1960s Teenage Rebellions Examined. Who Did It & Why

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  • čas přidán 12. 01. 2010
  • To support my efforts to create more clips please donate to me at www.patreon.com/allinaday. I am very proud of the TV series I made for PBS called Making Sense of the Sixties. I had the chance to spend a year examining my youth and how I became an active member of the 60s generation. If you are from that generation or a child of the 60s, I think you would find the entire series of value.
  • Krátké a kreslené filmy

Komentáře • 1,1K

  • @williamgrand9724
    @williamgrand9724 Před 10 lety +250

    “Psychedelics are illegal not because a loving government is concerned that you may jump out of a third story window. Psychedelics are illegal because they dissolve opinion structures and culturally laid down models of behavior and information processing. They open you up to the possibility that everything you know is wrong.”
    ― Terence McKenna

    • @dionco92
      @dionco92 Před 10 lety +12

      very well said.. finally someone who is AWAKE.

    • @tabathathomas6279
      @tabathathomas6279 Před 10 lety +13

      Well, psychedelics are one way to open your eyes, so I've heard. But in my experience, just look around and see what the world is like. It's so blatantly backward that I think it's possible to get there without the expense or cost to your mind. They must just open the senses, but can't we look at the world less with our intellect and more with our senses anyway?

    • @NiteckterX
      @NiteckterX Před 10 lety +10

      No pretty sure it makes you jump out windows as well.

    • @williamgrand9724
      @williamgrand9724 Před 10 lety +11

      Niteckter X Pretty sure you've never done them...

    • @NiteckterX
      @NiteckterX Před 10 lety +2

      The fuck you talking about.

  • @williamgrand9724
    @williamgrand9724 Před 10 lety +105

    Sometimes I wonder if society would have collapsed had everyone been a hippy. I think society needs a certain amount of conformity and materialism for it to evolve and advance. But the hippys of the 60's definitely brought upon an emotional revolution that was necessary for societal growth. They were the reaction to very restrictive way of thinking and definitely taught society something that has helped us allot.

    • @karmarose6332
      @karmarose6332 Před 7 lety +7

      William Grand that is the creepiest profile pic ever lol

    • @laraantipova389
      @laraantipova389 Před 4 lety

      Yes it certainly would have they are basically the pin worms of America.

    • @hothemeep1219
      @hothemeep1219 Před 6 měsíci

      Nothing is necessary. Things happen by accident

    • @joeblow5087
      @joeblow5087 Před měsícem +1

      Hippie not hippy.

    • @Boppinabe
      @Boppinabe Před měsícem

      I never wonder if society would have collapsed had everyone been a hippy.

  • @KiaraMitchellx
    @KiaraMitchellx Před 7 lety +215

    This is so interesting for me, as a 16 year old who's barely experienced the outside of her bedroom. The 60's and 70's have fascinated me for a while now, it's the closest experience to those time's I will ever get! Thank you.

    • @KiaraMitchellx
      @KiaraMitchellx Před 7 lety +2

      Peaches Pintaura thank you, I do wish I could experience those days myself. Something that will only live in my imagination I guess haha!

    • @flamencoprof
      @flamencoprof Před 7 lety +15

      I am 65 and lived thru this time while romanticising even earlier times. Now I am in the future I think we should learn from but not try to live in the past. That said, I still hold to the values of the time, and wouldn't want to discourage you in that area. Peace and Love are timeless!

    • @Blueeyesinthesky
      @Blueeyesinthesky Před 7 lety +7

      Kiara Mitchell im 16 as well and i totally agree with you! My mom and her friends would talk about the glory days and i find it so interesting. i wish we could have as much fun as they did

    • @KiaraMitchellx
      @KiaraMitchellx Před 7 lety +5

      Me too, technology has taken over, wish I could experience what it was like all those years ago. So fascinating!

    • @ruralgoblin
      @ruralgoblin Před 7 lety +6

      Kiara Mitchell I can relate to that. I'm 16 and have always longed to experience the kinds of things the people I've looked up to did. I've tried my hardest to simulate something similar - I picked up playing the Guitar, and have since formed a band with my 3 best friends, and together we'd walk railroad tracks for miles, doing nothing but talking about how the society that was once so unified has become so divided. No matter what we do however, we will never get to understand reality the way the hippie generation did. It's too late for that, what with the Internet and the lazy ignorance of the new generation. The problem with them is they want to fight all the time, they just don't know what's worth fighting for. I can only hope that some day, our children, the children of forward minded, critical thinking, carefree lovers can find something truly worth fighting for, so we can come together as one once again.
      But hey, what do I know, I'm just some 16 year old tree hugging wannabe rockstar that'll never get their turn in the spotlight, so take what I say with a grain of salt.

  • @DavidHoffmanFilmmaker
    @DavidHoffmanFilmmaker  Před 9 lety +173

    I have decided to remove several individuals commenting on this CZcams film clip of mine. Clearly they have never seen my series, never talked about it, and are commenting presenting their own polemic without awareness of the work I have done and why I am putting this video on my channel with such pride. I apologize to anyone who was insulted by these people and to these people but I am sorry, my CZcams clips deserve to be seen and commented on.
    David Hoffman-filmmaker

    • @plannedresponse
      @plannedresponse Před 9 lety +1

      Still love the Jerry Rubin clip - especially looking back after years of Don Draper.

    • @plannedresponse
      @plannedresponse Před 9 lety +4

      The show holds up really well -

    • @DavidHoffmanFilmmaker
      @DavidHoffmanFilmmaker  Před 9 lety +1

      ***** Sure does. And fun to read the many comments when you have the time.

    • @drumstick74
      @drumstick74 Před 8 lety +4

      +David Hoffman You're in your good right to do that...it's *your* channel.

    • @drumstick74
      @drumstick74 Před 8 lety +1

      JAY MIDDY Not to interfere, but at least he _allows_ comments. Some channel owners disable that function entirely. I'll let David Hoffman reply now ;-)

  • @georgecandreva2842
    @georgecandreva2842 Před 8 lety +85

    "We won't get fooled again." But, unfortunately we did!

    • @normastanley5853
      @normastanley5853 Před 8 lety +9

      Yes --over and over again. They say the best people do not run for office..I find this to be true..

    • @thespeez
      @thespeez Před 7 lety +7

      ..And teh good ones get killed! Look at JFK!

    • @kaleeshsynth9994
      @kaleeshsynth9994 Před 5 lety +2

      Baby bommers became more conservative during Regean, but they forgot there roots in not being so trusting of minorities.

  • @softailspringer9915
    @softailspringer9915 Před 8 lety +95

    The hippie era was mad fun!!! Believe me... I was there in the 60's !

    • @unapersonamas4262
      @unapersonamas4262 Před 7 lety +1

      nice.

    • @saucerfull1
      @saucerfull1 Před 6 lety

      softail springer...yes, but it was not enough...

