A Deep Dive Into The 1950s Dating Culture

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  • čas přidán 19. 01. 2024
  • I beg your pardon- 💀
    books mentioned:
    "Boy Dates Girl" by Gay Head (real name 😭)
    "Dating, Mating and Marriage" by Jessie Bernard, Helen E. Buchanan
    "Your Dating Days" by Paul H. Landis
    "Teen Dating and Marriage" by Mark E. Petersen
    ______________
    My Instagram: bit.ly/2Qo9rrI
    My nudes: bit.ly/2GZN1ur
    My merch: bit.ly/2CCq5jE

Komentáře • 1,5K

  • @embroideredragdoll
    @embroideredragdoll Před 3 měsíci +7137

    I joke about how crap the dating culture is nowadays then I look back to the 50’s and 1800’s social seasons and realise that it’s always been a shitshow.

    • @quantumblur_3145
      @quantumblur_3145 Před 3 měsíci +344

      Realizing things haven't progressed as much as you assume, is a rare and valuable phase

    • @NankitaBR
      @NankitaBR Před 3 měsíci +273

      And in addition to that, until less than 100 years ago doing well on the dating market as literally life or death for a woman. If you didn't do well you risked ending up in a terrible marriage with a terrible husband or even never getting married and ending up on the streets.

    • @sofiabravo1994
      @sofiabravo1994 Před 3 měsíci +31

      It’s worse now because there’s no more standards .

    • @quantumblur_3145
      @quantumblur_3145 Před 3 měsíci +166

      @@sofiabravo1994 that's simply not true

    • @autumnsprite
      @autumnsprite Před 3 měsíci +53

      Yeah, it's just bad in a different way

  • @kimgoodwin2711
    @kimgoodwin2711 Před 3 měsíci +4289

    I asked my mom how she and my dad met. She worked as a “soda jerk” at an ice cream shop. She said when my dad came to the shop she used to give him extra ice cream in his ice cream sodas and sundaes. What she didn’t know at first was that he had to take a train and two buses to come to the shop.

    • @LM-fn6qb
      @LM-fn6qb Před 3 měsíci +644

      This is such a sweet story. Her with her extra ice cream and him with his extra travel. I'm glad they ended up together.

    • @emilyrln
      @emilyrln Před 3 měsíci +154

      That's so precious!!! 😭 💕

    • @Diana02400
      @Diana02400 Před 3 měsíci +57

      Adorable

    • @emilyolivia5737
      @emilyolivia5737 Před 3 měsíci +52

      That’s so so cute

    • @maryeckel9682
      @maryeckel9682 Před 3 měsíci +43

      That's so romantic

  • @honeyswann
    @honeyswann Před 3 měsíci +4226

    Jesus Christ the girl with the several boyfriends gave me whiplash. Those alpha bros always wish they had a traditional woman from the 50s. They would have a heart attack knowing how some of them were like that girl. Idk how she did it though

    • @lenas6246
      @lenas6246 Před 3 měsíci +401

      this video is a good bookmark in case some unwanted incels pop up in unrelated discussions

    • @venmis137
      @venmis137 Před 3 měsíci +79

      @@lenas6246 I mean, I'm technically an incel (though I don't like identifying as such) and I think it's kinda based. Casual dating seems like a much simpler affair with sex being much less prominent.

    • @sofiabravo1994
      @sofiabravo1994 Před 3 měsíci +25

      She was literally the exception it wasn’t normal or glorified…

    • @ember9361
      @ember9361 Před 3 měsíci +188

      @@venmis137 you know what they meant. Also you type like a teen so I'll assume you're one and just say you're not an involuntary celibate, you're a child.
      Not having sex until X age literally does not matter. Everyone has their own time

    • @ember9361
      @ember9361 Před 3 měsíci +78

      @@sofiabravo1994 how would you know, were you there?

  • @jordankuo6662
    @jordankuo6662 Před 3 měsíci +2179

    Dear Diary,
    Jack is dating Hal (they were roommates).

    • @melijo
      @melijo Před 3 měsíci +111

      “..and they were roommatessss”

    • @2-d_in_a_bag
      @2-d_in_a_bag Před 3 měsíci +82

      Oh my god they were roommates 😎

    • @SuicideShow
      @SuicideShow Před 3 měsíci +11

      And they were roommates!!

    • @feliperoa5821
      @feliperoa5821 Před 2 měsíci +25

      While I was hearing that story my mind thought "Having two boyfriends is hard, I'll better get them to dating each other so we can form a lovely couple of three"

    • @jordankuo6662
      @jordankuo6662 Před 2 měsíci +5

      @@feliperoa5821 BYE LOL-

  • @kirstenpaff8946
    @kirstenpaff8946 Před 3 měsíci +3683

    By sounds of it, dating wasn't necessarily romantic, it was just two of the opposite sex going to a social event together.

    • @lhughes6656
      @lhughes6656 Před 3 měsíci +146

      And that's exactly how it should be!

    • @hikariluanGC
      @hikariluanGC Před 3 měsíci +636

      @@lhughes6656 As much as I love the sexual freedom of our times, one of the negative aspects of it is putting pressure on people to experience sex or assuming they’re having sex if they go on a date. Dating as some socializing event without sexual compromises sounds like heaven for me as gay guy. It’s so much pressure when it comes to having sex that I’m often afraid of dating because of it.

    • @alejandrogonzalezakamintyt2242
      @alejandrogonzalezakamintyt2242 Před 3 měsíci +200

      ​@@hikariluanGC Same here. I'm always afraid that at the end of the date, he'll be expecting me to go to bed with him.

    • @hikariluanGC
      @hikariluanGC Před 3 měsíci +88

      @@alejandrogonzalezakamintyt2242 Yes, I've been trying to work on that anxiety and on that fact that is ok to say no when I'm not in the mood or not into it, but the pressure can still be present because it's a common thing which in and of itself isn't a bad thing. It just creates some pressure under some circumstances.

    • @wtfisggon7251
      @wtfisggon7251 Před 3 měsíci

      No it was romantic but the key here is they weren’t having s3x

  • @technicallyawriter
    @technicallyawriter Před 3 měsíci +2547

    My mom was a teen in the 50s in the US and described dating similarly, but there is a bit of missing context: Friendships were exclusively within the same gender. So dates were the *only* time boys and girls really got to know each other. My mom thought it was cool that my circle of friends had a mix of girls and boys, and I think she enjoyed the novelty of watching a teenage girl consider boys as something other than potential dates.

    • @lajoyous1568
      @lajoyous1568 Před 3 měsíci +219

      My mom is in the same age group as yours & was horrified when I would drive off with a car full of guy friends. "What will the neighbors think?!"
      I learned early to ignore the assumed opinions of neighbors. 😁

    • @rosecat5638
      @rosecat5638 Před 3 měsíci +106

      Yeah my grandparents always thought any guy friends I had were boyfriends I didn’t want to admit to, they just couldn’t grasp that were didn’t see each other that way.

    • @WhiffleWaffles
      @WhiffleWaffles Před 3 měsíci +50

      That makes a lot of sense in modern context, or at least a few years ago, where people have this concept that "girls can't be friends with boys" and whatnot.

    • @user-jf3xy5kk6u
      @user-jf3xy5kk6u Před 3 měsíci +7

      Sex, not gender.

    • @emmanarotzky6565
      @emmanarotzky6565 Před 3 měsíci +29

      So “boyfriend” really could mean “friend who is a boy” lol!
      (Also what’s with that other reply? The original comment is clearly talking about gender, not sex. It’s saying that people thought friends had to be the same gender - so girls could only be friends with other girls and boys could only be friends with other boys.)

  • @elizabethwillis885
    @elizabethwillis885 Před 3 měsíci +4790

    My grandma told me all about dating culture in the late 40s. It’s wild. Her parents had so many dating rules and she was the most popular girl in school. She dated so many boys. She was booked up for MONTHS. All with different boys. She said casual dating was very normal. She also proposed to my grandpa! She was awesome.

    • @elizabethwillis885
      @elizabethwillis885 Před 3 měsíci +215

      My grandma also looked just like the black dahlia. She was gorgeous.

    • @mimir1885
      @mimir1885 Před 3 měsíci +90

      Wow!!!!! Thabks for sharing lol they make it seem like it was soooooooooo different but that's really not true. The only different is we have the internet

    • @southernbelletales
      @southernbelletales Před 3 měsíci +53

      Return of The Mack is your grandma’s theme song 😂

    • @jordankuo6662
      @jordankuo6662 Před 3 měsíci +30

      slay.

    • @bossyboots5000
      @bossyboots5000 Před 3 měsíci

      Yeah, I've always been told that dating a lot of different boys got you named "easy" (slut) and you were ostracized for it. Even in the 80s this was true in the US.
      However, I do agree that people (especially men bc they were more privileged and double standards do exist - hello, "body count") have always been ghosting, disrespectful, and only wanting sex (then dumping you if you didn't provide). It's just that now sex is a much bigger part of it, and things like social media, smart phones with cameras and ubiquitous porn have intensified the bad behavior. Like, in the 50s they didn't have revenge porn, but I'm certain that if smart phones existed back then men would have engaged in that behavior. In other words, the behaviors are still the same, it's that technology has intensified things in the present.

  • @originofclothing
    @originofclothing Před 3 měsíci +830

    Just a funny little aside: I work at a middle school and apparently the current version of “getting pinned” is wearing your girlfriends scrunchie on your wrist. It’s actually really cute to see the boys in the hall proudly sporting the scrunchie

    • @emilycurtis4398
      @emilycurtis4398 Před 3 měsíci +75

      That is adorable

    • @sharimeline3077
      @sharimeline3077 Před 3 měsíci +33

      So cute.

