New York 1970s

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  • čas přidán 19. 10. 2018
  • Footage can be license at Getty Images

Komentáře • 2,3K

  • @gaborkun7290
    @gaborkun7290 Před 4 lety +53

    Probably the most interesting time and place in recent history.
    All these cars, the music scene, fashion, movies, architecture, the shops, clubs, grittiness and beauty.
    Never a dull moment, seemingly.

    • @5Giants5
      @5Giants5 Před rokem +5

      A transition era, notice the present people who still wore Fedora Hats, and the Checker Cabs. Classic New York!

    • @robertnussberger6449
      @robertnussberger6449 Před 4 měsíci

      Pretty high in crime though at this time

  • @factnotfiction3544
    @factnotfiction3544 Před 4 lety +1535

    Back when the people who worked there actually could afford to live there

    • @cosmosgato
      @cosmosgato Před 4 lety +202

      Fact Not Fiction
      It was cheap because no one in their right wanted to live there if they had a choice.
      I was born in the Bronx and have lived in NYC my entire life.
      New York City has never been better than right now.

    • @elkabong6429
      @elkabong6429 Před 4 lety +224

      cosmosgato I grew up in Manhattan in the 1960’s and 70’s and I gotta say; you are both right and wrong at the same time. Yes, it was dirty and dangerous and there was a lot of crime and vandalism, etc; but to say that the only way to counteract that is to have made NYC become only a playground for the rich, which is what it is essentially now, is not right. What is happening with both residential and commercial rents there is out of this world pure, unadulterated greed and has resulted in, on the commercial side; thousands of storefront vacancies because no one can afford those rents, except for big banks and big name retail pharmacies and similar stores. All of the mom & pop stores and the small independent shops that made New York City the wonderful place that it was are gone, because they cannot afford absurd rents of $50,000/month that these greedy bastards are demanding. So the stores sit empty for, literally years. It’s a phenomenon called “high rent blight”.
      Also, there is now a situation, as someone else mentioned above, where average working people, or young people just starting out on their own, cannot afford to live. Residential rents are also out of control, so you have five and six people crammed into one bedroom apartments in neighborhoods all over the city, creating unlivable conditions.
      So, yes, New York City is cleaner and safer than it’s been in two generations, but at what cost? There has to be a solution that finds an answer somehow.

    • @777keko
      @777keko Před 4 lety +16

      @@elkabong6429 Do you think that the pandemic crisis might somehow change the reality you are describing?

    • @elkabong6429
      @elkabong6429 Před 4 lety +29

      777keko That’s a very interesting question! In the short term, at least, the present emergency may make things worse, due to so many people having lost their jobs and no sense of when they’ll regain them. Ultimately, the only way to even come close to solving the problem, from my non-professional point of view, is to somehow create incentives for builders to create affordable housing by the thousands, combined with living wages for those people we all are now calling “essential workers” who ironically are often times the lowest paid workers! It’s not going to be an easy problem to solve, that’s for sure!

    • @777keko
      @777keko Před 4 lety +32

      @@elkabong6429 I envy you. I wish I could've been in NYC during the 70s. It just had a certain aura hard to replicate anywhere, even in the same city 40 years later. I went there for the first time a few years ago and it sure looked like gentrification is taking away the character NYC once had

  • @hejiranyc
    @hejiranyc Před 4 lety +196

    I still vividly remember my first trip to NYC in 1976 as a 7-year-old. At once I thought it was the most horrifically filthy, chaotic place I'd ever seen, but at the same time, I was utterly in love. For years I would doodle NYC skylines during boring lectures at school. Anyway, it all finally came full circle 22 years later when I moved to NYC and I know in my heart that I will never leave.

    • @Wa3ypx
      @Wa3ypx Před 2 lety +4

      I feel ya on that one!

    • @matth3708
      @matth3708 Před 2 lety

      I'd rather go back to Afghanistan than live in that Liberal s'hole.

    • @metalEric69
      @metalEric69 Před 2 lety +3

      I bet the taxes suck .

    • @hejiranyc
      @hejiranyc Před 2 lety +9

      @@metalEric69 They do! I just moved to Florida because of the taxes and the shitty weather. LOL

    • @gabrielmartines3510
      @gabrielmartines3510 Před rokem +6

      I don't know why i feel the same, it was an utter shithole, but it had so much character to it compared to the corporation shithole it became nowadays.

  • @proclaimer2u
    @proclaimer2u Před 2 lety +117

    Ah The 70s. I was 15 in 1970. The music was absolutely touching my heart and everyone else. The Beatles the Bee Gees and so many others. Girls were girls friends were real friends people helped people, Baseball was fun, romance was real, dad‘s were home, mom fix dinner, Saturday morning everyone Watch cartoons, food taste great, no GMO, doctors cared, hospital bills were low, men were gentlemen, ladies were nice, downtown was great, and love was real. What else can I say. It was a really great time to be alive.

    • @v44n7
      @v44n7 Před 2 lety +5

      today's time are just as great but its just a generational thing.

    • @markholroyde9412
      @markholroyde9412 Před 2 lety

      @@v44n7 BS, its crap and they/you know it.....tick tock.....

    • @easportsaxb8057
      @easportsaxb8057 Před rokem +19

      As someone born in 2003, I can only dream of having grown up in the 70s. I find it an extraordinarily fascinating time. I do however think there were both great thing worse thing compared to today. Of course every decade has its pros and cons.

    • @shrimpymacdougall3134
      @shrimpymacdougall3134 Před rokem

      You must be a white male,lol

    • @fernandowong371
      @fernandowong371 Před rokem +3

      Well said!

  • @guypalumbo7892
    @guypalumbo7892 Před 4 lety +602

    It was the Best of Times yet the Worst of Times! God, bring me back!

    • @chatman2a
      @chatman2a Před 4 lety +17

      Guy Palumbo Please, take me with you.

    • @pdizbon
      @pdizbon Před 4 lety +34

      1000 times better than what we live in now

    • @robertortiz8540
      @robertortiz8540 Před 4 lety +9

      Brings back memories.

    • @bbygrlpt2
      @bbygrlpt2 Před 4 lety +31

      I think any time was better than what the world is goin thru right now

    • @mystic7splace
      @mystic7splace Před 4 lety +4

      60's or bust for me!

  • @walesdad
    @walesdad Před 4 lety +156

    This looks like a scene from 'Taxi Driver'.Wonderful.

    • @IronMan-tk8uc
      @IronMan-tk8uc Před 4 lety +12

      Exactly! This looks like a deleted scene from a movie.

    • @Mustafa-fm7kg
      @Mustafa-fm7kg Před 4 lety +4

      It reminds me Midnight Cowbow

    • @ponrix
      @ponrix Před 3 lety +7

      Not really. It was broke and lawlessness everywhere.

    • @UtenZork
      @UtenZork Před 3 lety +1

      Dude! I watched this video meanwhile the theme of Taxi Driver was playing! it's delicious!

    • @countdown2xstacy
      @countdown2xstacy Před rokem

      “All the animals come out at night - whores, skunk pussies, buggers, queens, fairies, dopers, junkies, sick, venal. Someday a real rain will come and wash all this scum off the streets.”

  • @cadicorniche
    @cadicorniche Před 2 lety +15

    Now, that’s MY New York! The city was exciting, vibrant, scary, dangerous. IT WAS WONDERFUL!

