You might be OLD…If You Remember These! PART 1
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- čas přidán 20. 11. 2022
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#recollectionroad #nostalgia #oldiesbutgoodies - Zábava
Spending an entire Saturday morning watching cartoons then going outside to play with your friends.
Yup! From 6am till 11am or noon!
you forgot cowboy shows too
Bugs bunny and Tom and Jerry
The BEST !!!
@@philosopher1a right?!!
I am 61 and remember all of these things vividly. Boy, this generation now has no idea what they missed!
And the generation before that! Money was 90% silver coins (dimes-quarters-halves until the 1965 Coinage Act removed the silver real money) and a silver dollar paper certificate was redeemable into gold at 1/35th per oz. until the gold-dollar divorce on Aug. 15, 1971. That started the destruction of the 'money' (a hidden tax on the people) holding its purchasing power.
We had a hillside of some 100 acres to play on behind us, and a half mile the other way was the river where we went skinny dipping in a swimming hole. We once rode a raft several miles to the ocean. Boy did we catch hell for that.
I'M 52 & THOSE WERE THE GOOD OL DAYS!
I feel BAD for them!!!
I'm 64. They know what they missed but many of them don't care.
Remember when you went outside to play, and your parents really had no idea where you were or what you got up to? As long as you were home in time for dinner, no questions asked. It was great. Kids had to figure out stuff on their own and learned lifetime skills everyday!!
yep. girls and boys didn't mix then either.. not until well after puberty. no locks on our entry doors so we never had a key on us because the door was always of course, open! I remember my first car a 1949 Chevy coup and it had a key slot on the outside of the drivers side door. what's this? I don't believe I even had a key for it because the knob for both door locks was missing! wow.
or later in the year as long as you were home (if you lived in the city) the lights came on and the neighbours all looked after you as you were with their kids as well
I remember every one of these, also no malls, no “supercenters” No cell phones, no internet. We played outside and in the mountains and woods. No one talked back to ANY grown up. We said yes ma’am and yes sir. And I was born in 65 😢
I’m old!!!! But so happy I grew up in this era. 😊
I agree.
getting old is better than not growing old .
ABSOLUTELY
DAM..... I'm old...... I'm not sure if this is a compliment or and insult! The very sad part of getting old is a lot of the people in these pictures are dead. This is happening way to fast....
Me, too!
💯💯🙃
Lord , What I would'nt give to be able to return to these wonderful times !!!
Were they really that wonderful?
@@stuarthirsch Born in '55 , grew up in the sixties surrounded by a large & loving family ... Yeah for me they were the best time of my life. PEACE to you & yours.
@@stuarthirsch Of course there was some bad stuff that went on, but we're enjoying remembering the good parts.
The loss of the Woolworth's lunch counter is irreplaceable. There will never be anything like it.
I miss that too!
Born 1955...know about everything you described. Sometimes, I wish I could return to those times. Seems like everything was simpler then.
Things were simpler back then. Things were also a lot slower. But things were also a lot harder for some (manual laborers and farmers, as well as farmers children) and a lot more devestating for those getting seriously ill.
The sad thing is, with advance in technology there was also an advance in making money no matter the consequences and we all pay the price now.
I remember when kids used to play outside, drink from the garden hose, learn how to write cursive, and respect their elders.
I remember when I had to stand up if an adult came into the room. AND I WAS A GIRL! All adults were called "Mr./Mrs./Miss and then the last name. I STILL refer to those adults that way (of course, most have passed).
And if you disrespected your elder...your parents put you in your place.
AND rode in the back of a pickup truck!
Ok boomer
That was from another planet!!!!
Even though the good old days weren't always good, I'm glad that I was a kid in that era. I wouldn't want to be a kid today if you paid me!!
Today's youth are pathetic, soft, sheltered, lazy, entitled, safe spaces and therapy pets for them. The school system is setting them up for utter failure in the real world!!! It's not all rainbows and unicorns and puppy dogs it's tough out there!
@David Allen If anyone asks "What was so good about the good old days?" the answer is simple: We were young. BTW I'm 66.
Now wait a minute!!! I wouldn't go that far I wouldn't mind being 7 again and doing it all over If i knew a 10th of what I know now. especially if i was being paid.