    • @slpy.flower
      @slpy.flower Před 3 měsíci +57

      Yesss this is true!! When I was in middle school I knew some girls that would do that with guys, and once had a friend freak out because she felt like she should’ve sprayed her scrunchie with perfume. 😭

    • @podtherod9304
      @podtherod9304 Před 2 měsíci +21

      Lmaoooo, i work at a summer camp for 4th-6th graders and they’re the exact same way. If they’re really serious they’ll make a bracelet or have one of the counselors make them one to give to their crush. I had one boy who went around with a Gatorade bottle cap circle thing (like the thing that seals the cap) and was trying to get a girlfriend with it. He goes the whole week with no luck then finally on the last day he runs up saying “I FINALLY GOT ONE!!!!” So I was like awesome dude!! What’s her name? Kid had NO idea what her name even was. Kids are ridiculous

    • @smol_chilli_pepper
      @smol_chilli_pepper Před 2 měsíci +7

      That is soo cute

  • @mkatcavanaugh
    @mkatcavanaugh Před 3 měsíci +2067

    My grandmother's favorite story is telling me how back in high school, she used to have a kitchen drawer full of class rings and would slip on the right one before each date. She told me she would famously make plans with different people for the same night, and whomever showed up first was who she went with. One night apparently she was sneaking in the back door from an early date for another one while my great grandmother had to entertain the boy waiting in the parlor. She said "Hank, I'm so sorry. Barbara must be running late" and he responded "ma'am, my name is Joseph".

    • @karenk2409
      @karenk2409 Před 3 měsíci +234

      Your grandmother was a master player!

    • @Sophie_Pea
      @Sophie_Pea Před 3 měsíci +122

      I’d love to see this in a move lol

    • @moononthewindynight27
      @moononthewindynight27 Před 3 měsíci

      Disgusting manipulation

    • @mellie4174
      @mellie4174 Před 3 měsíci +23

      😂😂😂😂😂

    • @mkatcavanaugh
      @mkatcavanaugh Před 3 měsíci +72

      My dating history however pales in comparison 😅 growing up she'd see me home on a Saturday night and be confused as to why I didn't have give dates lined up. 🤷‍♀️

  • @bossyboots5000
    @bossyboots5000 Před 3 měsíci +1242

    The one thing those books didnt address was how much the option for social activities was so limited to dates. So if you were a girl who was shy, or had strict parents, or didnt meet the beauty standards of the time... well then, you spent an awful lot of time alone on the weekends. I think part of the reason girls dated around so much was bc it was one of the only options for socializing and leaving the house.

    • @mellie4174
      @mellie4174 Před 3 měsíci +78

      Excellent point. Karolina touched on it briefly but didn't expand.

    • @amberadams9310
      @amberadams9310 Před 3 měsíci +96

      Yeah my grandparents were remembering a girl that went to high school with them
      All the guys apparently wanted to ask her out… and they were all terrified of her father so no one did

    • @TheMariemarie16
      @TheMariemarie16 Před 3 měsíci +45

      There were a lot more organized social clubs and most people participated in church so yes there was no mall and no Starbucks but there were other things for a girl to do.

    • @bossyboots5000
      @bossyboots5000 Před 3 měsíci +28

      @@TheMariemarie16 True, I did forget about the kind of clubs that would pop up. Though my understanding was that they tended to be gender divided? Like a sewing club with all women. Or a cigar club that was all men.

    • @michelleobrien6996
      @michelleobrien6996 Před 3 měsíci +15

      My mother's era was 1950s, but she lived in Australia. Perhaps you are right about dating being the primary way to have a social life - in 1950s America. My understanding is that in 1950s Australia most young adults (male and female) went to the local dance every Saturday night and there wasn't a culture of casual dating.

  • @ashleygreenslade2344
    @ashleygreenslade2344 Před 3 měsíci +1028

    Suddenly Archie Comics make more sense.

    • @roseannevandijk2095
      @roseannevandijk2095 Před 3 měsíci +156

      Yeah now I understand it all much better. I could never wrap my head around the constant switch between Veronica and Betty.

    • @jammjumble9928
      @jammjumble9928 Před 3 měsíci +82

      Betty and Veronica comics are the only reason I knew that 50s dating was casual. They constantly go on dates with random guys

    • @heeloo2997
      @heeloo2997 Před 3 měsíci +13

      I was thinking the same thing! They constantly dated around

    • @jessicalukram74
      @jessicalukram74 Před 3 měsíci +3

      Yes

    • @helenlong8988
      @helenlong8988 Před 3 měsíci +11

      Yesss! I actually knew a lot of these dating terms and customs already from being obsessed with Archie comics as a kid!

  • @IAmBene
    @IAmBene Před 3 měsíci +447

    As someone who is super interested in life in different eras, it's such a weird feeling every time I think "Wow, it would be super interesting to live in that time for a while!" and then remember that I'm gay.

    • @hollyingraham3980
      @hollyingraham3980 Před 3 měsíci +14

      They didn't just invent same sex involvement! You ought to be checking academic stuff on what was going on behind the curtains back then.

    • @IAmBene
      @IAmBene Před 3 měsíci +93

      @@hollyingraham3980 I know my queer history, I know what was going on behind the curtains. But I know that if I ever pulled the curtains open, it would be bad. History is queer, we have always existed, but it was a very different experience from the heteronormative mainstream. That's kinda what I meant by my original comment: I see these videos about life in different eras, like this one, and imagine myself in that time, but then the realization kicks in. I wouldn't be bringing home a different boyfriend every week, I'd have to bring home a girlfriend or nobody at all. Gay dating in the fifties was a very different beast. And then I remember that I'm trans, and that complicates the fifties fantasy even more. The past is never just a playground for me, I can't help thinking about the implications, the atrocities committed against people like me. When I imagine myself in the fifties, or in any other time where my people were oppressed, I'm never just a guy, I have to be a rebel, and while that's a neat fantasy, it's limiting, and brings with it another harsh realization: The fact that I'd probably not be a rebel, I'd be closeted and depressed.
      Sorry for writing a whole dissertation, I've got a lot of thoughts and feelings on the topic.

    • @hhale
      @hhale Před 3 měsíci +22

      You would have casually dated the opposite sex and most people wouldn't think a thing of your sexuality, even as you secretly did your own thing in the closet. That's how Rock Hudson got by in Hollywood in that era. Where things would get complicated is if the women (assuming you are male) you dated started talking to each other and compared notes. "He never tries anything" or "he didn't even try to kiss me goodnight." If you were lucky, they'd write it off as shyness. If you weren't, someone might muster up the courage to ask, then you had a decision to make. Coming out was not something you did. Getting caught even kissing someone of the same sex...nightmare scenario. Best of times, worst of times, really.

    • @dextro_whatever
      @dextro_whatever Před 3 měsíci +12

      Oof skill issue (what am I talking about I’m also gay)

    • @mamasimmerplays4702
      @mamasimmerplays4702 Před 3 měsíci +9

      Yeah living in an era when we're all allowed to marry the consenting adult of choice is precious, and worth fighting for as the bigots try to take that away again.

  • @katebryan2305
    @katebryan2305 Před 3 měsíci +446

    My God. I got exhausted just listening to that diary. I feel like the diary helped her organize all these dudes 😂

    • @MichaelRainey
      @MichaelRainey Před 3 měsíci +73

      That wasn't a diary, that was a catalog.

    • @drewgoin8849
      @drewgoin8849 Před 3 měsíci +24

      I thought it was hilarious when Karolina said, "She's for the streets!"

  • @chronischgeheilt
    @chronischgeheilt Před 3 měsíci +455

    So basically, GREASE isnt even that unrealistic.

  • @ComandanteToht
    @ComandanteToht Před 3 měsíci +858

    We can all agree that Dick Gunn was the obvious choice

    • @Miner-dyne
      @Miner-dyne Před měsícem +5

      Seriously, just the name... Hal had no chance

  • @graceanderson7933
    @graceanderson7933 Před 3 měsíci +904

    I'm glad I wasn't a teenager in the 1950s because I sure as hell wouldn't have the energy for all that

    • @happytofu5
      @happytofu5 Před 3 měsíci +57

      Haha me too. But I am sure introverts exited back then as well.

    • @mschmidt62
      @mschmidt62 Před 3 měsíci +33

      I think the overall expectations of academic achievement were lower. A lot of folks didn't go on to college before the college boom of the 1960s. In the late 70s, my social circle consisted of the "honors" courses with a lot of people intending to apply to competitive colleges. We were busy!

    • @cogitorium1089
      @cogitorium1089 Před 3 měsíci +42

      Nowadays your brain is overstimulated with shiny pictures online and on tv, so it's tired all the time. Back then when it comes to things one can do at home you had like 3 tv channels and maybe a library nearby, so people had to socialize or they'd be crazy bored.

