Wyatt Earp's Nephew, Virgil Earp, Talks About the Wild West - Enhanced Video and Audio [60 fps]

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  • čas přidán 20. 05. 2022
  • My new history channel "The History Zone"
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    Virgil Edwin Earp (April 19, 1879 - November 20 1959) was the son of Newton Jasper Earp, Wyatt Earp's half-brother. Newton and Wyatt had the same father, Nicholas Porter Earp (September 6, 1813 - February 12, 1907). Born in Tombstone, Arizona in 1879, Virgil learned the ways of the Wild West quickly. By the time he was 18 years old in 1897, he was the Sheriff of Paradise Valley, Nevada. He eventually moved to Sacramento, California in 1909. In 1918, Virgil listed on his WWI draft registration card that he worked as a collector and solicitor for the San Francisco Chronicle. In 1943, he listed on his WWII draft registration card that he worked at the Sacramento Air Depot, McClellan Field, Sacramento, California. This game show was called "The $64,000 Question" and aired in 1958.
    For this video, I colorized it using AI optimization software, interpolated it to 60 frames/second, speed-adjusted it and refined it with De Blur, Sharpness and Stabilization. For the audio, I remastered it using noise gate, compression, loudness normalization, EQ and a Limiter.
    This video is made for educational purposes for fair use under section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976.
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Komentáře • 9K

  • @jcnunny
    @jcnunny Před rokem +4661

    I went to lunch with my Grandma in 2000 when she was 95, and asked her what it was like to see so many changes in the world.
    From horse and carriage to the space shuttle program, she saw so much.
    She looked around and said she didn't know why she was still here, as her husband, siblings, and friends had all passed, and she was losing her eyesight.
    I said "Grandma, you're alive today to buy my lunch!".
    She leaned across the booth and punched me in the arm and laughed.
    She lived to be 101, and I miss her.

    • @Dwightaroundyolips
      @Dwightaroundyolips Před rokem +109

      That's awesome

    • @kingmichaelthelastwarrior
      @kingmichaelthelastwarrior Před rokem +79

      Sweet story

    • @kendaullary4102
      @kendaullary4102 Před rokem +53

      I can’t love this enough

    • @johncastino2730
      @johncastino2730 Před rokem +53

      You are a good grandson

    • @matthornton44
      @matthornton44 Před rokem +81

      Mine said the same thing when I asked her, didn't know why she was still here. She got to 97 and still lived on her own/ She used to say, 'you're going to have to shoot me', I responded, 'what out of a cannon?'
      If she had been cremated I would have but she is buried with my Grand father and their baby son.

  • @jwill5223
    @jwill5223 Před 2 lety +10611

    This guy was born almost 150 years ago and we get to watch video of him. What a time to be alive

    • @axa.axa.
      @axa.axa. Před 2 lety +165

      The time would be more impressive 1000 years from now

    • @michaelkelemen5567
      @michaelkelemen5567 Před rokem +106

      That is something but, in fact, there are lots of people around today - baby boomers - who were alive when this show was broadcast. It was only 64 years ago.

    • @brianmatthews4323
      @brianmatthews4323 Před rokem +97

      @@michaelkelemen5567 When I think I was born just 100 years after the Civil War it just makes me feel old. And I'm only 57.

    • @lonetardigrade
      @lonetardigrade Před rokem +22

      @@brianmatthews4323 that's because you are old and that time-frame shows that. Not in the range of 70-80 years old but you are an older man Brian. Hope that's a good thing for you instead of bittersweet and melancholic like I hear it is for many.

    • @hmq9052
      @hmq9052 Před rokem +33

      I think you'd have lived a richer life then, living life, rather than watching about lives lived.

  • @curly874
    @curly874 Před rokem +355

    I am just approaching 70 and so much has changed in my lifetime
    1. We had a party-line telephone with about a dozen other farmers when I grew up. You had to carefully lift the receiver and listen for the dial tone, if someone was talking then you hung up very quickly.
    2. We got a TV when I was about 8 of 9 years old. Big black-white box TV. There were three television stations back then and they went off the air at midnight.
    3. We used to sit out on the porch and listen to the radio in the evenings, Dick Tracey, The Shadow, Jackie Gleason and major league baseball games. Dad used to go up on the roof and adjust the antenna when the wind blew hard.
    4. We got three pair of pants and three shirts for school every year from the Sears & Roebuck catalog, also six underwear and socks and immediately got out of your school clothes when you got home from school. Mom used to use iron on patches when we tore our pants at the knees.
    5. I remember eating out at a restaurant twice before I got to High School age.
    6. I had 55 cousins growing up. Farmers had lots of kids, and lots of kids passed away from accidents and ailments. My older brother drowned at 9 years old. There are five of us kids left, mom is now 89 and still active.
    7. We were allowed one hour of TV a day and two on the weekend. Unless it was a sports game, then we could finish the show.
    8. Dad and several uncles added a bathroom to my grandma's home when I was about six years old. Dad was so proud to help his mother.
    9. One of my first memories was pulling weeds in our 1/2 acre garden. I was so proud when mom said I was big enough to snap green beans for canning. Mom canned most of our food for the winter. She made bread about every five days or so.
    10. Mom used cloth diapers for all six kids. She used to originally wash them out in the toilet, then the washing machine, then hang them on the clothes line to dry. She had a washing machine with a ringer to get the moisture out of the clothes.
    11. I remember opening sluice gates when we had irrigation water twice a week; sometimes at 2:30 AM in the morning. Irrigation water was vital to farming. The county had ditch riders and they carried pistols to enforce irrigation times between the farmers.
    12. I remember pushing cow manure to the trough in grandpa's barn so it could be washed outside and digging the six inches of sand from ditches every year before I started school. School used to close for two weeks in the last of September for potato harvest, so that us farm kids could help with the harvest.
    So many memories of times gone by. A person's word meant everything back then. No one talked back to parents then, you would get knocked down and miss supper for that sort of thing.

    • @222ableVelo
      @222ableVelo Před rokem +40

      That is fascinating. Thank you for sharing. That is real history.

    • @kristenkaz3080
      @kristenkaz3080 Před rokem +22

      There’s a book there. You should be a storyteller for us all.

    • @azurephoenix9546
      @azurephoenix9546 Před rokem +12

      @Kristen Kaz 100%! Definitely a good book in there!

    • @redssr1193
      @redssr1193 Před rokem +30

      As a farm kid, now 76, I share many of those same memories. Times were hard. For entertainment, the neighbors would come to the house and bring their instruments and have jam sessions. My dad was a drummer and fiddle player and my mom played the piano. Mom sewed clothes for my brothers out of my dad’s old suits and she sewed dresses for us girls out of feed sacks that were colorful at that time. Hard times but, looking back, good times, as well.

    • @curly874
      @curly874 Před rokem +13

      @@redssr1193 That was a very good way to grow up.
      Lots of fun and responsibility
      - The retire accountant

  • @mikethemonsta15
    @mikethemonsta15 Před rokem +102

    This guy answered way harder questions than any game show host of our day, well deserved money

    • @cockeyedoptimista
      @cockeyedoptimista Před rokem

      Ah, spoiled the ending! I shouldn't look at comments b4 it's done.

    • @danontheair
      @danontheair Před rokem +3

      I get the feeling it’s all rigged though

    • @cockeyedoptimista
      @cockeyedoptimista Před rokem

      @@danontheair One wonders. But it could be real. The wife looks genuinely hopeful/surprised.. It looks real, it'd just hard to believe. But why not? He had years of experience as the sole sheriff, or whatever it was. Good question though. Who knows?

    • @Chuck--
      @Chuck-- Před 5 měsíci +2

      The question about the brands almost seemed unfair but he got them right. Who today would know the answers?

  • @lelandlewis7207
    @lelandlewis7207 Před 2 lety +5111

    What is cool about this is that he didn't learn all that, he lived it.

    • @Meekerextreme
      @Meekerextreme Před 2 lety +86

      Living it is apart of learning too. But yeah I get what you mean.

    • @YourRoyalMajesty.
      @YourRoyalMajesty. Před 2 lety +57

      Some of it was from before he was born as well! 😊

    • @RM360CR
      @RM360CR Před 2 lety +2

      what is weird here is that people often uses the term wild west when they refer to violent crime mass shooting today when in reality today society is vastly more violent and uncivilized than those days it seems from what he said..... so the real wild west is today

    • @jimwednt1229
      @jimwednt1229 Před 2 lety +37

      Oh, he learned it alright . On the job education.

    • @harryteevee9569
      @harryteevee9569 Před 2 lety

      Leland... allegedly, if the history is true. You know J James only targeted the criminal banksters etc. that funded the civil war, like a robin hood. But the spin is real and this shows exactly how the propaganda was perpetrated. thru a fancy new tech, the television.. Bells and whistles and you don't question the facts...easy digested propaganda

  • @CurtisEWipe
    @CurtisEWipe Před rokem +1956

    My great grandmother was born 1899 and died 2000......she literally lived throughout the whole 1900's... amazing.