  • @76NightProwler
    @76NightProwler Před 4 lety +44

    It’s fascinating to see all those 70’s and older cars looking so spotless and new. Today, those cars are buried and rotting several stories underground in a junkyard. Awesome video.

    • @karlabritfeld7104
      @karlabritfeld7104 Před rokem +4

      No reason for that. Cuba is still driving cars from the 50s, restored and looking fabulous.

    • @volactic5240
      @volactic5240 Před rokem +2

      Those boomers time 😌

    • @quang5DCameras
      @quang5DCameras Před měsícem

      Yes Very Fascinated by Classics cars 70s all made in Metal. They HAD Character unlike New cars today which made Cheap plastic. I Don't care or intend to buy any those Electric cars nowadays.

  • @sukie584
    @sukie584 Před 5 lety +504

    Oh how I miss that time!! You could afford to live and create there. Nightlife was incredible.. No place like it. Wonderful time to be a teenager in THAT city... though NYC is part of my DNA, She's nothing like that now. Cleaner yes, less crime yes, but much of the soul has been sucked out, and it's all about how much money one has.. At least I got to come of age during that time.

    • @brassknucks2548
      @brassknucks2548 Před 5 lety +49

      Yep...it was an exciting city. Had it's own rules and style. We will never see that again.

    • @sudipta_archive
      @sudipta_archive Před 5 lety +3

      @@brassknucks2548 but someday?

    • @multifan1662
      @multifan1662 Před 5 lety +14

      Wasn’t nyc always expensive

    • @filipelimartins
      @filipelimartins Před 4 lety +31

      You just got older

    • @blondie2998
      @blondie2998 Před 4 lety +13

      its still a great time to be young in new york

  • @easkeybikes1966
    @easkeybikes1966 Před 4 lety +118

    2:48 I can literally smell this scene. The rain and diesel oil and feel of the humidity.

    • @pdizbon
      @pdizbon Před 4 lety +4

      Me too !

    • @pr0ject25o1
      @pr0ject25o1 Před 4 lety +11

      Lol. Remember turning my face up and smelling the rain well before it came. That scent of concrete when it got wet from afar. Those days are gone.

    • @brianvail9212
      @brianvail9212 Před 4 lety +4

      I remember the smell of walnuts and it was great

    • @blackbway
      @blackbway Před 4 lety +3

      and smug! don't forget the SMOG!

    • @nohaylamujer
      @nohaylamujer Před 4 lety +2

      oh boy, it was the first thing I thought too.

  • @andyappleton3353
    @andyappleton3353 Před 2 lety +18

    That artist who decorated the subway train is still alive and well. I see the same virtuosity displayed on several street corners in my local ghetto every day.

  • @JoeR203
    @JoeR203 Před 4 lety +147

    Looks like the opening to "Welcome Back Kotter".

    • @Name-jw4sj
      @Name-jw4sj Před 4 lety +1

      Dirty then and still dirty now. With all that tourism you will expect they will use that money to clean it up but nope it’s only getting worse.

    • @brianglade848
      @brianglade848 Před 4 lety +1

      It is

    • @Apefather
      @Apefather Před 3 lety +2

      Listen to a song about Brooklyn, New York in the 70's and 80's!czcams.com/video/vrQXnkPPDiM/video.html

  • @alvarez.l9422
    @alvarez.l9422 Před 4 lety +527

    When actual New Yorkers lived and ruled the city.

    • @shrek19yearsago78
      @shrek19yearsago78 Před 4 lety +28

      Louie Alva yup i bet the new york accent wast still alive during this time

    • @KOLDBLU3ST33L
      @KOLDBLU3ST33L Před 4 lety +8

      Riiight? Those were the days...

    • @KOLDBLU3ST33L
      @KOLDBLU3ST33L Před 4 lety +12

      @mo zack
      Lol, same here. I had guys(in the military) say they "couldn't understand me!" Fuhget-aboud-it! 😄

    • @RafaelSantos-vd6be
      @RafaelSantos-vd6be Před 4 lety +1

      Yes not THESE DID NOTHING FOR DA CITY BUY COME TO TAKE AND NOT PUT IN ANYTHING. THEY DONT CIRCULATE DA DOLLAR BUT TAKE IT ALL TO DA UNCIVILIZED LANDS.

    • @philtripe
      @philtripe Před 4 lety +8

      idiot...it was run by the Italian mob dummy! remember how much it used to cost for trash service back then? then in the 1990's they were forced out and the Russian mob took their place ... i have an idea...buy a book and read it

  • @nikmills
    @nikmills Před 4 lety +169

    It was the best of times. When New York wasn't for everyone. So much energy and potential and music. I loved it. It was balancing between chaos and creativity. It was on the edge for about 15 years. I went back a few times in the 90's and 2000's and it's just Disneyland now.

    • @BabyBugBug
      @BabyBugBug Před 4 lety +21

      Mickey Mook there were 2000 to 3000 murders a year then and through the early 1990s. I don’t miss that I’m sorry.

    • @nikmills
      @nikmills Před 4 lety +8

      @@BabyBugBug : Did you at least see Mongo Santamaria at the Mud Club? Tell me you didn't miss the greatness of New York and just worried about getting mugged the whole time.

    • @DAREDEVILBKLYN
      @DAREDEVILBKLYN Před 4 lety +17

      Grew up in NYC $3 pitchers of beer and 2 hot dogs for a dollar at Grey Papaya's on street corners. People where stressed with NYC hustle but happy you could enjoy things. Not any more big $ and a corperate circus sucks now just a rich man's playground.

    • @DAREDEVILBKLYN
      @DAREDEVILBKLYN Před 4 lety +11

      @@BabyBugBug I remember crack came in to NYC like a storm in 1980's. "it was bad" I was there, peace.

    • @DAREDEVILBKLYN
      @DAREDEVILBKLYN Před 4 lety +11

      @@nikmills Enjoyed alot in NYC funny never was robbed directly. But did have 2 bikes robbed. I loved the east and west village, Coney Island great comic conventions and concerts were awsome. I liked a rustic Sin City NYC now a corperate light show. It was bad NYC in late 1980's and early 1990's but if you knew how to move not that bad. I as a white shadow knew the do's and do nots in NYC there we rules survival street rules, peace.

  • @tattyshoesshigure5731
    @tattyshoesshigure5731 Před 4 lety +137

    Love NYC, especially when it was a gritty city. These great old clips are like watching Kojak re-runs... heck there’s even a brown cop car with a removable red flashing light @2:02!

    • @MohammedAli-oi3gx
      @MohammedAli-oi3gx Před 4 lety +7

      Im from london but im surprised that these were a thing, i thought these were just from Hollywood movies. Heck, i even would say that the clip even looked like it came out of a movie which is really impressive.

    • @nightrider5109
      @nightrider5109 Před 4 lety +7

      YES !!! When I saw the brown car Thats the FIRST thing I thought was KOJAK !! The part in the sub way with the white tile reminded me of The Warriors and the 1st Deathwish with Charles Bronson

    • @Just1American1966
      @Just1American1966 Před 4 lety +5

      Federal Equipment "Fireball" light. I was a volunteer firefighter in the early eighties, and a police officer beginning in the late eighties, and they were still a thing. I think I might even still have a blue one around somewhere (red=fire, blue=police here in Florida.)

    • @Jaydoggish
      @Jaydoggish Před 4 lety +3

      Omg love those lights. Back in like 1996 I think I saw a Brown Buick Lasabra with blue rotating light pulling truck over and couple plain clothes cops. Miss those lights.

