They designed the Marmite jar to drive you crazy trying to get to the last bits stuck under the neck with your knife. They are still laughing.
@JeremiahsFiles21 күн бұрын
The oil embargo of the 70s happened following the Yom Kippur War between Israel & its Arab neighbors Egypt & Syria. Because the US supported Israel during the war, Arab countries halted oil supply to the West.
@JeremiahsFiles22 күн бұрын
Hey, I heard “Don’t Fence Me In.” I first heard the song in the Disney singalong video Campout At Walt Disney World.
@kathleenadams3770Ай бұрын
I was born in the early 60’s….. 1962 in Philadelphia,Pennsylvania (USA)
@kathleenadams3770Ай бұрын
I grew up in the 70’s🫶🏾
@jacquelinedewitt2366Ай бұрын
In the upper class family the wife would have her womens club charity work etc. She would not be sitting at home all the. The daughter at her age would be spending months preparing for her coming out so this show is not exactly following the times.also middle class women did speak back to hubby.
@pattymelt-go3fvАй бұрын
Stark...unvarnished.
@pattymelt-go3fvАй бұрын
HELP!!! Does anyone know the name of the song at 13:45?? I found it! Steve Harvey "Make Me Smile" Good song I like it....been trying to figure it out for ages!
@lruss5050Ай бұрын
Still love watching this! The little boy is just darling!
@ixlnxs2 ай бұрын
Lucy Worsley: this documentary is about a decade that was not unlike the 1960s in its modernisation of art and design The documentary: music by the Beatles, Stones, Kinks and Doors.
@sophiebenson10692 ай бұрын
We'res the Edwardian episode
@alansmart172 ай бұрын
splendid paegentry
@cmaden782 ай бұрын
The finished product of Marmite is something they considered PALATABLE😂?!? Edible maybe...palatable?...not sure😂❤
@cmaden782 ай бұрын
I'm 46 and from South Florida, so, not a big hot tea drinker. But I find it absolutely amazing that people had been essentially drinking tea for what must have been decades with out using what they NOW say is the best part, the tips?!? Do I have that right? Seriously 😂? So you're telling me that when they were making the original "tea product" they just didn't even try different parts and different blends of the leaf?!? That cannot be correct. I'd like to give our ancestors more intelligence than that. I mean we know there were smart people. Darwin wrote origin of the species..etc. I have to look into this🤔🤨
@gudrunnigg52572 ай бұрын
Interessting .The British had "Nazi" too.
@BetsyWells-od6nf-b9p2 ай бұрын
Now they know damn well black folks wasn't living all peaches and cream in the 60's🙄 why don't the show the real experience? Always tryna butter up and sugar coat sh**
@2_thumbs_up_baby2 ай бұрын
Been looking for this. Thankyou
@jonasglanshed3 ай бұрын
Saying Edward the VIII was ousted because of his love of Wallis Simpson and not because he was a fucking Nazi is doing the country a great disservice
@loditx77064 ай бұрын
Rich people did not ride a coach. They had private post chaises and their own horses. The horses were changed out every 10 miles or so. That was the "post". If the trip was long the travelers would put up for the night at an Inn, having dinner in a private room; not in the company of the locals.
@beejereeno24 ай бұрын
This last "decade" they lived through was a bit more confusing because they said all the women were working, but didn't show the nurse doing her job, just the school traffic guard and the cafe waitress.
@aspencouloir7614 ай бұрын
Excellent, thank you. The vegetarian section was boring and gross though🤷♂. As an aside, milk chocolate is foul, so Fry's was correct, even if for the wrong reason lol.
@Irene-j9f2g4 ай бұрын
❤
@tb22k5 ай бұрын
❤❤
@bookaufman96435 ай бұрын
Dr Perrier looks like Stanley Tucci.
@cassieoz17025 ай бұрын
I love how he glosses over the background of Kelloggs and Grahams breakfast cereals 🫤
@Someone-kg8qf7 ай бұрын
J's: We control your money and politics. We are powerful and protected Also J's : whaaaaaa!!! We're victims!!!!