@@kybble That's the reason for that other adage: "Youth is wasted on the young" ☺
I miss our old world! 🌎😢
Remember at the entrance to the parking lot of many shopping malls, there was a Fotomat which was a small, shack-like building where you dropped off you undeveloped film from your camera. A few days later you returned to pickup your developed photos. These Fotomats were everywhere.
Remember poodle shirts.james dean
Elvis.what great movies and music.
I grew up in NY.
Remember Carvel ice cream,stores like robert hall.i Remember hanging g clothes on the line in winter they were like cardboard when you brought them in.
I was so lucky to get to grow up in the 70s and 80s, Really feel sorry for kids that have to grow up in today's broken world
Me too. I grew up in the 60s and 70s.... we had the best times and music especially.. all those concerts of great bands at under $10 a show. My own sons were born mid 80s and so glad I didn't have to deal w/ smart phones or computers ... yet.
@@cathyt502 I was born in 1954 and remember the 1960s and 70s fondly, but my husband just reminded me of the turmoil in the US - assassinations, civil rights, Vietnam, riots on the college campuses. So maybe just as tumultuous as today. I seem to remember the 1980s as being a bit more peaceful, but I was busy with my children and was distracted.
@@cathyt502 Born in 66. I found a ticket to The Who from 1982. It cost $9 to see them and The Clash, lol. Good times!
I grew up in the 50s and 60s. It was great except for the Vietnam war. Also the Bay of Pigs but I didn't even know about it until much later. Edit also JFK assignation, so sad. But life was slower and kids played outside and going to the movies was special and trips to the Dairy Queen 😋😋
@@susansalvucci4281Yeah, people forget the 60s was a rough time. But I’ve always loved the fashions. The gogo boots and miniskirts. I couldn’t wait to leave home so I could wear them. 😂😂
Born in 1957 and remember all of these and more. Glad to have grown up then and not now.
Know what you mean born in 68 here, we all were lucky to grow up when things were simpler before cellphones ect. Where does the time go........
you could play outside and ride your bike and run free and you knew if you had street lights it was time to get your butt home . Most neighbors turned on porch lights and that was a cue also
Dec. '57 here. Wouldn't trade it for anything
July 57 Me too!!
I live in Canada. Born in Hong Kong April/60. Moved here as a child. Glad I grew up in the 60s and 70s. It was a more innocent time.
I enjoyed it.
I'm 75 and remember every one of these great memories 😅 The good ole days, that are gone forever...and truly are missed and will always be cherished!! Oh, to be a kiddo again! Old is just a number...that kid we used to love to be, is still in us, enjoy, while we still have time 😊❤
There is nothing wrong about getting old. Love these memories.
At 71 I remember all this , and happy to be "old".
I remember 5 cent Hershey bar, party lines, phone numbers without area codes, gas stations where the attendant filled your tank checked oil, and cleaned your windshield (for my Dad), looking at the Parakeets and gold fish at Woolworths, and the cheap toys, caps and cap guns, when we actually had paperboys, collecting bottles to bring to the store for a refund.. wow.
I can remember when I got paid .50 cents an hour for babysitting. Then it was .75 cents and on up to $1. I got a "real" job after that.
How about phone numbers before they became all numbers? I can remember our phone number in the very early 60s was WE1-****. The WE stood for Webster. Think it was mid 60s when phone company sent out letters to everyone explaining how their numbers were going to "change" and become all numbers, so the WE1 became 931.
@@robertjaent6087 My grandmother lived in a small town and she had a 5 digit number.
Also milk delivery, "three on the tree", A&P, Mel Allen saying, "It's going, going, gone" on the radio, Wonder Horse, 50 cent bleacher admission at Yankee Stadium.
And aren't we glad that those were "our years" --- 40's, 50's and sixties --- we could not have asked for a better time!!!!
The cars of the 50's are rolling works of art.
they were TANKS is what they were!
I'd take the old times back again. Nothing Like OLD School.
Okay, Okay...So I'm guilty as charged. I am 61 now. But let me tell you, the 60s and 70s were absolutely a blast for me.
I’m right there with you. Such great memories 😊
Me too!
Same here
I'm 62 and miss those days
Same age. I lived in the Bay Area and remember the Summer of Love.
I was only 5 y.o, though.