    • @robertbeirne9813
      @robertbeirne9813 Před 4 lety +3

      Kojak drove a Buick Century, but, it was brown.

  • @beatrizrobinson6481
    @beatrizrobinson6481 Před 7 měsíci +1

    Raised in Brooklyn, New York in 1970. Thank you for the memories!!!

  • @sirich7751
    @sirich7751 Před 4 lety +420

    Back when the word neighborhood had a meaning.

    • @elkabong6429
      @elkabong6429 Před 4 lety +10

      Link Age WTF does that even mean?

    • @reillymoore3257
      @reillymoore3257 Před 4 lety +2

      @Joey Balas You got that right, Joey.

    • @elkabong6429
      @elkabong6429 Před 4 lety +13

      Link Age So, the “Pervert Left” are the ones who ruined NYC? Are you a complete moron, or only a partial moron? It’s the rich fucking Republicans like your boy Trump that obliterated neighborhoods and jacked up commercial rents so high that only banks and places like Rite-Aids can afford it. All you Trumpanzees can go fuck yourselves.

    • @elkabong6429
      @elkabong6429 Před 4 lety +9

      Joey Balas Fuck you, I was a union tradesman for 33 years in NYC. This bullshit about “liberals ruining NYC” is fuckin’ bullshit and you know it.

    • @elkabong6429
      @elkabong6429 Před 4 lety +4

      Joey Balas IBEW and IATSE stagehand. Good for you. Any union man that’s for Trump or any Republican is a JACKoff! Go ahead and vote against you and your families best interest: remember Ronnie Raygun and the PATCO strike? That was the beginning of the end of unions, bubba. Have a good rest of your short life as you choke on your own blood from Covid-19! 😆

  • @LadyQuick
    @LadyQuick Před 4 lety +762

    Who else remembers life with out "Cellphones " 😅📳📱📟📞☎️

    • @julieerin115
      @julieerin115 Před 4 lety +31

      Born in the '70s so I remember.

    • @Ralphie_Boy
      @Ralphie_Boy Před 4 lety +17

      @@julieerin115 I remember black & white t.v.'s and 1th. rerun's of the honeymooners! 🤣

    • @fastica
      @fastica Před 4 lety +39

      Born in 1980, so I remember. Last generation to have a childhood without cell phones and internet.

    • @marklennox2151
      @marklennox2151 Před 4 lety +26

      I saw a show where they put a rotary phone in front of a bunch of GenZers and they had no idea how to dial. It was like cavemen looking at the wheel for the first time !!!

    • @lt4324
      @lt4324 Před 4 lety +33

      born in 60, and loved those years growing up. everyone was more personable and we had fun OUT DOORS playing every kind of sport you could squeeze in during the day.

  • @StylesMusic
    @StylesMusic Před 4 lety +9

    This look will never get old. I love NYC ❤️

  • @MrBillBronx
    @MrBillBronx Před 4 lety +60

    I was there. I came to New York in 1978. What a dump it was. BUT I HAVEN’T LEFT YET. 😆

    • @messimanuel1076
      @messimanuel1076 Před 3 lety

      czcams.com/video/mugRenBeRw0/video.html

    • @timetraveler2518
      @timetraveler2518 Před 3 lety +1

      I visited New York City in November 1982. I was shocked to see the horrible and dangerous place to visit New York City. Graffiti was all everywhere, especially in the dark subway. Stink urine and BO, trash, prostitutes and pimps, drug-addicts, hardcore drugs, crimes, low-life scenes, a glut of adult and liquor stores were everywhere. I first visited New York City in 1965 and it was much better than the late 1970s and the early 1980s. My last visit of New York City was autumn 2013 and I stayed three months in Manhattan. I was shocked to see New York City became a beautiful, clean and safer city, and even the subway. Wow! Republican New York mayor Rudy Giuliani ordered to clean up the city. Thanks to him for rejuvenating New York City to rise again. Now it is reverse to decay again because of Democrats-controlled politics.

    • @messimanuel1076
      @messimanuel1076 Před 3 lety +1

      @@timetraveler2518 oh stop the cap "visited new York in 1965" like You can't be 80 years old

    • @timetraveler2518
      @timetraveler2518 Před 3 lety +1

      @@messimanuel1076 No, I was seven years old when my family and I visited New York City and the World Fair in the summer of 1965 after we returned from South Vietnam. We had a marvelous time in New York City. I remembered most of it. The subway was pleasant but it was crowded.

    • @MrBillBronx
      @MrBillBronx Před 3 lety +2

      @@timetraveler2518 Your description is absolutely dead-on. A good presentation of Manhattan in the early -mid 70s is Scorsese's "Taxi Driver". By the 1980s a despairing urban life was taken for granted in New York. The smart and rich abandoned the town: the down and out, the perverts, the stuck, the nostalgic and the adventurous stayed behind. By the year 1990 things hit their bottom worse. I think their were over a thousand homicides that year, a record. And Giuliani, who was a US attorney and mob buster came into office, the first Republican since John Lindsey and started cleaning up the city. Violent crime has been ticking up the last couple years, homelessness is on the rise again and the city seems dirtier than I can remember three decades.

  • @lewiss.3786
    @lewiss.3786 Před 2 lety +8

    To be walking through the streets of New York, on a rainy day, in the 1970s, what a mood.

  • @IamOrangeGT
    @IamOrangeGT Před 3 lety +4

    All cars are so beautiful

  • @Traderjoe
    @Traderjoe Před 4 lety +246

    Not one person had a cellphone. If you wanted information that nobody had, you’d go to the library. Or, ask people who might be knowledgeable. And people back then stored their information in their heads. You knew maybe a dozen people’s phone numbers by memory or, you’d have a little black book in your pocket. You found out what happened in the world either on the radio or at 7pm on the news. Or, a newspaper the day after it happened. You would talk to people for hours and hours and they’d look you in the eye. Virtually everyone knew how to do something really well and you were truly free. Nobody knew your whereabouts and you literally could disappear and it would take the FBI months to track you down. You could go to any airport and buy a plane ticket right then and there and fly anywhere in the country immediately.

    • @johnnydoubleu3656
      @johnnydoubleu3656 Před 4 lety +22

      Im 56....I remember there was a club I used to go to called the rooftop....All though it was in the early 80's it had such a good vibe...
      Yeah sure there was nose candy but I have to say people talked to each other..Everybody was interested in what you had to say..You looked forward to it.....Girls were hot and with all that was going on not one stitch of trouble....$13 bucks to walk in and I think alcohol was free.....You would leave there sometimes 6 am... Those days are gone....

    • @unglemergy
      @unglemergy Před 4 lety +12

      lol at remembering peoples numbers anymore. i know people that have forgotten their own.

    • @unglemergy
      @unglemergy Před 4 lety +2

      @@johnnydoubleu3656 got check your prostate

    • @markb20
      @markb20 Před 4 lety +32

      Now if you just want to unplug, relax, and disappear for awhile, people either think you're weird, anti-social, hiding- or dead.

    • @markb20
      @markb20 Před 4 lety +2

      @anne smith Good for you, I admire your ability to disregard the pressure to conform to society's need to always stay "in touch" with the world. It still amazes me how people can't wait 5 minutes until they're out of the store to call someone back.