    • @trscsaeg
      @trscsaeg Před rokem +90

      That’s fucking crazy and awesome

    • @chidoquest8759
      @chidoquest8759 Před rokem +89

      My great grandma was born right at the turn of the century, died in 1993 when I was 20 years old. I knew her very well. She was the last child of a large family and some of her siblings were 20 years older than her. Her dad was born in 1850 and she had uncles who fought in the Civil War. She literally may have had a conversation with her dad that included the phrase, "when I was a teenager during the Civil War", blows my mind to know that I knew someone who knew people in the Civil War.

    • @CurtisEWipe
      @CurtisEWipe Před rokem +12

      @@chidoquest8759 it's insane. Crazy to think about...

    • @sweetroll1723
      @sweetroll1723 Před rokem +12

      There was a short story we read in middle school of a great grandma like that. It was called the three century woman.

    • @joe1972
      @joe1972 Před rokem +17

      That's amazing. My great-grandmother was born the same year 1899. She lived a long life but not as long as yours. I often wondered what she was doing at various times during her life like ww1, Spanish flu, ww2 etc. Amazing yours lived every year of the 1900s as you said.

  • @imonit1177
    @imonit1177 Před rokem +43

    He carried himself with more dignity over 10 minutes then most men have their entire life today. A different time, a different breed.

  • @jamfan7937
    @jamfan7937 Před rokem +105

    I can't imagine with our 4 second attention spans these days any of us can retain information as well as this old man!

    • @eluminaryxarrais7735
      @eluminaryxarrais7735 Před rokem +5

      I wouldn't be too sure of that for this particular show it ended up being canceled over a scandal of it giving it to contestants the answers. They may have done so with him since he was a likeable entertaining guy and they wanted to keep him on.
      Fun fact it was also the basis of Jeopardy giving answers to the contestants and then they have to supply the question

    • @diceymaan
      @diceymaan Před rokem +6

      Don't believe all you read in the tabloids. The actual attention span of an average adult is 36 - 54 minutes. Attention is not one measurement, it's divided into three. The sustained, selective, and divided attention. The problem with the fact that we have so many things competing to take our attention in the digital world, is that our brain struggles to decide what to give sustained and selective attention to. But in a setting like this, unless you have add, you'd have the same attention span as people before us.

    • @arthurmorgan2026
      @arthurmorgan2026 Před rokem

      @@diceymaan exactly!!! Anyways what were we talking about

    • @salazam
      @salazam Před rokem +3

      Don't believe anything you read on the internet either. One's attention span is entirely and completely relative to how interesting he finds the subject. I can spend 3 hours reading a book on WW2 history and it feels as though only 5 seconds has passed. Try to get me to study the taxonomical classification of deciduous trees and I'm blanking out after 30 seconds.

  • @josemartin1727
    @josemartin1727 Před 2 lety +3583

    The fact that this man was born 14 years after the Civil War and to still have the razor sharp mental acuteness that he displayed at the age of 79 in this historic remastered footage was incredible to watch.

    • @ChiralSpirals
      @ChiralSpirals Před 2 lety +328

      meanwhile I could name a certain 79 year old who can't stay on top a bike, let alone string together one coherent sentence....

    • @jjhack3r
      @jjhack3r Před 2 lety +189

      It’s amazing what a lack of technology and synthetic chemicals in your body can do to keep you sane.

    • @jerkyboy8897
      @jerkyboy8897 Před 2 lety +28

      @@ChiralSpirals ooooh bazinga

    • @josemartin1727
      @josemartin1727 Před 2 lety +18

      @@ChiralSpirals Lmao 🤣

    • @thechosen254
      @thechosen254 Před 2 lety +17

      @@jjhack3r 💯

  • @Justafeller
    @Justafeller Před rokem +1761

    I've never heard a single question turn in to so many questions. I thought he'd never end. That's hilarious. 😂

    • @derschnuff8819
      @derschnuff8819 Před rokem +110

      yeah, you have to answer the next question for the 32.000 $....Reads a bunch of completley different questions in a row. I This dude had to know more things just for one step up, than todays gameshow winners for an entire match.

    • @kaltaron1284
      @kaltaron1284 Před rokem +48

      I was wondering about that as well. Would have been even more hilarious if he started every additional question with "But wait, there's more..."

    • @ajolillen
      @ajolillen Před rokem +26

      Really, like... One question at a time, would make more sense...?

    • @zolo49noname45
      @zolo49noname45 Před rokem +75

      I was starting to think poor Virgil would die of old age before all the questions even got asked.

    • @DennisTedder-wj5ln
      @DennisTedder-wj5ln Před rokem +1

      I got lost!

  • @peterturner5618
    @peterturner5618 Před rokem +33

    Virgil deserved 64 million. He answered a lot more than one question!

  • @kellyhollywood5036
    @kellyhollywood5036 Před rokem +106

    This guy is a gem, his time came a long time ago but I feel like I got to meet him. Thanks CZcams

  • @williamrawls4680
    @williamrawls4680 Před 2 lety +2356

    Legend has it, he's still reading the question today

    • @tezhug1890
      @tezhug1890 Před 2 lety +20

      lol very good

    • @emdee7744
      @emdee7744 Před 2 lety +156

      Good grief!! The QUESTION has a gazillion parts. That isn't a question, it's an essay test!!

    • @MasterTiarnan
      @MasterTiarnan Před 2 lety +12

      OMG thats good, I liaghed so hard I hurt my rib LOL

    • @regisidec5478
      @regisidec5478 Před 2 lety +3

      and he is still more relevant than you will ever be 😂👊🏼

    • @TheWillimusin
      @TheWillimusin Před 2 lety +66

      @@regisidec5478 Cringe reply bro

  • @Gmtar
    @Gmtar Před rokem +1183

    People of this mans era are noticeably different to people today. He appears very stoic and direct. No nonsense, someone that could be relied upon thoroughly and totally honest.

    • @stevencoardvenice
      @stevencoardvenice Před rokem +101

      You probably didnt last long back then if you had a bad reputation

    • @thomass7140
      @thomass7140 Před rokem +67

      Not sure you can use an Earp as a reference point for the common man. Built different.

    • @oscarilp
      @oscarilp Před rokem +4

      @@stevencoardvenice Most probably

    • @electricdreamer
      @electricdreamer Před rokem +6

      You must be from California.

    • @AD-kv9kj
      @AD-kv9kj Před rokem +65

      You have literally no idea what this man might have done and to whom in his life. You do know the sorts of things that were considered normal back then, right? Often involving kids too. Idealizing complete strangers after merely seeing them present themselves for a few minutes on a tv show 🙄

  • @scottcupp8129
    @scottcupp8129 Před rokem +327

    Could you IMAGINE going back in time and talking to that man, or Wyatt Earp? They were living story books. This is the next best thing. Amazing!!

    • @derek_3054
      @derek_3054 Před rokem

      Was he the guy who saw Lincoln get shot in 1865?

    • @AceGoodheart
      @AceGoodheart Před rokem +8

      Could you imagine the Earps being here in today's America? I'm sure they'd say what happened to this country.

    • @nooooo7573
      @nooooo7573 Před rokem +2

      @@AceGoodheart They’d probably die again of a heart attack! With all this lawlessness going on.

    • @haunterdragon4580
      @haunterdragon4580 Před rokem +2

      Would be terrifying to see them react to the state of the world now

    • @AceGoodheart
      @AceGoodheart Před rokem +5

      @@haunterdragon4580 The FBI would arrest them and call them extremist.

  • @oliphauntsneverlie6227
    @oliphauntsneverlie6227 Před rokem +618

    Around ~80 years old and his mind is still sharp as a tack and physically fit. Impressive.

    • @pepsiccolausa8857
      @pepsiccolausa8857 Před rokem +9

      Yes
      Also Biden is 79
      And trump is 76
      The two oldest to be president after Ronald Reagan

    • @kris856
      @kris856 Před rokem

      no BS food available then - which purpose is solely to keep you alive but sick, to sponsor big pharma.... no BS TV shows to make you dumb, just books of wise men, no BS biography of music stars, who at his times were there ONLY to keep you eintertained, and nowadays they claim to be better than you, know more than you do and show you the direction of your life...
      During his time honesty and honor were words which meant sth, now most of the young guys don't even know how to spell these, not mentioning to understand the meaning or comprehend the significancy of these virtues in the life.

