I grew up in the Bronx and in 1972 went into the military came back in 1976 things were changing fast forward to 2024 now you have no more burnt up buildings but crime is up sky high but I still love the Bronx!
@chrisallen7663 күн бұрын
The Bronx, and a lot of Brooklyn looked like this. Glad I lived in Queens.
@AviationTrainTV4 күн бұрын
Schönes Video
@TheBerlin092 күн бұрын
Vielen Dank!
@philliphoneysett63745 күн бұрын
✋️〰️👂〰️🫂🫦🫱🚪☝️☝️🖕✌️🫱〰️🦵👏🦵〰️🫲〰️ song off joy🎤s
@mauricio25686 күн бұрын
Now that's the best place possible for New York to start hip hop
@alandani83637 күн бұрын
Creo que soy el único que ve esto en 2024 XD chale que recuerdos cuando lo veia en mis 4 años y cuando tenia miedo alas escaleras eléctricas xD
@thomasbussmann78847 күн бұрын
Ganz starkes Video bin 62,mein ganzes Leben bin ich mit dem Typ Hochbahn bei uns in Hamburg gefahren ,zur Lehre zur Arbeit in der City ,jetzt mit 62 bin ich krank ,auf den Rollator angewiesen Frührentner und fahre keine Öffis mehr,dieser Film ist eine wunderbare Reise in meine Vergangenheit😢😢Vielen Dank dafür 😥
@TheBerlin095 күн бұрын
Vielen Dank für deinen tollen Kommentar und das ich durch das Video schöne Erinnerungen hervorbringen konnte was mich umso mehr freut. Ich wünsche dir vom Herzen das Beste und schöne Grüße! 🙂👍
@mtw88368 күн бұрын
2:17 Laurence Fishburne ?
@InnocentPeacefulLake-zc5ml20 күн бұрын
This is america in 2050 with bidens head in a jar
@alfredogalletti442525 күн бұрын
One thing Hamburg is the largest city but not in the world Zürich, Bern, Basel and Geneva are the largest cities don’t have the subways.
@FrankRommerts-dr4yp26 күн бұрын
Welcome to the USA, a 1st world country full of 3rd world places….
@take5thАй бұрын
It was a wild place. On a weekend, everyone was out, music playing, having a good time. I used to buy Valium from a guy named boom-boom near Jerome ave. Coke and weed around the corner. The police had to have been corrupt as drug sales were open, 24/7, on selected corners. A million stories, daily, for decades. It is some of the best geographically located land on the east coast, yet it struggles.
@esconis5304Ай бұрын
It's interesting seeing these older clips and no one in on their phones. I mean they didn't really exist then but still. And then fast forward 10 years later and half of people are on their phones. Crazy how much can change in a decade
@AdityaVaidya866Ай бұрын
Anyone in 19/05/2024?
@romanknauer2877Ай бұрын
❤❤❤❤❤
@hajicr1968Ай бұрын
In the 70’s and early 80’s the Bronx looked like a war zone. People from other boroughs and Long Island wouldn’t go to the Bronx, it was very scary and horrible. You don’t see so many abandoned burnt buildings any more but still see much of everything else, not much has changed. To think how beautiful the Bronx once was when the Italians, Irish and Jews lived there, once they all moved out the Bronx went down hill
@bastiskleinewelt4784Ай бұрын
Tjaa nun sind sie weg die guten alten 270er... Freuen wir uns einfach daß wir sie hatten, und hier und da mal eine kleine Kamera war!
@SchlipperschlopperАй бұрын
Best times ever! Today everything there is russian and chinese owned....
@1Nanerz2 ай бұрын
Seems like a nice place….
@amackert.19602 ай бұрын
NYC had a much higher violent crime rate in the 70s and early 80s than today. The city was truly dangerous, scary, and depressing then. I think the song from that era that represents NYC the most is "Baker Street" by Gerry Rafferty which was hugely popular in 1978. A song full of fear and melancholy from a fearful and melancholy era. No wonder Gen X'ers growing up in that era turned out to be pissed off & angry at the world.
@HugoBlueDiamondGalaxyBoi20092 ай бұрын
Nostalgic ❤💙
@dirkupnmoor2 ай бұрын
Schönes Video, gut, dass man hier mal wieder die klassischen S-Bahn-Geräusche hören kann!
@TheBerlin092 ай бұрын
Vielen Dank! Ja, die klassichen S-Bahnklänge sind wie Musik in den Ohren ^^
@NateBullock-ow6on2 ай бұрын
Looks like the movie escape from new York 😮
@zuegeinbaydenbug43812 ай бұрын
Ich bin zwar Teenager, aber ich hab trotzdem geheult. Diese Züge sind so besonders
@TheBerlin092 ай бұрын
Dann hat dich der Abschied sehr emotional bewegt wie bei dem einen Triebfahrzeugführer Herr Laube. Immerhin bleiben die schönen Erinnerungen und Videos dazu ^^
@EddieCruz-el3ho2 ай бұрын
Metro CDMX de mi MP-68R96B
@EddieCruz-el3ho2 ай бұрын
Música de Mariachi Loco quiere bailar
@5-Consecutive-Hairpin-Turns3 ай бұрын
Crazy how they put 2012 in the title and we assume this wasn't even that long ago but it's been 12 years
@bartoszkaczmarek25553 ай бұрын
Eine gekonnter Schritt zurück made in Berlin.
@timafiggy3 ай бұрын
Im glad I lived in Harlem.
@user-zk3uj7dx6k3 ай бұрын
Der U-Bahn-Tunnel zwischen Lehrter Bahnhof und Bundestag wurde 1995 gebaut.