    • @magdam8290
      @magdam8290 Před 3 měsíci +8

      If you didn''t have the internet, you would have energy

    • @graceanderson7933
      @graceanderson7933 Před 3 měsíci +18

      @magdam8290 Actually, I'm pretty sure I wouldn't lol. The internet has nothing to do with my introversion. If I was around in the 50s I'd probably be at the library reading all the time

  • @timriehl1500
    @timriehl1500 Před 3 měsíci +657

    I had also read that in the US, it was up to the girl to stop the boy from going "too far". The idea was that boys were naturally sexual and girls had the responsibility of setting limits. Then when WWII came around, and young men were sent to the UK, American dating culture clashed with British dating culture. British girls expected that boys who "tried something" meant the boy was in love and wanted to marry them. American men who dated British girls were surprised at how "easy" they were! So there were many situations where Amercian boys tried something and the British girl didn't stop them and then were shocked when the Yank wasn't making marriage plans with them!

    • @hhale
      @hhale Před 3 měsíci +109

      the book "'Overpaid, Oversexed, and over Here': The American GI in World War II Britain" might be of interest to you.

    • @TReel-vz7eh
      @TReel-vz7eh Před 3 měsíci +4

      @@hhale Thanks; I'll put it on my list!

    • @ineedhoez
      @ineedhoez Před 3 měsíci +2

      😂😂😂😂😂😂

    • @Schneeeulenwetter
      @Schneeeulenwetter Před 3 měsíci +44

      this is so funny, bc we had that in philosophy class. how a kiss meant something else / another base int he US than in the UK (eventho they spoke the same language) and led to many misunderstandings

    • @skadigemini
      @skadigemini Před 3 měsíci

      Ha! How funny.

  • @anxiety4daysmusingmedic891
    @anxiety4daysmusingmedic891 Před 3 měsíci +766

    This is my grandmother's dating time period. She was a hussy, unapologetic, and complicated. I miss her dearly. She had multiple boyfriends at her nursing home where she eventually passed. ❤

    • @MultiEquations
      @MultiEquations Před 3 měsíci +46

      Such a legend.l

    • @jennymunday7913
      @jennymunday7913 Před 3 měsíci +27

      I love her. I'm glad you had her in your life.

    • @fishtank39
      @fishtank39 Před 3 měsíci +19

      i hope we one get a romcom based in a nursing home with the female lead based on your grandmother

    • @readmachine18
      @readmachine18 Před 2 měsíci +5

      "A hussy" 😂😂😂😂😂😂

  • @karenk2409
    @karenk2409 Před 3 měsíci +603

    My Dad (born 1925) told me there were just as many premarital pregnancies as today, but the difference was, they got married. Lots or premature firstborns. Also, dating was an event - you didn't "hang out," you actually did something, like movie or a meal or a picnic. Girls were divided into good girls and otherwise ... if you wanted to be prime marriage material, you said no and took it slow. The risk of pregnancy was very real, and could be devastating for the girl's future and reputation, pretty much forever, if marriage didn't occur before the child was born.

    • @cynthiamurphy3669
      @cynthiamurphy3669 Před 3 měsíci +111

      I'm 70 and am acquainted with two women (one about 72 now, the other my mom's cousin (80-something now) who got pregnant in their teens and were quietly sent out of town to a catholic unwed mother's home here in Ohio to have their babies, both of whom were adopted. I imagine a whole lot of that went on in this country, whether you were catholic or not. The now 72-year-old gal strangely enough had her baby, came back home and kept the boyfriend, married him, and they never had any other kids. A few years ago, she was contacted by this daughter who had been adopted and was now a wife and grandmother herself. The daughter questioned her biological mom about her father, if she possibly knew her father's whereabouts. Of course, the daughter was naturally upset when she found out her biological parents had actually gotten married. The whole business was upsetting to everyone (the adoptive parents in particular), but I was told they did all get together at least one time.

    • @noth1ng5id
      @noth1ng5id Před 3 měsíci +32

      My Dad was born "premature" 😅 I think him and his siblings just ignored it? Like nobody really had a problem telling me but you can't say anything straight to them? The mental gymnastics people will go through

    • @ritamucci
      @ritamucci Před 3 měsíci

      @@cynthiamurphy3669my grandmother has told me multiple stories of female friends, relatives and classmates at her conservative catholic school “mysteriously” disappearing for months

    • @annabeinglazy5580
      @annabeinglazy5580 Před 3 měsíci +65

      Oh yh my grandma once told on herself by ranting about how much more health "premature" Babies used to be. My sis works in a neonatal unit, mostly with premature Babies, and my Gran for some reason boasted that her sisters Kid was 4kg (Not Sure how much thats in pounds but it's... Not a weight a premature Baby would have) and super healthy and my sis and I really Had to Work hard to keep straight faces.
      "Premature" uhuh.... 😂

    • @clockside
      @clockside Před 3 měsíci +10

      ​@@cynthiamurphy3669I'm only in my 30s, so there's a lot I don't understand about how things just Were back then... Why were people angry about the bio parents having gotten married at a later point in time??? They clearly weren't capable of caring for the child at the time, so it was for the good of the child to be adopted by a family that COULD give her the proper care and love she deserved. Did society really have such a strong social demand for unmarried people who got pregnant to either commit to a lifetime with someone they weren't sure they'd want to stay with or else end the relationship forever???
      I'm divorced, childfree, and have multiple family members who have been involved with adoption and foster care (as adoptees, adoptive parents, and foster children), to give you a sense of where my perspective is coming from. I see the situation of that woman you know as having worked out probably the best it could have, especially given the time frame of events. The bio parents were able to figure their lives out on a timeline that was appropriate for their needs, the child got a home that took care of her better than the bio parents could have, and the adoptive parents got a child to raise and love as their own. Why would the child and her parents be upset at the bio parents for something totally unrelated to the child?? I'm just so completely and genuinely confused...

  • @Cakesblue74
    @Cakesblue74 Před 3 měsíci +884

    Honestly, I think for teenagers it is fine to date multiple people, in the sense of never going steady. Instead, I think it's nice to go and do activities with people you like, without the weird pressure of having to commit. I think it forces teens to act more adult and mature. I wish I hadn’t had the pressure to go steady with people after one or two dates.

    • @Cakesblue74
      @Cakesblue74 Před 3 měsíci +133

      I mean, I think making teens be super monogamous when they date is a bit bizarre imo. I'm not saying they should cheat, but making them commit right away is not great.

    • @marcilk7534
      @marcilk7534 Před 3 měsíci +135

      I told my son when he got into middle school that he didn’t need to have girlfriends. He could spend time with girls as friends. This is my modern version of that idea, since dating has so much pressure now for sex.

    • @darkstarr984
      @darkstarr984 Před 3 měsíci +28

      The idea of going steady with people only, only because you like each other, absolutely turned me off the very idea of dating as I just… have no interest in that sort of thing. I didn’t want to do anything but hang out with my friends as a teenager and as an adult I don’t particularly function well with the idea of having a singular relationship where someone is every kind of thing to you. People need just friends.

    • @tarathoughts13
      @tarathoughts13 Před 3 měsíci +4

      Yea, like it’s not a good thing to play multiple people at a time don’t get me wrong, but I can forgive it more easily if you’re a teenager.

    • @hulking_presence
      @hulking_presence Před 3 měsíci +2

      The only sane and non-disgusting comment here.

  • @kirstenpaff8946
    @kirstenpaff8946 Před 3 měsíci +374

    I once asked my grandma how she met my grandpa. She answered something along the lines of "A friend set us up, but I was a little worried, because I had another date earlier that day."

  • @kirstenpaff8946
    @kirstenpaff8946 Před 3 měsíci +552

    My guess as to why there was so little dating advice for older (>25) women was that it was assumed that if you were looking for a husband at that age you had either already been married (and were then widowed or divorced) and knew how to get a man, or there was no hope for you.

    • @bossyboots5000
      @bossyboots5000 Před 3 měsíci +98

      There are still people today who think women over 25 are "used up" and "saggy/gaping" so there's no purpose in even considering them as a romantic partner. Usually said by incels and incel adjacent. But damn, the number of times I've read comments likr that online.

    • @beerelf6397
      @beerelf6397 Před 3 měsíci +89

      In USSR you were marked "old birth giver" (idk how to translate this in english) after 25 in medical documents. This was so cemented in people mind that in nursing school in 2010s our teachers still felt the need to remind us - no it is not the norm anymore, please drop this sh*t

    • @DoritoBot9000
      @DoritoBot9000 Před 3 měsíci +24

      Ironically my grandmother married at 30, and she had where to choose from, lol

    • @bossyboots5000
      @bossyboots5000 Před 3 měsíci +77

      @@beerelf6397 In the US I believe the term they still use is "geriatric pregnancy" when a woman 30+ yo is pregnant. In English the word "geriatric" refers to people who are like 80 years old. So yeah, it's offensive here too.

    • @beerelf6397
      @beerelf6397 Před 3 měsíci +11

      @@bossyboots5000 oh yes, it gives off the same flavour

  • @leileleileleile
    @leileleileleile Před 3 měsíci +203

    This video makes me think that much of the contemporary idealization of the 50s as the “good ol’ days” (no sex before marriage, going steady, women totally subservient to men) is a construction of the present to serve 21st century aims (conservatism, eg) rather than an accurate reflection of what life was like in the 50s

    • @xoica
      @xoica Před 3 měsíci +32

      it’s easy to romanticize a decade you didn’t live through and have only see movies about lol

    • @cookieface80
      @cookieface80 Před 3 měsíci +23

      It's created by 1950s media which was heavily censored.

    • @JeremyLevi
      @JeremyLevi Před 2 měsíci +2

      Bingo!

    • @kathleenkirchoff9223
      @kathleenkirchoff9223 Před 5 dny

      But rabid feminists today have a twisted view of how women were mis treated in traditional roles which is not accurate either. My mom had a career in the Marine Corp and as a telephone operator before meeting my Dad in college. She chose to stay home to raise us kids. I never saw the women in my neighborhood oppressed as housewives. But modern media makes those women look held down by domineering men.