    • @integrityminded1983
      @integrityminded1983 Před rokem +47

      He wasn't raised on processed foods, nor has he spent hours in front of a computer or playing video games

    • @classact9144
      @classact9144 Před rokem

      @@integrityminded1983nor was he fed pills by the pharmaceutical mafia

    • @joebowl8315
      @joebowl8315 Před rokem +29

      Video games aren't bad, anything can be abused, but I get your point.
      You're spot on about the diet though.
      There was no bs when it came to food.
      Everything was organic, for better or sometimes worse

  • @ZENMASTERME1
    @ZENMASTERME1 Před 2 lety +1864

    I knew my great grandmother pretty well as a child, she was born in 1879, and died in 1979. I remember thinking, in her lifetime there was no refrigeration, cars, airplanes, electricity, antibiotics or even radios. But she got to witness all that and more. I asked her what was the strangest thing she’s ever seen in her lifetime, her reply was, “we landed a man on the moon.”

    • @michaelcorbidge7914
      @michaelcorbidge7914 Před 2 lety +133

      I still marvel at this digital device in my hand with a screen giving better and sharper picture than the old TVs . And it's also a calculator, language translator , camera, phone, navigator , torch .............

    • @armyvet8279
      @armyvet8279 Před 2 lety +205

      NOBODY has EVER landed on the moon. It's impossible.

    • @haroldhumerickhouse8731
      @haroldhumerickhouse8731 Před 2 lety +25

      @@michaelcorbidge7914
      It’s absolutely amazing isn’t it! I’m 70 years old and I can only imagine the wonder it is to 80 and 90 yr olds.

    • @harryteevee9569
      @harryteevee9569 Před 2 lety

      Oh man, you believe that fat lie? How did they get through the van allen belt? the moon landing is a grift, = theft of amercan's wealth by the military industrial complex. just like the coof wars.

    • @themotiondoctor
      @themotiondoctor Před 2 lety +10

      OTOH, you’ve seen as much of a paradigm shift in your lifetime. Maybe more.

  • @waltermurch5570
    @waltermurch5570 Před rokem +11

    My grandmother was born in 1875 and died in 1976. She was born before sound recording, movies, light bulbs, electric motors, airplanes, cars, telephones, rockets, computers, and men on the moon. When she was 99, I asked her what invention made the greatest impression on her. She answered: hot water out of a tap in the home. When she was born, water (cold water) came from a pump outside the house. When you wanted it hot, you had to pump it, bring it into the house, light a fire in the wood stove, wait for an hour (at least) until it warmed up.

    • @dorkydragon-
      @dorkydragon- Před měsícem

      I think your story will stick with me forever. Thank you so much for sharing it!

  • @squidward66
    @squidward66 Před rokem +11

    He speaks so much better than us modern "advanced" people. Much admiration for this man, and for America of the past!

  • @jbeard82
    @jbeard82 Před 2 lety +11969

    How did one question turn into 100 questions?

    • @stephenfiore9960
      @stephenfiore9960 Před 2 lety +334

      …good catch

    • @cwe1923
      @cwe1923 Před 2 lety +682

      back then they were not going to give away 32 grand which was a lot of money just for answering 1 question

    • @zyxwut321
      @zyxwut321 Před 2 lety +540

      @@cwe1923 Yeah, $32K back then would probably be more like $320K today.

    • @abajaj1510
      @abajaj1510 Před 2 lety +1099

      They had longer attention span than folks today…..

    • @txhunter144
      @txhunter144 Před 2 lety +351

      @@zyxwut321 That’s very accurate. But at the current inflation rate I think by next week it will be double that! lol

  • @alexball2446
    @alexball2446 Před rokem +326

    My super great grandpa was born in 1861 and died in 1958, nearly aged 100. To think that he was alive for the Civil War and both World Wars is astounding

    • @svMazy
      @svMazy Před rokem +12

      That's wild as hell to think about

    • @voldemort008
      @voldemort008 Před rokem +25

      Even more crazy is the fact he wouldn’t have had to fight in any of them due to age lol.

    • @maryjanedavidson2804
      @maryjanedavidson2804 Před rokem +13

      My grandfather was born in the 1880's and passed in 1981, my dad was born in 1918 I wish I had paid closer attention to their stories. I am a Mennonite Canadian and one story that always got me was when my dad would tell the story of how his dad first lived in a "Soddy". For those who don't know a Soddy is a sod house, think of an Igloo but instead of blocks of snow it is blocks of dirt and sod and built part way under ground. They immigrated from Prussia, fleeing religious persecution at the time and moved to Manitoba, Canada...now imagine living in a Soddy with the temps at -40 in the winter!!! Oh and they had to make a soddy because there wasn't enough or any trees in the area at the time.

    • @svMazy
      @svMazy Před rokem +1

      @@maryjanedavidson2804 wow that's incredible!

    • @GamingAmbienceLive
      @GamingAmbienceLive Před rokem +3

      scary that all he knew during his life was war war war, whereas for our generation its all lgbt and racism, and only now we have war in ukraine thats super conserning

  • @cmarbormaster
    @cmarbormaster Před rokem +12

    What a class man. He definitely has the presence of a sheriff.

  • @RAWTEN
    @RAWTEN Před rokem +24

    Despite the modern day chaos, we live in pretty amazing times to be able to watch this man on camera.

  • @MH3GL
    @MH3GL Před 2 lety +1248

    Listening to him say "people were more honest then" hits home... Hard.

    • @wiscgaloot
      @wiscgaloot Před 2 lety +25

      Wyatt was the opposite of honest. For $1k he threw a boxing match when acting as referee.

    • @AnAdorableWombat
      @AnAdorableWombat Před 2 lety +33

      @@wiscgaloot that's just boxing politics. That doesn't mean he wasn't honest lmao

    • @wiscgaloot
      @wiscgaloot Před 2 lety +45

      @@AnAdorableWombat Um, no, it completely ruined his reputation for the rest of his life, and it is utterly dishonest. Good job proving your complete lack of any ethics whatsoever. What are you, 12?

    • @AnAdorableWombat
      @AnAdorableWombat Před 2 lety +53

      @@wiscgaloot no bunt. I'm not 12 and why are you so mad? Are you over 200 years old and bitter because my opinion differs from yours? Sir, seek help. I don't care about this mess. I just commented🤣🤣🤣🤣

    • @wiscgaloot
      @wiscgaloot Před 2 lety +14

      @@AnAdorableWombat ah, if you aren't 12, then it is clear you rode the short bus.

  • @oldjunkvet
    @oldjunkvet Před 2 lety +2182

    I love how understated, and matter-of-fact people were in those days. Very dry, serious, and learned.
    We could still learn a lot of lessons from those earlier generations if we chose to.

    • @shaffer4220
      @shaffer4220 Před 2 lety +196

      As a boomer in WI we grew up learning with this character style in many (not all) of our classrooms. Strong, up front, wisdom telling, holding true to word, dedicated & focused. They did not mince words, they taught with clarity. Yes, it was somewhat dry and monotone but there was an undeniable forward momentum of learning. Today, it is as though we dance around the center point of truthfulness.

    • @californiaplant-basedeater2761
      @californiaplant-basedeater2761 Před 2 lety +25

      The writing in books was often that way too. Great stuff.

    • @Kingx90
      @Kingx90 Před 2 lety +109

      I believe this forwardness died with the WWII generation. This, to me, was the last of real men. Truthful, hard working, personable, knowledgeable, charming. I am ashamed to say I do not feel the same about my generation. Good men create good times, good times create weak men and women.

    • @johnmcmahon8513
      @johnmcmahon8513 Před 2 lety +3

      AMEN TO THAT

    • @manoo2056
      @manoo2056 Před 2 lety +6

      All our current education is because the old generation ;).

  • @justmeldin6062
    @justmeldin6062 Před rokem +20

    Oooo man how he behaves and holds eye contact. Calm, serious and to the point.
    You can feel confidence, seriosness, and wisdom in him.
    I would love to watch and listem the likes of him just to see and learn how to behave and think properly.

  • @moragosullivan2879
    @moragosullivan2879 Před rokem +2

    This man is a great comedian. I’ve started to watch him wherever he comes. A very, very intelligent man. X

  • @flowerpow8472
    @flowerpow8472 Před rokem +833

    I love how he said, The rancher went broke "as far as money". It reminds us that there are other things that speak to our true worth and value than money.

    • @wrench246
      @wrench246 Před rokem +42

      Land and cattle and probably other possessions

    • @devinvez3869
      @devinvez3869 Před rokem +16

      Things are different now....money plays a bigger role in our lives now. We depend on it way more to survive these days

    • @MysticAustin
      @MysticAustin Před rokem +28

      Back when you were allowed to own land in the United States.

    • @DT-yt2zh
      @DT-yt2zh Před rokem +5

      @@MysticAustin You'll have to explain for us uneducated how we are not allowed to own land today?

    • @AnonningAnon
      @AnonningAnon Před rokem +6

      @@DT-yt2zh You are allowed, you probably just don't have the money to afford to own enough land (or animals) to feed your whole family as you did back then. Most people living in the cities means the prices of land owning and live stock owning went up to compensate.

  • @Abutado
    @Abutado Před rokem +426

    I can't describe how watching this made me feel. It's a bit surreal. To go from horses and cowboys to game shows in a single life. Wow

    • @charleyjr.iriarte7428
      @charleyjr.iriarte7428 Před rokem +6

      He was a very diligent man!