    • @carmenparker2017
      @carmenparker2017 Před 5 lety

      I am to young I was not in the sixtys but trust me I wish I was

    • @vinista256
      @vinista256 Před 4 lety

      CJ Colvin Umm ... ever heard of “The New Deal”? 🤔

    • @stub4488
      @stub4488 Před 4 lety +3

      You're the problem

  • @DavidHoffmanFilmmaker
    @DavidHoffmanFilmmaker  Před 9 lety +48

    Jacob
    It was first released in 1991. And the folks in it from the hippie movement would be around 65 to 70 years old today.
    David Hoffman - filmmaker

    • @msmithrandir561
      @msmithrandir561 Před 9 lety +2

      Brilliant Documentary...My Very Favorite

    • @DavidHoffmanFilmmaker
      @DavidHoffmanFilmmaker  Před 9 lety +1

      penny miller Thank you Penny. That does my heart good.
      David Hoffman - filmmaker

    • @sharrell3921
      @sharrell3921 Před 9 lety +2

      David Hoffman sorry to ruin anyones day i stopped by checking out some hippie reels and i am 60 and was in school and loved every MINUTE of being a hippie, so they were not ALLLLL 65 to 70 :) peace \ / man

    • @DakotaGurl1
      @DakotaGurl1 Před 9 lety +2

      S Harrell I have to agree with you, 57 here and I did a lot of fun things back in the day.

    • @SuperNevile
      @SuperNevile Před 9 lety +2

      wavygr Is that who John Lennon was singing about on "How Do You Sleep?".........."Those freaks was right when they said you was dead" ?

  • @victorg7618
    @victorg7618 Před 8 lety +65

    Enjoyed watching this video of the sixties. This video took me back to 1969, I was living in Trinidad Colorado in a trailer park, my father was working for an oil company and my family moved with him for the summer. I remember a hippie commune there north of town. They used to live in dome houses made of car doors, very colorful. Every evening they used to go to a telephone booth by the handful and use the phone, I guess to call their parents to send the money. Anyway, there was this one evening I was watching them from my fenced yard and I could smell a very strong odor, and I asked my mom what that smell was and she said it was a weed and the hippies would smoke it like a cigarette. I remember seeing a pretty girl, maybe around 18 years old, wearing flowers in her hair, a halter top and very short shorts. I remember her telling me she loved me and she gave me a flower from her purse through the fence. I grabbed it and looked at her with curiosity. I was 7 at the time. That event happened so long ago and I'm glad that I lived during that era. Wish you much Peace and Love!!

    • @DavidHoffmanFilmmaker
      @DavidHoffmanFilmmaker  Před 8 lety +6

      Beautiful, Victor. I'm glad you shared it. You are a lucky man to have had this experience and to remember it so well. I was a hard-working professional in New York city and in Maine during this time and didn't participate in these movements but would like to have. It was fascinating to make the documentary series and really delve into this stuff.
      David Hoffman-filmmaker

    • @velviussvloggingchannel5356
      @velviussvloggingchannel5356 Před 7 lety

      Peace and love.

    • @chrisweidner4768
      @chrisweidner4768 Před 7 lety

      Velvius's Vlogging Channel Be happy and love one another.

    • @victorg7618
      @victorg7618 Před 7 lety +4

      My friend, just got to see this comment. You know, its funny you would mention this. It's 2017 and I'm 55 and sometimes I still think about that beautiful creature. I bet she's still around and beautiful as ever. I wish you and yours peace and love.

    • @victorgalindo5891
      @victorgalindo5891 Před 6 lety

      How could you remember. You were on LSD.

  • @CaptSpacelord
    @CaptSpacelord Před 8 lety +15

    Born in 54 I was a lucky to see / hear the progression of rock music into psycedelic style and later the heavy stuff.
    My first single I bought was Not fade away by Rolling Stones when it came out and they became my fave band but so many other bands turned up and it was fantastic to be part of this as a youngster.
    In 1967 I bought the album Are you experienced by Hendrix and then, 13 years old I wanted to be a hippie .. lol
    More and more bands came up with fantastic music that I loved and if I should talk about it I would better have written a book :-)
    I changed my clothing style, grew my hair, wear colorful sunglasses, ring in my ear and music was my life.
    In 1970 I went to sea for four years, on and off different wessels, saw the " whole " world but I was a bit late coming to San Fransisco in 72. Started smoking weed the year after, experimenting with hallusinogenic like LSD and mescaline and that gave the music a whole new dimension.
    In my small hometown in Norway people said we, me and friends was crazy and lazy, but we were having a very good time, pretending to be hippies, cause this was some years after the 67 - 68 but we did not care and lived our lives with great pleasure and thought we were very, very cool ... hehe
    Thanks a lot for posting this series about the 60's and hippies David Hoffman.
    Never tired of seeing it ;-)

  • @lekkki1
    @lekkki1 Před 8 lety +26

    I am amazed and touched by this documentary. Really well done. My father used to always say that the original and "true" hippie movement had enormous validity, (Environmentalism, egalitarianism, ((women and people of color)) anti-corrupt politicians and anti corrupt big businesses etc...) but that it was co-opted by people who were interested in nothing but sex and drugs. Whatever the movement may have been, it had a profound and lasting effect on American culture.

  • @DavidHoffmanFilmmaker
    @DavidHoffmanFilmmaker  Před 9 lety +16

    Dear Sandy: thank you for your recent comment on my television series and your personal experience. In my hundreds of interviews and in the talks I continually give on the 60s at events of all kinds, I find many people like you. Once hippie. Still hippie. Doing very well in fact in leadership positions across American society. Congratulations on your efforts. And may your support for philosophy I found most fascinating when I was creating a series, continue for a long long time to come.
    David Hoffman-filmmaker

  • @fuzzballzz36
    @fuzzballzz36 Před 8 lety +6

    Thank you for making this series. I was born a little too late, and was fascinated with the late '60s cultural revolution from the time I was a teenager in the late '70s. I saw this and watched the entire series, and it was a great inside look for me.

    • @armandosalinas5946
      @armandosalinas5946 Před 19 dny +1

      I did not rebel,just explored,but still respected,freedom is for everyone , do not abuse it

  • @jerryjohnson28
    @jerryjohnson28 Před 8 lety +69

    smoked my first joint in 67 and preceded to join the hippie scene by 68 was a full blown hippie from Denver Colorado and for 5 wonderful lived sex drugs and rock and roll traveling across the nation meeting all kinds of people of the same mindset in L.A. San Francisco New York Woodstock Cape Cod maybe sounds corny but I was a hippie and now at 66 it has been a long strange trip peace to all✌😎

  • @yagotoo7999
    @yagotoo7999 Před 7 lety +35

    There are still true hippies that have never sold out. They can be found living in smaller houses, growing gardens, worshipping all that lives around them. Their music was original, special and did not spur on hate nor prejudice nor calling women bitches, etc. The true hippies look down on status symbols such as McMansions, BMWs, etc, etc. Happiest are those who can appreciate nature, skinny dipping, a meteor shower, the first tomato, a good bud. There is no need for most of what our insane society feeds on (tv violence, horrible music, the latest tech, shitty food obscene talking heads who spit venom. True hippies have the world. They have it because they are not shallow, appreciate the simpler and yes finer things. I know many, and would rather be with them than stockbrokers, salesmen, or big game hunting, cigar smoking, greased back hair fools. Just my opinion based upon six decades of observation

    • @hothemeep1219
      @hothemeep1219 Před 6 měsíci

      Those are the biggest bastards. So messed up they actually believe in what they say

    • @johnking6252
      @johnking6252 Před 2 měsíci

      You Sir , sound like a fellow hippie ...🌍✌️🌎 Peace brother.