  • @alainvosselman9960
    @alainvosselman9960 Před 4 lety +28

    This was the NY we saw on TV when we was just kids growing up in Belgium....watching this on screen was like the hole world was happening right there, and we weren't part of it. But we could enjoy it from a far through an endless stream of tv shows, series, movies : Taxi, Different Strokes, Cheers, Cagney & Lacy, Starsky & Hutch... just too much to mention. I Could watch this all day long..lol. Thnx for sharing

    • @philipklug7784
      @philipklug7784 Před 4 lety +5

      Cheers was Boston.

    • @khayman181
      @khayman181 Před 4 lety +2

      Will Will you get the award for buzz kill of the week, congrats!

    • @AntonioCostaRealEstate
      @AntonioCostaRealEstate Před 4 lety

      Cheers was as Boston as America is ruled by a Prime Minister.
      All it had from Boston was the building’s front facade on Beacon Street. All the indoor takes were recorded in some studio in California , my guess , Burbank. Everyone around knew it.
      Neighborhood bar .... yeah right. Maybe a lawyer’s swanky lounge. Biggest tourist trap in town, over priced beer and T-Shirts. During the 90{s along with Faneuil Hall , the most tourist visited spot.
      Real Boston places in Dorchester, Brighton, East Boston, Chinatown, Roxbury, the Old Jamaica Plain, Roslindale.

    • @GUITARTIME2024
      @GUITARTIME2024 Před 2 lety

      It was still gritty until the mid 90s, then it improved quickly. Its a mixed picture today. (My wife is from Belgium. She loved Dallas, Falcon Crest, A Team).

    • @alainvosselman9960
      @alainvosselman9960 Před 2 lety

      @@GUITARTIME2024 Hehe..; what are the odds ! Yeah, Falcon Crest... that was for the women.. I watched Dallas with my parents... it was HUGE here. Still remember when the world stood still wondering who shot JR... lol..

  • @rubiescube
    @rubiescube Před 4 lety +16

    Wow! Thanks for the post. I grew up in NYC during the 70's & early 80's. It brought a lot of memories of how NYC used to be before Guliani. Cutting school, bombing the trains and going to the duce were my routine as a youth. The city and times are so different today. Truly miss but not forgotten.

  • @joselo-zl5wo
    @joselo-zl5wo Před 4 lety +137

    The world population has doubled since 1970. We didn't have cellphones, no computers and no Facebook .
    It was awesome. No doubt everything is different nowadays

    • @juliamontour434
      @juliamontour434 Před 4 lety +8

      I lived in Brooklyn that time and we didn’t even have a phone in apartment. Was to expensive for depositto phone company. We made our social contacts throughout work phones.

    • @elkabong6429
      @elkabong6429 Před 4 lety +7

      Remember bookstores? NYC used to have lots of them! Where I lived for years, in the East Village, there was a ton of them. They were all gone by the mid 1990s.

    • @butterfliesandfate
      @butterfliesandfate Před 4 lety +6

      Bill and Melinda Gates are working very hard to bring that population down with that mandatory vaxx most traitors and cowards are begging to receive.

    • @christopherwood2290
      @christopherwood2290 Před 4 lety +1

      @@juliamontour434 I grew up in the Bronx. I remember the noise 24/7.

    • @christopherwood2290
      @christopherwood2290 Před 4 lety +1

      @@elkabong6429 And all the peep shows and sex acts lol!

  • @ellorial
    @ellorial Před 4 lety +27

    Grew up in Queens in the 70's, life was outside! Every kid on the block was your friend, every race, every religion! Life was good.

    • @mm6461
      @mm6461 Před 2 lety +2

      More serial killer’s back then

    • @vitocangialosi4878
      @vitocangialosi4878 Před 2 lety +3

      I grew up in Astoria in the 70s and you are right rain, shine, or snow we were outside playing ,all the neighborhood kids Italians, Greeks, Irish ,Puerto Ricans etc. GOD to be young and playing wiffle ball again 😊

  • @tomsreviews238
    @tomsreviews238 Před 4 lety +369

    You know your old when you can identify every car in this video.

  • @AndrosBabheira
    @AndrosBabheira Před 4 lety +54

    I wish I could fly back those times... dark vibes and dreary atmosphere but it also had such a romantic and magic apealing... I would give all I have (which's not too much) to spend a few weeks in NYC in the 70's... in summer.... and party at Studio 54

    • @bizzlowthxx
      @bizzlowthxx Před 4 lety

      Arent you a millenial?

    • @AndrosBabheira
      @AndrosBabheira Před 4 lety +3

      @@bizzlowthxx Born in 1986, whats your point?

    • @xraystudios3693
      @xraystudios3693 Před 4 lety +7

      NYC was full of crime back then, try reading "welcome to fear city" a paper written by cops and firefighters from 70's New York, it's guidelines of how to survive New York.

    • @brennocalderan2201
      @brennocalderan2201 Před 4 lety

      @@xraystudios3693 Ah! The Fear City, it seems being a New Yorker back in the 70's wasn't very fun.

    • @claudiahansen4938
      @claudiahansen4938 Před 4 lety

      FunkTuristic Inc. , party at David Mancuso's The Loft!

  • @richarddrolet7746
    @richarddrolet7746 Před 4 lety +4

    Something so special about this wonderful city....rick.

  • @noumenon6923
    @noumenon6923 Před 4 lety +45

    A lot of great music was made in the 1970’s.

  • @literallyunderrated
    @literallyunderrated Před 2 lety +12

    I remember my Dad driving us on the Cross Bronx Expressway and pointing out the fake cardboard windows that the city would put in abandoned buildings, to kind of dress them up and make them less ugly. Some of them even had cats and flower pots printed on them to make them look real

  • @loveparkes
    @loveparkes Před 4 lety +106

    2:47 that footage is so clear, it’s so strange. It’s like someone went back in time with their phone and took a video.

    • @101Volts
      @101Volts Před 4 lety +16

      If it was shot in film, there's nothing strange about it.

    • @fastica
      @fastica Před 4 lety +26

      Film is as good as digital video. The problem is that many films weren't stored well. Watch the restored Beatles videos. They look like they were filmed yesterday (no pun intended).

    • @steveconn
      @steveconn Před 4 lety +16

      It's the '70s, not the 19th century, putz.

    • @metalmusic4958
      @metalmusic4958 Před 4 lety +2

      Because there were no ufos!

    • @wsemmons2001
      @wsemmons2001 Před 4 lety +4

      Looks blurry to me, but my glasses are out of reach and cannabis is legal where I live jk

  • @scottmoore1614
    @scottmoore1614 Před 4 lety +64

    That is just the way I remember it the first time I visited NYC in the summer of 1977...nasty, smelly, seedy and utterly fascinating! I was 7 years old and I loved it!

    • @benjaminsmith2287
      @benjaminsmith2287 Před 4 lety +2

      This is the worse areas. A lot of areas weren't like this. Upper Park Av. wasn't much different than today, midtown Av. of the Americas, the upper East side. NYC always had it "nice" areas vs. seedy type of areas. It was dirtier, though, overall and more neighborhoody.

    • @thomasmartin-rx2uu
      @thomasmartin-rx2uu Před 4 lety +1

      @@benjaminsmith2287 people were actually afraid to visit New York back then

    • @Batman2StaticShock
      @Batman2StaticShock Před 2 lety

      How was the 90’s? M

  • @samp7003
    @samp7003 Před 2 lety +12

    We thought there was some crazy stuff back then. We could never imagine the insanity in 2021. Take me back PLEASE!!