I grew up in the 40s and 50s, so this is all new stuff. How many remember the party line? I remember learning how to read with Dick and Jane, Sally, Spot, Puff, and Tim.
Ok true confession time. Did you ever listen in on the party line? I did 🤦😂. I was a nosey kid.
@@pam5389 me too
I grew up in the 50's and very well remember party lines! Also, my grandmother had an outhouse and no running water in her house...she had a pump in her kitchen that we had to use to fill buckets with water, heat them on her wood stove, then cook or bathe with the hot water...fun times!
I was born in the 60s but remember the Dick and Jane readers. I thought I was so important being chosen to read aloud in a circle. I just bought a vintage Duck and Jane primer 😉
I remember party lines and Dick and Jane readers, Grimms Fairy Tales, Highlight magazines etc as well
YES. This was a great trip down memory lane . I’m 60 so have experienced all these things. Our generation had some really good times growing up. The Saturday morning cartoons. The muscle cars and the drive in movies. Great music of the sixties and seventies. It was a much simpler time with not a lot of worry.
Yes, and now it seems like doom and gloom. Glad that I'm 62.
@@billybrown7953 Keep On Rockin Billy ! 🤟
I was born in '48 , and also remember milk , bread, and fish, all of it incredibly fresh, being delivered to our home, along with biking to the next town, about 8 miles away to go candlepin bowling, taking a bus into the city, by ourselves, to go to the movies , and so much more. It was a good time to grow up.
got a few years on you. First thing I could remember was my Dad had an ICE route in MD! I was amazed how fast he could take a tiny ice pick and cut up a 1000 pound block of ice (at the "ice house") into perfect 80 pound blocks in seconds! He'd then pick 2 of these up and carry them with ice tongs down to the truck and he'd do that until the entire block was in the truck... and off we'd go delivering ice on his ice "route". yep like yesterday, Jim.
"fresh fish"? Not where I lived.
I'm Old. I wouldn't trade growing up in the 70s and 80s for anything.🤘😎
Same here.
same here
I just turned 70 and really don’t feel “old.” I think it’s because I played outside so much! The front and back-yard was whatever we wanted it to be. It was a paradise for our imaginations!
We owned 2 blocks of our neighborhood! Kick the can, playing army, red rover, cowboys and Indians! Only came home for food!
don't worry, you are old
@@elfiero50 I knew that…….but I’m not “worried!”
We used to haunt the appliance stores for refrigerator and washer/dryer boxes for forts and grass sleds.
I am almost 70 and I don't fell I am old and needs assistance when I was sick at the hospital. I can drive to work and never want to "work from home" ! I can fly a plane safety why should I stay home and waiting to die on Rocking chair like what my ex employee 401K investment bourchue!
When we wanted to go to a rock concert, we waited in line outside a store that sold tickets with hundreds of other people, sometimes overnight, even when it was raining or snowing, and even if it was a school night. I remember paying $10 to see Queen at the Boston Garden and I thought it seemed really REALLY expensive back then!
I love Queen! I would love to have been at that show.
Imagine seeing Queen for $10 bucks! Remember watching two movies for the price of one. And going to the matinee. I haven’t been to the movies literally in years. I refuse to pay 20 dollars for a movie and another 15 dollars for popcorn.
OMG, I AM old, because I remember most of these!! Oh, how I long for these wonderful times again!!😊❤
I was born in the early 1950's so yes, I'm old and I remember all of these things. Seeing all of the changes over the years and seeing how the world is today, I thank my lucky stars that I was born then and not now.
I feel the same! I’m 66.
So, I have a serious question for you. I'm 59, and once in a great while, I'll get in a debate with someone who says that crime is the same as always, we just know about it faster. There's no way I believe that, and I'm curious on someone else's take on that.
A person could write a book on life in the early 60s but few today would believe the stories. When America was strong, fit, and honorable. You mention writing checks at the grocery store; remember counter checks?? At the BIG A&P or Super Valu there was a "courtesy" rack of checks from half a dzn banks. If u had forgotten your checkbook, you carefully and legibly wrote your name/address for the $7.36, handed it to the cashier & that was that. I suppose there were a few who scammed the stores but not many. Why? Because we had a country; nobody would THINK of doing that....