  • @acecat2798
    @acecat2798 Před 3 měsíci +605

    Personally I'd be very interested to hear what dating was like for Karolina's grandparents' generation in 1950s Poland.

    • @reneaisak
      @reneaisak Před 3 měsíci +29

      Before October 1956: What do you think about Joseph S and commanders but quiet ?
      After Polish October 1956: WILD!

    • @mellie4174
      @mellie4174 Před 3 měsíci +2

      Yes!

    • @hulking_presence
      @hulking_presence Před 3 měsíci +4

      @@reneaisak I learned to find it funny that we russians live in your heads rent free 😁

    • @magdam8290
      @magdam8290 Před 3 měsíci +36

      Dating culture in Poland was extremely influenced by Catholic church in the 50s and beyond. That means a purity before marriage, sex out of wedlock was considered as a sin. People felt guilty and ashmed about their sexuality. Women were afraid to be considered easy by men. Many women married their first and only boyfriend. Dating wasn't viewed as fun, recreational activity, but as a way to find a spouse.

    • @sharimeline3077
      @sharimeline3077 Před 3 měsíci

      @@hulking_presence No, not the "russians." Just assholes forcing a regime on a country that didn't belong to them. Sit down.

  • @Sly-Moose
    @Sly-Moose Před 3 měsíci +1055

    So this begs the question, if our grandmas were like this, HOW did the rules become so strict nowadays with hussy shaming and all? Like, was it out of guilt/shame that the grandmas had and taught their kids to not be like them? Outside forces? Both?

    • @kirstenpaff8946
      @kirstenpaff8946 Před 3 měsíci +579

      I think there is a much stronger association between dating and being in a sexual relationship nowadays than there was in the 50s. Women are still judged quite harshly for having multiple sexual partners and if a woman has a lot of boyfriends, then the modern assumption is she also slept with a lot of guys. Also, people tend to forget the crazy shenanigans they got up to as teens once they become the parental authority figures that teens are rebelling against.

    • @curlzOdoom
      @curlzOdoom Před 3 měsíci +295

      Honestly, what quantumbler said, AND the chockehold of purity culture in the 90s and early 00s.

    • @K.C-2049
      @K.C-2049 Před 3 měsíci

      @@curlzOdoom the 90s and 00s definitely saw a backlash to feminism in the 70s and 80s that was the progenitor of the manosphere types we're seeing now. it seems like every time in the last 200 years or so, whenever there's a push for women's liberation there are people pushing back against it, and in those decades they were more than happy to spew their shit in pop culture and force it down everyone's throats. I mean look at the 1950s tradwife propaganda that the manosphere is referring to now. it was never a representation of reality, more men trying to get women back under control once they had begun working outside the home during WW2 (or so is my understanding of it).
      oh oh and also, I think we can see the purity culture definitely as a response to the expanding availability of birth control. like if we can't SCARE them into not having sexual autonomy, we'll SHAME them.

    • @ember9361
      @ember9361 Před 3 měsíci +216

      @@curlzOdoom fr like they called men who showered "metrosexuals" 😭

    • @Mynnia
      @Mynnia Před 3 měsíci +58

      Movies being taken for reality and the widening influence of fringe groups thanks to the internet.

  • @tabbitee
    @tabbitee Před 3 měsíci +962

    2020's dating culture: WE'RE the wildest!
    1950's dating culture: no WE'RE the wildest!
    19th century Denmark: *clears throat*

    • @quantumblur_3145
      @quantumblur_3145 Před 3 měsíci +83

      "we're special," screamed the unremarkable

    • @trudyannbuckley
      @trudyannbuckley Před 3 měsíci +169

      Okay now I need to know about 19th century Denmark XD

    • @crowned_crow493
      @crowned_crow493 Před 3 měsíci +71

      What was dating culture like in 19th century Denmark?

    • @ruthalysse4096
      @ruthalysse4096 Před 3 měsíci +36

      Commenting so I can hear the answer to this when someone replies xD

    • @nilawarriorprincess
      @nilawarriorprincess Před 3 měsíci +21

      I need about Denmark to know too!

  • @bellemoore9534
    @bellemoore9534 Před 3 měsíci +181

    In some sociology or history class during college, we learned that 1950s "casual dating" was encouraged by parents because "going steady" meant you were way more likely to be having the sexxx. So exclusivity was discouraged because people assumed it would lead to pre-marital intercourse.

  • @bluegirl4079
    @bluegirl4079 Před 3 měsíci +233

    The older my mother got, the more she told me about her "love life" in high school. She was a bit of a wild child. She worked as a ticket taker and usherette at the local movie theater and knew everyone in town. She also told me she like to go "parking!" She and my dad were so strict with me in high school, probably because she was so wild! LOL

  • @agargoyle12345
    @agargoyle12345 Před 3 měsíci +102

    I was raised by my grandmother -- a 50s housewife! People forget a 30ish year old 50s housewife was a 20ish year old on the WWII homefront and was a 10ish year old during the Depression.
    My grandmother's first job was in a factory assembling army boots. Women without children were expected to do 48 hours minimum a week. There was also weekly mandatory blood drives--she was very proud of the fact she had donated ("donated") over 40 gallons of blood! She couldn't break up with her first boyfriend because there was a great stigma against writing a Dear John letter. She always felt great guilt at not being too devastated when he died in France, partly because of all the sympathy people gave her.
    When she'd been a girl, she'd owned 3 dresses and during the winter, had to wash one each night, while wearing two, rotating layers. Her father was gone for weeks on end, because he could only find work miles away, and they couldn't afford for him to come home each weekend. My great-grandmother farmed a 10-acre 'garden' on her own, with only 4 elementary aged girls for help. She also hired the whole lot of them out as a housekeeper and cleaners in the evenings -- she'd fix meals and do laundry while the girls scrub the house. They weren't paid, they just got free meals for it, which allowed them to sell most of the produce and eggs. She left school at 15, having gotten her 8th grade education.
    By the 50s, she was married with kids. And of course she encouraged her kids to date, and enjoy their youth! She herself WANTED to be taken care of and not have to be the one ultimately responsible for things.

  • @Miannemih
    @Miannemih Před 3 měsíci +53

    This is why I love Grease! People thought teens in the 60s or 70s were too wild or sexual or dated too loose. But the writers, Jacobs and Casey (two men who would’ve been dating during high school in the 50s), came together to say “Hey! If you dated in the 50s you probably all dated most of your school! You can pretend everyone was so modest and virtuous back then but we know the truth!” 😂

  • @empressmarowynn
    @empressmarowynn Před 3 měsíci +127

    Even though my grandparents married in the 1930s they had similar experiences. My gram was super popular and every guy in the neighborhood wanted to go out with her. She dated pretty much everyone as a teen but in her 20's she eventually narrowed it down to my pap and another guy. My pap was kind of wishy washy on whether he wanted to be serious because he was having too much fun being a bachelor and playing with his band (so ridiculously modern day) so she literally moved several states away to become a nanny until he figured his nonsense out. She wrote to both of them while she was there and since she liked my pap more she gave him an ultimatum. She said that the other guy was ready to propose if he thought she'd say yes and if my pap wasn't interested anymore that's exactly what she was gonna do. That finally got him moving so she came back, he proposed, and then they were married for over 60 years. She said not to take any crap from guys because it wasn't worth it. Thanks gram.

  • @cinemaocd1752
    @cinemaocd1752 Před 3 měsíci +124

    This is the exact premise of half the comedy in Back to the Future. The young man in the supposedly permissive 80s, has a steady girlfriend and his mother is a bit of a player and far more assertive than one imagines from the supposedly demure 50s.

    • @wisconsieee
      @wisconsieee Před 3 měsíci +5

      Oh my gosh thank you for bringing in this reference! Love ittt😄

  • @lfgifu296
    @lfgifu296 Před 3 měsíci +243

    I love how it was sort of like picking one’s clothes- try on as many as you need before you find the right one to invest on. Also Dogalina had me dead💀

    • @quantumblur_3145
      @quantumblur_3145 Před 3 měsíci

      "was?"

    • @lfgifu296
      @lfgifu296 Před 3 měsíci +28

      @@quantumblur_3145 because this is an educational video on the 1950s dating culture. My verb tense was referring to the 1950s, and not used to imply that today it’s not like that.

    • @quantumblur_3145
      @quantumblur_3145 Před 3 měsíci +3

      @@lfgifu296 ah, I see. My mistake!

    • @lfgifu296
      @lfgifu296 Před 3 měsíci

      @@quantumblur_3145 enjoy the video:)

  • @Sly-Moose
    @Sly-Moose Před 3 měsíci +143

    Next time you're grandma tells you, "Oh the things I got up to when I was your age! 😊" SHE MEANS IT! 😭

  • @jeanboden8198
    @jeanboden8198 Před 3 měsíci +250

    My church growing up emphasized casual dating until 18. The purpose was to help you meet many different people and learn what qualities are important to you. I followed that idea and am so glad I did! Dating my husband was a breeze because I knew what I did or didn’t want. It is funny watching this video because it isn’t wild to me lol.

    • @hopetikvah4906
      @hopetikvah4906 Před 3 měsíci +6

      Are/were you by any chance LDS? That's the main church I've heard of that tends to encourage those sort of dating practices

    • @jeanboden8198
      @jeanboden8198 Před 3 měsíci +3

      @@hopetikvah4906 You hit the nail on the head! Yup.