    • @peterbrooks5476
      @peterbrooks5476 Před rokem +5

      To be fair he was born into the industrial revolution but he obviously spent a lot of time as his father did despite that

    • @Noitisnt-ns7mo
      @Noitisnt-ns7mo Před rokem

      My G-pa was born before the wheel.

    • @lawrencetalbot8346
      @lawrencetalbot8346 Před rokem +8

      More like the guy went from riding a horse for a whole day just to visit a neighbor as a kid to being able to get on a plane and flying to NY in a few hours so he can appear on a game show that afternoon. That’s crazy

    • @charleyjr.iriarte7428
      @charleyjr.iriarte7428 Před rokem

      @@Noitisnt-ns7mo AHAHAHAH

  • @dj3114
    @dj3114 Před 11 měsíci +2

    My Gosh, I smiled the whole time listening to him answer the most complicated questions I've heard.

  • @RustyShackleford76
    @RustyShackleford76 Před rokem +10

    This was great! I couldn’t even imagine everything this man has gone through. All the history and changes in technology and society.

  • @Gl6619
    @Gl6619 Před 2 lety +409

    I love how Virgil immediately recognized the song and was basically singing along…he probably sang it more than a few times in front of a campfire in his youth..

    • @courtesyofdickboak
      @courtesyofdickboak Před 2 lety +9

      It’s still popular in bluegrass and stringband music today

    • @OldFartFilms
      @OldFartFilms Před 2 lety +6

      @@courtesyofdickboak Nick Cave gives a rendition in ‘The Assassination of Jesse James...'

  • @Visceralreality
    @Visceralreality Před rokem +37

    My grandad was born in 1907, he left us in 1996. His life saw such changes that he was always excited about the next new thing.
    His attitude was infectious. Miss that old fella, he had amazing stories.

    • @fastsetinthewest
      @fastsetinthewest Před rokem +1

      I remember my g grandparents born in 1872. They died in 1964. I feel like I lived back in those days with all their stories. I was 17 when they died.

  • @t34esq
    @t34esq Před rokem +385

    I would have loved to see a 60 minutes style interview of this man instead of a gameshow questionnaire, but to even have this is simply amazing

    • @arsenioseslpodcast3143
      @arsenioseslpodcast3143 Před rokem +2

      How many black people did you think he saw strung up by their necks?

    • @clindsell6111
      @clindsell6111 Před rokem +36

      ​@@arsenioseslpodcast3143 its very telling that is what you got out of this. not how far we've come, not "wow look how long ago that was", not I wonder how many first nations he saw die during a genocide that by most estimates dwarfed the holocaust. that seems like a very self-centered viewpoint and you should think about that and what it says about you. Because if you scroll through the comments you wont see very many like yours.

    • @terryshrader3909
      @terryshrader3909 Před rokem +9

      @@arsenioseslpodcast3143 While I sympathize with what blacks went through, it is now history and we progress from it. The man probably was a racist but he was born of innocence. We are merely beings of our surroundings and in no way are any of us perfect.

    • @nicetryb0z0
      @nicetryb0z0 Před rokem

      @@arsenioseslpodcast3143 good question I wonder if the blacks back then made up over 60% of all violent crime and murder like they do today

    • @megancrager4397
      @megancrager4397 Před rokem +6

      @@arsenioseslpodcast3143 why would one WANT to continue to live in a slave mentality? Making oneself the victim of something they never lived through.
      I'm willing to bet if your ancestors could speak to you today, they'd say how disappointed they are in you coopting something THEY suffered through, while spitting on the ground we've made, which is exactly what they fought for.

  • @maxwarboy3625
    @maxwarboy3625 Před rokem +6

    The television year said 1958, at that time Virgil answering the questions must've seemed like an old man, being quizzed on history - already old to that audience. In 2022, it has been over another 60 years since Virgil Earp's death. This is a gem of a video indeed.

  • @da9618
    @da9618 Před rokem +4

    That man's memory is sharp for his age, it's like it was yesterday for him

  • @JustinCopacetic
    @JustinCopacetic Před 2 lety +1091

    Even though this video is over 60 years old, I was so happy when he got all the questions right and won the money! Well done Mr. Earp!

    • @ramen6959
      @ramen6959 Před 2 lety +26

      There was a moment , wasnt there? I was in suspense with the XIT question/answer lol 😆

    • @mickeymcmurphy3179
      @mickeymcmurphy3179 Před 2 lety +42

      after seeing movie Quiz Show about the game show scandal 21, I'm a little skeptical, can't help but think its all staged.

    • @michaelcorbidge7914
      @michaelcorbidge7914 Před 2 lety +11

      I'd figure 32 grand back then to be like somewhere like 300 to 500 grand in terms of purchasing power today . It's another discussion but i can remember prices of a lot of things in 1960s compared to prices for today such as building materials , tools , fence posts , bail of wool n straw , fuel .......

    • @sausage6984
      @sausage6984 Před 2 lety +10

      @@mickeymcmurphy3179 sure looks staged

    • @wildmilne
      @wildmilne Před 2 lety +23

      sadly, it says this video is from 1958 and he died in 1959

  • @mercurialpierrot7073
    @mercurialpierrot7073 Před 2 lety +677

    This is like someone born in 1979 answering questions in 2059. Just imagine how different the world got for this guy between his birth and 1959. Dang...

    • @rizon72
      @rizon72 Před 2 lety +48

      Went from horse and buggy to airplanes and space along with two world wars.

    • @nelsonvanvickle8862
      @nelsonvanvickle8862 Před 2 lety +27

      Hey I was born in 1968, and I could answer questions about the 1970’s, otherwise known as the “dark era of primordial internet-lessness”

    • @rizon72
      @rizon72 Před 2 lety +33

      @@nelsonvanvickle8862 Remember when you had to get up to change the channel?

    • @thenewvoice8
      @thenewvoice8 Před 2 lety +2

      wow - did you work that out all by yourself?

    • @hlhs42
      @hlhs42 Před 2 lety +11

      @@rizon72 How about fixing the horizontal hold & vertical hold on the TV?

  • @nassermj7671
    @nassermj7671 Před rokem +7

    He is an encyclopedia - a treasure to the past.

  • @rubiesofgold7698
    @rubiesofgold7698 Před rokem +4

    There’s something I really like about the way people looked and acted. They looked older but seemed very mature and respectable.

  • @WillowMurdock
    @WillowMurdock Před rokem +509

    Did anybody else get straight played by this guy?! Like, he shuffled on out here all quiet and unassuming, softly mumbles a little bit of small talk with the host, and then when it came time to answer that 4000 part question, he snapped up sharp as a tack and answered every question as if he were a walking encyclopedia/history book! What a dude!
    🤯😍🤩🥳👏

    • @trigger455
      @trigger455 Před rokem +25

      I forgot the first question after the 4th!

    • @Murasame
      @Murasame Před rokem +8

      I did for sure, I was super worried for him and then the cuts to his daughter being scared didn't help.

    • @incitingariot9925
      @incitingariot9925 Před rokem +17

      He was a law man in a lawless Era. He knows how to play people.

    • @wallraven55
      @wallraven55 Před rokem +6

      @@incitingariot9925 your sentence is nonsensical. You can’t enforce laws if there’s no laws to enforce. So by definition if you’re a law man there has to be laws to enforce.

    • @WALTRIPFLAIR
      @WALTRIPFLAIR Před rokem +15

      The $64,000 dollar challenge was one of the game shows cancelled for being fraudulently run by the networks in the late 50's I believe. Possibly he was coached? The movie Quiz Show was based on one such show.

  • @Chuckles..
    @Chuckles.. Před rokem +621

    This Virgil Earp was 20 years old before the turn of the century. The people he met and history he saw unfold is mind boggling.

    • @biggordo482
      @biggordo482 Před rokem +28

      We’re living through the roaring 20s V2 although in reality it’s the Great Depression V2

    • @misguidedangel6550
      @misguidedangel6550 Před rokem +19

      The same will be said of people born in 1980 one day, look at all the history they have witnessed. Cell phones, microwave ovens, stealth bomber, electric cars, the internet, HDTV, 9/11, Osama Bin Laden, Donald Trump

    • @sebastienbolduc5654
      @sebastienbolduc5654 Před rokem +11

      @@misguidedangel6550 yes, exactly! We tend to not view ourselves in the same historical light. It creates a disconnect, so-to-speak, from those folks of the past to ourselves within the present. We view them as being "different" in many ways, but in reality they weren't. Instead, we view ourselves as living in the new age. I'm sure folks from his generation probably thought the same about themselves. It's a good way for us to keep things in perspective. This is how people in the year 2122 will be viewing us. There will be people saying, "That dude on The Price Is Right was..." lol

    • @cavemandelta
      @cavemandelta Před rokem +1

      @@biggordo482 Damn...didn't even think of it like that...

