Really appreciate your hard work putting together these great documentaries❣️
@michaelfuller21534 жыл бұрын
I visited a small town in Georgia in 1970, right after the Rock Festival there. The local paper showed a young couple walking down a railroad track...from behind...not a stitch on! Way past wacky! WHO really started all of this? I wish the whole story could be told. The Summer of love...led to Roe vs. Wade in1972 or 3. Think about that for a few minutes.
@dalegriggs53924 жыл бұрын
David, I’m a baby boomer, raised in a middle class neighborhood of small town America. Patriotism was a paramount element of our citizens and I subscribed to that ideology. Yet in the mid sixties I was also caught up in the music of the day. I loved the Mama’s and the Papa’s and their “California Dreamin” mentality and the 1967 “Summer of Love” in drug induced Hieght/Ashbury. I loved the music of popular bands such as Buffalo Springfield but especially Creedence Clearwater Revival, whose many songs were a protest of sorts of the status quo. I was torn by the message of the music on one hand and the required, absolute patriotism of my fellow townspeople. It was a difficult time. I played guitar, belonged to a band that played for weekly dances the music of the day, yet I had this underlying sense of the necessity of supporting my country. To be honest I have never, to this day, reconciled the two conflicting ideologies. I was drafted into the Army, served in Vietnam because my inherent patriotism demanded I do so. In reality, despite the message of the time, I was and am proud to have serve my country regardless of the popularity of that war. The times were confusing for many of us but that confusion should not negate the decisions we made at the time. We simply followed our hearts, whether patriots or resistors. I hold no animosity to anyone who did what they felt was right during a very difficult time.
@andytaylor54764 жыл бұрын
Yes it was a dilemma. I came to hate the Vietnaum War and America's involvement. I was a a "hippie". I had hippie friends who went to Nam, not all came back. My friends and I supported those fighting. It was a terrible war. Thanks for your service.
@sarahdeshay13944 жыл бұрын
You seem to not get the true meaning of patriotism. David mentioned (professor) Howard Zinn in this piece, you should listen to what he has to say about patriotism. In my eyes Howard was the greatest American patriot ever, he spent his life educating the youth and was always on the side of the oppressed that’s what makes him a hero.
@dalegriggs53924 жыл бұрын
Sarah Deshay I don’t need you to speak to me about patriotism.
@dalegriggs53924 жыл бұрын
Haha Porter V I truly feel sorry for you. You have no idea what sacrifices have been made to enable you to express your opinion and your “hatred of the USA. Fine, move to Venezuela or Cuba, you will be much happier there I’m sure. Us “Old Fucks” will even pay for your exit from a country you hate so much.
@dgillett414 жыл бұрын
@Haha Porter V Easy to criticise, and foul language seems to come naturally to you, but do you offer any alternative? Amazing how many people are desperate to come to the US and UK and become 'dirty whores'. "Always look on the bright side of life". Good luck!
@LordGreystoke4 жыл бұрын
The only thing I take away from this, as far as the "love generation" goes is that for a very brief period in time, a certain segment of the 60s generation experienced a sort of naivete about how the world's problems could be overcome by simply coming together around the word, love. As naive as that maybe, you have to admit that there hasn't been such a generation since. So to their credit, I think these young people deserve to have their history and be complimented for engaging in behavior that, if anything, gave the world pause to consider an ideal we no longer seem able to imagine.
@SchuStringx4 жыл бұрын
Another consideration, or another perspective - perhaps that of the counter culture, is the naivete that the geopolitical systems in place at the time were sustainable towards providing human rights for every person across the globe. Of course answers to these problems are never black & white, and the perspectives of each generation are vastly different from one another; challenging a system that many think they understand, don't understand etc.
@johnfalkenstine83774 жыл бұрын
We were young but not as naive as is the common assumption. For example I was 1-A in 1967. I knew young men that had already come back in a coffin and I had a friend who dropped out of school and was drafted. That had an effect on your thought processes. We simply "did not come together." We were often enjoying ourselves because for a young man, there was a bad thing coming. Also, school was affordable.
