
@rickarnold6825 3 жыл бұрын
@@zarategabe That was a terrible fact at the time. In my view, racial inequality was a real problem overlooked by most.
@kylelowry1521
@kylelowry1521 3 жыл бұрын
@@zarategabe fax
@sv_cheats1970
@sv_cheats1970 3 жыл бұрын
@@mikesully110 pretty scary
@marijooneill8015
@marijooneill8015 2 жыл бұрын
I graduated from 8th grade in 57 and we got our first TV the same year. It was the best time to grow up. I'm 78 years old and I remember everything about those days.
@gingeroxendine2288
@gingeroxendine2288 2 жыл бұрын
Native Americans were also living under Jim Crow. We rode freight elevators and we're not allowed to enter the front door of stores. My parents couldn't vote.
@sayitdontsprayit9325
@sayitdontsprayit9325 2 жыл бұрын
cool
@rocketeer2361
@rocketeer2361 2 жыл бұрын
Natives also get everything for free.
@adrukova1407
@adrukova1407 Жыл бұрын
@@rocketeer2361 Right ✅️
@goes5114
@goes5114 Жыл бұрын
@@rocketeer2361 Makes sense since everything was taken from them
@maxhenry9724
@maxhenry9724 Жыл бұрын
@@goes5114 Nobody alive today took shit from them.
@veronicacannon1500
@veronicacannon1500 2 жыл бұрын
My mother, her mother and her 8 siblings were starving. They didn't have free school lunches. My grandfather was very abusive and knocked my grandmother's teeth out and beat his children, kicking them with his cowboy boots. My grandmother was not protected by anyone or any laws. No one called CPS to report the abuse or hunger. My grandmother was stuck in that awful marriage until her children grew and she was able to divorce him. This was not their life in the 50s.
@Wheelio
@Wheelio 2 жыл бұрын
I think your case probably was not too uncommon sadly. Under the glitz and glam of the projected "perfect American family" were lots of issues being swept under the rug.
@67hoursAndCounting
@67hoursAndCounting 2 жыл бұрын
@@Wheelio Definitely, all those men coming home from the war had PTSD too
@potatosalad9085
@potatosalad9085 2 жыл бұрын
@@emjay2045 then again, we have a mental health crisis in our youth, so you lose some you win some
@franksullivan1873
@franksullivan1873 2 жыл бұрын
☹️Your tale is a sad one for sure.I am glad you survived it.I was just fortunate to have parents that loved each other and loved me.Not everyone’s story is the same.I hope are doing well and have gotten on to a better life situation.
@oghash4912
@oghash4912 Жыл бұрын
Same shit goes on today, extremely sad
@karenmilligan9128
@karenmilligan9128 4 жыл бұрын
I was 7 in 1957 in first grade growing up in Michigan the daughter of a school teacher and pastor of a Baptist church. It was a safe, wonderful time of life! I loved school. I loved to play on our tire swing, skip rope, jump mud puddles, roller skate with clamp on skates, dress my doll (that I still have by the way.), watch Howdy Doody on a black and white TV, make snow angels in the snow, walk the four blocks to school with no worry or fear. And I loved saying the pledge of Allegiance every day at school!
@LK-pc4sq
@LK-pc4sq 2 жыл бұрын
In 1971 we also did Pledge of Allegiance in school I really liked it! live was so much better back then. Never fear of getting shot, kidnapped or drugs and everyone was far more respectful of each other. Together Americas are nasty! they get into road rage,the steel from stores "seen it twice in two hours" in Puyallup WA
@jonbanks653
@jonbanks653 2 жыл бұрын
My life exactly only I was the son of two teachers. It was great until one day when I was 7 I asked mom and dad why we never went to restaurants. They hemmed and hawed and said well we don't need it. We have food at home. It was years later I realized that we could not go to those places because of our color. I felt really stupid when I learned the truth. I also did the pledge of allegiance in my segregated school and honestly believed in liberty and justice for all. I had a rude awakening
@louisachalarca6494
@louisachalarca6494 2 ай бұрын
We said the pledge of allegiance in the 90s we just had seen 9/11 then the Iraq war and we thought about it with critical thought not nostalgia and not being bothered by oppression
@tylerforde87
@tylerforde87 4 жыл бұрын
1957: conveniences that are "Spiritually Uplifting!" 2019: conveniences that are "Absolutely Soul Crushing!"
@christianmorales8978
@christianmorales8978 3 жыл бұрын
Wait till you see 2019’s sequel
@crazybutcool5150
@crazybutcool5150 2 жыл бұрын
Gay
@MrCreeperYT_Official
@MrCreeperYT_Official 2 жыл бұрын
Yea i mean just imagine having to drive to the other side of town just to see how many countries are in the world from a book that's probably from the Interwar period (the area in between the World Wars).
@JohnLRice
@JohnLRice 2 жыл бұрын
@@MrCreeperYT_Official Libraries were kept very up to date and most cities of any size had many libraries, for me there was the big main branch that was downtown and most of my childhood I lived a few blocks from the local branch. And a popular thing to buy at the time was encyclopedia sets, so a good percentage of homes had their own reference on general facts about history, science, philosophy, etc, with some sets being more specific than others. I was born in 1958 and my sister in 1954 and my folks bought several sets (typically from door to door salesmen I think) and my favorite one to look through was Compton's Pictured Encyclopedia from 1962, it was like our "internet" back then to answer questions or to go down a random rabbit hole on a lazy Sunday morning because TV sucked . . . no cartoons just boring political talk shows dad liked to watch! ;-)
@stj971
@stj971 2 жыл бұрын
@@JohnLRice the library has been my fav hangout all my life. They even have computers there son.
@jaybird7201
@jaybird7201 2 жыл бұрын
I’m so thankful I grew up in the 1960s before the age of smart phones, computers, and social media. TV was an occasional distraction, but only for 2-3 hours a week. We had neighborhood friends and always played outside. When it was raining, we played board games. We broke bones, got stitches, were stung by the occasional bee, shot hoops in the park and rode our bikes everywhere. We went creek stomping and got lost in the woods. We ate dinners together and went to church as a family. When we misbehaved in school and were disciplined, our parents also punished us (and not our teachers). We learned how to spell and punctuate sentences properly. A high school diploma meant something - a college degree even more. We drank from the garden hose. We fought to get there first when the phone rang because it was always our friends - never telemarketers. We learned to read maps on road trips and were always looking out the window. School was for learning - not indoctrination. Life was lived in person. Our bonds were real and not virtual. Kids have so much more “stuff” today but we seemed to be much more happy with what we had. 😊
@chriswoods662
@chriswoods662 2 жыл бұрын
70's too
@scottsmith491
@scottsmith491 Жыл бұрын
I was born in 1960. Loved every minute of my childhood in the Midwest. I still believe that 1950's America was definitely the greatest decade in the greatest country. The 60's come in 2nd place. If not for the Vietnam war and the assassinations the 60's would have been almost as good.