  • @privateprivate201
    @privateprivate201 Před 8 lety +15

    I was born in March 1968 and I am a child of the late 60's early 70's. Everything that I believe came from that time. For a little while I forgot who I was, but then cancer knocked me on my butt. And all that I am has saved me. Inside out. Peace, Love, Harmony....Beautiful work, I have seen your full work on PBS. Peace and Namaste

  • @bynro7
    @bynro7 Před 7 lety +4

    Loved this video! I was a college freshman at Northeastern in Boston the fall of 1969. This video brought back so many memories! I remember the Moratorium and protesting against the Vietnam War. And who could forget that day in February of 1964, a few days after my 13th birthday when the Beatles were on the Ed Sullivan show! Thanks for this video!!!!!!

  • @eyarbroughzone
    @eyarbroughzone Před 8 lety +48

    I had never seen a hippie until we drove through Aspen, Colorado in 1969. Naturally, we were scared to death.."oh daddy, please don't stop" But of course nobody wanted to hurt anyone, they were just hangin' out. Hippies all over the place. I wish we'd stopped now.

    • @eyarbroughzone
      @eyarbroughzone Před 8 lety +3

      +Ellen Yarbrough Oh by the way. Nice documentary. I think I watched this one on tv. We love PBS. It's awesome that your work has aired on on PeeBS.

    • @DavidHoffmanFilmmaker
      @DavidHoffmanFilmmaker  Před 8 lety +3

      +Ellen Yarbrough Thankyou Ellen. now CZcams is my home for my films-- and sales via Amazon.
      David Hoffman - filmmaker

    • @eyarbroughzone
      @eyarbroughzone Před 8 lety

      Very nice. Thanks.

    • @Noct343
      @Noct343 Před 8 lety

      +Ellen Yarbrough Spiritually I'm a hippy, but I'm a modern day OG.

    • @Noct343
      @Noct343 Před 8 lety

      +Ellen Yarbrough Spiritually I'm a hippy, but I'm a modern day OG.

  • @catmomma4599
    @catmomma4599 Před 9 lety +8

    Great insight and perspective to an important part of history and the realization of a new culture in our society. Unfortunately, I wasn't born until 1970 but I was raised in a home where this music and its new ideals were greatly encouraged! Brings back many wonderful memories. Thank you so much :) much peace and love to all.

  • @poohathome52
    @poohathome52 Před 9 lety +3

    I love this series, Its a time in history, if you don't get that your missing the point. This was my generation. I'm proud of what we tried to do.. I got goose bumps when I heard the intro.. Thank You!! David Hoffman

  • @7mugwumps
    @7mugwumps Před 6 lety +5

    I remember watching this series on TV. I loved it! Although I was only a young teenager in the 60's and living in Canada, I didn't really understand what was going on. This documentary helped me fill in the missing pieces. I participated in all the outward appearances of hippie lifestyle, but I wasn't informed on the politics. I saw the nightmare that was going on in the States (assassinations, anti-war demonstrations, race riots) through the TV news and it was very graphic. Now that I'm almost a senior, I now know there was an intense impact on my psyche from that time, I've carried with me my whole life.

  • @3243_
    @3243_ Před 12 lety +4

    I watched your series when if first aired in 1990-91, and I enjoyed it. Great job, allinaday.
    Viva the 1960s!

  • @freddylubin
    @freddylubin Před 10 lety +17

    The main reason for the various aspects of the youth "movement", hippies and others, was the growing sense that we'd been lied to. We received a traditional education, had real information available to us, were large in numbers, and had a great desire to express ourselves.

    • @HQsandsMusic
      @HQsandsMusic Před 9 lety

      You know who else had a great desire to express themselves? Joseph Stalin and Chairman Mao. Silly hippie communists. If everyone ran around dropping acid and having sex with anything in sight, the country would be bankrupt within a month
      Humans have evolved past such selfish primitive thinking. We found a way to develop complex societies which were capable of supporting billions of people and providing them with a high standard of living, something your commie professor probably taught you to despise

    • @freddylubin
      @freddylubin Před 9 lety

      So much hatred.

  • @carlinraton1
    @carlinraton1 Před 9 lety +1

    Gentleman noble spirit Sir David Hoffman,
    In my own life (born 1956) I will honestly and sincerely state
    that,
    despite adversity,
    young people did things because one cared deeply,
    with a fervent hope,
    that each, all, every body
    could effectuate a future for the better.
    May all of us everywhere bring out the best future available.
    Thanks.

  • @Lowtread
    @Lowtread Před 9 lety +2

    I had the good fortune to see this series when it first aired. I taped the entire set of shows and have watched it many times since. It is the clearest, fairest, and most thorough presentation of the confusing events of that time that I have ever seen. I was an art student who was plucked by the draft in 1968 and who served in the U.S. Army. This series jibes completely with my own first-hand memories from both sides of the barricade, and it explains things I didn't fully appreciate or understand at the time. Thank you, thank you, thank you for making it. I absolutely recommend that Making Sense of the Sixties be incorporated into modern history classes to provide a framework for understanding where our current social sensibilities came from. Many of my students today dismiss the sixties as a frivolous and passing fad. Some even think that it all happened in the seventies! Must see.

  • @RandyR
    @RandyR Před 6 lety +4

    Even though I am now a senior, I am still a rebel with a cause. The cause is to help wake up society an make things better. We made a lot of improvements back then, but have a long ways to go. Never give up on the dream ✌🏼

  • @xtinamarie6628
    @xtinamarie6628 Před 5 lety +5

    I find this series interesting, since I was not born in this era, I consider myself a hippie even though I was born in the 90s. Being one is an amazing journey.

  • @ChristmasPerson32702
    @ChristmasPerson32702 Před 10 lety +52

    Where is the time machine ?

  • @RPMac
    @RPMac Před 7 lety +8

    this is brilliant...hit it on the head...best I've seen on the era !! I was 18 in 1968....bullseye !!!!!!!!!!

  • @Void-uj7jd
    @Void-uj7jd Před 7 lety +8

    Those days look incredible. Now when you analyse society it just seems like a bunch of egos banging together never meeting middle ground or unity with each other, people always paranoid of their enemies. Something in society these days is really wrong.
    Look how connected to each other they were back then, now everyone is peaking around corners in case an enemy appears. We have got more insane over time.

  • @asirf.3634
    @asirf.3634 Před 9 lety +31

    these beatles fan girls were like one direction fan girls today omg.