  • @benbrown9053
    @benbrown9053 Před 4 lety +23

    Hard to believe some of those cars, trucks and buses are still on the road today in 2020.

  • @charlesfuentes3695
    @charlesfuentes3695 Před 4 lety +18

    WTC stood majestically on the SW skyline. I remember when they were built. Conceptualized on a bar napkin. Nice short film. TY 4 posting.

    • @tswagg504
      @tswagg504 Před 3 lety +4

      The new WTC just doesn’t have the same allure

    • @jimgag2
      @jimgag2 Před 3 lety +1

      @@tswagg504 I remember taking the PATH train every day from Jersey City and walking to Rector St. (before I worked on Wall St.) and watching the WTC being built.

    • @tswagg504
      @tswagg504 Před 3 lety

      @@jimgag2 The original?

  • @WinstonGuitar
    @WinstonGuitar Před 4 lety +39

    "Hi, I'm Mike. I'll be your robber today."
    "Here you are, my good fellow. Don't spend it all in one place."

    • @gregh7457
      @gregh7457 Před 4 lety +2

      bernhard goetz is waiting for you to say that to him

    • @hazelwashington665
      @hazelwashington665 Před 4 lety +2

      @@gregh7457 "Get away from me or I'll use my screwdriver and make your glasses really wobbly!"

    • @elkabong6429
      @elkabong6429 Před 4 lety

      Hazel Washington Bwahahahaha!

    • @gregh7457
      @gregh7457 Před 4 lety

      @@elkabong6429 he don't like vigilante justice

    • @cyberspore00
      @cyberspore00 Před 4 lety

      LoL

  • @g.v.3573
    @g.v.3573 Před rokem +2

    I was there too and boy was it amazing! All the way from 7 to about 34, and would never trade it for any other way. The time, the people w no phones and the many conversations. Moving back to a bigger city. Done with driving in the south. I miss the stories you pick up from strangers.

  • @BBOYWORLD
    @BBOYWORLD Před 4 lety +331

    Can somebody build a time machine and take me back to the 70s im tired of 2020

    • @dr2759
      @dr2759 Před 3 lety +38

      Don't worry, NYC will look like this AND have the same crime very soon.

    • @PRHILL9696
      @PRHILL9696 Před 3 lety +4

      yes please!

    • @yournaturalbuffguy7202
      @yournaturalbuffguy7202 Před 3 lety +6

      @@dr2759 fax

    • @HobbiesRfun
      @HobbiesRfun Před 3 lety +23

      Don't need one now. It's December of 2020, and Mayor De Blasio, and Governor Cuomo are making damn sure New York City is much worse than it ever was in the 70s.
      At least in the 70s you could actually run your business, go out to eat, have parties, enjoy the holidays, socialize with friends, and family, and live like a human being, despite the high taxes, high crime rate, and trashy neighborhoods.
      Not only do you have high taxes, high crime rates, and trashy neighborhoods in December 2020, but thanks to all this Covid-19 hysteria pushed by the media, De Blasio, and Cuomo, you're no longer allowed to run your business, go out to eat, have parties, enjoy holidays, socialize with friends, and family, and live like a human being, because of the tyrannical lock down, and mask rules implemented by these two Demonrat stooges.
      Even Hell seams like a better place to live at the moment, than New York City.

    • @mysoncrumphaseveryinjury3853
      @mysoncrumphaseveryinjury3853 Před 3 lety +14

      Exchanging safety for coming back to the good old times... when this was one of the most dangerous cities in America. Someone's blindfolded by nostalgia big time.

  • @cpsmonroe1
    @cpsmonroe1 Před 4 lety +14

    Such good footage I can almost smell and taste the City.

  • @vinniecorleone62
    @vinniecorleone62 Před 5 lety +108

    I spent a lot of time there with my father on his business trips there in the late 60's & early 70's then, your video is the real deal.

    • @israelc1717
      @israelc1717 Před 4 lety +1

      vinniecorleone62 did you spend a lot off time in Time Square with all your quarters

    • @mamertomanglejr2249
      @mamertomanglejr2249 Před 4 lety +2

      @@israelc1717 I enjoyed your video. Grew up in jcnj. Path train 30 cents. Wtc just finished. Little italy Chinatown cool time.wiseguys with their brown leather 3/4 length. L.e.s. orchard rivington. Dope and firecrackers 8$ a mar. Times square show world. Went by myself @ 10 years old.best time of my life. I am a 1st generation filipino. Proud to american. Love usa. Peace. I wired at the Mudd club.

    • @if6was929
      @if6was929 Před 4 lety +1

      @Maw is Back You're so clever! o.0

    • @RafaelSantos-vd6be
      @RafaelSantos-vd6be Před 4 lety

      I TEMEMBER DA PART IN DEATH WISH MOVIE MOVIE THAT LAND DEVELOPER TELLS CHAR LES BRONSON LET ME KNOW WEN YOU GET TIRED OF LIVING IN DAT TOILET BOY I.PACK.MY.BAGS RITE NOW WAY TOO MUCH FILTH HAS CME TO DAMAGE DA FABRIC OF THIS TOWN.

    • @stateofmind4341
      @stateofmind4341 Před 4 lety

      @@mamertomanglejr2249 you're not philipino your a newyorker
      ✌🏽🇵🇷🇵🇭

  • @pr0ject25o1
    @pr0ject25o1 Před 4 lety +43

    Loved it. Had nothing, literally not even the shirt on my back but had REAL people. Do or die friends. That’s what made it great; the fact that even we had nothing (comparatively speaking) we’d all still give everything we had. We were together.

    • @caha9583
      @caha9583 Před 8 měsíci

      So when you lived in NYC you couldn´t even afford a shirt to put on? Sounds like a cliche to me.

  • @brianl8540
    @brianl8540 Před 4 lety +144

    Back when interesting poor people still lives in the city. It’s ALL Finance now, every neighborhood. People paying $3000/month to live in freaking RED HOOK. Yikes.
    New York is Squaresville now.
    Get out!

    • @RafaelSantos-vd6be
      @RafaelSantos-vd6be Před 4 lety +3

      Who DA HELL THOUGHT THESE CRUMMY RUN DOWN RAT ROACH INFESTED FILTH DA NICE COUNTRY PEOPLE WOULD WANT TO BE PAYING SO SO MUCH. TO RENT OR BUY TOP $ FOR THIS RAT.NEST.

    • @scholarlycat8180
      @scholarlycat8180 Před 4 lety +16

      Yeah NYC seemed like such a fun colorful place 45 years ago. Now it’s overrun by pretentious hipsters and cold blooded money-hungry business people. Strictly a place of finance now. Not the vibrant culturally rich city it once was.

    • @crisl9518
      @crisl9518 Před 4 lety +1

      @@scholarlycat8180 that's a bit of an exaggeration lol

    • @spensert4933
      @spensert4933 Před 4 lety +3

      It is a worldwide phenomena. What is next?

    • @elkabong6429
      @elkabong6429 Před 4 lety +10

      The two room flat I rented on East 14th Street in Manhattan in the 1970's for $200 and was only $400 when I moved out in 1992 now goes for $4500!! Who can afford that shit? Not me! I retired in Virginia, I couldn't retire in my own freaking city! Back then it was really true that 1/4 of my monthly salary was equal to my rent. Now? Fuhgeddaboutit!

  • @OnettBoyXD
    @OnettBoyXD Před 4 lety +327

    It looks like Gotham City in the new Joker movie.