@dcon4762
@dcon4762 5 жыл бұрын
I remember going to the store and just leaving the house unlocked. I grew up in a blue collar neighborhood with hard working people. Riding bikes all across town with my friends. Never wanted to be inside. We kids played outside all day until the street light(we had one on our street) came on. Fun times.
@Yakanhikoerotikkushiti
@Yakanhikoerotikkushiti 5 жыл бұрын
I did that too in 1998.....
@jondstewart
@jondstewart 5 жыл бұрын
D Con And back in the day, especially in Southern California, you had blue-collar neighborhoods that had underground swimming pools in the backyard!
@oxcarthabu
@oxcarthabu 5 жыл бұрын
Almost the same in my neighborhood. I was born in 1954. I was the first born of six after my Dad returned from Korea in 1953. Blocks of mostly cookie cutter 2 story Cape Cod houses, some with 1 car garages! Riding our bikes all over the neighborhood until dusk. We had the milk box on the small front stoop for the Milkman. The Fuller Brush man would come around every week. The Good Humor man would drive his truck around in the summer. As soon as we heard the bells we'd run towards his truck! I used to get either a Strawberry Shortcake or Toasted Almond ice cream bar! Great times!
@chaosdemonwolf1
@chaosdemonwolf1 4 жыл бұрын
@@jondstewart You mean ''in ground?''
@karnagefails333
@karnagefails333 2 жыл бұрын
@@Yakanhikoerotikkushiti I was a 16 year old puke chunk. Skateboarding (was lousy at it too), dropout, pot smoking, loitering, loser scumbag. Played a lot of Tenchu, Resident Evil & Metal Gear and got in a lot of trouble and listened to a lot of shitty nu metal. Had a cute girlfriend & a lot of friends though. Late '90s were not too bad lol
@skipgetelman3418
@skipgetelman3418 3 жыл бұрын
As a kid in the fifties I remember how great it was Mom always home dad worked and we had everything we needed When I got sick I saw my doctor at my house Milk delivered to the front door We played until almost dark and it was safe Time now isn’t very good
@mikaelglansencreutz2482
@mikaelglansencreutz2482 2 жыл бұрын
This was an golden era, the 1950s and it lasted to end of the 90s.
@concars1234
@concars1234 2 жыл бұрын
@@mikaelglansencreutz2482 What do you think happened in the 2000s to create the foreboding atmosphere that almost everyone seems to be able to feel?
@misterscaz6011
@misterscaz6011 2 жыл бұрын
@@concars1234 I think it actually started to crumble in the 90s. We saw it come to a head in the 2000s. It feels like to turning point was September 11th, 2001....not because of the attack itself, but our reaction to it. Same thing with the pandemic....our reaction to it was worse than the pandemic itself in my opinion. Just seems like everyone's spirit is broken now. We're jump from one "crisis" to another and we get beaten down a little more every time. This was one of the themes of "1984". They were constantly at war with one country or another and kept society on edge making them controllable through fear. I think there our powers (people) that want this fear because it makes us controllable. They have it in their head that they are going to mold a new society that is "equitable" to everyone. They're going to do that by dragging the middle class down, not elevating the poor because they've found that you can't elevate the poor. Make everyone equal in the gutter except for a small elite at the top.
@oznelnavnaekal6679
@oznelnavnaekal6679 2 жыл бұрын
@Mister Scaz Yeah, over the past years I have also noticed that our governments restricts many things that back in the 90s could be done without a problem. And I am beginning to wonder: has Orwell’s 1984 really some predictions of the future?
@concars1234
@concars1234 2 жыл бұрын
@@oznelnavnaekal6679 if needing a "vaccine" for international travel is not a red flag for EVERYONE then I think people are really just willfully ignorant of this issue
@garrieclark24
@garrieclark24 2 жыл бұрын
How time has changed,sad...as 56 year old, wish I was there..
@hawke4753
@hawke4753 Жыл бұрын
I am a 14 year old, and when I did some research on the 50s, I fell in love. I feel like it was an amazing time to be a teenager because of the amazing economy, and freedom, the new and cool cars, and more. I wish I could have lived in those times.
@splash2849
@splash2849 Жыл бұрын
i like the simplicity but i’d rather be living today
@hawke4753
@hawke4753 Жыл бұрын
@@splash2849 thats your choice, but I see that the 50s was a much better time. Especially for teenagers.
@splash2849
@splash2849 Жыл бұрын
@@hawke4753 well white teenagers yeah if i wasn’t a poc ig i’d love it
@poetcomic1
@poetcomic1 Жыл бұрын
@@splash2849 It was MUCH better for black teenagers as well. The level of drop outs, teen pregnancies and above all violence was a FRACTION of what it is now.
@splash2849
@splash2849 Жыл бұрын
@@poetcomic1 civil rights movement? why would anyone want to be alive during that
@cathoffman652
@cathoffman652 3 жыл бұрын
I was born in '41, graduated high school in '59. I think I lived in the best time period there ever was. I grieve for my grandchildren who have decades of this corrupt world to endure. At age 79, I'm glad I'm close to time to check out. Living in this day and age is like a preview of hell.
@michaelmeyers3664
@michaelmeyers3664 3 жыл бұрын
We now live in Sodom and Gomorrah and as Jesus said in the days of Noah!
@TempzModz
@TempzModz 3 жыл бұрын
Lucky
@whatever_it_takes6691
@whatever_it_takes6691 3 жыл бұрын
You listened to Buddy Holly?
@canaldofred2366
@canaldofred2366 3 жыл бұрын
@Urjjo Bandyopadhyay please stay in india, we dont want indians in America
@belleisleguy
@belleisleguy 3 жыл бұрын
You lived through an amazing time. I'm in my 40s now and I'm truly afraid of what the USA will be like when I'm 79.
@OcotilloTom
@OcotilloTom 6 жыл бұрын
I was born in 1946 and remember much of this. Thanks for posting. I still have a 1957 Chushman motor scooter I purchased in 1961. My first car was a 1955 Studebaker Champion. Good times!