  • @terrysheehan4879
    @terrysheehan4879 Před 7 lety +5

    60s "love music", 70s "disco", my era the 80s "long hair and heavy metal!!"

  • @poetryjones7946
    @poetryjones7946 Před 3 lety +4

    I’m obsessed with the perfection of the theme music for this wonderful series. So haunting, so apropos. 🌹✌🏼

    • @DavidHoffmanFilmmaker
      @DavidHoffmanFilmmaker  Před 3 lety +2

      It was composed by Ara Dinkjian. You can hear much more at his website - aradinkjian.com. Tell him I sent you and he will treat you wonderfully. A great guy.
      David Hoffman filmmaker

    • @poetryjones7946
      @poetryjones7946 Před 3 lety +2

      Thanks so much! 🙏🏼

  • @Mmewster
    @Mmewster Před 8 lety +101

    I am an old hippy chick.. I am 60 and I miss the good old days

    • @tomrogerlilleby2890
      @tomrogerlilleby2890 Před 8 lety +8

      + Mmewster
      That means you were 12 years old during "The Summer of Love" in 1967.
      By the time you were 15 it was all over !

    • @maaferreirahd
      @maaferreirahd Před 8 lety

      I'm 18 years old, live in Brazil. And I wanted to live these times! Sorry my english.
      Eu tenho 18 anos de idade, vivo no Brasil e eu queria ter vivido esta época!

    • @rubyjames3105
      @rubyjames3105 Před 8 lety +10

      it wasn't like there was no more in 1970, there was a progression into other things but it wasn't like the dinosaurs going extinct. There was plenty of energy left over, Manson made it harder but there was still a movement. I know old hippies that were doing their thing back in the day and still are, it's a state of mind, a consciousness.

    • @tikletik
      @tikletik Před 8 lety +8

      Hey, thanks for destroying the country.

    • @Mmewster
      @Mmewster Před 8 lety +3

      I destroyed the country.. you must be talking to someone else, as I was only 14.. so how in the hell could I have ruined it?

  • @DavidHoffmanFilmmaker
    @DavidHoffmanFilmmaker  Před 11 lety +6

    I had the chance during the making of the series to interview about 3 dozen “ex-hippies.” I found most of them to be functioning members of society, doing their jobs, raising their families, just like most of the rest of us. The exceptions were folks like Steve Jobs and there are a surprising number of them as well.
    David Hoffman-filmmaker

  • @kaleeshsynth9994
    @kaleeshsynth9994 Před 5 lety +6

    Nice video, I feel like a lot of people forgot the lessons of this generation, nice to have interviews from people who were part of the movement.

  • @ghettomist1575
    @ghettomist1575 Před 9 lety +52

    Why all the hate ? Are you haters stuck in the 50's or do like today's music that tells you to gang bang instead of fight for peace?

    • @jaydenmclean8786
      @jaydenmclean8786 Před 9 lety +5

      ***** not really, it was very conservative and a bit boring.

    • @rocatiusvictor9590
      @rocatiusvictor9590 Před 8 lety +1

      +GhettoMist well i dont like the urban music we listen today i listen to the classical music for example Mozart,Beethoven,Johnann,Giuseppe and Fredric Chopin. All famous classical music composers. What i dont like is hippies, everyday 5 or 10 teenagers would yell in my neighbourhood "Down with the republic party!". And i have no idea what there on about but i think there on drugs. But did'nt they accomplish something? Like we already have civil rights and independence in each state at america whats more to ask for???

    • @jaydenmclean8786
      @jaydenmclean8786 Před 8 lety

      ***** you mean the 20s?

    • @jaydenmclean8786
      @jaydenmclean8786 Před 8 lety +1

      ***** yeah, after the counterculture movement, there was now huge problems with drugs, crime and values were just gone. They did damage society a bit.

    • @ghettomist1575
      @ghettomist1575 Před 8 lety

      Malbro Jay OHHH YEA

  • @rav94en
    @rav94en Před 9 lety +3

    David I want to thank you for both taking the time and effort to make this documentary and share it here. I was born in the Spring of 1964, and unfortunately missed out on this amazing social revolution. However I do have some amazing memories of being a very young child in the late 60's and 70's. I am very grateful to people like yourself who invest the life, art, and talent, in bringing things like this to those of us who could only wish to have experienced it first hand, but do so vicariously via film and documentary. Thank you!

    • @DavidHoffmanFilmmaker
      @DavidHoffmanFilmmaker  Před 9 lety +1

      Stevie C And my thanks to you as well, Stevie. My goal with the series was not to talk to my generation but to talk to the younger generations about a time that was not like “just any other time”. Many of the people who write on this video taken people from that time. Many others are proud to be a part of the generation and the changes that were made which were complex to be sure but overall, much better than what existed for many of us in the 50s. I was not a hippie. I was a working man with a very tough job and a family. But when I studied them, by and large, with many caveats, they did some spectacular thinking about ways of living life that improved on what they found when they were kids.
      David Hoffman-filmmaker

  • @SandySandifer
    @SandySandifer Před 9 lety +5

    I was Born September 11th, 1949
    I was and am a Hippie.
    24/7 100%
    I work at corporate Level for a tv Station in Europe.
    I have two grown Kids (both studying at a university) with whom I do an occasional doobie for mental Hygiene purposes.
    I have three grandchildren, two who do well in School.
    Hippies is not a Thing of the past. All my Hippie Peers are still at it.
    Nothing changed except our hair has gotten Grey.
    Salve - Pax n' Peace out ;-)
    p.s.: I am listening to Music from THE Hippie band of the 70ties.
    "It's A Beautiful Day".
    Try it & don't Forget to "tune in - turn on - drop out"

  • @jendhsnsns7276
    @jendhsnsns7276 Před 7 lety

    This is one of my favorite videos ever so thank you so much I watch this almost every single day

  • @sassycat5856
    @sassycat5856 Před 8 lety +1

    All I can say is WOW! As a child of the 60's this brings back many good memories. Thank you for a very caring and thoughtful video.💖💖🌼🌻🌹🌺🌞

  • @WeldonDavis
    @WeldonDavis Před 10 lety +5

    What has changed since the 60's, some may ask.
    I can say FEAR of Failure has.

  • @NYCgirl927
    @NYCgirl927 Před 8 lety +7

    Fabulous David. Great depiction of what was going on then. I was there I remember all of this,

    • @DavidHoffmanFilmmaker
      @DavidHoffmanFilmmaker  Před 8 lety +1

      +j flo Thank you J. Lucky person to have been there,
      David Hoffman - filmmaker

    • @NYCgirl927
      @NYCgirl927 Před 8 lety +2

      +David Hoffman I watched some of your videos and as a life time New Yorker I really enjoyed the NYC ones. I would never leave the NYC area.

    • @DavidHoffmanFilmmaker
      @DavidHoffmanFilmmaker  Před 8 lety

      +Brian Salomon Thank you Brian. Those music groups were amazing and it's not just because we are from the 60s generation that I say that. They were making social political personal statements within music that those of us who participated in the 60s generation, about a 3rd of the baby boomers, understood and were affected by.
      David Hoffman-filmmaker

    • @ALAKA777
      @ALAKA777 Před 7 lety

      I would like to know as well. It was used on an 1965 episode of American Bandstand. The music was used as a lead in to a commercial break.