    • @brian4rmthewood
      @brian4rmthewood Před rokem +1

      @@biggordo482 I be thinking this when I’m alone in my thoughts 😂

  • @zackadamec9332
    @zackadamec9332 Před rokem +5

    Imagine growing up in the wild west and seeing all this technology come out over the years

  • @5DNRG
    @5DNRG Před rokem +4

    This man is absolutely fascinating, his face shows an amazing life.

  • @tailgunner2
    @tailgunner2 Před 2 lety +402

    This is amazing.
    The man lived from having little to no electricity, two world wars, radio, television, and left this world in an era of modern appliances and automobiles.

    • @tyyamnitz8408
      @tyyamnitz8408 Před 2 lety +23

      He was 23 years old when the wright brothers first flew an airplane and lived to see the first satellite launch into space

    • @phillipkulas2302
      @phillipkulas2302 Před 2 lety

      He was fortunate to live when Caucasian males were creating the greatest innovations in all of history. No other race or females could have ever achieved what the Caucasian male did in that time.

    • @mantirig4139
      @mantirig4139 Před 2 lety +7

      Makes Me wonder about the Bible verse that talks about end times. Things that have never been seen before, man rode a horse for thousands of years.

    • @The_Ghost923
      @The_Ghost923 Před rokem +3

      @@ronmexico8383 And just look at what's going on now. I truly believe we're living in the end of times.

    • @nonow1353
      @nonow1353 Před rokem +3

      @@The_Ghost923 Hopefully this doesn't start any sort of pointless argument, because I would tend to agree, but I'm of the opinion that this isn't the first time we have been through this. I believe this isn't even the second time that we by our misguided actions, cruelty, greed, ignorance of the divine reality of which we are very much a part along with everything else, but through our huberous and arrogance and following those who promote said vanity and selfish pride, come to believe we are separate not only from nature and creation but by this stage we not only believe that but also deny God or anything greater than ourselves, it isn't until a flood or some cataclysm or another comes along that people suddenly remember and for awhile live at first in proper reverence and respect to the order of things, then as direct memory is forgotten people live in fear of Gods wrath as remembered through the stories and writings of those who witnessed said end times, then ...... You see where I'm going with this? Virtually every person with an NDE to report or some other humbling experience like that will all tell you that the point in life is to learn to be truly good and loving and that it is only your deeds towards others and strength of character as well as your ability to live in a place of love that matter once you die...or we all do rather. So end times or not, I think what is important has never changed and no matter the circumstances if you strive to be truly good and live without doing others harm and without regrets then the worst that could happen is you live happily and loved by those around you and die comfortable in that knowledge and at best you will understabd the rest afterwards. It's not rocket surgery but we are so conditioned by this world especially in these days of only fans and Instagram fame that it can be easy to lose sight of what matters

  • @Jamedia66
    @Jamedia66 Před rokem +541

    Love watching the way that our predecessor carried themselves, w seemingly fewer words, yet a more profound sense of integrity.

    • @bertkilborne6464
      @bertkilborne6464 Před rokem +19

      There's something impressive about the man, no doubt about it

    • @biggchungus5512
      @biggchungus5512 Před rokem +13

      Advice from John Wayne to a young Michael Caine on acting
      "Talk low,talk slow and don't say too much"

    • @frank6842
      @frank6842 Před rokem +4

      @@biggchungus5512 John Wayne was also a closeted gay and coward so I wouldn't take much on his voice

    • @ZACH_95_
      @ZACH_95_ Před rokem +14

      @@frank6842 And this coming from a nobody on CZcams don't say much either. If you weren't around him back then, then you have no clue how he was. You can believe what others said but again...

    • @serpentines6356
      @serpentines6356 Před rokem +5

      @@frank6842

  • @ObVoid
    @ObVoid Před rokem +8

    He sounds like my great grandpa who still lives today, though was born in the early 1930's. Even then he had stories of throwing live dynamite into abandoned barns with his friends, because that's what teens did back then lol. What a crazy time it was back then.

  • @CockneyClint
    @CockneyClint Před rokem +3

    Look at the Solid Stone demeanour of this Old Legend ! Just goes to show how bad ass his uncles must of been and people in general back then was .

  • @2012escapee1
    @2012escapee1 Před 2 lety +802

    He must have been 80 years old. And a very healthy and intelligent elderly gentleman.

    • @zyxwut321
      @zyxwut321 Před 2 lety +91

      Don't know how healthy he was. He died only a year later. Certainly very intelligent, though. What priceless footage. Truly a link to a lost world.

    • @holdingcopsaccountable6554
      @holdingcopsaccountable6554 Před 2 lety +36

      His grandpa lived till he was 97 years old.

    • @MrT67
      @MrT67 Před 2 lety +12

      79

    • @scottphipps3577
      @scottphipps3577 Před 2 lety +127

      If only Biden could be this lucid...

    • @MrT67
      @MrT67 Před 2 lety +22

      @@scottphipps3577 There's always one.....

  • @mr.crighton9491
    @mr.crighton9491 Před 2 lety +230

    That "question" was an 8 part examination....who put this bizarre thing together????? they left out pt. 9 of the question: what caliber of pistol did Billy Clanton use when he shot a rabbit when he was 12 years old, and what kind of rabbit, and what type of tree was the rabbit sitting under when it was shot, and what color was it, and what spice did his mother use in the rabbit stew, and which of his 3 brothers got diarrhea after eating the stew, and what did they give him to drink to stop the diarrhea?

    • @elizabethezell8749
      @elizabethezell8749 Před 2 lety +13

      Lololololol I agree !!!! I thought for the love of mercy ,you gonna have to repeat those questions again I done forgot the first question!!! 🤷🤦

    • @janetclaireSays
      @janetclaireSays Před 2 lety +18

      I think people were smarter and more focused back then. They were used to using their memories.

    • @MG-fn9xw
      @MG-fn9xw Před 2 lety

      Hahahahahah

    • @michaelcorbidge7914
      @michaelcorbidge7914 Před 2 lety +4

      Well it wasn't bugs bunny anyway .

    • @theresaadams3802
      @theresaadams3802 Před 2 lety +1

      🤣🤣🤣

  • @arturoELchurro69
    @arturoELchurro69 Před rokem +1

    Great man that saw a world very different as we do now. Respect!

  • @constitutionman9026
    @constitutionman9026 Před rokem +4

    Great job in doing this. The crazy thing is there has now been enough time passed that the time between his days as a lawman and the time this show aired is equal to the show until now.

  • @jacklambert1521
    @jacklambert1521 Před 2 lety +147

    Guy nailed those questions like a carpenter.

  • @X-Prime123
    @X-Prime123 Před 2 lety +590

    Dude asked him about the history he was a part of. That's pretty cool. Different people, tougher than we are, by a mile.

    • @ohhhyeahhh1174
      @ohhhyeahhh1174 Před rokem +55

      These men would break us apart with 1 word, today's America has nothing on the wild west specially now that everyone has gone fr uity with their pride months.

    • @X-Prime123
      @X-Prime123 Před rokem +30

      @@ohhhyeahhh1174 Tell me about it. Back in my day, fruit loops was a cereal.

    • @betterthanyesterday3912
      @betterthanyesterday3912 Před rokem +6

      @GreenGoSpanish It's possible to have both. I live a life that would be considered luxurious by many, but hunt and fish, and can handle myself in the woods. Your comment is very accurate, but there are exceptions.

    • @Re-Todd_Howard
      @Re-Todd_Howard Před rokem

      @@betterthanyesterday3912 yeah that’s pretty true. Look at Joe Rogan, he’s extremely rich but he also bow hunts and is a rugged man that can handle himself in the woods and in physics combat. However, I do believe on average people these days are softer than they used to be. Sorry for getting political but especially people on the left.

    • @gringofilet474
      @gringofilet474 Před rokem

      @@ohhhyeahhh1174 Many were trash, racist scumbags. Good riddance!

  • @simon5evans52
    @simon5evans52 Před rokem +2

    CZcams is a time machine. All of these wonders would have been lost to the public without the brilliance of the younger generation.

  • @77ukfan
    @77ukfan Před rokem +19

    The sad thing is none of the millennial generation will ever meet anyone born in the 1800's, even if they were born in 2000 and someone was born in 1899, they would be 101 years old and chances would be VERY slim they would live long enough for them to have any memory of them. I was so blessed and fortunate enough to remember three of my great grandmothers and one great grandfather all born in the 1800's. My great grandmother (Bowman) Taylor was born in 1882, and her older brother, uncle Jess Bowman was born in 1880, she also had a younger brother and sister, Younger born in 1890 and Huldah born in 1895. I remember all of them very well, I was a teenager when my great grandmother died in 1972 at the age of 89 and uncle Jess died in 1977 at the age of 97, uncle Younger died in 1981 at the age of 91, aunt Huldah died in 1971 at the age of 76. My great grandmother would tell of a story about how her family was on a wagon train when she was a little girl going from Kentucky to Texas, and then back from Texas to Kentucky, that was a FIRST HAND account from someone who did it. Her father in law Robert Taylor was a Civil War veteran, so stories she knew about life then was just ONE generation away from the people who lived it. Her firstborn was my great uncle John born in 1899 and died in 1994 at the age of 95. The stories about how they lived, their struggles, triumphs and the way things were done are stories that I treasure more and more each day as I get older because they are part of my history and my heritage and not everyone has been blessed like this.