    • @exequielmorancrowley6726
      @exequielmorancrowley6726 Před 4 lety +40

      For me Gotham is New york in the 70s, i was thinking the same when i was watching the movie haha

    • @Metalgearbro
      @Metalgearbro Před 4 lety +23

      According to the director of Joker, videos like this had a lot of inspiration for the movies atmosphere.

    • @polishherowitoldpilecki5521
      @polishherowitoldpilecki5521 Před 4 lety +25

      Astro Can’t believe they went back in time to film that movie.
      By the way, the original Batman authors confirmed that Gotham city was based of New York.
      And the Joker movie takes place somewhere between 1976 and 1980.
      During the 70s New York was going through Shit. The homicide rate was through the roof, youth gangs were taking over the streets and so were drugs, the city and the country was going through a recession and a gas crisis. The NYPD was notoriously corrupt aswell. So yea, real life Gotham city. Although New York made it through the 70s, Detroit did not.

    • @polishherowitoldpilecki5521
      @polishherowitoldpilecki5521 Před 4 lety +8

      Astro
      Here’s a documentary on the events that inspired Gotham city.
      m.czcams.com/video/rHXAYddPLsM/video.html

    • @RandomnessTube.
      @RandomnessTube. Před 4 lety +22

      Nothing sums up 70s new york city more than the movie taxi driver the joker was inspired by it.

  • @bennysmemestore2274
    @bennysmemestore2274 Před 4 lety +7

    I still live in the house I grew up in Williamsburg Brooklyn. My dad bought it for 2700 hundred dollars from the last Italian on the block. Loved playing skelly with all the kids in the neighborhood.

    • @Movieman1965
      @Movieman1965 Před rokem

      Skelly was the game! Did you use the coca cola glass bottle upper rim pieces or the cap itself with melted candle wax was in them?

  • @kevinshockey2765
    @kevinshockey2765 Před 2 lety +1

    Wow I love watching these old videos. Thank you so much

  • @laurallama73
    @laurallama73 Před 2 lety +2

    Couldn’t have picked a better song.🎶🎶❤️😎

  • @truthcrackers
    @truthcrackers Před 4 lety +4

    Great blast from the past thaks for posting.

  • @johnnydoubleu3656
    @johnnydoubleu3656 Před 4 lety +229

    Ahh yes, only American made cars and pay phones..

    • @philtripe
      @philtripe Před 4 lety +11

      boy do i remember...every time you made it somewhere you were elated if you made it without any car troubles

    • @marcchevalier3750
      @marcchevalier3750 Před 4 lety +2

      the bad old days filled with scumbags yes i am talking to that disgusting dumbfck generation (Baby boom / silent gen) shouldve been jailed / aborted a long time ago for ruining this once called a great country

    • @tacoconch7678
      @tacoconch7678 Před 4 lety +5

      Yeah, I can smell the fumes already!

    • @gregh7457
      @gregh7457 Před 4 lety +7

      @@marcchevalier3750 shuddup and get back to work. i've got a pension to collect and you're paying for it kid

    • @John_Rogers
      @John_Rogers Před 4 lety +2

      @@philtripe That's right and everyone back then was an amateur auto mechanic.

  • @margiesbeauty
    @margiesbeauty Před 2 lety +1

    Born and raised in New York City, 1973 Baby here. Looking at this video makes me think of how things were back then when it was a reason to live here but now, not sure anymore

  • @andreascool3041
    @andreascool3041 Před 3 lety +4

    Look how beautiful these classic cars then VS 2020 ugly dam cars

  • @brucebainmatunucksurfrat7911

    I miss the grit that New York had

    • @kcash6359
      @kcash6359 Před 4 lety +1

      I remember the sidewalks felt sticky by Times Square.

    • @mickroyster6442
      @mickroyster6442 Před 4 lety

      @@kcash6359 o.0

    • @Apefather
      @Apefather Před 3 lety

      Listen to a song about Brooklyn, New York in the 70's and 80's!czcams.com/video/vrQXnkPPDiM/video.html

  • @monnikhan1000
    @monnikhan1000 Před 2 lety +1

    That vintage vibe and simplicity I keep going 10 years back in NY and it looks so a surreal and better than the next 10 years. 2021 is truly a hell.

  • @DavidinSLO
    @DavidinSLO Před 4 lety +8

    "Clowns to the left, Jokers the right" --- nice choice of lyrics

  • @elgalan718
    @elgalan718 Před 3 lety +55

    Heeyyy those two guys in leather jackets approaching the corner at 1:37, they look just like Starsky and Hutch.

    • @gavinmcalpin9612
      @gavinmcalpin9612 Před 3 lety +1

      That’s funny

    • @IWAITEDDAYSTOGETKNOCKEDOUT
      @IWAITEDDAYSTOGETKNOCKEDOUT Před 2 lety +11

      The guy in the dark leather jacket was Tommy Desimone, he passed away in 1979. He always had two pistols with him.

    • @XxowendanxX
      @XxowendanxX Před 2 lety +1

      I hate to break this to you but those are two chicks. New York, where the men are men and so are half the women.

    • @royrogers3404
      @royrogers3404 Před 2 lety

      That was actually haldeman and ehrlicman incognito.

    • @XxowendanxX
      @XxowendanxX Před 2 lety

      @@IWAITEDDAYSTOGETKNOCKEDOUT he's in heaven now, telling the angels to go get their shine box

  • @wanderingwade8877
    @wanderingwade8877 Před 4 lety +10

    Is this Popeye Doyle and Serpico's New York?
    "Warriors! Come out and PLAYYYEEEAAAA!"

  • @admagnificat
    @admagnificat Před 4 lety

    Man -- thanks for putting together this song and video. It was a real tonic at the end of a tough day.

  • @dominiceugenio3694
    @dominiceugenio3694 Před 4 lety +28

    I'll take that NYC over this crap any day

    • @chrisbano9216
      @chrisbano9216 Před 4 lety +3

      Me too, I'll take NYC in the 80s And 90s anytime! I miss my Ray's Pizza, Davids Cookies, Shopping at Antique Boutique, riding the vandalized subway trains! Buying records at tower records on Broadway 4th Street, Renting videos at Kim's Video! Clubbing at the Tunnel, Limelight etc, Miss those time!!

    • @PickleRicksFATASSCOUSIN
      @PickleRicksFATASSCOUSIN Před 3 lety +3

      @Kahinur Nessa hipster...

    • @mysoncrumphaseveryinjury3853
      @mysoncrumphaseveryinjury3853 Před 3 lety

      Mhm. Y'all would have gone back to the Syrian warzone just for the sake of having fun like in the "good ole days".

    • @Apefather
      @Apefather Před 3 lety

      Listen to a song about Brooklyn, New York in the 70's and 80's!czcams.com/video/vrQXnkPPDiM/video.html

    • @dominiceugenio3694
      @dominiceugenio3694 Před 2 lety

      @Umb Ojust live in this overpriced overpopulated dump we are in now

  • @patton303
    @patton303 Před 3 lety +3

    Remember how cool we thought the future would be?
    We were wrong. And still no flying cars.

  • @justlookattheflowers4239
    @justlookattheflowers4239 Před 4 lety +26

    I managed to live there for a few wonderful years a few decades ago. Then the Twin Towers came down and the city changed for ever.

    • @vronica84
      @vronica84 Před 2 lety

      And the rest of the world followed.