@Alejandr-io3oe
@Alejandr-io3oe Жыл бұрын
We need this America back. We can't give it up...
@eugene8524
@eugene8524 18 күн бұрын
too late
@karld884
@karld884 2 жыл бұрын
This was PRE CIVIL RIGHTS. Freedom for all? This is what MAGA is all about!!
@robertdouglas8895
@robertdouglas8895 25 күн бұрын
Civil rights ended up supporting Black families which are now 70% without a father. Yes, there were advances made but I grew up in a small town where Blacks had all the opportunities that anyone else had. I had a grandmother who was clearly racist, but the mores changed without the government mandating it.
@tj-kv6vr
@tj-kv6vr 4 жыл бұрын
I am 71 and wouldn't want to be 30 now a days.
@Sora_Nai
@Sora_Nai 4 жыл бұрын
It's not that bad im 21. Just that alot people dont know how to live within their means. I make 24k a year and I have a 6 month emergency fund 10k in investments. I didn't go to college but I'm doing fine. My monthly burn rate is $700 - $1000 so I save half of my monthly pay checks. Have my own place and live in the suburbs in a good area in a good city. Times are rough but the 60s where worse I wouldn't want to be 20 or 30 in the 60s fearing every moment of my life for nuclear inhalation. Times are good even now. So idk what people complain about saying they cant make ends meet then stop being financially stupid save leave with your means dont get into debt or buy shit you can't afford. My rule us if u can't afford 5 of them I can't afford 1.
@elizrebezilmadommdo1662
@elizrebezilmadommdo1662 4 жыл бұрын
@@Sora_Nai what do you do for a living?
@nickc247
@nickc247 4 жыл бұрын
@@Sora_Nai That works great when you're 21. It doesn't hold up over time...not without more money.
@Sora_Nai
@Sora_Nai 4 жыл бұрын
@@nickc247 that's why me doing this at 21 by the time I'm 25 or 23 I'll be making more money and be financially free gaining money passively.
@nickc247
@nickc247 4 жыл бұрын
@@Sora_Nai Making more money will be tougher without that degree or at least a solid trade. Don't get me wrong, it's great to have plans. I guess what I'm saying is, it probably won't turn out that way.
@terryharding7476
@terryharding7476 5 жыл бұрын
I was 7 years old in 57, this almost made me cry as i remembered all of it, and how much the quality of our lives has slipped away. Progress sometimes isn't the best thing..
@alvarohernandez2438
@alvarohernandez2438 5 жыл бұрын
Terry Harding the Native Americans lived a harmonious life one with nature. The white man has deluted this land to 57 genders pedophiles slavery in taxes and concrete jungles. No more afternoon watching lakes and wildlife just arguments republican vs democrats and mass shootings on tv?.
@Kube_Dog
@Kube_Dog 5 жыл бұрын
I'm a good bit younger than you, but it almost made me cry too.
@j.r.mocksly5996
@j.r.mocksly5996 5 жыл бұрын
@@alvarohernandez2438 They lived in harmony with nature the same way tribal people do: because they cannot exploit it. These same natives were just like you and I, and they often committed brutal atrocities and fought over territory amongst themselves. If they could've done what Europeans did, they would have... they were no more noble than anyone else.
@chippledon1
@chippledon1 5 жыл бұрын
I was born in '63 and I miss the fifties!!! I'm only semi-joking!
@LonelyMelon99
@LonelyMelon99 5 жыл бұрын
It was a great time in the 50s. Unfortunately, we are now seeing the after effects of such industrial development,
@ArjanTV
@ArjanTV 2 жыл бұрын
Any time is like paradise if you are smart enough to make it like one
@catkeys6911
@catkeys6911 2 жыл бұрын
One big reason we were all (at least somewhat) happier back then was because we were not bombarded with information the way we are today. It's that old, time-honored idiom "Ignorance Is Bliss* . Now, when something bad is happening, we ALL HAVE TO KNOW ABOUT IT - sometimes that's a good thing, but it certainly can get in the way of "Paradise"
@marypevitt174
@marypevitt174 4 жыл бұрын
I was born in 1951, I live in Australia mum & dad both worked & life was wonderful, I'm glad I wasn't born in today's world. it was much more safer, never locked the door when we went out
@marypevitt174
@marypevitt174 3 жыл бұрын
@Urjjo Bandyopadhyay Cardi B & Nicki Minaj have to do with it ???????
@marypevitt174
@marypevitt174 3 жыл бұрын
@Urjjo Bandyopadhyay maybe, but their doing something right ?, They do have the money
@SuperJacob2006
@SuperJacob2006 3 жыл бұрын
@@marypevitt174 I've Built A LEGO 1957 Police Car
@marypevitt174
@marypevitt174 3 жыл бұрын
@@SuperJacob2006 that's awesome
@cryptohunt2552
@cryptohunt2552 5 жыл бұрын
I was born in 1958. Sometimes I wish I could step back in time and just spend a little time in that era.
@joethayer8785
@joethayer8785 5 жыл бұрын
Crypto Hunt my grandmas ten years older than you! 😁
@pegleg09able
@pegleg09able 5 жыл бұрын
If you like to read I will recommend a book that will let you travel back in time (in your imagination). It's called "11/22/63" by Stephen King. It is about the JFK assassination in Dallas. I read it last summer (I was born in 1958 in Ft Worth TX). It was weird reading that book. Stephen King states that he visited that area to do research for his book. I don't remember a lot of the places (buildings, streets, businesses, etc that are mentioned in it) but I read bits of it to my mom who is 84. She remembers a lot of the things King talks about in this book. Amazing way to tell a story! The main character goes back in time to try and stop the assassination.You go along for the ride!
@matiascarnevale4397
@matiascarnevale4397 5 жыл бұрын
Marty McFly already did so
@kimberlygabaldon3260
@kimberlygabaldon3260 5 жыл бұрын
pegleg09able - I need to find that book! I didn't know he wrote it. I was also born in 1958, (Des Moines, IA), and remember that day. We were sent home from kindergarten early 💔
@ScribblebytesWorldwide
@ScribblebytesWorldwide 5 жыл бұрын
You can...in the Twilight Zone 🗝️
@terryhill4732
@terryhill4732 2 жыл бұрын
I was born in 1957 and the older I get and as each year goes by and the more I try to learn about our country and this world the more I get frustrated of believing something I once thought was truly great , really isn't all that, for me the more I learn about the world we live in there's just been way too many lies , way too much corruption for me to ever get that feeling back I once had
@emilfrederiksen.1622
@emilfrederiksen.1622 2 жыл бұрын
America will never be so great as it was back then back then.