We do have way more information than the past! Look at all the cell phone filming and in the public realm immediately! Besides satellite, cable and radio and hundreds of television stations! The old saying, you see what you look for!
@@qmnnvrdyz8965 I'm 71 and there is definitely more crime today. When I was growing up we didn't even lock our doors. Neither did our neighbors. Breaking and entering was unheard of...at least in our neighborhood. There was no gun violence. I still live in the same city and gun violence is now a common occurrence. We didn't have to walk through a metal detector at school. If we misbehaved at school, we were dispciplined at school. And again at home if our parents found out! In school we ate lunch off of real plates and used real silverware. Now they're afraid kids will use real silverware as weapons so plastic spoons, forks and knives are used instead. I never heard of a school shooting when I was in school. Most boys carried pocketknives, but I never heard of a stabbing in school. If you were playing with your pocketknife when you should have been studying the teacher would take it and give it back when the class was over. Carrying a knife to school today will get you arrested. On weekends and during the summer we played outside from sun up to sundown and our parents hardly ever knew where we were. We fished, built huts in the woods, played baseball, football, swam in the river, rode our bikes, picked up bottles for the 2 cent deposit etc. We knew right from wrong and stayed out of trouble. Parents didn't have to worry about their kids getting kidnapped or molested. I suppose it did occur, but I never heard of it happening to any kids I knew. Parents nowdays have watch their kids every minute, especially young girls. It was a safer world when I grew up than it is now.
I remember 100% of all these including S&H green stamps and blue chip stamps. And let's not forget layaway. Wow, I'm old.🙂
And if you didn’t collect S&H green stamps you had Triple S blue stamps. I got a chess set and my first fishing rod that way.
Remember in 1962 when JFK's motorcade pulled into an Esso station to get gas? JFK reportedly leaned out the window to collect all those Blue Chip stamps for Jackie. Aside: I had a classmate who had a face that resembled the Blue Chip mascot squirrel.
@@ecphorizer I don’t remember Blue Chip stamps. What part of the country were they in?
@@artiek1177 West Coast, had them in LA!
@@Porsche996driver Ok, thanks.
My first car had two keys. A push button high beams and where you filled the gas tank was behind the license plate. Also, I remember riding my bicycle to the bowling alley.
@@caco4now-mi7og huh
Thanks for the reminder of a time when life was safe and special. I am 62 and this brought back good memories.
I I guess I'm getting old but this was the best time to be growing up
Yes I totally agree with you I'm so glad I grew up back then and not in today's generation. I really believe that we were blessed to have experienced those days.
Compared to the sh!tshow today's youth have to endure, I consider myself fortunate to have been young 50 years ago. And even more fortunate to be old and soon to be gone from this nightmare that shows no sign of ending!
@@orionwarren4244
PERFECTLY said.
Ditto that same here.
Thanks Orion!
Absolutely the case that it was.
(War baby here, born DURING it. Statistically our numbers are very low on account. I am contemplating the creation of a little grouping of us, while we exist-still.)
@@orionwarren4244 I'm sorry life hasn't worked out for you.
I don't know what your nightmare is but in my beautiful country everything is still just like this video.
I also remember frozen TV dinners from this time period. Those aluminum trays with fried chicken, creamed potatoes and green peas. Or maybe the one with that Salisbury Steak and brown gravy. Swanson or Banquet? We didn’t have them often, but they were a treat for us kids.
They were a treat at my house too. Mom always cooked dinner.
Do you remember the chipped beef in a baggy...that you boiled and served over toast/noodles?
Yup - my mum would spoon feed me the dessert when she didn’t like it!
With the brownie
@@gregorykiernan7849 Yes I do.
I feel so blessed to have grown up in a small town during the 50s and 60s. It was safe to walk around town by yourself even if you were a young girl and everybody knew your name and your Mom & Dad & your grandparents too!
So many memories I could go on forever.
Anyone remember when the Saturday matinee at the movies included the previews, AND two or three cartoons, a newsreel, a short feature and finally the main feature?
I sure do. My first matinee was Herbie The Love Bug at the Whitehall Mall in Whitehall, PA. Great memories as a kid at that theater.
My mother gave me $1.25 and took my brother and sister and I to Saturday morning movies. She then could shop without us. By the way, we used to have money left over.