    • @hopetikvah4906
      @hopetikvah4906 Před 3 měsíci +16

      @@jeanboden8198 Seems like a good way of doing things to me. A lot of kids I knew who got too serious with their boyfriends/girlfriends too young got distracted from their schoolwork, or were tied down to the first person they dated, who wasn't always the healthiest choice. It ended up being quite codependent a lot of the time, where they wouldn't hang out with their other friends, but were joined at the hip.

    • @jeanboden8198
      @jeanboden8198 Před 3 měsíci

      @@hopetikvah4906 Totally get that. I saw that with my friends too. It gave me lots of fun memories of getting to know people and doing fun activities! I still had boys I had bigger crushes on but they never progressed until I was in college.
      I have seen the people who got together that young change so much and their relationships suffer because they aren't who they were in High School.
      It is by no means a perfect system, and as a teen you can feel lonely without having that one person, but I wouldn't change my experience for the world.

    • @gabbsaton
      @gabbsaton Před 3 měsíci +12

      Hahah I was going to say, the group dates, the dating several people, the actually going on a fun date-- all of it is how I grew up. Dating was a blast! I didn't realize it was so wild in today's culture. 😆 I wish more young people would just have fun and get to know each other without trying to grow up so fast.

  • @thetillerwiller4696
    @thetillerwiller4696 Před 3 měsíci +301

    I sorta was hoping that Karolina would talk about 1950s Polish dating culture. It would be nice to compare US culture with it

    • @hhale
      @hhale Před 3 měsíci +8

      Given that it was dominated by Soviet occupation and the country only very slowly recovered from World War II? Not the sort of place that was all that pleasant. Americans don't realize at times just how easy we had it back then relative to other countries.

    • @thetillerwiller4696
      @thetillerwiller4696 Před 3 měsíci +19

      @@hhale exactly the reason why I want to know the differences. Nothing makes you appreciate what you have more than knowing what others went through.

    • @hermenegildakociubinska6665
      @hermenegildakociubinska6665 Před 3 měsíci +7

      I'd guess that between re-building of the country after the war, the electrification of the countryside, "hero" labourers and the wonders of the Party, teenagers' social life had little chance to become the subject of a publication.

    • @partiellementecreme
      @partiellementecreme Před 3 měsíci +6

      @@hhale so? It's still interesting. If Karolina and other Poles are alive today, it's because Poles in the '50s were attracted to each other and made a new generation, despite the communism.

    • @Tatiana_Palii
      @Tatiana_Palii Před 3 měsíci +7

      ​​@@partiellementecreme my granny (who happens to be ethnically Polish) was a teen in the 1940's-1950's USSR, and she remembers being less interested in boys than other girls were (that's our family trait) she was more of a tomboy, but there were still crushes, parties, dancing, school prom, etc. She married relatively late, at 31, and she seriously dated some guys before that obviously.
      My grandad from the other side of the family married early in the 1950's because of his girlfriend's pregnancy, and later met my granny and divorced his first wife.

  • @darrinscott6612
    @darrinscott6612 Před 3 měsíci +293

    My dad was dating around this time, and this basically checks out, though I'd note my dad mentions that sex in casual relationships among young adults (less so teens) was pretty common, in part because the parents had less control. Being chaste until marriage wasn't the norm. It was just more taboo to talk about. I'd also note that sexually active teenagers aren't as common as you might think even today. The CDC cites 55% have had sex by the age of 18. Almost certainly the majority of 16 year olds have never had sex.

    • @K.C-2049
      @K.C-2049 Před 3 měsíci

      I'm starting to think that everything we hear about the MoRaLiTy of the 1950s from these redpill manosphere types (the chastity of women, the sanctity of marriage, reinforced gender roles and the tradwive garbage) is really just reliant on social control propaganda that was prevalent then and is still prevalent now, rather than anything that actually existed.

    • @bossyboots5000
      @bossyboots5000 Před 3 měsíci +110

      There have been countless reports stating Gen Zers are having less sex bc they're just so turned off by people's behaviors, the risks associated with it, and how gross it's gotten (such as things like revenge porn).

    • @zvezdoblyat
      @zvezdoblyat Před 3 měsíci +4

      ​@@bossyboots5000but also many more sexual activities and teenage pregnancy by children as young as 13 years old

    • @bossyboots5000
      @bossyboots5000 Před 3 měsíci +56

      @@zvezdoblyat you literally just "but also" then completely contradicted what I said lol. I'd like to know your statistics on that bc it's the opposite of everything I've read. In fact, 13 yo getting pregnant seems to have been far more common in the past, when we didn't discuss the sexualization of children, there was no sex ed (though our current standards are lacking) and a lack of access to birth control

    • @zvezdoblyat
      @zvezdoblyat Před 3 měsíci +19

      @@bossyboots5000 there are more young adults not having sex because of information of STDs, STIs, HIV, etc. combined with not wanting any possibility of having a child at such a young age. But there are also increased rates of early teens having sex. I'm sure you can find the info if you look it up, maybe similar to where you're sourcing your countless reports from.

  • @mollieanne
    @mollieanne Před 3 měsíci +157

    My mom kept the sweet letters my dad wrote my mom in the 1950s when they were apart, but going to get married. She was in Wis, and he was going to school in North Dakota. My dad wrote her a letter a day for a whole year. I was able to have them after my parents past away. I read them all last year and they were so fun and sweet and funny too.

    • @SoVidushi
      @SoVidushi Před 3 měsíci +13

      That is so sweet omg, just like in the notebook.

  • @just_foxy35
    @just_foxy35 Před 3 měsíci +91

    "people have always been people" is such a true statement, no matter what was seen as "moral" or "the way to do things" or whatever, people have always been doing the same things, it would just sometimes be a bit easier or a bit harder, sometimes be more open and sometimes more secretive. people will always be people

  • @getabiggerboat
    @getabiggerboat Před 3 měsíci +46

    This is where I get to tell one of my 100% most favorite stories. My mom is a product of the 50's. She attended a university where there was a women's college and a men's college. In those days, the women's college campus was separate from the men's. She told me that you could tell who had a date on Friday night because those girls came to class with their hair rolled in orange juice cans. This scene with the lucky girls with dates showing up to class with their hair all rolled for the big event is absolutely the most 50s thing.

  • @thisisjeff9845
    @thisisjeff9845 Před 3 měsíci +387

    My grandparents were married in 1957. My grandma always told me that there's no point in dating someone if you're not sleeping with them. She was only a little bit bit pregnant when they got married.

    • @lenas6246
      @lenas6246 Před 3 měsíci +16

      allo brained take

    • @ember9361
      @ember9361 Před 3 měsíci +20

      @@lenas6246 or aromantic. Regardless, cringe comment

    • @Downhomeherbwife
      @Downhomeherbwife Před 3 měsíci +29

      My paternal grandmother was also a little bit pregnant with my father when they married.
      On the other side of my family, my great great grandmother was 8 months pregnant when she married my great great grandfather (per the records of the Lutheran church.)

    • @carpevinum8645
      @carpevinum8645 Před 3 měsíci +16

      My grandparents never celebrated their wedding aniversary. One year as a child/teen my mum did the maths and figured out he brother was definitely already on the way. My grandfather was a sailor.
      Mum was born 1957, so would have been 1955, I think.

    • @franciscrozierera
      @franciscrozierera Před 3 měsíci +10

      @@ember9361 other people have different experiences and opinions than you, get over it

  • @eldorados_lost_searcher
    @eldorados_lost_searcher Před 3 měsíci +38

    Archie's relationship with Betty and Veronica makes so much more sense now.

  • @SibylleLeon
    @SibylleLeon Před 3 měsíci +81

    The boyfriend tally-up has me wheezing. Soooo funny! You go girl! 🤣

  • @trudyannbuckley
    @trudyannbuckley Před 3 měsíci +95

    Some study came out like 5 years ago or so and I listened to a podcast about it. It was "Science Answers: What's the Best Way to Find your Soulmate?" or something along those lines. Scientists had surveyed tons of people, their dating style, their happiness in marriage, and all. Their advice for the happiest relationships was: date casually when you're young. Don't take any relationship too seriously for the first few years. Date all sorts of people and get a feel for the kind of person you get along with best. Then, when you're ready to settle down, you'll be able to find your serious partner in the haystack easily. Hearing that's what it was more or less like in the 50s and society decided we should CHANGE it is WILD! I'm pretty annoyed tbh. lol
    Pinning a boy's ability to control themselves on the girl he's dating is the stupidest shit ever though- and seeing that idea persist into the modern day is maddening.

    • @tamarrajames3590
      @tamarrajames3590 Před 3 měsíci

      Puberty sucks, and hormones always played a role back then…they likely still do today. You are right, putting the onus on the girls to keep control of the situation wasn’t fair. The reasoning was that boys were driven sexually, and girls were less susceptible to their own hormones and sexual drives…which wasn’t always the case. Girls tended to make excuses, which the boys attempted to find ways around until the girl either got mad and demanded to be taken home, or gave in a little, and tried to set a new boundary. Before going on a date, my Sister and I were always given a $5.00 bill called “mad money”. We weren’t to spend it unless we got mad with our date, and needed to see ourselves home by taxi. It was a pretty standard thing between Mothers and Daughters back then, and gave us a sense of security, as we didn’t need to depend on our date to get us home.🖤🇨🇦

  • @reno.corona
    @reno.corona Před 3 měsíci +152

    The general idea I always got was, because sex wasn't common practice in school relationships, the stakes for dating people weren't so high. It was just to have a partner for social gatherings ("going stag" existed I'm sure, but seems less common.) I guess that was mostly true.
    However, one thing the book experts would never address was the lack of sex ed and awareness probably led to a lot more communities being like "The Last Picture Show" than anyone cared to admit!