@67hoursAndCounting
@67hoursAndCounting 2 жыл бұрын
@@emilfrederiksen.1622 Great for those people depicted in the video...
@emilfrederiksen.1622
@emilfrederiksen.1622 2 жыл бұрын
@@67hoursAndCounting Yes
@abimaellopezmaylord27lopez7
@abimaellopezmaylord27lopez7 Жыл бұрын
@Emil Frederiksen. Women couldn’t do anything in the 1950s
@bruceharkness4497
@bruceharkness4497 11 ай бұрын
The lack of the internet was a blessing. So glad I did not grow up glued to a small screen. We ran free till dark and were allowed to be kids without helicopter parenting.
@godscommandmentsaretruthis2837
@godscommandmentsaretruthis2837 4 жыл бұрын
Not saying it was perfect, but 1945 - 1963 were in many ways the glory days of the United States. It's been all downhill since JFK was assassinated.
@teddybears4life240
@teddybears4life240 4 жыл бұрын
Free Bible Prophecy Book Reg6 Dot Com ...fuck 😢
@boostergold20
@boostergold20 4 жыл бұрын
Ahem Racisim?
@brucemarsico6
@brucemarsico6 4 жыл бұрын
Depends on who you were, where you lived, how much money you made.There was despair and sadness and insecurity. People hid behind their fears and conformed in silence and self torment.I will admit there seemed to be more of a community. Now, there is verylittle, neighbors do not know neighbors, and it seems that they don't wantto. The USA people are desensitized. It's a cold country out there now, 2019.
@boostergold20
@boostergold20 4 жыл бұрын
@@mrbevelaqua8649 Im not brain washed, Racisim Exists
@2ndEndingVintage
@2ndEndingVintage 4 жыл бұрын
That's because when JFK was murdered it was the end of our Democratic Republic. Everything since then has been one big script.
@NoBite2
@NoBite2 3 жыл бұрын
Our neighborhood had block parties in the summer where we’d block off both ends of the street. A carnival atmosphere was created. Every family brought food and games out to tables and everyone visited with each other. Another thing, most of the neighborhood was comprised of young families with their first home. Regardless of whose house you were in, the rules were pretty much the same and a Dad in any home would discipline you if you got out of line! And your parents would back them up. You could go out and play all day as long as you were in for dinner and then back before dark.
@NoBite2
@NoBite2 3 жыл бұрын
@Daniel S That’s an odd, racist, comment, Daniel. Do you see everything through a racial lens? Sad life you must live.
@annarodriguez9868
@annarodriguez9868 2 жыл бұрын
​@@NoBite2 Daniel's comment has disappeared.
@NoBite2
@NoBite2 2 жыл бұрын
@@annarodriguez9868 That’s odd!
@bricklawson9745
@bricklawson9745 2 жыл бұрын
Wow This sounds like heaven
@NoBite2
@NoBite2 2 жыл бұрын
@@bricklawson9745 This was long before projection TVs or big screen TVs. One family would hang a white sheet over their garage door. They had a movie projector and played kids movies after the sun went down.
@ryanh4499
@ryanh4499 2 жыл бұрын
It's really sad to think that most people 25 and under will never achieve anything close to the affluence and comfort the people of the 1950s had. Many of us have even a difficult time affording food
@yankee2666
@yankee2666 Жыл бұрын
You've convinced yourselves of many of your issues, and in turn you put democrats in office who care nothing about the homeland, let alone your particular needs.
@Angel-ni2yn
@Angel-ni2yn Жыл бұрын
People also had a hard time affording things back then too, that's capitalism. And most women were married into affording anything, often times they weren't allowed to have independence and autonomy. Even tho they began to work in daily life after the war, it was still limited in what options they were allowed to take as a job for themselves, they were still restricted by society and men, and forced into roles.
@regieds
@regieds 2 жыл бұрын
Nowadays owning a home is nearly impossible. Sad times we live in...
@CuzKatieSaysSo
@CuzKatieSaysSo 6 жыл бұрын
Ran across this by accident. I was born in 1957. It certainly was a simpler time. Although she's been gone almost 30 years now, my mother was a stay at home mom. Personally I'm glad I had those years with her and not thrown in a daycare center.
@seaotter52
@seaotter52 6 жыл бұрын
CuzKatieSaysSo Nostalgia is always nice. Remember these are advertisements
@LucasFernandez-fk8se
@LucasFernandez-fk8se 6 жыл бұрын
CuzKatieSaysSo there are still plenty of stay at home moms aren't there? My mom is a stay at home mom and all my neighbors moms we're stay at home/ work from home moms
@speedracer1945
@speedracer1945 6 жыл бұрын
I too was born in 57' , we grew up in a great time in the 60's the end of a era . We saw things change in our lifetime but hate the aches and pains with old age . LOL
@allanhunter2328
@allanhunter2328 6 жыл бұрын
I was almost 10 at that time and yes those were good times. Would like to have those days back. That is when the kids went home and not to a day care.
@allanhunter2328
@allanhunter2328 6 жыл бұрын
Chris I would do it all over again if I could. At that time my Dad had a1950 Chevrolet kind of grey color sedan. Mom run it into a fence post. I got a ride in a Greyhound scenicruiser bus
@deathwrenchcustom
@deathwrenchcustom 4 жыл бұрын
I'm currently 44 years old. My house was built in 1957, and I have a truck that was made in 1948. Many things are better today, and many things are worse. It's up to us to make things better. Raise your kids right, and live in a way that makes the world a better place. Don't get into any more debt than you absolutely have to, and live within your means.
@mike_404
@mike_404 4 жыл бұрын
Well said
@Deku_38580
@Deku_38580 4 жыл бұрын
100% agree
@Saaad2
@Saaad2 3 жыл бұрын
well said sir!
@Churlz
@Churlz 3 жыл бұрын
Thank ye!