    • @jamessilver6429
      @jamessilver6429 Před 5 lety

      @Brian Salomon the band grateful alive allman brothers. it was aone dayer i think. ✌ 👍

  • @drbobperkins
    @drbobperkins Před 2 lety +1

    I feel so lucky to have lived through the 60’s and being in high school in the 70’s. The culture, Music, films, etc., were s vibrant

  • @karenhancock542
    @karenhancock542 Před 7 lety +2

    I enjoyed this video very much. Well done. I remember it well. I look forward to seeing the rest of this and more of your videos.

    • @DavidHoffmanFilmmaker
      @DavidHoffmanFilmmaker  Před 7 lety +1

      Thank you, Karen. I do have many clips from many movies on this CZcams channel.
      David Hoffman-filmmaker

  • @busTedOaS
    @busTedOaS Před 10 lety +49

    i want my generation to be like this

    • @SOMSebster
      @SOMSebster Před 7 lety +17

      busTedOaS Unfortunately it's not gunna happen. Liberels nowadays are uptight authoritarian ass holes

    • @amoniousbt1110
      @amoniousbt1110 Před 7 lety +5

      technology has made us too socially anxious to meet in mass anymore

    • @blacquesjacques7239
      @blacquesjacques7239 Před 6 lety

      busTedOaS Unrealistic ?

  • @junebug29
    @junebug29 Před 9 lety +11

    I enjoyed watching that. I appreciate the work very much. I am a hippie as well, born in late 1952. I have two children, both very successful in life, four grandchildren and they are doing very well in school and in life. As for my experiences, it was certainly a great time to be young. Yes we had our ups and downs as it was a sensitive era filled with questions and wonder and defiance, but definitely would not trade it in for anything else. It was a special time in so many many many! ways. Thank you so much David Hoffman, wonderful work, very nice. I like everyone's comments too. Interesting!

    • @DavidHoffmanFilmmaker
      @DavidHoffmanFilmmaker  Před 9 lety

      Thank you Junebug29. You and the other intelligent commentators on my documentary would be surprised how many hippies produced successful families, successful work lives, and maintain the values that were created and articulated during that time. I was not a hippie myself way back then, but I was fascinated by my interviews with folks who had developed and/or lived that lifestyle and how well so many of them did.
      David Hoffman-filmmaker

    • @Prox1015
      @Prox1015 Před 9 lety +1

      Every time I watch videos about the 60s I just dont understand why some people nowadays still act like some people would in the 50s its like they're stuck in time, very strange

    • @OhSmexyGirlfriend
      @OhSmexyGirlfriend Před 7 lety

      So, can I ask, what happened to you once the hippie revolt of the 60s ended and your generation "grew up?" Did you go on and receive higher education? Did you employ yourself with a "regular" job? Did you succumb to society's pressure of following the rules and being a civilized, working man/woman? Basically, where did you end up after everything died down? Thanks.

  • @wattenslaafje1825
    @wattenslaafje1825 Před 6 lety +1

    Very informative and interesting look into the zeitgeist of the 60s. Thanks David, for this wonderful little documentary!

  • @DavidHoffmanFilmmaker
    @DavidHoffmanFilmmaker  Před 13 lety

    @allinaday thank you for the question and the comment. I do think that people can be trained to be much better storytellers but most of the skills come early on in life-how your parents talked to you-how much the people around you enjoyed your stories when you were a kid.
    David Hoffman-filmmaker

  • @jab3785
    @jab3785 Před 10 lety +6

    Absolutely right. The early hippies were totally apolitical; even anti-political which annoyed the people in Berkeley no end. They assumed that because they looked similar that they would be in sync with their protests but the hippies were more interested in living their life the way they wanted rather than telling the rest of the country what their politics should be.

    • @DavidHoffmanFilmmaker
      @DavidHoffmanFilmmaker  Před 10 lety +1

      You are absolutely correct,Jab3785, and thank you for sharing your thoughts and experience.
      David Hoffman-filmmaker

    • @taurotar
      @taurotar Před 10 lety +1

      I agree.I had friends who were political activists who cut & kept their hair very short as the police would often grab protesters by the hair in order to more easily take them 'down' & subdue them. Hippies would NEVER cut their hair. Many activists I knew of, did no drugs while the same could certainly not be said for hippies.

  • @drowsy_mouse8406
    @drowsy_mouse8406 Před 8 lety +12

    funny how the people who grew up during these years now call millenials lazy and too concerned with the world's problems

    • @generationofswine-ge5rw
      @generationofswine-ge5rw Před 7 lety

      They do? I thought they would understand rebellion and idealism since they went through it and almost created something great, and they were fighting against much of the US gov't as it turned out. The same thing is happening now. Protesters are called rioters once again, and conformists call for protesters to be shot, but that doesn't stop them from protesting and it doesn't stop them from winning.

  • @jesuskrist3018
    @jesuskrist3018 Před 9 lety

    This was a pleasure to watch, just like all of your documentaries. Thank you David

  • @DavidHoffmanFilmmaker
    @DavidHoffmanFilmmaker  Před 10 lety

    yes. I make DVDs of the entire series directly from the Masters. Please e-mail me at my e-mail address to discuss this, allinaday@aol.com
    David Hoffman - filmmaker

  • @LouRazz
    @LouRazz Před 11 lety +3

    I take my hat off to you, David Hoffman--I recorded all 6 hours of "Making Sense of the Sixties" onto VHS tape and later transferred it over to DVD. It is part of my treasured collection of TV recordings, and a wonderful, thorough and accurate depiction of the "Sixties" which is my (our) generation. I myself just turned 65 years od age on Wednesday, August 20th; I was a college student from 1966 to 1971 at the University of Miami in Miami, Florida and VERY much a part of the "counter culture."

  • @hugecraig
    @hugecraig Před 9 lety +4

    Thank you David ,this takes me back to my childhood

  • @klimber10001
    @klimber10001 Před 8 lety +2

    Great video, very emotional.....Thanks for posting.

  • @julie-francescoughlin1446

    David, this is beautiful work! I am from a different era and a different world, but intrigued by the 60s and the world that was being born then. Your work takes away the sensationalism that has almost always accompanied discussing this paradigm shift. I am writing a small book, and I will watch all your work as preparation. I would love any correspondence with you, if you please.

  • @chrisweidner4768
    @chrisweidner4768 Před 7 lety +4

    The idea of teaching peace, love, cooperation and kindness for everyone is alive and well and needed now more than ever.

  • @billtaylor4224
    @billtaylor4224 Před 8 lety +6

    I've heard it said that if you remember the sixties you weren't there. Well I remember the decade well and like all decades had its best and its worst. I for one remember the best because the best was as good as it gets especially rock wise and people becoming aware of our environment and the need to create more love for all of humanity.