On Saturday morning, The two movies, the cartoons, the previews, popcorn, and a Coke cost $.25
I was 10 when they showed Deep Throat and Debbie Does Dallas.
@@mr.bnatural3700 who showed you?? Your Babysitter??
I remember all those! We had a Ford Pinto Station Wagon. Before that was an old VW Bus. I remember my pops buying a Dodge Challenger with a 8 track player listening to The Beatles. Good times! I'm old enough to remember president Carter and Reagan and old enough to remember when Elvis and John Lennon dying.
I was in the military under Carter and Reagan. I know exactly where I was when Reagan was shoot.
Man , I miss my childhood of the late 60’s and early 70’s . Everything he says in this video is 100% true facts . Thanks for the memories of my childhood. The ones that I forgot about in my old age too !! ✌️and ❤️ to ALL
I remember all of these. Times were much simpler back then.
I'm not old, I'm mid-century modern.
😂
SO IS MY HOUSE
I'm gonna borrow that line. Just letting you know.
You tell"em
Desirably retro!
As a 70's kid, I remember all of this.
Same here.
if you really remember party lines in the 79s you real rural. I lived in the 70s rember the phone co saying people might have them but never saw one
Me too... I remember and miss those days.
@Mark rapacki
there were a few recent ones but not enough to be easily reembered. I am 57 and inever met anyone witha party lne durring my my memory
. Wgiuhich startys in earnetst in the 1970s
@@0011peace It happened in the early 70's(before 73). I'm not rural, I grew up in the city(the hood). A couple of times i was on the phone and the operator cut into my call because a family member from out of town was calling. I passed the phone to my mom and she took over.🤷🏾♂
I remember all those things. I grew up in the 60s and 70s. I had a wonderful childhood. Life was so much simpler and fun. Nope, I'm not old though.
Just like I remember!! Sure miss those times and growing up in the 60's and 70's ...
Old is in the mind. Glad to have experienced these wonderful times.
How true, Melywood!
Is this following to prove as-so? "Life begins at eighty."
I've no idea as to who said it but, I suppose some few
ARE to find out.
@@jamesmiller4184 Better chance of getting there if you were not jabbed. Insurance acturials show American death rate up 20% since 2022
@@MelywoodMedia Well, thanks for that advisement Melywood but, no comment . . . other than to put 👍👍👍 that is. 😸
Old IS in the mind, that I have solved :)
but death is reality, that I am working on. :))))
It's official! I'm old, I remembered everything
At least you still have your memory 🥴
Me too!! Wouldn't trade it for nothing!!!
I remember almost all these things. Life was simpler, safer and better. I miss those days.
I'm definitely old. These were the good old days!!
I’m younger than dirt. Does that count?
The good old days actually ended when Adam and Eve were expelled from the Garden.
Absolutely remember all of this!!! I'm 60 years old and loved the 70s, 80s and the 90s. Saturday morning cartoons and American bandstand!! So sad the way our country is now, don't recognize it at all.
And soul train! With Don Cornelius!
We had it the best, I almost feel sorry for todays kids.
I feel your pain. I am 51 and feel the same way about this country now.
I remember when the Mickey Mouse club aired in 1953. We got a television a few months later.
I will be 60 next month and I remember Saturday morning cartoons, American bandstand and listening to Wolfman Jack on the radio and all the rest of the great things in the 70's & 80's.
I still remember how amazed I was to see all of these things when I first immigrated here to America. Such things were only the stuff of fantasy in East Germany.
I loved the 70s , 80s when I grew up .I remember all of my time and experiences. From them even the foods and drinks also. I would love to go back and grow up again .
I may be old but I am so grateful to have grown up when I did. I pity the kids of today, they will have memories of this insane world
Yes it truly was a great time to be a kid so glad I experienced those times.
I was born in 1955, I loved growing up in those eras.
I was born in 1960 and saw most of all this what a great time to be alive!!!
I'm old,old,old! Remember them all...and so much more! THANK YOU for the memories!
So glad I grew up when I did.. I miss those simpler days.. **sigh**. 🙄💜✌️
I don't mind being old. This was some of my childhood in one video😢
Neither do I 😉 Best Years of my Life 😊 im 68 Us Baby Boomers remember Kids today need to Educate themselves watching these videos 😊😂
Some? This was my childhood, and I am proud that I grew up during this era 😄
Me too! Best of times.