    • @Bob-li5vs
      @Bob-li5vs Před rokem +1

      Millennials were born in the 80s and 90s.

    • @jake8855
      @jake8855 Před rokem

      Many millenials already have met people who were born in the 1800s.

  • @bewhitey
    @bewhitey Před 2 lety +494

    $32k was equivalent to over $300,000 today. Virgil Edwin Earp lived a wild life, born in a wagon train campground in Tombstone Arizona in 1879. Was sheriff of Paradise Valley Nevada at the age of 18. Killed 3 men by the age of 21, first one being a man that molested his sister.
    He saw the birth of the automobile, birth of aviation, birth of television and radio. Witnessed the conquering of the west and expansion of the railroad. He
    lived through two world wars. 13 years after the end of WW2 he appeared on this television show. The $64,000 question....a big deal. When it first aired in 1955 it held the #1 rating spot knocking out I Love Lucy, but it did not last very long and was cancelled just 3 years later in 1958. The same year Virgil appeared as a contestant. What happened you ask? Well just a little thing known as THE QUIZ SHOW SCANDAL!
    In the fall of 1958 other similar quiz shows were under federal investigation due to contestants coming forward saying they were "coached" or given answers before hand. This became known as the era of the "Quiz Show Scandal" and the $64,000 question was very much a part of it. America knew the dirty secret behind game shows, they were all rigged and game show ratings plummeted. Did Virgil ever get his money? Was he given these answers in advance? We may never know for sure. What we do know is all the television networks pulled their high stakes game shows off the air. Replaced them with westerns and detective shows....and the very next year in 1959 Virgil passed away.

    • @patrickoneil5913
      @patrickoneil5913 Před 2 lety +33

      Great comment - thanks for the info

    • @marcodesalud7034
      @marcodesalud7034 Před 2 lety +11

      wow, great info!

    • @popeantichrist8847
      @popeantichrist8847 Před 2 lety +25

      Now we just have beta bun boys

    • @FuhqEwe
      @FuhqEwe Před 2 lety

      Except the story pertaining to his life was all BS.
      He never killed anyone, never worked in law enforcement. He bounced around random jobs, like selling sewing machines door-to-door.
      He was a grifter that used his last name, and the lack of google, to fabricate lies for profit.

    • @hermdogg1846
      @hermdogg1846 Před 2 lety +8

      Appreciate the info.. great history knowledge...

  • @zudemaster
    @zudemaster Před rokem +720

    Amazing when you think of how many changes someone like him would have seen. When he was born and a little kid, modern transportation was a horse and wagon or if you were lucky a train. You used lamps and candles for lighting. Eventually he saw the invention of cars, electric lighting and airplanes. The invention of telephones, radio and TV. Wars - WW1, WW2 and Korea. The nuclear bomb. The beginnings of the space race. Imagine trying to explain those things to someone the year he was born.

    • @jsflm
      @jsflm Před rokem +42

      You want to see him go crazy? Put him in a room alone with an iphone

    • @zombeat7376
      @zombeat7376 Před rokem +21

      @@jsflm drives me crazy too 😂

    • @JohnJohn-qv4mg
      @JohnJohn-qv4mg Před rokem +21

      Actually for someone who is his age today, they went through as many changes as he did, just different types. I mean imagine if you were born in the 1940s and what's that light compared to today; the exact same as what that guy went through. The only thing that makes him more fascinating is you can still talk to people who were born in the 1940s and some people can even speak to people who were born in the 1930s. So fascinating, yes, but different than anyone else, not really.

    • @Camcolito
      @Camcolito Před rokem

      Same idiots, different century.

    • @traymilligan2865
      @traymilligan2865 Před rokem +9

      @@JohnJohn-qv4mg I kind of understand what you're saying but in a way you are also wrong. We are talking about who was then a living legend not only him but other members of his family. Definitely, Not like everyone else. That can never be replaced in history. Sure others lived through changes of technology but that was about all. This man literally has his place in American History books. Not just anyone can say that and he was not just anyone.

  • @gavinross4754
    @gavinross4754 Před rokem +29

    Amazing how someone would have seen so much change in the world. I wish we had more people like this today.

  • @Skans-Gustav
    @Skans-Gustav Před rokem +2

    So many intricate questions for 16000 USD. He was sharp, would anyone today be able to answer so many questions without Googling? Impressive man.

  • @Perception_
    @Perception_ Před rokem +269

    Just listening to someone's voice you quickly establish a sense of him being the real deal or not. He's definitely the real deal.

    • @arsenioseslpodcast3143
      @arsenioseslpodcast3143 Před rokem

      over a fucking voice? Wonder how many blacks did he see hung?

    • @clindsell6111
      @clindsell6111 Před rokem

      theres a reason people used to respect lawmen this man exudes that reason with every syllable

  • @CYCLONE4499
    @CYCLONE4499 Před 2 lety +528

    Impressive. These legends are long gone but these videos are a testament to their legacy

    • @MrMuaythai84
      @MrMuaythai84 Před 2 lety

      Racist white people those days are gone now we got white people who not open minded and enjoy sharing their wife with brown people

    • @High-Performance-IQ
      @High-Performance-IQ Před 2 lety +4

      No one has ever gone. Death is an Illusion.

    • @stuartredman1550
      @stuartredman1550 Před 2 lety +3

      @@High-Performance-IQ Death is real.

    • @julius43461
      @julius43461 Před 2 lety +2

      @@stuartredman1550 Well we certainly can't prove it. I can't prove that someone ever died, any more than I can prove that someone other than me had a thought. Solipsism all the way lol

    • @rantsupreme2670
      @rantsupreme2670 Před 2 lety +2

      Im so glad i found them. I’ve always been fascinated with how people from the 1800s lived

  • @ghostsquirrel8739
    @ghostsquirrel8739 Před rokem +4

    The changes that this man witnessed are staggering.

  • @rh5563
    @rh5563 Před rokem +1

    Smart man! He really knew his history. 👍👍👍

  • @kennethblevins6172
    @kennethblevins6172 Před rokem +166

    My great grand mother was born 1876, she use to tell me stories when I was a kid that kept me awake at nights and some that would make you crack a rib from laughter. I think of her often and loved her dearly

  • @stephanieyee9784
    @stephanieyee9784 Před 2 lety +505

    Wow, Virgil is a mine of information about the Wild West. What an amazing video and a fantastic piece of history.

    • @colinglen4505
      @colinglen4505 Před 2 lety +10

      I got every question right except the brands, and i'm an old Englishman. ;)

    • @sarahjackson1860
      @sarahjackson1860 Před 2 lety +38

      Compare the standard of questions and his knowledge to today’s quiz shows and contestants.
      Also note his restrained reaction upon winning, the smartness of the audience and their polite applause after he wins the $32k (a huge amount in the 1950s). No whooping and screaming.
      A different era.

    • @sarahjackson1860
      @sarahjackson1860 Před 2 lety +32

      I’ve just used a historical money converter to find out how much 32k in 1958 is today.
      The answer is 321k.
      Yet he doesn’t flinch when he wins.

    • @TheDanEdwards
      @TheDanEdwards Před 2 lety +4

      ​@@sarahjackson1860 "No whooping and screaming. A different era." - you don't believe there was "whooping and screaming" in the 1950s?

    • @sarahjackson1860
      @sarahjackson1860 Před 2 lety +5

      @@TheDanEdwards What’s your point?

  • @Beeterfish
    @Beeterfish Před rokem +2

    That was absolutely amazing!

  • @KevinGrahamArt
    @KevinGrahamArt Před rokem +1

    I love old game shows. It’s like a time capsule. It sad humans don’t live longer. Such great knowledge lost in all of us when we die.

  • @payrocoin
    @payrocoin Před rokem +59

    This is incredibly impressive. Such a sharp man. The Earp family is quite a family.

    • @arsenioseslpodcast3143
      @arsenioseslpodcast3143 Před rokem

      How many black people did you think he saw strung up by their necks?

    • @ryand.3858
      @ryand.3858 Před rokem +12

      @@arsenioseslpodcast3143 probably his fair share.
      I don’t know which I find more peculiar: your implication that he was targeting black men, or that none of those hanged were deserving of their fate by virtue of their skin color.
      Black, white, brown…they all got hanged back then.

    • @grawman67
      @grawman67 Před 10 měsíci

      ​@@arsenioseslpodcast3143Why did you comment that under so many people? To get a rise?