@conniewright8080
@conniewright8080 11 ай бұрын
We grew up, as kids, working. Nobody got to loaf around. We had a roof over our heads & healthy food on the table. For me t.v. came in the late 50's. Maybe an hour a week. It was silent movies & black & white screen. My dad repaired t.v's, big ole picture tubes, resistors, transformers, glass tubes that plugged in. We were restricted to what we could watch (now we find out it was all bad). We had to hoe a half an acre garden, hand pump, wringer washers, hanging clothes on the clothesline, outdoor toilets, you pumped water to washed dishes, laundry & take baths. Lunch was tomatoes & green peppers eaten in the willow tree. Walked to school (1 block) came home for lunch (freshly canned tomatoes with butter) In school we made butter in the churn, made ice cream. Played neighborhood baseball with sticks & rocks (they made me the pitcher, ouch), neighborhood football. I was a tomboy. Climbed trees, broke my arm when I was to afraid to go back down the ladder so I swung like Tarzan & let go. Well I was 12' drop (around 8 years old) Life was good.
@rickstarfighter5598
@rickstarfighter5598 2 жыл бұрын
It’s ironic so many people these days complaining about the past being bad while at the same time not even trying to make a better future for themselves today.
@PR-nq4dt
@PR-nq4dt 3 жыл бұрын
I was a teen in 80's and life was so much simpler back then. I felt like I was living the American dream.
@everlastingsingle1959
@everlastingsingle1959 3 жыл бұрын
Same with my Grandma! But she was not living the American Dream. Life was hard for her.
@chino3796
@chino3796 3 жыл бұрын
I remember the 70's. It was all over by the 80's.
@retroguy9494
@retroguy9494 2 жыл бұрын
I was a teen in the late '70's/early '80's and I agree with you! And there was always that promise. That we would inherit what Reagan used to call "the shining city on the hill." And we did. And we messed it up so much, I don't think it will EVER come back. And we did it with greed, self centeredness and apathy. Those qualities (or lack thereof) best define the sub "Jones Generation" which is made up of the younger boomers and older genxers. How far we have slid.
@crazybutcool5150
@crazybutcool5150 2 жыл бұрын
You're acting gay
@LK-pc4sq
@LK-pc4sq 2 жыл бұрын
Yes it was simpler!!!!!! I wish Regan was never voted into office
@dianalee8967
@dianalee8967 2 жыл бұрын
Wow thank you for this video I'm87 and in 1957 I was 23 Carefree working in a hospital as a nurse and on days off would go to a nightclub and probably do the twist rock and roll crime was way down in Los Angeles and South Bay California go to the beaches and when I was younger people didn't even lock their house doors or car doors leave your bicycle outside the store and when you come out the bicycle was still there how times have changed thank you for the video by
@Mark_Tschetter
@Mark_Tschetter 2 жыл бұрын
I call it the beginning of the end, cause that's when societal decay really gained momentum
@stevetrevino5346
@stevetrevino5346 2 жыл бұрын
I was born in 62. As a kid I caught glimpses of those times at what probably was the tail end of that era. The turbulent 60's definitely changed the entire tone of society.
@acsilver2777
@acsilver2777 2 жыл бұрын
yeah suddenly the white man wasnt allowed to hold everyone else down
@stevetrevino5346
@stevetrevino5346 2 жыл бұрын
@@acsilver2777 I will say it wasn't all white pickett fences and apple pie for everyone in the great USA, but I was blessed with a great childhood. For that I'm grateful 🙏.
@acsilver2777
@acsilver2777 2 жыл бұрын
@@stevetrevino5346 yeah, still isn't. But the ones who had those white Pickett fences are still trying their hardest to hold on to it. Not once did they try to help build a white Pickett fence for their neighbors of another color. They packed up from the cities and moved into the suburbs. There is still plenty of work to do.
@stevetrevino5346
@stevetrevino5346 2 жыл бұрын
@@acsilver2777. Very insightful on your part. I live in an area that when that happened it was known as the white flight. It was a real thing .
@acsilver2777
@acsilver2777 2 жыл бұрын
@@stevetrevino5346 people wonder why black communities are full of struggle and crime but it's simply because they never had the same support from society. They were left to figure out how the world worked the hard way. The older generations really messed up, they ran from the problem instead of trying to fix it. We have all tried to build this country from day one. I just wish we could all come together as a nation. We should be more worried about china than our neighbors.
@silverfox5507
@silverfox5507 5 жыл бұрын
Born in Jan. 1950 Victoria BC Canada . 7 yrs old with brothers and sisters , a wonderful time and great memories .
@Texas_Cruiser
@Texas_Cruiser 5 жыл бұрын
silverfox how was cannabis viewed or loved if at all during that time?
@larrycraddock3063
@larrycraddock3063 5 жыл бұрын
flying kites and playing with those old balsa wood airplanes with the red propellar! ha ha ha
@douglasreents219
@douglasreents219 5 жыл бұрын
I was born Jan. 1950...there was nothing till Elvis
@Texas_Cruiser
@Texas_Cruiser 5 жыл бұрын
Hippy(Bboomer) pot is no worse than processed sugar nor shall I say that word....alcohol. It's how it's used and abused that matters. I am with you that during those times things were different from a mental perspective...but there were just as many raging alcoholics as there are now. To blame some bad actions on a plant is absurd. It's how things are used....guns for example. Guns don't kill people. Not a gun toting person and yes flooding a market with more will increase the violence rate in some situations. Yes flooding a school with pot may lead to more dropouts. Well same goes for putting more liquor stores in neighborhoods. At the end of the day it comes down to choices and balance.
@janicemills2627
@janicemills2627 5 жыл бұрын
Dresses to school, kids played outside, never a door locked...So laid back and easy. Those WERE the best years growing up. Mom home cooking, skating every weekend. Oh my yes... great years!
@bobcostas6967
@bobcostas6967 5 жыл бұрын
What r dresses?
@wethen5480
@wethen5480 5 жыл бұрын
@lemon diesel Open your eyes and look around.Most young people and children are obese. And all they know how to do is play on their phones. When SHTF they will be dead or killed in urban riots.
@pisstakecentral
@pisstakecentral 5 жыл бұрын
@lemon diesel I would say the culmination of that has to be this generation, gen z, the absolute worst most careless hateful scummy people on this planet without a doubt, no value of human life, no beliefs, no passion, nothing what so ever, this generation will bring about the end of the word as you know it mark my words
@memberofgodsarmy7329
@memberofgodsarmy7329 5 жыл бұрын
Funny how your generation disses the boomers. Not one single one of you would even be here if not for that generation!!
@neuronoc.7343
@neuronoc.7343 5 жыл бұрын
@Evan Perrine In the south. And tbh, I'd take making food and cleaning the house over having the possibility of death in a 9-5 job. I do agree about the school clothing though.