@@citibear57 yes some because there was so much more awesomeness! Best years of my life. Even then I didn’t want to grow up but it just happened!
Back when gas was 30 cents a gallon and love was only 60 cents away.
I wouldn't trade those days for a new youth...especially today.
AMAZING! I remember everything on this list and 50 is the new 30, plus look at the great music we enjoyed and know most of the words to the hits! I thank God I was born in the 60s not the 80's!
For me..... worth it to be old now if it means having the great memories
Remember when you were excited to wake up early Saturday morning to eat a bowl of cereal and catch actual fun and wholesome cartoons shown on broadcast TV? Except for certain evening specials during some holidays, it was the ONLY time during the week that you could see cartoons! I would literally be watching from 7am to 11am, if my parents let me. Sometimes they did, other times they insisted I go play outside instead or help with chores. But I always got at least an hour or two in.
Oh yeah. I was up before anyone else in the house on Saturday. Right in front of the TV with my bowl of cereal.
Same exact memories. I knew what was on the 3 channels and when to flip it. I started watching when the test pattern was still on and watched until mom threw me off between 10 and noon.
The cartoons we watched are not considered wholesome today.
@@diegosuarez1563 yeah, perish forbid we should scar our kids by watching a cartoon coyote have an anvil dropped on him ( and fully recover).
They’re much better off with The Family Guy 😳
@@steverogers2603 Went from physical assault to verbal assualt.
I'm 10 days away from being 62, I really miss the 60s and 70s. I just wish my sons could have experienced it. Great memories!
Being able to say you have gotten old is an honor, not a punishment.
I grew up in the 1950s. This video brought back memories, but is a bit sad, for times gone by.
So true. I remember everyone smoked (at least my parents both did) and going on long drives choking on all that second hand smoke which we pretty much got used to, since we weren't allowed to roll down the windows - it would ruin my mother's hairdo. 😂
It was ALWAYS annoying to be behind someone who wrote a check, ESPECIALLY when the people didn’t even pull out their checkbook until AFTER everything was rung up.
Oh, how that used to annoy me. I wrote checks until I married in the early 2000s. I would write out the date and payee while waiting in line, then all I had to do was the amount and signature at check out. My husband could not believe it.
That would have been my mother in 2011…
It was a total pain!!! They had to get the manager to look at the check and then your ID and they would write down your DOB, SS #, DL #, and I think something else. I can remember when we put our social security number on our checks!
Nothing wrong with getting old, Because we're still alive
I just turned 60 and it was a great time to grow up in America, I used to also like to hear stories about the 50's when my parents grew up 👍🤗🙏🇺🇸
Nothing unfortunate about being old. We had it all.
I'm 62 and like to drink a few every so often and listen to our music from rock to pop. And catch a little buzz and go down memory lane.
I was shocked a little while ago, was invited to my nephews birthday party at a roller rink, the kids that couldn’t skate very well had what looked like a walker! When I was little, we’d just crash and burn! Lol
That’s hilarious. Ya I remember just falling on my butt until I got it right lol. It was more of an incentive to get it right lol.
I REMEMBER WALKING MILES TO SCHOOL IN THE SNOW AND GOING BACK HOME....AND IT WAS
UPHILL BOTH WAYS ! WHAT A LIFE . 😁
I remember when my cousin. had a roller rink birthday party. And I was scared to go out on the floor, and practiced on the rug by the time I was ready to go out on the rink the party ended. So to this day i still can't roller skate
1956 I practiced roller skating with metal skates on the sidewalk while my mom held my hand so I didn't crash. I was about 6. When I was older and the invites to roller rink parties came calling, I was pretty good at it. Thanks Mom.
Haha! crash and burn is right, I remember that well!
I grew up in the 70's so pretty much remember all of this stuff. Great memories. 👍🏻👍🏻
“If you recognize this, you grew up during a special time. But unfortunately, you are now old.” 😂
Love Recollection Road Guy’s matter of fact delivery of this unfortunate news. 🤣
I was born in 1957,I was one of the baby boomers. I am now 65 years old and getting old. I remember the phone books and they looked like the Sears,Roebuck Catalogs. I grew up in the 1960's and 1970's. Those were the good old days. Even the 1980's and 1990's were excellent years. I am looking forward to part 2. I remember everything from part 1.