@BLACKSTA3613 ай бұрын
Looks like Berlin 1947😂😂
@alebubis14 ай бұрын
😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊
@CeeTeeUSA4 ай бұрын
The Bronx will look worse and be far more dangerous very soon when the migrants chase the Police out and soldiers with machine guns patrol the streets. Uptown Manhattan and Brooklyn will suffer the same fate, along with parts of Queens..
@Ronald-ks2iy4 ай бұрын
I live in the UK, back in 1985 my cousins in queens took me to a party in the Bronx. We had a hell of a good time but when we left at daybreak I couldn’t believe my eyes at how desolate and run down the area was. I drove through the same area in 2009 and I did not recognize the place, totally rebuilt, vibrant and chic. So from the ashes a newer, nicer South Bronx has been reborn!
@ajm23603 ай бұрын
What was the party like? Was it your normal house party or like an early hip hop kind of deal? Also did you move ti the UK later or are you from there? I'm curious since I wonder what the local bronx peoole thought of you since you came from the UK. Anyway your story was quite fascinating to read!
@Ronald-ks2iy3 ай бұрын
@@ajm2360 I will give you a little background on my family, my paternal grandparents migrated to the UK from Jamaica in the 1920s, my mother’s parents migrated from India in the 1930s. Both my parents were born in the UK. My father’s elder sister married a U.S. serviceman who was stationed in the UK during WWII, he brought her back to US where they settled in Virginia, one of their sons moved to NY in the late 60s and started his family. It was his children whom we visited on trips to NY, they were my second cousins once removed and a bit older than me though we were teenagers. The ladies in NY took a shine to me especially because of the texture of my wavy hair and my height and they loved my Manchester accent. The party we attended in the Bronx was a hip hop party and at one point guys were free styling. I remember it like it was yesterday, very happy to have experienced American hip hop culture in America just as it was going mainstream.
@frankhaun84774 ай бұрын
Looks like Europe after WW 2
@stewartchromik1654 ай бұрын
Some great footage here, I just wonder how did it end up in ruins? So many buildings destroyed and left - When was it all built?
@TheEtiTransportesEJogos4 ай бұрын
R.I.P. A60 Stocks 1960-2012 All trains got Scrapped
@PaulRestorer4 ай бұрын
Great video my friend
@TheBerlin094 ай бұрын
Many thanks! Vielen Dank ^^
@recoveringnewyorker22434 ай бұрын
I went to PS 111 elementary school and John Phillip Souza, junior high school, (JHS 142) My parents took me out of the Bronx (1890 Schieffelin ave) on my 13th birthday in 1973. Where I was, would’ve been considered “high class“ compared to these pictures. But the subhuman Street thug animals who lived in these areas decided they would invade my old neighborhood. We moved to semi rural north Central Florida where people were actually civilized. For some reason they decided to return in 1974 for a “vacation.” I returned to the Bronx in 2006 to visit my brother. He lived in the same neighborhood where “Fort Apache The Bronx” was filmed. From 2010 to 2012 I had to return to the New York /New Jersey area to tend to family business. In my opinion, NYC (especially the Bronx) was, is, and always will be an urban cesspool!
@mikes70474 ай бұрын
looks like a war zone
@jesussebastian63465 ай бұрын
Metro la línea 8 nm o2 metro línea 2
@lucaazeri17005 ай бұрын
4:36 The infamous Claw man of NY. Drug dealers used to try their new dope on him , he was shooting in his arm, if he felt the high it meant that dope is good. True story .
@Buledde5 ай бұрын
Heute benutze ich Noise-Cancelling-Kopfhörer, damals hat es der Krach erledigt.
@warrenwiechern3455 ай бұрын
FFUCK IT DISGUSTS ME, LOOKING AT NY BLACK NEIGHBORHOODS OF THIS ERA COMPARED TO UPSTATE NY & PLACES LIKE CLUB54 & ITS CAREFREE JEWISH CLIENTELE & THE REST OF JEW YORK!
@Berliner0795 ай бұрын
War eine schöne Fahrt am 03.12.2023. Extra im Stadtbahner gebucht. Als wäre die Zeit stehen geblieben, so wie früher.
@TheBerlin095 ай бұрын
Das kann ich sehr gut nachvollziehen. Solche Züge sind wie Zeitkapseln auf Räder ^^
@bvgvideomat565 ай бұрын
Ach ja wie toll, die Hst. Roederplatz vor dem Umbau
@TheBerlin094 ай бұрын
Irgendwie interessant, wie so einiges in etwas über 10 Jahren verändert.
@stevenknopfel8936Ай бұрын
Ich vermisse die kt4d ich hab die kaum bekommen ich hab immer gt gehabt aber ich kann ja nach Magdeburg da fahren noch kt4d
@knottybogeye63876 ай бұрын
Looks like Gaza, free Palestine. You can tell when your government is controlled by Zionists, theres unchallenged corruption at the highest of government, and huge poverty.
@kyatisback126 ай бұрын
Ich muss sagen, bei 18:20 bin ich schon ziemlich neidisch auf den Jungen! :) Bei 13:08 sieht man mich im Zug sitzen, hihi. :=)
@TheBerlin096 ай бұрын
Das glaube ich dir haha, irgendwie musste ich bei den Jungen auch etwas an dich denken als du klein warst oderso ^^
@trams_trains6 ай бұрын
Sehr schöner Zusammenschnitt von tollen Fahrten & Fahrzeugen. Großes Lob 😊
@TheBerlin096 ай бұрын
Vielen Dank! Freut mich das du auch den Stadtbahner endlich mal in Realität geniessen konntest und bei der einen Fahrt dabei warst :)
@Eddie-rm4xc6 ай бұрын
It’s sad! Da Bronx suffered as the result of forced immigration! A lot of people were killed, raped, everything taken from them, including their livelihood!