  • @semoremo9548
    @semoremo9548 Před 3 měsíci +121

    To me this is just further proof of what I always say. People have always been people. Some cheat, some break up and make up multiple times, some lie... just generally messy, like we are to this day.

  • @JUMALATION1
    @JUMALATION1 Před 3 měsíci +55

    My grandma got "courted" by a guy (my grandpa) at work. She started working as an errand girl at a bank, and he was an errand boy. They were like 14 or 15 and one day my grandpa asked her "will you be my girl?" and she said yes. They got married at 19 after my grandma's dad died (he never accepted his future son-in-law, he was a bit possessive over his daughter). They lived a very turbulent life full of ups and downs, but they still somehow worked it out until my grandpa passed away in 2009. I'll have to ask my grandma for more details about their early dating life the next time I see her.

  • @rachaelmarks2170
    @rachaelmarks2170 Před 3 měsíci +46

    I read Sylvia Plath's diaries and was so confused about all the boyfriends that I tried to count them. I'm sure I missed some, but there were around 30 and they all seemed horrifying.

  • @raraavis7782
    @raraavis7782 Před 3 měsíci +64

    'Do you battle or do you suffer?'
    I'm dead 💀

  • @katykatmeow5159
    @katykatmeow5159 Před 3 měsíci +44

    I highly recommend the book, "Bad Girls: Young Women, Sex, and Rebellion before the Sixties" by Amanda H. Littauer. I read it for a class last semester and the later part of the book talks a lot about 1950s dating culture.
    The book also discusses stuff such as the affect of WWII on dating and sex, the reactions of American women to the publishing of the Kinsey report, and the experiences of young queer women in the 40s and 50s.

  • @sentimentalcircuscurator
    @sentimentalcircuscurator Před 3 měsíci +66

    When I was a kid we actually had something similar. We called it "asking chance/fråga chans" (Im from Sweden). But this was a pre-going with/boyfriend/girlfriend. You would ask a friend to ask your love interest "Whatsherface wants to "ask chance on you", does she (or he) have a chance on you ? It was basically "introduction/testing the waters"/do you find "this person" attractive ? Would you CONSIDER "going with", dating this person ? and there was NO COMITTMENT OF ANY KIND ATTATCHED. You could have MULTIPLE boys or girls, that had "asked chance" on you, at THE SAME TIME. And often they all knew about the others, and sometimes the same friend group (boys or girls was the same) had ALL "asked chance" on the same girl or boy. THIS DID NOT MEAN THAT THEY WERE YOUR BOYFRIEND.( It was platonic romance, sussing out whether your crush was interested in you, and at what level). That was something that COULD happen later, if you played your cards right. Im not sure this thing exixts anymore though. This was an interesting video. : )

    • @wisconsieee
      @wisconsieee Před 3 měsíci +1

      This is fascinating! Thank you for sharing and explaining it 🙂

    • @kimberlybega8271
      @kimberlybega8271 Před 3 měsíci +6

      Would this be where the lyrics for the ABBA song "Take a Chance on Me" come from?

    • @44scotlandstreet87
      @44scotlandstreet87 Před 2 měsíci +2

      YES I remember "asking chance" on two different boys on the same day in 3rd grade lol. This was the 2010s

    • @sentimentalcircuscurator
      @sentimentalcircuscurator Před 2 měsíci +1

      @@kimberlybega8271 Possibly. Huh, never thought about it like that. I dont know the "lore" of all their songs though. But many of their songs DO have a story, of sorts, so... maybe?

    • @sentimentalcircuscurator
      @sentimentalcircuscurator Před 2 měsíci +1

      @@44scotlandstreet87 ok so its still going on? Thats so cute!

  • @mysticalarrow1
    @mysticalarrow1 Před 3 měsíci +93

    Dear Diary: Teen drama of the 50s reads just like the teen drama in my highschool during the 2000s XD

  • @stephaniehorne6692
    @stephaniehorne6692 Před 3 měsíci +64

    She dated more guys in one year than I have in my life!

  • @jcasillas78
    @jcasillas78 Před 3 měsíci +131

    Great video! Maybe this could be a series, dating in different eras? When I was in high school in the states (90's) we still had a "Sadie Hawkins Dance" where girls asked out the boys. Supposedly named after the first girl to ask out a boy.

    • @emilyrln
      @emilyrln Před 3 měsíci +4

      My high school in the mid 2000s had a yearly Sadie Hawkins dance. Wonder if they're still around in schools today.

    • @andrewtime2994
      @andrewtime2994 Před 3 měsíci +6

      Sadie Hawkins was a character in the "Li'l Abner" comic strip by Al Capp that ran from 1934 to 1977. She couldn't get a date so the town decided to have a dance where the women invited the men. Sadie Hawkins Day was a running joke on the strip for years.

  • @acecat2798
    @acecat2798 Před 3 měsíci +176

    Thank you for doing this video! As someone who watches and reads a lot of stuff from the 1950s, it's always bizarre to me when older people (who were children at the time) try to tell me that nobody dated casually, had hookups, mixers-- personal ads in the newspaper weren't that different from online dating profiles either. Like the very idea that you have a "best girl" or are "pinned" or "going steady" implies that this is a significant commitment compared to your more casual dates with different people at the same time. And that's not even getting into key parties and open marriages, or the common issue of separation without divorce (to the degree that you might hire someone to be "the other woman" in court before no-fault divorces were common, or you might have to hire someone to track down a spouse that left so you can marry someone else). Heck, it's not rare to find that somebody was married briefly as a teenager "but it didn't take" and they had it annulled.

  • @AliFinNoble
    @AliFinNoble Před 3 měsíci +35

    This video reminded me of my grandmother very much! She wants told me when I was in my early teens that I should never say no to a date because it's free food. And then I should date as many men as I can so I find the one that I like. I remember being so bewildered by being told that and my mother's eyes got so big when she heard what lovey had said!

    • @MrsDazl
      @MrsDazl Před 3 měsíci +5

      😄my dad would tell me the "free food" line

  • @gostovahs8121
    @gostovahs8121 Před 3 měsíci +54

    My grandparents were young adults from the late 40's early 50's, and I can remember my grandma griping to me 'all the kids now a days (this would have been the 90's) want to be in longterm relationships... highschool is supposed to be about casually dating lots of people! Stress about long term stuff later'. So from what i gathered from her this seems on the money

    • @karenk2409
      @karenk2409 Před 3 měsíci +9

      It was about "playing the field," certainly not sleeping with the field. That's the difference between then and now. Once you start having sex, there is an expectation that this is a long-term commitment, at least for most women. The neutral area between flirtation and sex has disappeared.

  • @K80_02
    @K80_02 Před 3 měsíci +25

    I wish there were casual dances instead of nightclubs, it seems like it would be good to have a space you can just dance in without drinking and the music isnt too loud, so you can actually get to know someone.

    • @minniemoe4797
      @minniemoe4797 Před měsícem

      And it would be sooo good for weight loss!!! I guess my mother's generation (gen x) was the last one that had dancing spaces not directly connected to alcohol or hook-ups

  • @tarawolf425
    @tarawolf425 Před 3 měsíci +51

    As the Beach Boys said "none of the guys are going steady 'cause it wouldn't be right to leave your best girl home on a Saturday night."

  • @EmmaCruises
    @EmmaCruises Před 3 měsíci +48

    Plot twist after plot twist in that diary! 😂

    • @jfcfanfic
      @jfcfanfic Před 3 měsíci

      Was not expecting Emma over here. Love your channel too.

  • @MichieHoward
    @MichieHoward Před 3 měsíci +24

    Perfect for this topic!! One of my favourite Golden Girls episodes
    Rose: “What's your definition of a boyfriend?”
    Blanche: “Any man you bring to a fevered pitch of uncontrollable ecstasy.”
    Rose: “Oh… Fifty-six.”
    Blanche: “Excuse me?”
    Rose: “I had about 56 boyfriends. Of course, that was before I knew Charlie. I probably would of had more, but I wasn't allowed to start dating until I was a senior.”
    Blanche: “Fifty-six? Fifty-six?”
    Dorothy: “Oh God, stand back. She's gonna blow!”
    Got to imagine as the ladies were in their late 50's early 60's they were meeting their husbands in the late 1930's to late 1940's

  • @srlee203
    @srlee203 Před 3 měsíci +53

    Those diaries read like mid 2000s Livejournal. Vibes.

  • @AliFinNoble
    @AliFinNoble Před 3 měsíci +35

    My grandmother always used to tell me that she had three boyfriends and she said to herself if "pop" doesn't propose to me then I'm going to break up with him and focus on the other two. Well of course my grandfather did not propose to her so instead she proposed to him in the middle of the diner. Needless to say the other two gentlemen were not pleased 😅

  • @Pannalovegood
    @Pannalovegood Před 3 měsíci +22

    I remember reading something, a book, a short story, an article maybe, don't remember, but it was from around 50s in US from the perspective of a father who was worried that his daughter would only see one boy 😅 He wished she would go out with other boys "like other girls do". The implication was that it was dangrously too serious

  • @fran4636
    @fran4636 Před 3 měsíci +18

    This makes a lot of things my grandfather taught his kids about dating make more sense, like "all's fair in love until they're engaged."