  • @calrissianlando7792
    @calrissianlando7792 Před rokem +2

    THAT was New York, maigical, affordable, fun and wickedly diverse. Not the piece of junk you have now, man what a great time to be alive that was.

  • @canadianc420
    @canadianc420 Před 4 lety +17

    Never will be a new York like this again . The 80s were great too

    • @benjaminsmith2287
      @benjaminsmith2287 Před 4 lety

      The 80s was full of Yuppie values, greed is great mentality and clubs and galleries changing into trendy stores. There was also disco, if you liked that.

    • @canadianc420
      @canadianc420 Před 4 lety

      @@benjaminsmith2287 scrotum Bob!

    • @billbright100
      @billbright100 Před 4 lety +1

      @@benjaminsmith2287 disco was in the 70s.

    • @benjaminsmith2287
      @benjaminsmith2287 Před 4 lety +1

      @@billbright100 Yes, it gets blurred to me after a while. It kind of died out in the early 80s.

  • @NatJac-gg3mv
    @NatJac-gg3mv Před 4 lety +5

    Excellent video/film quality!!

  • @dmscholl4
    @dmscholl4 Před 4 lety +16

    It’s like a montage of the B roll of every Scorsese film.

    • @Apefather
      @Apefather Před 3 lety

      Listen to a song about Brooklyn, New York in the 70's and 80's!czcams.com/video/vrQXnkPPDiM/video.html

  • @lorenzodelre7001
    @lorenzodelre7001 Před 4 lety

    LOVED THIS VIDEO OF YOURS!! thx for sharing and very good job, who ever you are

  • @capriomrowkicz1751
    @capriomrowkicz1751 Před 2 lety +2

    Beautiful times, smartphones, PCs and other devices that destroy modern society did not exist. Beautiful times, especially in the USA!

  • @zoesdada8923
    @zoesdada8923 Před 4 lety +84

    Im from New Orleans. I've never been to New York but it seems to me that they've done the same thing to my city they did to New York. Sucked out the soul and flavor.

    • @AnnabelleJARankin
      @AnnabelleJARankin Před 4 lety +6

      I'm from the UK but I lived in NYC 1982 - 1984. I thought about taking a load of photos of it then, wish I had!

    • @if6was929
      @if6was929 Před 4 lety +3

      @@jaspjody-wb9ef It's an oasis for the rich, are you wealthy?

    • @mayaroberts4275
      @mayaroberts4275 Před 4 lety

      What are the biggest changes in N.O?

    • @citizenmope605
      @citizenmope605 Před 4 lety +2

      Zoes Dada The Illuminati eats souls and hates flavor. Bad for business.

    • @citizenmope605
      @citizenmope605 Před 4 lety +2

      Link Age Uhhhh 🙄 No, I don’t. And I can’t tell if you’re attempting a joke or making a serious attempt at a conversation. Everyone who is in the know, knows that the Illuminati is a hodgepodge of leftist views, tempered by right-wing traditions. Democratic ideology and Republican virtue.

  • @BaltimoreAndOhioRR
    @BaltimoreAndOhioRR Před 4 lety +27

    This was neat to watch! 🏙

  • @ozdiaz1048
    @ozdiaz1048 Před 2 lety +1

    What a beautiful time era all American car's on the road and just the look of things they look simple and nice .

  • @LeopoldMaysonet
    @LeopoldMaysonet Před 4 lety +2

    NYC born and raised 1970-80 , it was a learning experience for me! Learned how to fight in first grade! Born in Concourse Bronx, lived in Yorkville (Manhattan) '72-75 and moved to east Harlem, 112th/ Madison Ave. (Taft houses) '75-80 . Definitely a different place and time..

  • @jodydavis161
    @jodydavis161 Před 4 lety +7

    Wow i seen a Vaga just love the the 1970s i was a young kid oh how miss it ! The vans the trucks and cars Wow

    • @marklennox2151
      @marklennox2151 Před 4 lety

      ....you're right JD...I'm currently looking for a Ford van and I see from this footage how little they've changed in basic design since then...

  • @peterlazaridis1991
    @peterlazaridis1991 Před 4 lety +5

    The amazing and great memories of what NY was and will never be again!

  • @mikestefka6668
    @mikestefka6668 Před rokem +1

    Man I miss the 70's, the music, the cars, the carefree vibe.

  • @hectorlopez1069
    @hectorlopez1069 Před 2 lety +1

    I like those old 70s cars. They were really beautiful.

  • @robertbrindamour8309
    @robertbrindamour8309 Před 2 lety +3

    Thank you for this mini-documentary.A reminder of a not so far era.

  • @haeleth7218
    @haeleth7218 Před 4 lety +251

    Back when cars in America actually looked American.

    • @martinliehs2513
      @martinliehs2513 Před 4 lety +8

      First thing I noticed was that there was not a single foreign car in that clip ( as far as I could see). I don't think that Hyundai existed as a carmaker in its home country of Korea in the mid 70s.

    • @philtripe
      @philtripe Před 4 lety +3

      dirty...graffiti everywhere...this is the worlds richest nation? its gotten nothing but dirtier and more embarrassing since then

    • @mariogiresi6792
      @mariogiresi6792 Před 4 lety +5

      Haeleth 72 And Americans were actually Americans too. We had the whole country to ourselves and had no idea of how good we had it. Now we are forced to share everything that’s ours with Central America, South America, Africa, and Asia and are told by our politicians to shut up and take a back seat. They favor them over us.

    • @elizandrolopez6295
      @elizandrolopez6295 Před 4 lety +5

      Exactly my man!! Not like today who the streets are full of japanese 1.0 liter junk😤, this is the way people today support what ur country produce ooo man🙄

    • @javierbaron1856
      @javierbaron1856 Před 4 lety +5

      Hey.... was that a 1973 AMC Gremlin ??? Yeah .. that green ugly thing.

  • @corvetcoyote443
    @corvetcoyote443 Před 2 lety +2

    The music, the traffic, perfect video,the Ford Fairmont unmarked police car 2:00 must've been filmed around 1978.

    • @deuteriummeridian8998
      @deuteriummeridian8998 Před 2 lety +1

      Agree, and there were two 1977ish B-body Chevrolet taxis also, outnumbered by the Checker cabs. Am no New Yorker, but I remember when the lanes approaching intersections were all stained with oil and other fluid leaks from vehicles waiting at the lights or at stop signs. That's been gone for a long time now.

  • @saniad2128
    @saniad2128 Před 4 lety +1

    Авто ,,, просто шедевры искусства!!!!! Жаль что сейчас таких не делают.

  • @Numantino312
    @Numantino312 Před 4 lety +23

    paradise on earth when you're fifteen; hell on earth when you're fifty

    •  Před 4 lety +1

      Wrong

    • @Numantino312
      @Numantino312 Před 4 lety +1

      @James Vergil when you're fifteen, (unless you've expensive tastes, habits, or a girl...) you don't really need money. you can be punk rock obnoxious as you happily litter, throw water balloons out window at people on sidewalk, write graffiti, skip school, and basically tell world to fuck off.
      at fifty, you DO need money, city is hella stressful being kept awake at night by creeps in building, trying to get to work on time on subway, and, if you're decent parent, worrying about own kids in such an environment. unless adult has piles of money (anywhere), they are in less position to tell world to fuck off

  • @perrysar5954
    @perrysar5954 Před 4 lety +9

    I saw at the end a 1975 AMC Red Pacer,so this is definetly 75 and on,back when the city was for real New Yorkers who lived and breathed the city.Times Square now is like going to Disneyland,I want the low down dirty funky NY!