@YTCensors I was born and raised in Detroit,Michigan.
Remember the jingle, let your fingers do the walking through the yellow pages…
Born in 69. Growing up in the 70s and 80s was the best
Yes, it certainly was a very special time. I can happily say I'm still living with a couple of these today.
The 80's and 90's were the best years ever to grow up in. I miss those days so bad 😔😔😔 Yes I'm old 😭😭😭
I remember when bowling alleys had " pin boys" who were stationed behind the bowling pins and set the pins back up manually. You also had to consult the TV Guide to see what was playing on all of the channels. There were 3 main channels and maybe 3 or 4 minor channels. There was one TV in the house, and it was black and white with no remote. Reception was via " rabbit ears." Now that's really old !
Yes!!! Remember all the aluminum foil that you were wrap on the antenna's to get better reception? Or if you got your youngest to stand in just the right place in the right way, the reception got better too. The youngest always had to turn the channel and as we got older it became a matter of whoever got up and turned the channel got to watch what they wanted.
And dad risked his life putting an antenna on the roof.
Do you remember when the newspaper had the TV listing in it?
My brother was a pin boy! Yes, rabbit ears. I STILL say we had the best of childhoods!
There was a remote in our house -- me!
I remember everything you mentioned!! I was born in 1950.
My Step dad is 97; he can remember the 1920s. He is probably the last living person to witness the St. Francis dam breaking and the aftermath in Santa Paula , Ca.
wow! that man has witnessed some water over the dam. does he still have cognitive? there's lotta actors getting up there.. Eastwood, Hackman, and may others getting ready to enter their 10 decade.
Born in 61, remember all of this stuff, simpler times, won't ever be that good again!!
I can remember these times. The 70s was a blast being a kid. Now I am rapidly approaching 60,I sure do miss being a kid again.
I hear you Ray, 1970's were magical... We supposed to improve as a society as time moves forward, we have gotten worse. Now, Fast food is overpriced and tastes like crap, TV is worse, Music is worst, etc etc...
I am 82, but I agree that the 70s were a 'blast' while I was in my 30s.
Had so many phone numbers memorized. Now that part of my brain is dead.
But Jason… I’ll randomly remember an old phone number and not know who it went to. 😁
Remembering all my friends phone #s, what time every TV show came on each night, when I had an appointment! Yikes we really had a lot to recall back then 😁
Yes...and no GPS. We had to know how to get places.
@@christophersmith3005 Or you had to unfold that huge map in the car and try and figure out where the hell you are! And hope to God that there was an insert of the city streets of the place you were going. Our glove box was full of these maps from all the states in the SE where we used to drive a lot. And if you were looking for a particular street, you had to find it on the index, and it would give you a grid coordinate and then you had to play "where's Waldo" to find the actual street in that grid. Yep, those were the days.
I still remember mine and my two best friends numbers growing up. I do not know either of my daughters' numbers - just press their name.
I'm 62, I remember all of those things, fondly.
Great video. Brought tears to my eyes as I remembered a more innocent time in America. 2 pieces of candy for a penny. Buying a soda with 5 cents and the bottle. We knew everyone by name in the neighborhood. Neighbors looked out for each other. It is a long ago time that will never be again and that is sad. It was the best of times. Thank you so much for the walk down life's memory lane.
How about riding in the back of a pick-up truck? I remembered everything in this video. I'm in my upper 60s.
Ha! Hahaha! My parents used to camp in and explore the deserts of Southern California. As kids they had a friend with a Ford pickup outfitted with a roll bar. The best summer rides were several of us kids standing up in the bed of that truck hanging onto that roll bar for dear life while bombing down bumpy dirt roads or driving through canyons.
that's totally illegal nowadays but back then everything was "cool".
Born in 1970 - grew up in the 80's, Great times and great music.
Me too life was simple but fun as heck 😀
1969 👋👍❤
I was born in 1970 too!
Same here. Born in 1971. I look back at how,lucky I was. At least in my mind anyway.
.....and the thing is we're getting old. :/
I still have a key ring with my apartment key, key to my parents' house and car key fob.