  • @ttintagel
    @ttintagel Před 3 měsíci +72

    If you haven't already, you should check out some of the educational films about dating that were made in the 1950's. They're wild! Full of parents scared that their teenage kids are running off to get married.

  • @kathysharp7551
    @kathysharp7551 Před 3 měsíci +57

    "Dear Diary..." 😂😂😂 What a drama queen teen! Even the girls won't talk to her any more. Omg. Wow, 14 was tough for us all, but I'm so glad mine was easier than that! Probably bc I wasn't dating.

  • @acecat2798
    @acecat2798 Před 3 měsíci +132

    I recently learned how my great-aunt and her husband met. My aunt Mary worked for his aunt, and my uncle was deployed during WWII. Apparently they set it up so that the girls at the store (office? we don't know) would have phone dates, especially with the soldiers who wanted someone to talk to. My great-uncle had talked to another girl named Mary, but there must've been a mixup because he ended up talking to my aunt Mary and hitting it off. When he got leave, his aunt arranged for them to have dinner at their house, and Mary got dolled up in a red dress-- "like waving a flag in front of a bull." They went to a movie, and when they came out the streets were in chaos-- it was V.E. Day. The restaurants were all closed, so they went back to her apartment. She doesn't say what all happened, except that they had hot cocoa and it was way too sweet.
    The way that Mary's brother and his wife met can be summed up quickly: he walked into church in February wearing aviator sunglasses, and that was it for her. She became friends with Mary to get introduced, wrote her then-boyfriend a Dear John letter and married Mr. Sunglasses like 8 months later.
    The most scandalous story of all is that my great-grandma was seeing a married man for years, but her daughter at least didn't see anything wrong about it because they were in love and the marriage was unhappy. He eventually divorced his wife for her and they got married and ran a resort.
    I only learned all these stories recently, but I think they're a good insight into dating and romance in the 40s. I think a lot of people got married quickly in the 40s and were widowed or got divorced (or got stuck and unhappy). Casual dating definitely existed for the whole 20th century, but I think the increased visibility of marriages that fell apart encouraged people to teach teenagers to date around first.

    • @brandyjean7015
      @brandyjean7015 Před 3 měsíci +4

      Did Mr & Mrs Sunglasses live happily ever after?

    • @karenk2409
      @karenk2409 Před 3 měsíci +5

      There is nothing like a man in uniform to turn a girl's head! I know, because my mother married one (WWII)!

    • @supersyncspaz7
      @supersyncspaz7 Před 3 měsíci

      I love the story about your great aunt! It sounds like a movie!

  • @canuck3169
    @canuck3169 Před 3 měsíci +41

    In my early teens (the mid 70’s) I was gifted a box of books by a friend of my Dad’s-his daughter was moving out after getting married. Along with the assorted Harlequin romances, Grooks, The Heart of Darkness (not a romance), The Catcher In The Rye, and some high school required reading literature, was the book `How to Catch and Hold a Man’. The book had been published in the 1960’s, it was gleefully shared with my friends. It talked about-among other things-how to get his attention, how to say no & how to say yes, marriage. and the importance of appropriate underwear (sexy-no granny panties). All in all, those 1960’s beach movies that re-ran continuously on the tv gave a false impression of what was going on datingwise in the 1960’s-with the exception of `where the boys are’ which depicted date rape.
    Divorce was harder to obtain before the ‘70’s, so breaking off an engagement if you weren’t happy rather than being stuck in an unhappy marriage.

  • @brookelynn3567
    @brookelynn3567 Před 3 měsíci +31

    The dating stories sound more like a fun but fabricated pop culture column for middle class teens. There was a huge class difference then. For a lot of working class girls like my grandma and older aunts,dating was serious business. It was their only way towards upward mobility and financial support. Love wasn't at the forefront and dating men, not boys as a teen was completely different. My grandma quit nursing school in 1939, to get married at 18. Did not have a happy marriage.
    My aunts had jobs at 14 and 16, and only dated older, established or more well off men, at least 10-15 years older. These men were divorced, and could afford to support two families, so no money issues there.
    My aunt's married at 18.
    The men they married they met at work. One aunt went to nursing school, worked in the cancer ward and married the son of the lady she was treating. lol
    Her slightly younger sister tried to get married at 14 to what might have been a cartel member or gangster. He'd pick her up in black limos and gave her lots of jewelry. My grandparents put a stop to that when he proposed and she tried to run off. They made her wait until she was 18 to marry. By that time she was working as a dentist receptionist and her future mother in law was there getting her teeth cleaned. The mom told her son to go get his teeth cleaned that week and to chat up the receptionist. He and my aunt were married in about a month.
    Did they have happy marriages? Not in my opinion, but they were "respectable", had homes and nice things, lived through a lot, had kids and worked things out because they had no other choice. Divorce for women like them wasn't an option. The more stereotypical 50's marriages usually occurred amongst poor women looking for stability.

  • @_NaLo_
    @_NaLo_ Před 3 měsíci +30

    4:49 How did you not mention that it was written "by Gay Head" (as stated on the book cover). That's the best name I've seen in months!

  • @KatieBrB
    @KatieBrB Před 3 měsíci +15

    I didn't go on a single date in high school, which confused and distressed my grandma. In the 50s, she used to go on a date with a different boy every weekend!

  • @mynamessofus
    @mynamessofus Před 3 měsíci +38

    Reminds me of a dramatized reading I went to the other day. Consisted of old letters written by H.C. Andersen and his “friends” (lovers) - and let me tell you, dating back then was 👏mes👏sy👏! A lot more entertaining than people might think 😅

    • @JanPospisilArt
      @JanPospisilArt Před 3 měsíci

      Andersen was an extremely dramatic messy bitch, those interested in details - see the video on him by Kaz Rowe.

  • @louisthegreat1686
    @louisthegreat1686 Před 3 měsíci +63

    I died at DOGOLINA

  • @amyferguson8856
    @amyferguson8856 Před 3 měsíci +64

    My mother (dated in the 50s) told me she got married so she could "go all the way" ! She told me many or her friends did this as well !

    • @suem6004
      @suem6004 Před 3 měsíci +6

      Nothing wrong with monogamy

    • @timriehl1500
      @timriehl1500 Před 3 měsíci +18

      My mother was 18 when she got married in 1959. I was born eight months later, lol. I've heard the same--that young people were in a rush to get married just so they could have sex.

    • @suem6004
      @suem6004 Před 3 měsíci +1

      @@timriehl1500 Nothing wrong with monogamy.

    • @awaredeshmukh3202
      @awaredeshmukh3202 Před 3 měsíci +39

      ​​@@suem6004no, but it is unfortunate that teenagers would feel the need to make a permanently binding legal contract in order to do something that nearly every teenager wants to do. That way lies unhappy marriages that weren't well thought out.
      Also, one can be monogamous without being married.

    • @suem6004
      @suem6004 Před 3 měsíci

      @@awaredeshmukh3202 Monogamy IS marriage. Sleeping around is the opposite. Leads to disease. Loneliness. Insecurity. Lack of commitment. Unhappy people sleep around. Have seen this first hand. Marriage is better than cheap one night stands.

  • @Nadia1989
    @Nadia1989 Před 3 měsíci +56

    25:57 I just remembered a story my Dad told me.
    When he was a teen, one of his cousins announced her engagement. It was an important event, both families and their closes relatives were invited, and the boy's family hired a photographer to take pictures of the young couple and mailed the prints to the relatives who couldn't be there. The thing is, one of the girl's cousins in the countryside got the news, and was so upset her crush was about to get married he decided to pay her a visit. He wrote to my grandma, got her permission to stay there for a couple of days (I don't know how, you didn't mess with her and live to tell the story), and dragged my Dad to take him to her house. Long story short, she changed her mind, broke off the engagement and decided to get married to Countryside Cousin instead. It was a scandal! Everybody got furious, her parent's almost had a heart attack, Grandma looked like she could commit a murder, and my Dad had to sleep at a friend's house for at least a week. The two cousins had to ask permission to the Church to get married, because first cousin marriage was banned (for understandable reasons), but in the end they were allowed to and the ceremony took place.

  • @rhondacrosswhite8048
    @rhondacrosswhite8048 Před 3 měsíci +56

    But we have to remember that Enovid, the first oral contraceptive, was invented in 1961. Suddenly having sex (the main reason for getting married) was possible without becoming pregnant was possible. That changed the whole dating scene.

    • @focusedstudying8993
      @focusedstudying8993 Před 3 měsíci

      Condoms have existed since hundreds of years and in the early 20th century they were already mass manufactured and common for everyone to buy.

    • @bossyboots5000
      @bossyboots5000 Před 3 měsíci +12

      Agreed that the accessibility of birth control options has def changed dating over the decades since. If a girl could casually buy a pack of condoms or get a bc pill Rx back in the 50s, dating would probably look a lot like it does now.

    • @saadamehdi2848
      @saadamehdi2848 Před 3 měsíci

      while it did change the dating scene, that was NEVER necessary not to be pregnant. Historical records show that casual sex was always a thing everywhere except in repressed reformist hellholes. To not be pregnant it suffices to:
      - do oral
      - do anal
      - reciprocate masturbation
      etc. Just don't put it in the babyhole. So it's never been a material or technical issue... the issue was and mostly still is, the lack of imagination and sensibility of most heteros.