@kathyjones274
@kathyjones274 2 жыл бұрын
Was born that yr and I'm sure my mom was swell. But as great a times that these were, we can't go back and relive them. Try not to be to nostalgic. It's good for us to make our own memories. Night 🌙 kids.
@justicewillprevail1106
@justicewillprevail1106 2 жыл бұрын
The time when ppl were able to afford to buy a house when working one job.
@loveaodai100
@loveaodai100 2 жыл бұрын
The earliest day that I can quantifiably remember was June 23, 1957 when in Queens New York with sunshine streaming into the kitchen... my mother picked me up swinging me around saying, "Oh my baby, he's 3". I did have a happy childhood. WWII was a profound part of growing up partly because of what we saw on TV as I grew up and partly because my father was born in Europe and spent time in a POW camp. Now in May 2022 I simply can't believe how we have arrived at this point. Hoping for the best....
@marijooneill8015
@marijooneill8015 2 жыл бұрын
You are so right, our Country is on a wrong road and I am 78 and grew up in the 50s, I graduated from eighth grade June 3rd 1957. Very few mothers worked out of the home, we came home for lunch from school then walked back to school. We all had chores to do and we had dinner as a family every night at 6:00 pm and their were 5 of us kids and as I look back I think of all the good times we had together. Today our Country is on a somewhat different track, and it's not good. My grandkids and great grandkids won't grow up the way I did and its a very sad thought to see it.
@minkya1010
@minkya1010 2 жыл бұрын
I'm from Astoria
@gninja92
@gninja92 2 жыл бұрын
@@marijooneill8015 maybe elect ppl who live in reality and recognize the problems science reveals. Instead half of america wants their made up gender to be validated while the other half menstruate about "CRT" What was it like in previous decades with getting an underdog in the political race at any level?
@jondstewart
@jondstewart 4 жыл бұрын
Back in the 1950’s, most adults in their 20’s on up with only a high school diploma made a decent living, owned homes, fully literate, and used proper grammar. Now we have college graduates below that level!
@schnaaa__
@schnaaa__ 4 жыл бұрын
Jon Stewart Today’s generations are much more intelligent than previous generations due to the rise of more accessible information.
@jondstewart
@jondstewart 4 жыл бұрын
Matt Schnaare If they’re so intelligent, why don’t they use proper grammar or spell, capitalize, and punctuate properly? Half of today’s high school graduates are functional illiterates and even more than that can’t name every state there is on a map of the U.S. I worked in Fort Yukon, Alaska one time and my coworker was from Missouri. We talked to a local elementary school teacher there from Chicago and she thought Missouri was way out west.
@schnaaa__
@schnaaa__ 4 жыл бұрын
Jon Stewart Anecdotal evidence is not valid in terms of argumentation, that’s one of the first things you learn in middle school in the modern education system. Rather the providing anecdotal evidence about my experience with a huge influx of Advanced Placement classes being introduced into high school by the College Board (AP Physics, Psychology, and many others) that are lightyears ahead of predating classes from the 1950s, I will first present the physical differences in what is expected in a high school student. In terms of mathematics, a student from the 1950s may be required to learn basic algebra. As per graphing these algebraic equations, a standard linear equation in the form of y=mx+b is all that would be expected. Mathematics in today’s high schools teach all of the foundation algebra either freshman year or their last year of middle school. From there it branches into more complex topics that build off of algebra such as trigonometry and eventually integral and differential calculus. This was only introduced at extremely high level college courses in the 1950s. I have not found anything that relates the science courses from the 1950s to modern day, however in modern high schools students are required to take at the very least Biology, Chemistry, and Physics. All of these have honors and AP variants available that dive into topics that didn’t even exist in the year 1950, and are at the college level. Students in history take Modern U.S. history (covering reconstruction to 9/11), World History, and Government. There are AP variants for all of these classes and honors for MUSH. One key difference from today’s learning environment and that from the 1950’s is that modern students are required to not only know the history, but to develop historical analysis skills to connect different events in history and argue certain perspectives. This would have never been asked if a student in the 1950’s. Similarly in English, modern students are required heavily annotate texts and develop strong college level thesis statements in order to prove a given essay prompt. Moreover, they are required to develop public speaking skills and overall reading comprehension. In addition to core subjects, many high level electives are offered in high schools as well. PLTW has introduced +IED and +POE that allows high schoolers to be introduced to engineering concepts as early as age 14. Due to this increase in standards of our students, studies have showed that with each decade, the average IQ the student body increases by 3. That means that a modern student would have an adjusted IQ of 118 in the 1950’s.
@jondstewart
@jondstewart 4 жыл бұрын
Matt Schnaare Wow, where did you get all this info? I’m not as smart as I thought I was. All I was saying was it seemed to me American society overall is drifting towards Idiocracy; I didn’t know anything about how math and science have advanced. I barely passed Algebra 2 in high school (not like it’s of any use in real life). Anyway, in my most perceptive opinion, most of the generation born the past 40 years have been dealt a bad hand compared to the Baby Boomers in terms of upward mobility.
@gettygets872
@gettygets872 4 жыл бұрын
And yet with all this information at their fingertips, the fact remains in general they still appear daft , not to mention socially inept. I guess they are not making use of all they are learning.
@Itsant33
@Itsant33 2 жыл бұрын
Omg did she really get paid to say "boy that's real emancipation from old fashioned chores?"
@frankiefingerz8047
@frankiefingerz8047 2 жыл бұрын
50s was the best decade absolutely
@Jupe367
@Jupe367 6 жыл бұрын
People respected each other, have values and life was so simple in the past.. I wish I grew up back then.
@thepessimistictitan2655
@thepessimistictitan2655 6 жыл бұрын
You have to earn respect. It's not just a given.
@metoo3342
@metoo3342 6 жыл бұрын
Jupe367 Have fun with polio
@ThaKingJay
@ThaKingJay 6 жыл бұрын
Jupe367 Were black people respected?
@frankvego1775
@frankvego1775 6 жыл бұрын
J. ROD #LeGoatFan blacks don't respect blacks. Why should anybody else?
@MKrip808
@MKrip808 6 жыл бұрын
The women in these pics look beautiful and the men look like a bunch of boring clowns.
@philhersh
@philhersh 5 жыл бұрын
I was born in 1958 and grew up in Levittown NY. My parents were thrilled to be able to move out of a small apartment in NYC and buy a house.
@Texas_Cruiser
@Texas_Cruiser 5 жыл бұрын
philhersh bet that was nice. Still have easy access to the city too.