  • @vick2012ish
    @vick2012ish Před rokem +169

    The fact that they asked him that many questions in his "one" question really shows how much they didn't want him to get it right.

    • @tobiasbki443
      @tobiasbki443 Před rokem +25

      Yea and how dumb we have become. Our shows are just stupid one liner questions :D

    • @voiceofraisin241
      @voiceofraisin241 Před rokem +24

      Sorry I disagree. They only asked him questions he knew the answers to. They wouldn’t bring this guy on to embarrass him. They wanted him to win.

    • @MFWb00bi3s
      @MFWb00bi3s Před rokem +5

      they asked every question first to get him thinking, and then asked them one at a time later while he held visual aides. you are a simpleton.

    • @lb6110
      @lb6110 Před rokem +1

      @@voiceofraisin241 Yes, I agree. I truly believe they wanted him to win because this guy is living history!

    • @tobiasbki443
      @tobiasbki443 Před rokem +1

      They had too much money and were such nice people to give this poooor man some money because he is from old times... Rofl guys.. are we living in the same capitalistic world?

  • @dahlski
    @dahlski Před rokem +1

    Amazing. Saw a video of an old man who was at the Ford theater when Lincoln was shot. Just imagine what our greatgreat grandchildren will be able to watch unless we screw everything up.

  • @NBAlejo
    @NBAlejo Před rokem +2

    The posture, the way he speaks, the respect...

  • @jennytalks5882
    @jennytalks5882 Před 2 lety +306

    I can look at this man's face and read the hard lines embedded from years of being in the sun, late nights and hearing sad heavy news, seeing so many men lying there shot and killed. I picture a man who walked into any room and got respect. Can you imagine the crime scenes he has stood at? He stood among circles of law enforcement men on dusty trails and streets and was considered one of the best of men. I really like him. They don't make men like him any more.

    • @jackieM88890
      @jackieM88890 Před 2 lety +14

      The way Virgil talked crime (men shot and killed you mentioned) was more rare in those times so I doubt he witnessed a large amount of men being killed.

    • @daniellebcooper7160
      @daniellebcooper7160 Před 2 lety +43

      Well said, we need Man like him in society now. He knew exactly what his gender was.

    • @janebaker966
      @janebaker966 Před 2 lety +3

      They certainly don't.

    • @thekid1597
      @thekid1597 Před 2 lety +5

      @@daniellebcooper7160 Exactly 💯 🤣👍

    • @jolo4036
      @jolo4036 Před 2 lety +7

      @@daniellebcooper7160 Yep, one big heap of testosterone. lol

  • @sadietravels6213
    @sadietravels6213 Před 2 lety +150

    Wow, what a great piece of history. $32K in 1958 is equivalent to $320K in 2022, adjusted for inflation.

    • @stephanieyee9784
      @stephanieyee9784 Před 2 lety +12

      I was thinking that 32K was an exorbitant amount of money back then. Virgil certainly earned every penny of it too.

    • @joewillburn
      @joewillburn Před 2 lety +5

      Did you just multiple by 10? It's actually a little over 294k not 320k

    • @sadietravels6213
      @sadietravels6213 Před 2 lety +4

      @@joewillburn No, I did not just multiply by 10.

    • @joewillburn
      @joewillburn Před 2 lety +1

      @@sadietravels6213 no what?

    • @sadietravels6213
      @sadietravels6213 Před 2 lety +2

      @@joewillburn I replied I didn’t just multiply by 10.

  • @niccidee782
    @niccidee782 Před rokem +5

    Exceptional job on putting this piece of history back together. Thanks for the finely tuned editing, makes a big difference in the final product.

  • @arrow2370
    @arrow2370 Před rokem +2

    I can't tell you how much I loved this video.

  • @NachoMamaNow
    @NachoMamaNow Před 2 lety +161

    Yikes! They called that A question????
    He was an encyclopedia of history of the west.

    • @danpatch4751
      @danpatch4751 Před 2 lety +3

      Absolutely was, no doubt

    • @VariedVids
      @VariedVids Před 2 lety +11

      Except the show was canceled in a big scandal for giving answers to the contestants.

    • @davewanamaker3690
      @davewanamaker3690 Před 2 lety +6

      It was more like an interrogation. Whoa there. Slow down with them questions. He was incredible!

    • @VariedVids
      @VariedVids Před 2 lety

      @Paul Perreira No he didn't. Do some research on him.

    • @dutchray8880
      @dutchray8880 Před 2 lety +2

      The was quite a fund of knowledge demonstrated there, as had occurred quite a few times on this show. At times, you would think it was almost impossible for one person to be able to answer a multitude of complex questions...turns out the show was fixed at least sometimes. I can't say that was the case with Virgil Earp. I do find him quite likable.

  • @TomCruiseOnCocaine
    @TomCruiseOnCocaine Před rokem +32

    This guy made me remember my grandpa. He was born in 1912. Saw almost every major event in the 20th century. He also was a law man. Died at 95. Miss him and my dad greatly.

    • @denisonpizzato1311
      @denisonpizzato1311 Před rokem

      As my grand pa here in 🇧🇷👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻

    • @Tatorvision
      @Tatorvision Před rokem +2

      My grandfather was born 1915 and he always had stories. I was lucky enough to live with him and grandma for a short time. I wish it could have been longer. He passed in 2000.

  • @OttawaRocks
    @OttawaRocks Před rokem

    Wish I could double like this video! Fantastic memoirs. Thanks for posting.

  • @JPLMONEY23
    @JPLMONEY23 Před rokem +1

    Wow good for him.....what an honor to grace the show....and win big!

  • @TrentCantrell
    @TrentCantrell Před 2 lety +255

    Its great seeing someone out of our history books walking and talking. I would love to see a recoding like this where someone from the 1800s is just allowed to tell stories for a while - if such a thing exists.

    • @arandom1024
      @arandom1024 Před 2 lety +32

      There's quite a few if you search for them, you can hear from both slaves and slave owners, civil war veterans, etc. I even saw a very old man who as a child witnessed lincoln's assassination. It's all incredibly fascinating.

    • @michaelversace456
      @michaelversace456 Před 2 lety +15

      @@arandom1024 I just wrote a comment talking about the kid who saw Lincoln get shot! Its absolutely amazing.

    • @arandom1024
      @arandom1024 Před 2 lety +11

      @@20alphabet that's like saying michelle obama (love her or hate her) isn't a historical figure because she wasn't the president. Such a close relative of one of the most famous figures of the wild west is of course a historical figure.

    • @janebaker966
      @janebaker966 Před 2 lety +15

      When I visited my cousin in Victoria BC Canada I unexpectedly had a chance to do some family history research which meant I spent some time at the library scrolling through the old newspapers on rattly old microfilm,it was years ago. In around 1900 to 1910 the Victoria newspaper did a regular feature of interviewing some local resident man or woman who was there,in the Old West. It was fascinating and I was very distracted from my main task(which I did acheive),it seems that every cowboy and gunslinger of the old West who didn't end up on Boot Hill and actually lived to get old,moved to lovely Victoria BC to end their days. It was better than any movie or story to read all these first hand memories and testimonies of life in the Wild West from actual people who were there.

    • @judyjones5089
      @judyjones5089 Před 2 lety +4

      Yes, this channel features just that. Happy browsing. I love this channel!

  • @thomascefalo938
    @thomascefalo938 Před rokem +267

    Fantastic video to watch. Brings to mind my 103 year old aunt, born in 1919, who tells us of how it was back then with cars that had to be cranked etc. She's seen a lot in those years.

    • @MoonKnightH8
      @MoonKnightH8 Před rokem +2

      She still alive?

    • @FG-bn3qq
      @FG-bn3qq Před rokem +9

      Your aunt probably saw movies before they had sound

    • @Madara2B
      @Madara2B Před rokem +9

      ah that why some say ' cRANK IT"

    • @dallaspowell6313
      @dallaspowell6313 Před rokem +3

      I have an aunt born then and still alive to boot! She lived quite a life so she always had a few stories to tell us kids.

    • @MrManfly
      @MrManfly Před rokem +3

      Wow, Virgil Earp !! 😯

  • @outsiderimages
    @outsiderimages Před rokem

    This is by far one of the best CZcams channels 👏

  • @alex79suited
    @alex79suited Před rokem

    This is an awsome video, thanks so much.

  • @ron.v
    @ron.v Před rokem +129

    What a great video. My grandfather was born in 1870, died in 1955. I'm so glad I got to know him before he passed away. He never owned a car and went everywhere either by bus, by train, by wagon, or on the back of a mule. Listening this this video makes me think of him and my other grandfather who was a lawman who once lived in Texas and traveled back to Alabama in a wagon.

    • @arsenioseslpodcast3143
      @arsenioseslpodcast3143 Před rokem

      How many black people did you think he saw strung up by their necks?

    • @NihilisticHatred
      @NihilisticHatred Před rokem +10

      @@arsenioseslpodcast3143 not nearly enough.