    • @awakendify
      @awakendify Před 2 lety

      That car the looks like a pushed in station wagon

    • @FatBichon
      @FatBichon Před 2 lety

      Yessssss AMC PACER at 3:07. Clip must be ‘75 or later since the Pacer was introduced on March 1, 1975

  • @eddiegonzalez6824
    @eddiegonzalez6824 Před 4 lety +1

    This makes me wanna cry. My childhood and the world I knew a 5 minute youtube video.

  • @yvettek1585
    @yvettek1585 Před 4 lety +1

    Those days need to come back was the best ever👍👍👍✌❤

  • @rick3747
    @rick3747 Před 4 lety +7

    Remember when one could get a Bearded Clam with ease in the 1970s?
    Miss those days.

  • @edwardvelez6764
    @edwardvelez6764 Před 4 lety +5

    Wow. Thank you so......much. My father had a grocer store in East New York and Ralph Ave. And also St. John Place and Ralph late 60's and 70's. Great times. I am retired from the Air force and Post Office. I was born in Brooklyn 1951. I still love New York. Thank you

  • @mias4696
    @mias4696 Před 4 lety +2

    I'm an old soul and love New York 70s culture and life.. Hot summers ...fire hydrant sprinklers and sitting on a stoop

    • @carlostorres4662
      @carlostorres4662 Před 4 měsíci

      Manhattan,105 Columbus,ave Westside.I was 12 in
      the 1976 blackout.
      amazing days.

  • @pontiacreddz4021
    @pontiacreddz4021 Před 4 lety

    Loved seeing all the old cars vans and trucks

  • @steebzs
    @steebzs Před 4 lety +31

    Back in the days all the cars looked like pieces of art.

    • @christinacascadilla4473
      @christinacascadilla4473 Před 4 lety +6

      Stefan Pets: The car is back then were made to rust out within three years. It was a joy. I can get my Toyota up to 90 miles an hour now and it doesn’t feel any different from 60 miles an hour. If you try to go 90 with the car in the 1970s it would drift off the road.

    • @steebzs
      @steebzs Před 4 lety +3

      @japanwatchconnection thats weird..im from europe but everyday i see some 30 or 40 year old american cars driving around here. ( i notice because im a fan) probably the owners are people who admire those cars and for hobby. 20 year old japanese cars you see rarely. They get replaced after that period.

    • @Dilomski
      @Dilomski Před 4 lety +1

      @japanwatchconnection Jeep Cherokee XJ, Chevy K5 Blazer, Buick Grand National, they were junk too?

    • @Dilomski
      @Dilomski Před 4 lety +1

      japanwatchconnection Sad to hear that, I always admired the classic american cars. I guess for us, who doesnt live or lived in USA, things were made more exotic through the movies.

    • @steebzs
      @steebzs Před 4 lety

      @japanwatchconnection ford mustang? Looked like a strong car..

  • @lorenzor4024
    @lorenzor4024 Před 4 lety +4

    Cars in the 1960s and 1970s looked much more elegant than the plastic vehicles we see today. I experienced the 1970s just for a couple of months but I'd like to get back to those years and buy a beautiful technology-free car for a reasonable price.

    • @5Giants5
      @5Giants5 Před rokem +2

      Most fascinating are the Checker Cabs, they look straight out of the 1950s but are all new cabs, they just never changed their design.

    • @lorenzor4024
      @lorenzor4024 Před rokem +1

      @@5Giants5 Yes, I totally agree!👍

    • @armorpro573
      @armorpro573 Před 6 měsíci

      @@lorenzor4024 What's your favorite vehicle?

    • @lorenzor4024
      @lorenzor4024 Před 6 měsíci

      @@armorpro573 I'm not a car expert actually, so I can't recall the name of any specific vehicle. All I can say is that I like every single car shown in the video much more than any modern car you can see today.

    • @armorpro573
      @armorpro573 Před 6 měsíci +1

      @@lorenzor4024 Ok

  • @pMcgov56
    @pMcgov56 Před 4 lety +2

    Like a walk down memory lane, cool video

  • @jamessimpson3088
    @jamessimpson3088 Před rokem

    Memories looking back with love for my city god bless NYC

  • @excelerater
    @excelerater Před 4 lety +18

    when MOM and POP could open a business and make a living in NYC and before the corporations ruined NYC

  • @cerliezio
    @cerliezio Před 4 lety +4

    I miss that New York and the I love New York jingle Remember? But how filthy it was!!!!

  • @E180TEKNO
    @E180TEKNO Před 3 lety +2

    the NYC of years 60s/70s was a charm unique comparated to today

  • @marcusfuckers7125
    @marcusfuckers7125 Před 2 lety +1

    Beautiful cities of New York 🇺🇲🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿

  • @sfogliatelle
    @sfogliatelle Před 4 lety +12

    I can smell the city here! This was my time, both of my parents were alive and I was a child. One of my fondest memories was them picking me up from the babysitters after a night out and we would stop at the all night bagel place on the way home. It was late night and the red neon “HOT BAGELS AND BIALYS” sign would hypnotize me from my dozing in the back seat of my parents huge American car which was eventually stolen (nyc, early 70s this was common). I probably didn’t have a seatbelt on and there was no car seat. My father would get a bag of fresh bagels and bialys for breakfast the next day and a snack before bed (no Atkins, no Keto... People weren't afraid of carbs and there was a lot less obesity) . The hot bag and delicious smell was so tempting, bialys are still one of my favorite foods on earth. I am Italian but as Sebastian Maniscalco once said Jews and Italians.....same corporation, different division 🤣 I was exposed to so many things here at that time that I never would have seen or tried anywhere else in this country. I miss this nyc.

  • @raygordonteacheschess5501

    Back when safe spaces meant not being robbed, shot, stabbed, or killed.

  • @gli7utubeo
    @gli7utubeo Před 4 lety

    Great video. Thanks.

  • @kevp9601
    @kevp9601 Před rokem +2

    New York City (1970s Version), We Will Never Forget You.

  • @ulovetashi
    @ulovetashi Před 4 lety +30

    The first part of this video was filmed on Third avenue between 75th street and 77th street. McCabes liquor store is still there on the corner but I remember the owner saying they were going to relocate, maybe because the rent is too high or they plan on knocking some buildings down on that street, not for sure of the reason. 1313 third avenue looks different now. In this video it was a bar and grill, today it's the Citarella Gourmet Market. This area is on the east side, (upper east side) and to be honest that area or that strip is changing rapidly. A lot of buildings are being knocked down and new ones are going up unfortunately.

    • @ojromero101
      @ojromero101 Před 4 lety +3

      Gentrification

    • @thecardsaysmoops3
      @thecardsaysmoops3 Před 4 lety +4

      Also see Ruppert Brewery Urban Renewal which opened in 1975 as Ruppert Towers on 3rd Avenue between 90th and 92nd. Colonel Ruppert owned the Yankees in the 20's and engineered the purchase of Babe Ruth from the Red Sox.

    • @cukikutya3716
      @cukikutya3716 Před 4 lety +1

      beautiful giirl

    • @fanpage3631
      @fanpage3631 Před 4 lety +3

      Third avenue 76-77 all the stores got knocked down bout a couple of months ago

    • @ulovetashi
      @ulovetashi Před 4 lety +2

      @@fanpage3631 That's sad but we seen it coming unfortunately. Thanks for the update, I appreciate it.