@rogerflair2143
@rogerflair2143 3 жыл бұрын
Same here. Levittown was our "Camelot"
@seanmccloskey7873
@seanmccloskey7873 10 ай бұрын
Aristotle was asking the same question 2,500 years ago.
@Here4TheHeckOfIt
@Here4TheHeckOfIt 3 ай бұрын
The part about the wonders of synthetic fabric and plastic sounds so innocent. Now, we're buried under the weight of it.
@SimpleMinded221
@SimpleMinded221 2 жыл бұрын
This era was paradise for some, and hell for many.
@crazydinosaur8945
@crazydinosaur8945 2 жыл бұрын
hell for most people outside north america and western europe
@commonsense3921
@commonsense3921 Жыл бұрын
@CrazyDinosaur Umm…. I’m pretty sure it felt like hell for “some people” in North America CrazyDinosaur………🧐
@crazydinosaur8945
@crazydinosaur8945 Жыл бұрын
@@commonsense3921 i know, i said "most people outside" not only people outside and at risk of this being received wrong, i will say that i would rather have been an african american in the US, than native peasant/worker in China, the USSR, any african country/colony etc in the same period
@commonsense3921
@commonsense3921 Жыл бұрын
@@crazydinosaur8945 The orignal commernter stated "this era was paradise for some, and hell for many" and your response referenced ONLY the people OUTSIDE of the US because you didn't mention the people inside of the United States AT ALL, So I reference SOME of the people inside the USA because this video and his comment is about the United States. Also I don't understand your point, Being an African American in the United States in the 50's and 60's was a terrible reality the fact that you feel the need to compare it to some of the worst conditions on earth to minimize the suffering is disgusting, The point is it wasn't a paradise for African Americans can we agree on that???
@crazydinosaur8945
@crazydinosaur8945 Жыл бұрын
@@commonsense3921 "earth to minimize the suffering is disgusting" it was the best way I could phrase it and i did say "and at risk of this being received wrong" i said "hell for most people outside north america and western europe" i didnt say "ONLY hell for most people outside north america and western europe" i didnt cancle "This era was paradise for some, and hell for many." i add to it by pointing out that most people outside these places had it like hell. "African Americans can we agree on that" at what point did i say it wasent i only said that at least they want in china undergoing the worst famine in history, thats not a high bar, so yes we can agree that it was not a paradise for African Americans. i still don't understand why you are so angry at my first comment BTW
@PS-jr8me
@PS-jr8me 6 жыл бұрын
I remember when color tv came about; when you shared a party line phone😊 when hang clothes on a clothes line and ringer washers!
@eliotmasry5401
@eliotmasry5401 5 жыл бұрын
My mother washing machine put a hole in the floor but what the heck!! But even 10 holes if I could go BACK from the future!!!!
@jaycompany4886
@jaycompany4886 5 жыл бұрын
Me too!
@larrycraddock3063
@larrycraddock3063 5 жыл бұрын
Love those grand ol days! Too bad they are gone! Still have memories though
@Nancy-px7hn
@Nancy-px7hn Ай бұрын
I loved growing up in the 50's. Life was not so fast paced and frantic as today. People had respect for one another and crime wasn't rampant.
@Sam-qw8gd
@Sam-qw8gd Жыл бұрын
Sometimes I just get sad because I wasnt around in these times
@jewelrichards1039
@jewelrichards1039 5 жыл бұрын
Such times bring a smile to my face remembering what it was like to be a kid back then life was so innocent simple and true familytime kids used to play outside on the tire swing or just in the dirt!😄
@johnkovacharpsbydavyc3505
@johnkovacharpsbydavyc3505 5 жыл бұрын
Yes! Outside in the dirt, trees, bushes and into anything else we could find.
@Xfranman
@Xfranman 5 жыл бұрын
I was 10. Watching this on my cell. No doubt modern society has real benefits. But the 50s felt better. Much less crime. Better schools. Patriotism and respect for our flag and anthem were never sneered at or looked down on. We were proud and grateful to be Americans. And as kids we had a lot of fun
@mournblade1066
@mournblade1066 5 жыл бұрын
What Average Johnson said. Also, "much less crime"? Are you serious? The murder and violent crime rates were FAR higher in the 1950s compared with today. In fact, violent crime is at historic lows.
@Shinnyuu2
@Shinnyuu2 5 жыл бұрын
A lot more lynchings
@theman211294
@theman211294 5 жыл бұрын
I'm 23. I still had a lot of fun as a kid.
@johnsmith-qe2fd
@johnsmith-qe2fd 5 жыл бұрын
Patriotism hasn’t faded, the media has.
@davidqualls9476
@davidqualls9476 2 жыл бұрын
I miss the 20th Century.
@sky-eo8tz
@sky-eo8tz 3 ай бұрын
The most important thing was that the whole family was seating eating foods and watching tv alltogether . people didnt have a problem to have eye contact and say Hi to their neighbours
@frankjennings4022
@frankjennings4022 5 жыл бұрын
Born in 1944 and raised in the late 40's and 50's. The world was a different place. Such good memories.
@mournblade1066
@mournblade1066 5 жыл бұрын
If you mean violent and hostile, then yes.
@mournblade1066
@mournblade1066 5 жыл бұрын
@@coolguy02536 Ah, but objective analysis proves quite the opposite.
@urgyenshelling5591
@urgyenshelling5591 5 жыл бұрын
@Donald Smith Thank Ronald Regan n for that
@adeel-eh7xq
@adeel-eh7xq 4 жыл бұрын
That's how I look at the 90s, but I'm guessing it's all and nostalgia than an objective fact.
@rosemaryhough9257
@rosemaryhough9257 2 жыл бұрын
I too was born in 1944, we were poor but we didn't know it, I didn't liuve in America but Scotland, I wore second hand clothes, but once again i did not know this. We played outside in rain, snow and it was fun, walked to and from school, nobody had a car! If they did they were rich lol. It was a fantastic time to grow up, lots if friends the music was fab. My dad used to put cardboard inside my shoes haha it didn't help, always had wet feet, but wouldn't change anything about the 50s it was a lovely time to grow up. I feel sorry fir my grandchildren today's world is sad.
@TotalState
@TotalState 4 жыл бұрын
This didn't disappear. They took this away from us.