    • @fortunateson7852
      @fortunateson7852 Před rokem +2

      I remember speaking with an old law man who was a sheriff in a Texas border town in the 1920’s. He said he rarely carried a gun back then. Was stowed in the car most of the time. Just a different time.

    • @RossLemon
      @RossLemon Před rokem

      @@arsenioseslpodcast3143 Dang I didn't know there were gamers back in those days.

  • @antcway
    @antcway Před 2 lety +125

    I never comment on videos, but as a history buff, I just had to admit how cool this really is 💯

    • @bentonrp
      @bentonrp Před 2 lety +1

      ...
      ...
      ...
      ...
      ...
      ...
      ...
      ...
      ... never 😀?

    • @wesleyalan9179
      @wesleyalan9179 Před 2 lety

      I find it very funny when people feel the need to point out they never make comments on video🤣.
      Why you gotta say that? Just make ya damn Comment! 🤣🤣😂

  • @staylor5687
    @staylor5687 Před 10 měsíci +2

    When I got my first job in a hospital, most of the elderly were born in the late 1800's and were now facing old age. It's really sad that there weren't more recorded interviews with many of them because the insight they could give on life in the 1800s would be invaluable. When we let these old folks pass away without telling their story, we have allowed an entire library to escape us. I know that most people who have connections with their grandparents are actually gaining insight of at least 50 years before they themselves were born. And by the time that grandchild passes away, they will have accumulated 150 years worth of insight on life and how it has changed.

  • @noloferratus
    @noloferratus Před rokem +1

    He was like a living encyclopedia of the west.

  • @hannahkirchner1656
    @hannahkirchner1656 Před 2 lety +120

    That's so weird that Wyatt Earp's nephew is on a TV game show.
    I am always awestruck by people in the distant past, as if they somehow think, look, or act differently from living folks. So strange to see such living history.

    • @BlommaBaumbart
      @BlommaBaumbart Před rokem +1

      @@softan The thing W. Earp is famous for happened before the grandparents of my grandparents were born. That's not close history, the TV show Virgil is on is close history.

    • @brianvogt8125
      @brianvogt8125 Před rokem +2

      @@BlommaBaumbart - It depends on your perspective. My older grandfather was born in Feb. 1876, in the middle of those infamous events - fortunately on the opposite side of the world. I was alive when the TV show was recorded, and can remember staying with friends during the time my brother was born that year.

    • @brianvogt8125
      @brianvogt8125 Před rokem +1

      @Hannah Kirchner - We can easily get a distorted opinion of people from TV shows. Almost 60 years ago, I enjoyed watching shows like Bat Masterson, Wyatt Earp, Tombstone Territory. Characters are whoever the script writers imagine. They contrasts with the brutally honest (warts & all) descriptions of the ancient "heroes" in The Bible, up to 3,500 years ago. Human nature hasn't changed a bit since then.

    • @bretagnejean2410
      @bretagnejean2410 Před rokem

      It s not strange he do a tv game because all american west story create big history and business around that....
      Between myth, reality and lies.

    • @Jimmy911ism
      @Jimmy911ism Před rokem

      We usually only see non-movie footage of people born before 1900 in ww2 docos. You're rihht Hannah, this so rare, a live interview featuring a person born in 1879. Telling that he only lived another year; part of the reason is people had shorter life spans. This is the oldest person on live TV, as far as I know and it's fascinating.

  • @j_rainsgoat3929
    @j_rainsgoat3929 Před rokem +215

    My granny was born in 1898 died in 1998 with all her faculty's. She could remember birthdates for great grand kids without a calendar. Her stories were amazing.

    • @AshtrayAnnie
      @AshtrayAnnie Před rokem +2

      You’ve totally missed the point of the entire video. Clearly you didn’t know anything about the Earps before clicking on the video.

    • @mscommerce
      @mscommerce Před rokem +16

      @@AshtrayAnnie As you have. The clip prompted J_Rains GOAT to share some personal family history with us all. What a rude reply!

    • @Anon54387
      @Anon54387 Před rokem +3

      My great aunt was born around then and lived to 104. I had to interview her for a college history class. She was still sharp as a tack. My only regret is that when I got out of college and gained more experience in life I would've been able to ask her better questions. Still, it was a real education.

    • @AshtrayAnnie
      @AshtrayAnnie Před rokem +2

      @@mscommerce nah mate. I’m speaking facts. Just because you got butt hurt about it doesn’t mean it’s not factual. It had nothing to do with this video. The Earp family goes hand in hand with ‘the wild west’ which is what this video is really about. Not people who also lived 100yrs ago lol

    • @EvaLasta
      @EvaLasta Před rokem

      Ok? Why are you posting this story lol its unrelated to the video

  • @Gmacc187
    @Gmacc187 Před rokem

    Very cool. Thanks for all the effort you put into this.

  • @themobseat
    @themobseat Před rokem +1

    These questions are way harder than anything, you'd ever hear on TV today.

  • @sminem6572
    @sminem6572 Před rokem +111

    The trivia he knows is even more incredible considering you couldn’t just look it up online back then. If you had a question, you had to ask someone or go to the library and find it in a book and read it for yourself.

    • @MD-fu6ly
      @MD-fu6ly Před rokem +14

      that was true even 25 years ago for the vast majority 🤦

    • @arsenioseslpodcast3143
      @arsenioseslpodcast3143 Před rokem +3

      How many black people did you think he saw strung up by their necks?

    • @clindsell6111
      @clindsell6111 Před rokem

      ​@@arsenioseslpodcast3143 99.999% < first nations killed but i guess you dont care about that huh cause it doesnt relate to you

    • @ludara8697
      @ludara8697 Před rokem +22

      @@arsenioseslpodcast3143 You're not a victim

    • @denverscott37
      @denverscott37 Před rokem

      @@arsenioseslpodcast3143 not as many as your generation will see vaporized by a nuke...
      Lots of ways to die, lots of ways to live. You'll get the chance to do both at least once..
      Choose wisely grasshopper....

  • @dinorahtdeleon3014
    @dinorahtdeleon3014 Před 2 lety +223

    My grandmother born 1903 passed away at 103 Feb 2007 she was born in Guanajuato Mexico in a Military family serving Porfirio Diaz he father was a colonel with the Federalist . She saw, the Mexican Revolution , Influenza ( Correction : Spanish flu) World War I and WW II her both Sons and husband fought, she saw Vietnam and much more . In the early 60’s we slept with the doors unlocked , trusted everyone walked in the evenings without a care those days are missed . I must say, Mr. Earl is an intelligent man.

    • @jimhoffmann
      @jimhoffmann Před 2 lety +1

      Very, very cool, DTdL!!!

    • @neapanther497
      @neapanther497 Před 2 lety +11

      I’m assuming by Black Plague you mean Spanish influenza?

    • @syndan9245
      @syndan9245 Před 2 lety +10

      @@neapanther497 thought the same thing lol, that's not the black plague XD

    • @sirhcffoh294
      @sirhcffoh294 Před 2 lety +1

      Titanic

    • @OurLargeFamilyLife
      @OurLargeFamilyLife Před 2 lety +3

      Wow thank you for you sharing

  • @kristenkaz3080
    @kristenkaz3080 Před rokem +1

    My Great Great Aunt was born in 1895. She recalled homesteading with her grandmother, she was a teenager when the Titanic sinks. She remembered cars becoming more common, the wars, vaccines, going to a prairie one room school with a teacher who was 17 & let the kids play all day, (he was fired because of it!). She was an incredible woman. She passed in 1997. And the world seemed to dim when her light left us. I miss you aunty.

  • @johnhorton9637
    @johnhorton9637 Před rokem +1

    Amazing. Absolutely amazing

  • @rboston33
    @rboston33 Před 2 lety +57

    I went to a Toastmaster's meeting in Phoenix a number of years back and his son was the speaker. He told a fascinating tale about his family and their adventures.

    • @rockandrollrabbit
      @rockandrollrabbit Před 2 lety

      What did he talk about?

    • @rboston33
      @rboston33 Před 2 lety +6

      @@rockandrollrabbit Hi. He did a 20 minute talk on Earp life after Tombstone. How they finally moved to California and how they built a real estate business. He did a great job telling about the family

    • @knightwalkr
      @knightwalkr Před 2 lety +2

      My dad went to school with one of Wyatt Earps older brothers grand kids. (They lived in central Kentucky for a while and some stayed behind)

  • @scottcurtin2598
    @scottcurtin2598 Před rokem +32

    I spoke with my great grandfather from Ireland in 1978.
    I was 10, he was 90. Loved the accent and he asked me
    What I go for Christmas.
    I tell people today that I spoke. With someone born in the
    1800’s. Great and only memory I have of him

  • @DavidMChampeau
    @DavidMChampeau Před rokem

    Amazing.Speechless watching this.

  • @hectorquintana5219
    @hectorquintana5219 Před 9 měsíci +1

    Wow!
    Thank you.