@Someone-kg8qf7 ай бұрын
If you go against us we will call you names!!!
@acmelka7 ай бұрын
Great content! I wish the documentary makers would respect the audience enough to throw in relevant dates ...
@arlenehutchinson92597 ай бұрын
Loved it thank you
@ChristyChristoffersen8 ай бұрын
The slurping is getting a bit much after a while. Bleh
@perlefisker8 ай бұрын
The packaging, the variations in designs and fonts, bottles, boxes, cans - so rich!
@palinozog6589 ай бұрын
Filthy slaveowners
@lindapage57219 ай бұрын
I would of love some of that, be more independent. Yes!!
@lindapage57219 ай бұрын
These are the same rentals for everyone., except for immigrants.....
@Fritha719 ай бұрын
Now let's do the stone age era... Anybody up for that??
@lruss50509 ай бұрын
One thing I do remember is reading British magazines in the 60s and a lot of teens were out on their own! That just wasn’t happening here in Canada! We were still in High School and really there was nowhere to move to ( no bed-sits to speak of!). We were more independent than today’s kids, not many helicopter parents!🇨🇦🙂
@justinevollert803210 ай бұрын
I would love to live like that. Wish they had something like that here
@germanomagnone10 ай бұрын
17:10 in a family scene like this I'd say, : "Lovely food, for rabbits, that is.”, as they don't cook that poor rabbit
@GothGuy88510 ай бұрын
sad that the 1970's were such a Drag in England. things weren't that great in the US either tho. we had the gas shortage, poor economy the Vietnam war, and Nixon as president. we didn't have power cuts, or water shortages, that I remember, but like the British, we persevered and got through it alright.
@jilltagmorris10 ай бұрын
❤❤❤❤
@jilltagmorris10 ай бұрын
😊😊😊
@JenniferEldridge-r5r10 ай бұрын
What is the music used at 4-16(death) thanks
@sophiesconergb567311 ай бұрын
Where's the rest of the series 😢 says 26 episodes unavailable
@angelfriend5211 Жыл бұрын
My first Tupperware party was in the 90‘s LOL. Maybe because I lived in Germany after 1974. I lived in London in the 60‘s and 70‘s, and I remember how we had to use candles because of the power cuts. That left such a deep impression on me that even today, in 2024 at the age of 62, I still have candles and matches all over my flat… just in case!
@angelfriend5211 Жыл бұрын
It‘s 2024, and I‘m working full-time, and I still do the lion share of the housework. My son will only do housework if forced or threatened😢.
@angelfriend5211 Жыл бұрын
What happened to the Goldings?
@lindaannelineharwood48917 ай бұрын
It was explained at the end of the 1940s video. As they were following their family's experience, their family relocated to the suburbs. Pretty common thing, actually!
@angelfriend5211 Жыл бұрын
This is all so unrealistic. I grew up in the sixties in London, and we were poor. My father was a primary school teacher with three children. We didn‘t have any of these gadgets. The walls weren‘t painted in all these colours. Everyone worked hard. My mother had to find a job because my father couldn’t feed a family and pay the mortgage from a teacher‘s salary. Why is my memory of the sixties in London so different from this?
@colvingenealogy Жыл бұрын
What's interesting is the moderns aren't understanding that their reactions are what they are because, unlike the Edwardians they're portraying, they have not been conditioned from birth to accept their status and hierarchical and patriarchal life as it was in the late 19th and early 20th century. The children would have been conditioned to absent parents and the parents conditioned to their gender roles. It's not that life was "harder"", "boring", or "more difficult," it's that they are moderns, accustomed to a computerized, automated, push-button world and have been thrust into a mechanical, steam, coal-powered, and oil and candle-illuminated one where gender, parental, and children's roles and family values were very, very different.
@annelousteau9799 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for speaking of Sanditon! PBS plays a BBC version! 😘 😘 😘