    • @missloretta
      @missloretta Před 3 měsíci +1

      It's literally called "The Pill". 🤯

  • @phelanii4444
    @phelanii4444 Před 3 měsíci +17

    My grandparents were childhood friends and when they got married, my gran moved into town to be with my grandpa, this was in Bosnia in the 50s. As the woman of the household (taking those duties over from my grandpa's mum) my gran was responsible for the finances as well. Sure, my grandpa was the one working the job that got the money, my gran took care of the farm animals they had and did most of the farm work on our plot of land, but as soon as he got his money, he'd give it all to her and let her do with it what she wanted. Since she was the housewife, she knew better than him where the money needed to go and she made sure that everything ran smoothly. They had a well working system and a lot of trust in each other and I find that beautiful.

  • @LanaHarlow
    @LanaHarlow Před 3 měsíci +12

    Wow! This was truly eye opening. I used to have all these romantic notions of dating in the 1950s and Regency eras and they were both just so wrong. You are right. And I noticed that "Netflix and chill" is basically the modern version of "parking"

  • @debcarroll8192
    @debcarroll8192 Před 3 měsíci +15

    I can attest that even in the 70's and early 80's dating was very casual, and it was very much like what you described about the 50's. "Going steady "was still a thing, too-- A guy would get you a bracelet or something like that (or give you his class ring , if he was a senior.) It was mostly about getting to get to know people better and having someone to hang out with. One thing that was good was there were so many places for kids to hang out in, like pizza parlors, movie theaters, arcades, etc.

  • @ThinWhiteAxe
    @ThinWhiteAxe Před 3 měsíci +20

    As someone who listens to a lot of music from this era (although more from the 60's and 70's than the 50's), this context makes a lot of those songs make a lot more sense.

  • @nilawarriorprincess
    @nilawarriorprincess Před 3 měsíci +49

    At that time, my family had two sets of brothers who both had 2 teenage girls.
    I had to laugh at "Very little chance for getting in trouble". As both of my great-great uncles daughters were pregnant teens. 😅

  • @rudetuesday
    @rudetuesday Před 3 měsíci +16

    I was a little kid in the 1970s, so the things in your video were in the process of dying out, but still present in US popular culture through TV shows like Happy Days. "Going steady" was still a concept with older kids at school, but girls wore boys' class rings on a necklace or wore their varsity jackets around school.
    It was sort of messy, but people are always gonna people.

  • @recklessmermaid
    @recklessmermaid Před 3 měsíci +46

    Honestly, this is a WAY healthier approach to dating than the purity culture nonsense that has infected our dating culture.
    One of the reasons that getting married young worked better then versus now is because by the time a young couple was engaged they would have dated many, many people and would actually have an idea of what they like in a partner, compared to now when young engaged couples are often marrying their first or second boy/girl friend
    The only thing we’ve added is purity culture and casual sex. I think if people were less starry eyed about “finding the one,” they would be more open to dating lots of people and finding a good match instead of trying to change your partner into someone you want because it seems easier than getting a whole new boyfriend.
    Hot take, but the issue with dating culture now isn’t the casual hookups, it’s the hotbed of puritanical outrage that we exist in.

    • @marysueeasteregg
      @marysueeasteregg Před 3 měsíci

      I suggest you take a look at the Journal of Family Studies article Counterintuitive Trends in the Link Between Premarital Sex and Marital Stability. quoted: "For women marrying since the start of the new millennium: Women with 10 or more partners were the most likely to divorce , but this only became true in recent years; Women with 3-9 partners were less likely to divorce than women with 2 partners; and,
      Women with 0-1 partners were the least likely to divorce." (poster's notes: In almost all cases, the "1" premarital partner would be the future husband. As I understand it, risk of divorce references risk within first 5 years of marriage. Divorce risk for women with 10 or more partners was only sightly higher than for women with 2 premarital partners -- those two groups had the highest risk.) But yeah, take a look at the whole essay.

    • @marysueeasteregg
      @marysueeasteregg Před 3 měsíci +2

      You are ignoring a MAJOR reason that early marriages used to be more successful: it was far more possible for people to earn, right out of high school, enough money to buy a house and raise children. I'm in my mid sixties, my husband and I married in our mid-twenties, common for our generation. But I've known several older couples with very successful marriages who got married very young and had not dated anyone else.

    • @recklessmermaid
      @recklessmermaid Před 3 měsíci +2

      @@marysueeasteregg fantastic points about the different economic realities the different generations face. But I give major side eye to any “long happy” marriage that occurred at a time before women could open their own bank account or get a credit card. I just can’t glorify those types of power dynamics and domestic inequalities, you can’t tell me that the majority of these women would stay married if they had real choices. I refuse to believe that entire generations of women wanted nothing more than to be subservient to a man, that’s just propaganda

  • @hunbran7939
    @hunbran7939 Před 3 měsíci +22

    My mum passed by saw what I was watching and said "that girl's pretty" :)

  • @karenfield3665
    @karenfield3665 Před 3 měsíci +15

    My mom dated another man while she was dating my dad before they got married (this was in the early 80s) and my grandparents thought it was totally normal. The only thing they didn't like was paying for the long distance phone calls! My granddad told me numerous times to "play the field" and date numerous people, and I never really fit that into the context of the older dating culture. Thank you!

  • @agimagi2158
    @agimagi2158 Před 3 měsíci +17

    Rachels bow-code video (one of the videos I tend to watch for a pick me up) makes so much more sense now! Thank you!

  • @Treia24
    @Treia24 Před 3 měsíci +11

    I had actually forgotten how my grandmother (who married in the 1950s) used to complain about "teens these days [1990s]" jumping into going steady on the first date was leading to sexual promiscuity, and now I can't stop laughing

  • @sarahgreen238
    @sarahgreen238 Před 3 měsíci +6

    Hearing all those diary entries was actually SO encouraging for me. I don't have kids, I never want kids, but I love my 14yr old niece and she is currently going through the exact same things as that 14 yr old was. Thank you so much - seriously!

  • @mjdc2533
    @mjdc2533 Před 3 měsíci +9

    interesting and enlightening. As a teen I use to like reading young adult novels from the 50s and reading about the going steady and dating. It seemed relaxed. More like hanging out with a friend.

  • @belkyhernandez8281
    @belkyhernandez8281 Před 3 měsíci +16

    I think people nowadays have a different definition of dating. Dating doesn't imply romance or sex. It's just time to get acquainted and be social. People were encouraged to be social in general. It was considered good upbringing to be social. That means knowing how to make others comfortable and show them a good time. Dating was a subcategory of that. I am not quite that old but I was also expected, almost required to go out with friends, see multiple people, know how to dance, converse, play a little bit of music or play games etc. It would be considered almost misbehaving to not engage in these things. In my household and others like me, being social extended to being a good citizen by voting, inviting the neighbors and extended family over for cocktails/meals, volunteering for the local whatever...., and having ritual celebrations to mark my introduction to society ie SWEET 16 or 15 depending.

  • @MsVorpalBlade
    @MsVorpalBlade Před 3 měsíci +14

    "In a world where premarital sex was a rarity"....? This world has never existed anywhere

  • @CureSmileful
    @CureSmileful Před 3 měsíci +7

    I am in love with the outro "anyway, that's all, bye!", as powerful as Jenna Marble's quick "subscribe" and video ends lol

  • @maryb3909
    @maryb3909 Před 3 měsíci +11

    My nightmare scenario: Popular influencer reads my diary to the world 😅

  • @17thcentury_girl
    @17thcentury_girl Před 3 měsíci +22

    Forget major historical events, this is more interesting to me 😅

    • @bec7080
      @bec7080 Před 3 měsíci +4

      I love how he she said the one girl was for the streets 😂

    • @17thcentury_girl
      @17thcentury_girl Před 3 měsíci

      @@bec7080 same

  • @MaryL-cr7hl
    @MaryL-cr7hl Před 3 měsíci +5

    I'm a teenage girl and sometimes my grandpa asks me how many boyfriends I have and is completely shocked when I tell him none lol I've always wondered why because I thought the dating culture used to be very monogamous, but DAMN now it makes sense!

  • @edefedd3121
    @edefedd3121 Před 3 měsíci +28

    MOTHER HAS POSTED

  • @calihhan4706
    @calihhan4706 Před 3 měsíci +39

    Karolina uploading this, while I'm overthinking the situationship I made up in my head (at least to 90%), while I'm still in my pyjamas, watching yt and snacking on a bucket full of cotton candy. And yes, I'm having a bottle of wine too.
    I have to take notes now. Back to the dating roots!

  • @Rhaifha
    @Rhaifha Před 3 měsíci +12

    Soo, I have some fun facts in my family history; My great-grandparents couldn't get married in their church because they got pregnant out of wedlock and refused to "confess their sins" in front of the whole congregation. In 1919! Great grandma was a badass who was like "We were just the unlucky ones" (aka everyone is doing it, but they just had the bad luck of actually getting pregnant).
    And my grandpa lived with my grandma and her family the whole time they were engaged. They were engaged for 5 whole years because they couldn't get a house (early 1950s). They shared a room. 👀
    Anyway, I guess my point is that pre-marital sex was super common, even before the invention of birth control.

    • @tamarrajames3590
      @tamarrajames3590 Před 3 měsíci

      So we’re homes for unwed Mothers…and couples that “had” to get Married.🖤🇨🇦

  • @RianShafer
    @RianShafer Před 3 měsíci +5

    Glad to see you back! This is a fun topic.