  • @supahdupah5262
    @supahdupah5262 Před 12 lety

    @allinaday thank you so much for providing us a video which can show our generation what YOUR generation was like. peace.

  • @pam02211
    @pam02211 Před 9 lety

    Thank you for this! I really enjoyed that glimpse into the past!!

  • @Sammy200655294
    @Sammy200655294 Před 8 lety +44

    Sadly we're basically living the 50s all over again, just with the freedom of having long hair... wish people would wake up again

    • @zedleppelin1391
      @zedleppelin1391 Před 8 lety +4

      I think you might the one who needs to wake up. The world mind is awakening. We have access to information that we've never had access to before. People are connecting on many different levels. There are waves of change coming. Things like veganism, the empowerment of women, people of color, the community lgbt, they're all gaining attention. We're voting with our dollars, taking better care of ourselves, creating art. We have a lot of work yes, but these are hardly the days of slumber.

    • @Sammy200655294
      @Sammy200655294 Před 8 lety +5

      I do know and feel all that, thing is, it's really subtle and I'm more a revolutionary type :P and there is still a lot more that needs to change. Plus, the hippie culture was also about peace and love, which at the moment I can't feel anywhere in politics, etc. (hint hint - right wing parties in Europe... Syria, etc.)
      For me it's not enough, so many young people are still in the wrong mindset, we're mostly a hedonistic "me-generation". Yes, at the moment things do change, but for me personally it's all going too slow and often feels half-heartedly.
      Aaand a thing, which is luckily changing at the moment - we are or were at least so old-fashioned, conservative... not in a political sense. For example the thing with sexuality is that, either it's in your face and doesn't feel natural and loving or you don't talk about it at all. It's hard to be an empowered, sexual being (especially as a woman) without being judged and/or objectified. A lot of what the sexual revolution was about was not only the freedom of showing your boobs, but (sexual) empowerment. I feel like in our culture nakedness is scandalous but at the same time all you see in the media is sex or sexual references. I could go on and on, but yeah hope you get my point.

    • @lipby
      @lipby Před 8 lety +5

      I think we're living in great times. The 60s bought us a lot of freedoms, and a lot of the hippie political ideas--environmentalism, gay rights, feminism--are now mainstream. The problem is that hippies built a lot of wonderful cultural freedoms that we all enjoy, and then the culture-at-large turns around and treats the hippies like the lowest form of scum.

    • @4ceclan664
      @4ceclan664 Před 8 lety +1

      Thank you for your comment!!!!

    • @amoniousbt1110
      @amoniousbt1110 Před 7 lety +3

      please dont equate sjw ism to peace and love

  • @johnhiram1207
    @johnhiram1207 Před 8 lety +3

    I was so blessed to have grown up during this time. The world worried me then. The world terrifies me now. LSD was one of the best thing I ever did. I would still do it at age 71!

  • @GrayearlDubstep
    @GrayearlDubstep Před 11 lety +2

    I'm only 14 and I still follow this. I got to school I wear my Zeppelin,Doors, and Jefferson Airplane Shirts. I learned guitar to hopefully play music that will once again bring us back together me and my girlfriend Taylor are starting this revolution to stop Rap, To stop

  • @DavidHoffmanFilmmaker
    @DavidHoffmanFilmmaker  Před 14 lety

    @OneWorldHistory And thank you for your comment. I too believe that many found science and that science is an undervalued positive that was reinvigorated because of the 60s. And Ara Dinkjian - a magnificent composer and musician.
    David Hoffman -- filmmaker

  • @kristineburbey2393
    @kristineburbey2393 Před 9 lety +6

    I miss the 1960's. I am glad I went thru that era. What do we have now? Shootings every day, fear, car hijackings, 2 movie shootings, I am 65 now and becoming a hermit as we are getting worse year by year. Those that can not see that are drunk, stupid or blind or whatever!! Can u imagine hitch hiking nowadays?? I saw it done and when neighbors cared and u trusted people (ha,ha).

    • @juliewitt7496
      @juliewitt7496 Před 5 lety

      Things are like they are now partly because of the 60's. Not as you think. It was government planned, including the rock groups & drugs.

  • @nat00ben06
    @nat00ben06 Před 9 lety +4

    I remember being 6 yrs old in 1971 & 1972 lying on our couch in Chicago. I got nailed by a drunk driver with no insurance and remember being in a full bodycast depending on my parents and brother and friends to help me heal it took 4 yrs, but everyday vietnam was on the tv,watergate and Nixon,The Beatles,Haight Ashbury,my father went to that damn effd Democratic convention protest and came in with 2 buddies in the evening all wide eyed and carrying on. I was lying on the couch drinking juice as a kid not sure what to make of it but the music was the glue and the hope of that era. Corporate America and silicon valley has destroyed that glue and the country is floundering. Every week mass murders.

  • @jacksonblack9408
    @jacksonblack9408 Před 7 lety

    I loved watching these. Thank you.

  • @RedVynil
    @RedVynil Před 12 lety +1

    I'm RIGHT THERE with you, hun!! :-) Music is my drug of choice!! The only thing better than music is having someone to love and to share music with. I just WISH I had that!! 50,000 records in my collection and no one to share them with. :*-( Every time I think I've FINALLY found someone they either walk away or get taken away from me. I grew up in the `60's and would absolutely LOVE to go back again. So much to see & experience that I never got to because I was too young to know it was there.

  • @thwb4661
    @thwb4661 Před 9 lety +16

    If I were a parent of those kids, I will be very worried too. No offense to people who lived in that specific era. But it seem that decency and proper etiquette were lost. Like what I heard, teenage sex became common, and its very disturbing. The dream of having a suburban innocent life was destroyed, and seeing your kids like that is just ... making you upset. Just saying. No offense to hippies or to any people.

    • @Maverickmordy
      @Maverickmordy Před 9 lety

      The Happy Weird Boy if your kids are haveing sex you should be happy for them not upset !! sex is disturbing for you? wow...and this is 2015

    • @thwb4661
      @thwb4661 Před 9 lety +6

      Maverickmordy OFCOURSE I WILL BE UPSET BECAUSE THEYRE TOO YOUNG TO DO SUCH THINGS. AND ALSO DOING DRUGS SUCH AS CANNABIS AND LSD IS VERY UNACCEPTABLE. THEYRE TOO YOUNG TO DO IT. THATS WHY TODAY, IT'S FUCKED UP. MANY TEENAGERS ARE STONED. AND IT ALL STARTED IN THAT ERA.

    • @neohip489
      @neohip489 Před 9 lety +2

      The Happy Weird Boy
      You remind me of my mom.
      She was born in 1931 and was among the first screaming crowds for the Beatles.
      She bought the records. saw the films and bought the records, I remember her saying to me that the thing she didn't like was reintroducing long hair for men.
      She told me that many times whilst asking me to visit a barber.
      One of the most endearing memories of my mom was finding her crying in the kitchen on december 8 1980.
      I miss John, and my mom too!

    • @maddi4052
      @maddi4052 Před 9 lety +1

      Educate yourself before you speak.