ETA: LOVED going to Roller Disco in the late 70s and early 80s while in middle school! So many cherished memories are from there. It was magical. I had loads of Little Golden Books as a toddler, too! I loved reading.
That huge station wagon @:30 reminds me of Clark Griswold's "Wagon Queen Family Truckster" in the sweet metallic pea color. It's a damn fine automobile and if you're thinking of taking the tribe across country, it's the one you should be using.
Remember when the ignition key was on the dash board like the push button start on most new cars now, and the dimmer switch for head lights was on the floor board? I’m vintage ‘56.
Good lord - you just reminded me of the time in ‘98 when I was late for my midnight shift because I couldn’t find the damned headlights switch in my the 80s Pontiac Sunbird I’d borrowed from my friend’s mom! Even figuring it was in the floor, it was too dark for me to find! Lol
I desperately wish the dimmer switch was still on the floor! I hate the hand operated ones. Most people I talk to who used the floor ones want them back.
@@Mick_Ts_Chick either way for me, but I do see the shoe-debris issue, especially in nastier climates. Mud, leaves, snow, dirt, gravel, and SALT/CALCIUM…ick.
Born 1939 and recall a lot more- but my7 kids grew up with these memories. They are in their 50’s and 60’s.
I learned to drive in a 1941 Studebaker. Our milk was delivered in clear bottles with cream at the top. We set our clocks by the fire station noon horn which could be heard for miles.
I feel sorry for the children of today, and what they have missed.
I LOVE being the age that I am. Having wisdom, peace, love & happiness now during this time was well worth it!
I never have thought it "unfortunate" that I've gotten older (57), rather pretty fortunate to have grown up when I did and still going strong 😁
I too consider myself very fortunate to have grown up in a unique time of prosperity, in a country where freedom and human rights are protected. I also hope that I have adapted to the progress. I remember the "old" days with fondness but also embrace the evolving new technology.
Born in 1965! Missed boomer by 6 months! Still consider myself one. Great times!!
You're giving me the urge to cry reflecting back on times that we're so much better. Before the avalanche of nonsensical technology, before the advent of the unsmart phone and even unsmarter users we had real communication, face to face conversations, and real friendships with real people. I am 62 now, my how I have seen how society has de-evolved. Civilization is indeed dead.
Disagree, I am 72 and wouldn't trade the way things are now for the way things were then. Technology has improved our lives, in almost every way. Technology is a power tool, tt all depends on the ways we choose to use it. The very fact that you and I can watch a CZcams and comment on it proves my point.
@@stuarthirsch On this we will have to agree to disagree. The result I see of this so-called beneficial technology is zombies walking around or even worse driving around with their un-smart phones, critical thinking is now a thing of the past, an independent thought for them is an impossibility, intelligent face to face conversation is a thing of the past. I will grant you the advancements in medicine with technology, but I lived for more than 50 years without you tube just fine, and more than 45 years without a cell phone or internet just fine. Take me back to 1975 and leave me, I would die happy there.
@@markporter6933 People said similar things about television back in the day. It kept kids from going outside and getting fresh air. Families didn't talk because they just sat around watching the tv instead. Now people look back at watching tv with their families and remember it as a wholesome bonding experience. Perspectives always change over time I suppose.
My fondest memories are of the 60s and 70s. You do a marvelous job providing us with the closest thing to a time machine. Thank you!
Yes to all. I'm old and so glad I grew up then. Best of times. 👍❤
The freedom we had back then compared to todays kids, cannot be expressed in words, you just had to live it. Truly a different era.
Yes, remember many of these. Sad that all the stores shown we had and are now gone. Spent many Friday and Saturday nights at the drive in. Bowled on a couples league for a few years. I turned 65 this year! Some days I feel older. I am so glad I grew up in the 60’s and 70’s. Sometimes I wish I could go back.
Same here - class of 1975!
I was just thinking about all the stores we used to have. It’s crazy how radically things have changed but I guess every generation says that. However I think generations now days are so much further removed from the previous generations.
I really thought that all of those good things would be around forever.
Born in the early 70s so yes I remember almost all if these things. I loved and missed thoes days. I definitely wouldn't want to be a kid in today's generation.
Well, being old beats the Hell out of being dead!!
absolutely.