@hubbletelescope1721
@hubbletelescope1721 4 жыл бұрын
"they"? Who are "they"
@TheDukeOfPannekoeken
@TheDukeOfPannekoeken 4 жыл бұрын
@@hubbletelescope1721 me
@beccuhhh106
@beccuhhh106 4 жыл бұрын
Not necessarily. If anything, we’ve been given too much from this ‘they’ you speak of. Our current society is the result of excess. Excess everything
@Notfound-pz2xu
@Notfound-pz2xu 4 жыл бұрын
@@hubbletelescope1721 central banks
@kathywilkins5546
@kathywilkins5546 4 жыл бұрын
@@beccuhhh106 except love, caring, and understanding. And some people just don't want to give up their hate. It's disgusting.
@gordsexton6781
@gordsexton6781 13 күн бұрын
As I started watching this, I thought how great it is to have the technology we have now, and to be able to watch features such as this on KZfaq -- what I call the ultimate TV station. The technology we have today is a bridge to the past. I think one of the best things about the 1950s and 1960s was that although there was bad stuff going on -- there always was and is -- it wasn't easy to access as it is today. Swear words in TV shows and movies were very few, if at all. I remember growing up when the Lord's Prayer was said before the class, and there was time in the day that scriptures were read by the teacher.😀❤️. Two of my favorite TV shows were available-- Leave it to Beaver, and The Dick Van Dyke show were on -- and that's just the tip of the iceberg. 😄. One more point: I think the music between 1954 and 1958 was the best, and the other stuff wasn't too bad at all. There's no wonder this endures today -- as well as the TV shows and movies, and other things. Thanks so much for your video. 😄😃
@uncleethan7488
@uncleethan7488 2 жыл бұрын
1950s: Man 70 years ago life was just simple and paradise. 2020s: Man 70 years ago life was just simple and paradise.
@khnum21
@khnum21 2 жыл бұрын
lol true assessment of the nostalgic nature of mankind.
@jurassicthunder
@jurassicthunder Жыл бұрын
i wish it was just nostalgia. look at economics of the world and you'll see why.
@roblocia437
@roblocia437 5 жыл бұрын
this was not only one of the best times but America at its best...
@orlandonavarro5674
@orlandonavarro5674 4 жыл бұрын
@From the Futon - - ...as it has always happened in world history.
@Sameoldfitup
@Sameoldfitup 4 жыл бұрын
“Nothing can be loved or hated unless it is first understood.” Leonardo da Vinci.
@josephgomes6829
@josephgomes6829 2 жыл бұрын
I was born in 1957. Seems that all that this nation has become or not become began here. There is so much to unpack in this film. Not enough space to write it all but this is a great film to understand the mindset of an America which never really existed except as a dream and those who fought to believe it to be true.
@erwingunther2093
@erwingunther2093 2 жыл бұрын
absolutely fantastic film.
@dimitristripakis7364
@dimitristripakis7364 4 жыл бұрын
Those videos are important to remind us towards what dystopia we are heading and that, perhaps, we can reverse it. Grew up happily in Greece during the 1970s and 1980s too. Money does not matter, people were happy because they were going somewhere together. Today is a hopeless every man for himself. What have we become...
@anthonyoneal8376
@anthonyoneal8376 3 жыл бұрын
I'm also half Greek, and I lived on Corfu without dad for three years, best time of my life.
@ianjohngonzales4066
@ianjohngonzales4066 3 жыл бұрын
The society is ruined now.
@kbanghart
@kbanghart 3 жыл бұрын
@@ianjohngonzales4066 how is it ruined?
@kbanghart
@kbanghart 3 жыл бұрын
It's not hopeless for me.
@dimitristripakis7364
@dimitristripakis7364 3 жыл бұрын
@@kbanghart Well people have offered themselves to Internet, TV, living through buying, living through working, polluting the planet, while getting dumber and poorer as time goes by.
@thomasallen3818
@thomasallen3818 3 жыл бұрын
I give anything to go back for another go around. The fifties were the best years of my life. I miss the youthful friendships and neighbors who we knew for several blocks. I loved growing up in my parents grocery stores, and all of the employees and customers. The town I grew up in was like one big family. I knew all of the business men and women all over town, and most of their families. There were no Walmarts or super stores. People had the option of having their milk delivered to their front door by milkmen who cared about their products. It was wonderful, kids today would be lost, we didn’t need coddling, and if you lost in sports or a game, that was it. You didn’t get a medal or trophy for being a loser, you were told that you needed to work harder next time, and you did. I’d give anything to give my mom, dad, and grandmother a hug again. That’s another thing, families were close and got together often, at least mine did. I had eight aunts and uncles, and sixty-three cousins. The ones still living, are still close. I’ve seen where we’re headed, I’d like to turn back, I don’t like what I see.
@angeladay1534
@angeladay1534 2 жыл бұрын
Thanks for sharing your wonderful memories. 😄
@SuperWesley16
@SuperWesley16 2 жыл бұрын
I'm much younger than you, born in 93. I CRAVE what you just said for my America. I wish my generation had what you said. Thank you for giving me a small sample of that.
@thomasallen3818
@thomasallen3818 2 жыл бұрын
@@SuperWesley16 well, I wish I could give that kind of life to you and any other young person who missed out. My grandkids are always saying they wish things were as simple as when I was a kid. I also know how hard my parents, and my friend’s parents worked and sacrificed to give us the lives we had. People nowadays don’t know many of their neighbors. That’s one way to make life better, get to know your neighbors, and include them in activities. It may sound corny, but that’s what most people did back then, plus kids played outside. Plus families were closer before “life” got in the way. Good luck, and God bless.
@donovanbryan5000
@donovanbryan5000 2 жыл бұрын
@@SuperWesley16 oh you missed so much. When you went to the bank everyone called you by name. You eagerly waited for the ice cream truck to come down your street. You ran for joy after school on Halloween just to get dressed. You walked with grocery bag. Christmas was the most exciting. You truly believed in Santa. Just like the movie . You begged for your red Ryder. You were filled with joy at getting roller skates that you tied around your shoes. And kept a key to adjust skate from pulling left or right. Your mom would dress like she was going to a wedding just to go to grocery store. Your dad wore a suit and tie. And when you visited grandma you drove down a white gravel single lane road. Dust everywhere. Wow. The whole world loved god
@steevyhorton5456
@steevyhorton5456 2 жыл бұрын
Because you weren't subject to being lynched by white people.
@ej-fo8pd
@ej-fo8pd 2 жыл бұрын
These movies of 1950’s america look like very well to do. In my memory we were poor. Must have just been my neighborhood.
@JT-tb8lh
@JT-tb8lh 2 жыл бұрын
1957: a million times better year than apocalyptic 2022
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