    • @ASSwipe.
      @ASSwipe. Před 9 lety +4

      The teenagers today are pretty close to the 60's and hippies . (I'm 17 and a junior in high school) and I can say that almost 80% of teens have tried drugs and this generation is far more interested in experimenting with drugs than you would expect. I see about 20-25 jimi Hendrix the Beatles led Zeppelin shirts at school a day. More guys are growing there hair out. And what you said about teenage sex. Couples in high school now have sex like fuckin married couples it's insane.

  • @laurabid
    @laurabid Před 2 lety +3

    i have 3 points : 1. i loved this video i have such a fascination with how generations repeat themselves in rebelling then conforming so thank u. 2. people who keep romanticising the 60s remember it was only really good if you were a rich straight white man, anything else and there were definite drawbacks. 3. it's both funny and sad that every new generation believes that they are the ones that are finally going to change things, then they instate some of their own rules when they're adults, and their children find stuff to be upset about thus growing into rebellious teenagers

    • @laurabid
      @laurabid Před 2 lety

      what makes my generation kind of interesting to examine is the added variable of media and technology being easily accessible, and how that stunts emotional, social and mental growth, whilst also providing new ways of protest and sharing information. would love to read some comparative studies on that kinda thing

  • @jsilence418
    @jsilence418 Před 9 lety +1

    Really excellent,I look forward to seeing the whole series.

    • @DavidHoffmanFilmmaker
      @DavidHoffmanFilmmaker  Před 9 lety

      Thank you. I look forward hearing what you think of it all.
      David Hoffman - filmmaker

  • @donnabarden4300
    @donnabarden4300 Před 8 lety

    Thanks for your work on this project. It sounds like a great leaning experience, Thanks for sharing~ In Gratitude! 'Donna THIS WS AWESOME...ITS COMING AROUND AGAIN,,,,,,

    • @DavidHoffmanFilmmaker
      @DavidHoffmanFilmmaker  Před 8 lety

      Thank you Donna. It was a great learning experience as has been every documentary I have worked on. That's why I think it is such a wonderful profession.
      David Hoffman-filmmaker

  • @kathyperry6772
    @kathyperry6772 Před 4 lety +3

    My mother didn’t experiment with drugs nor sex; however, she experimented with spirituality and religion beliefs.

  • @drumstick74
    @drumstick74 Před 8 lety +3

    Hi Mr. Hoffman,
    Awesome documentary, which I enjoyed viewing. It ends quite abruptly (when Oliver Stone is talking)...Is the rest somewhere to be seen? Thanks.
    Great to see Lisa Law in there as well. Remember her from a Woodstock documentary, where she explains how she helped feed the thousands people and set up _trip tents_.

    • @DavidHoffmanFilmmaker
      @DavidHoffmanFilmmaker  Před 8 lety +1

      +drumstick74 Thank you. Indeed this is a clip from one of the six 1 hour shows that I made for PBS called Making Sense Of The Sixties

    • @drumstick74
      @drumstick74 Před 8 lety

      David Hoffman I see, so it's meant as a "teaser"?
      Thanks for sharing it.

  • @sandraleiviska8966
    @sandraleiviska8966 Před 11 lety +1

    I am so glad I was an active member of this generation. Thanks for the memories!!!

  • @DavidHoffmanFilmmaker
    @DavidHoffmanFilmmaker  Před 11 lety

    Thank you for your comment. But if you watched all of the clips from my series presented on this channel, I think you would feel that your analysis is incorrect. In fact, the 1960s, the 1860s, and the 1760s, were very special decades in which much changed. American culture was radically different 10 years later-not politically, but in so many other ways. The same was true after the 1860s.
    David Hoffman-filmmaker

  • @nadinedeck
    @nadinedeck Před 10 lety +4

    Unless you were their you dont know I was their the filmore East, Janice, Nico . Jimmie hendrix, the fuggs the mothers , stonewall , Alices restraunt, Jerry Reubin ,abbie Hoffman , and blue cheer. woodstock Andie warhole. it was a real trip.

  • @vinista256
    @vinista256 Před 4 lety +3

    25:52 “You could stop and talk to anybody ‘cause they all looked the same ...”. Interesting to compare that line about the summer of love with the educational films shown in the first episode, exhorting young people to “fit in with their group.” Also interesting to compare it with Oliver Stone’s remark about conformity being dangerous. 😏

  • @thewordofgord
    @thewordofgord Před 11 lety

    Thanks David; have never seen this doc before. You have every right to be proud of it, it's a fine, intelligent piece of work.
    wordofgord

  • @DavidHoffmanFilmmaker
    @DavidHoffmanFilmmaker  Před 11 lety

    Thank you. I am proud of this series.
    David Hoffman-filmmaker

  • @UtahJobSeeker51
    @UtahJobSeeker51 Před 8 lety +3

    Happy Grass is an Herb 🌿, Not a drug.
    Neither is it addictive. The only way it can be addictive is when it's laced with addictive chemicals.

  • @cheamore4296
    @cheamore4296 Před 8 lety +88

    awesome/ bring back the hippi movement 2016!!!

    • @sainter1
      @sainter1 Před 8 lety +2

      +dubstepKing69 Good! LOL

    • @sainter1
      @sainter1 Před 8 lety +14

      +CHE Amore It won't come back but the spirit of love, peace and togetherness can be regenerated. It won't be easy though, the obnoxious kids of today's generation, let's face it, are mostly spoiled, greedy brats. If there's any doubt of that just check out Twitter and you'll see millions of little capitalists trying to get rich.

    • @elm1230
      @elm1230 Před 8 lety +13

      +SainterSan And those hippies were spoiled, entitled, brats that were mostly just young kids swept in a movement that died out in a few short years. Then they grew up and curated the most decadent and conservative times in America in the 80's, and forward. Some of the most successful acts of activism has happened in recent times and all on the backs of today's youth. Funny and a little ironic you're giving the criticism on today's youth the kids of the 60's got from their elders......

    • @sainter1
      @sainter1 Před 8 lety +4

      +elm1230 You are partly correct - they were kids. The rest is right wing nonsense and a misunderstanding of the hippies' significance to subsequent generations. Hippies were brand new, with ideas on individual rights, equality, racial harmony and global peace that still echo today. They were really just the younger voice of the counterculture revolution that had other aspects to it (Malcolm X & civil rights, socialism, feminsm etc etc). They did NOT curate the 'greed is good' 80s, that prize goes to Ronald Reagan and his fellow neo cons (before the word was invented) who introduced a new economic model known as Neoliberalism. Put simply, neoliberalism was the champion of privatisation, fiscal austerity, deregulation, free trade, and reductions in government spending in order to enhance the role of the private sector in the economy. In other words Reagan with help from Margaret Thatcher reset society and pushed it away from the collective good ethos to what was good for the individual. That ethic is STILL with us today. So today's kids have known nothing else other than neoliberalism or trickle down economics, Reaganomics, economic rationalism, whatever you want to call it - there is nothing brand new about it. The so-called 1% exists solely because of those changes and the willingness of subsequent generations to keep it going, particularly the 'Millennials' or Internet generation who by and large are the most self centered generation in modern history.

    • @stacyblue1980
      @stacyblue1980 Před 8 lety +1

      +CHE Amore it never went away

  • @keithdaniel8098
    @keithdaniel8098 Před 11 lety

    Thank you for the excellent PBS series, just went looking to find it again. Born in 1960 myself, always wondered what happened those days. Best.

  • @patriciamasci6172
    @patriciamasci6172 Před 4 lety +1

    We lived in Toronto, ON & gladly took in my 2 US Cousins to avoid the draft. Upon request, we took them to Yorkville - all Hippies & Head Shops in Uptown T.O (it's all Posh today!) They had a planned reunion with a whole gang of 20 something happy Hippy-draft dodgers & their Flower power Girls, from back home in Boston, Mass.!! It was such a GROOVY day for me!

  • @SooziinCa
    @SooziinCa Před 10 lety +3

    Hey Jerry, What's really changed since the 60's? Nothing, there are just 3.5 Billion more of us! Obviously "The Pill" didn't have that great of an influence regarding "planned pregnancies". Jerry Rubin R.I.P.

  • @louiso.4325
    @louiso.4325 Před 7 lety +4

    PLEASE. What are all the songs in the video??

  • @mjsfan1994
    @mjsfan1994 Před 9 lety

    This is where I wish I grew up. It was an amazing time in my mind. I love Rock n' Roll and all the cultures of this era. I'm different from my parents and I like it. My parents grew up in the 80s, but are very set in the ways of today. I like being different, like I said.

  • @DavidHoffmanFilmmaker
    @DavidHoffmanFilmmaker  Před 12 lety

    @KSitz77 I understand and agree. Thank you for your comment.
    David Hoffman - Filmmaker

  • @cliffbrowne6962
    @cliffbrowne6962 Před 9 lety +3

    I am a child of the 60s. Born in 1966,unfortunately I was much too young to remember the last 3 years of that decade. The SIxties oddly enough, seems to be so cliche. Hippies,Vietnam, and Civil Rights. When I lived in Las Vegas Nevada, I realized that I lived in a town where the 60s NEVER happened. In Vegas the 60s meant Mobsters,Martinis, and Dean Martin. That was where the Don Drapers of America went to get decadent. In many ways, according to the old-timers who lived there at the time, insinuated that the 60s looked like the 50s. Lounge Acts would play the Beatles, Rolling Stones, Doors, and Hendrix with large brass sections, accompanied by a Hammond organ. But there was not a guy with shoulder-length hair in Vegas back at that time. The Mob wouldnt allow them.

    • @TheChuck624
      @TheChuck624 Před 9 lety

      Awesome points about growing up in Vegas. It was as if the 60's and the hippies just took a detour right around it and in my opinion Vegas pretty much stayed that way until Mirage opened back 89, I think it was? Then things started to change and the old guard moved on. I can also recall talking to my cousin years after he came back from Vietnam and him saying that the best thing about living in Vegas was that no one seemed to give a crap about the war or anything that was going on outside of Vegas. It was all about gambling, drinking and being entertained. I guess I never looked at it that way but he was right. We just didn't care and didn't feel the need to care.

  • @AnnaFava_ThePsychedelicWeb
    @AnnaFava_ThePsychedelicWeb Před 10 lety +3

    what's the music used in the video?

  • @IAmMrQ
    @IAmMrQ Před 7 lety +2

    I was born in 79, the hippie vibe was relatively unknown to me growing up but I oddly enough have grown up to embrace many of their values and I appreciate their experimental contributions to society. I understand where they based their beliefs and it was greatly influenced by Vietnam, assassinations, rights movements and music.

  • @NewAmsterdamWales
    @NewAmsterdamWales Před 7 lety +4

    Is there anyway you can upload the whole series David? I am a sociologist and I have found this series to be invaluable in my classes on social change and social problems.
    Thank you and thank you for making this amazing series
    Dr. Gary

    • @DavidHoffmanFilmmaker
      @DavidHoffmanFilmmaker  Před 7 lety

      Dear Dr. Gary: Thank you for the query. Unfortunately, I cannot upload the series but do sell the DVDs (6 of them) directly to schools, libraries, professors and teachers. If you are interested, contact me at allinaday@aol.com.
      David Hoffman-filmmaker

    • @NewAmsterdamWales
      @NewAmsterdamWales Před 7 lety

      That is great - how can my school buy these DVDs?

    • @DavidHoffmanFilmmaker
      @DavidHoffmanFilmmaker  Před 7 lety

      Please contact me at the e-mail address listed below.
      David Hoffman-film maker

    • @NewAmsterdamWales
      @NewAmsterdamWales Před 7 lety

      ok

    • @TheJer1963
      @TheJer1963 Před 7 lety

      Did you watch the series The Sixties on CNN? It was really good. You can get it on Amazon. They also did the Seventies to.

  • @krazohills9008
    @krazohills9008 Před 6 lety +4

    I was born in 55. Identified fairly strongly with the hippie culture. Then I began to notice, the musicians were becoming fantastically rich, and most of the rest of the generation, returned to college and became yuppies! Sell outs. Just my observations.

  • @laurensweeny4513
    @laurensweeny4513 Před 7 lety

    Pictures speak a thousand words ..oh the memories this brought back...( a former flower child)

  • @IceboxGuy
    @IceboxGuy Před 6 lety +1

    I love this series. Everything about it is quality and truth. Honest truth. Peace.

  • @stevepeters7412
    @stevepeters7412 Před 8 lety +3

    beatles got out of performing live because they cared about the music and did not want the constant screaming.

  • @Tracylindilou
    @Tracylindilou Před 8 lety +9

    I was born in the mid-60's and I have always had an affinity towards "Hippies"...I remember saying to myself when I was 7 years old; 'I wanna be a hippie, hippies are cool'....Ha. Never became one but I lived as close to the lifestyle and philosophy as I could... This is a great vid!

    • @ilove9540
      @ilove9540 Před 8 lety +3

      +Tracy Lunos I was born in the 70's and my parents were hippies. My thought was that my parents were stupid and immature with no responsibility.

    • @ilove9540
      @ilove9540 Před 8 lety

      TheSunNeverShines M. when i grew i up i hated them even more

    • @ilove9540
      @ilove9540 Před 8 lety

      TheSunNeverShines M. oh no my mom was abusive and my dad was just busy with work

  • @GaryVuorela
    @GaryVuorela Před 9 lety

    This Video brings back memories,It was a Incredible time,peace,GARYV.

  • @AustrianAnarchy
    @AustrianAnarchy Před 9 lety

    Incredible awesome work Mr. Hoffman! Downloaded the whole thing at Archive.Org and spent my snow day watching every glorious moment.

  • @Nordland796
    @Nordland796 Před 7 lety +3

    Yup...Hippies and Political activists were not the same......Abbey Hoffman was boo'ed at Woodstock when he tried to politicize it .