@tenbroeck19583 жыл бұрын
As someone who is likely a little old and remembers the hippies, I would say the "founders" of the Love Generation were not at all naïve, but rather there were hundreds of problems with the Levittown-as-America paid for by the military industrial complex, and there couldn't be hundreds of answers until there was one overarching & simple framework: compassion/love. It unified people to fight racism, war, etc.
@juancastillonb3 жыл бұрын
yes... you just said that way ...you hit the nail in the head
@juancastillonb3 жыл бұрын
it was not only one word ... there were 2 words : PEACE AND LOVE ... and their weight was awesome ... and yet is.
@bonniekeough2444 жыл бұрын
In the 60's my family still lived in the Ozarks. My daddy was a farmer who raised 7 children..... We had a two room shack with a dirt floor.... Ofc, no plumbing, electricity, etc. We lived off the land and life was great. We moved to a Kansas City suburb in 68... My parents still didn't let us girls shave our legs and we had home-made dresses. The first few months was a nightmare.
@hawaiingirlbeth4 жыл бұрын
I was born in 77 and my mom made my clothes darn near sll of elementary school.
@thatgirlwhousedtohavereall55494 жыл бұрын
My mom didn’t want me to shave my legs or underarms either! What was up with that? So weird... Thankfully my dad stepped in & I was able to take care of things, but there was a month or more of turmoil in our house because of it. Ridiculous!
@aubreyjames87954 жыл бұрын
That is an amazing story and upbringing.
@jaklumen4 жыл бұрын
I guess things change with the times, or, it's just individual preference. I mean, I rather have to encourage my wife to shave her legs and also her underarms, and I'm never sure if my 18 year old shaves those areas, or not. Even then, I'm mostly asking the missus to shave if those areas aren't covered, i.e. for the pool, for summer clothing, etc.
@BrightSeaStar4 жыл бұрын
Bonnie, It would please me no end to some day meet and chat with someone like you. You must be about my age or a little younger, but that's where the similarity ends. My family was very lower middle class, but the difference was that we lived in a bit cosmopolitan city. My parents were very liberal (not politically)and not religious. They divorced when I was tiny, and basically I grew up alone. It is nice not having someone telling you what to do, but it's not so great when no one cares much what you do !!
@Dorthy-wx9fq7 ай бұрын
62 year old here and I'm a 2nd wave baby boomer. Grew up in the late 1960's and though the 1970. I loved it and I miss it. Love from Marysville California
@victoriaballard73544 жыл бұрын
I was 17 in 1967 living in Montreal. We went everyday all summer to Expo 67 and had an amazing experience. Yes we were hippies but I remember so many good things from that time.
@andytaylor54764 жыл бұрын
I was a hippie then and went to Expo 67. It was great!
@JonJonJonJonJonJonJonJon4 жыл бұрын
if you can remember then ya werent doing it right
@kevinmcgrath34314 жыл бұрын
Reformed White Knight those apartments were (are?) called Habitat. My dad worked on them. I was 10, expo 67 was fantastic.
@tenbroeck19583 жыл бұрын
Peace be with you
@AFaceintheCrowd013 жыл бұрын
We were living in Maryland and my dad took the family to Expo 67. We just loved it - it was so cheerful and optimistic. Futuristic in a really happy way that energized the participant. It was a marvelous experience. Later that year, we left the country and moved to London.
@randallanderson16324 жыл бұрын
As a 70 year-old guy who was around in that era I can say that there was a lot of pretentiousness. Just look at the oddball hats and other various "look at me" styles. It was fashionable to talk about love and just be "far out". That moment in time did not last long because it was not _real_ . Having said all of that, I miss that time in my life. In the summer I would go down to the local public lake to swim and have a couple of cans of Stroh's beer, chase girls, go cruising in a '66 Chevelle, and play basketball at the park.
@GalileoSmith4 жыл бұрын
You are what we used to call "a regular guy".
@JG-tt4sz4 жыл бұрын
No matter what era people are born in, everyone misses their youth.
@LosBerkos4 жыл бұрын
"Public lake" 🤣🤣
@alexander_the_great_19753 жыл бұрын
I guess the whole "love" thing is nice. But, people took it too far with the drugs, alternate lifestyle, and such. I can relate to "love one another". We can use the good things from these folks, why not?
@joanbradshaw3333 жыл бұрын
@@GalileoSmith a regular guy or a straight but probably not a greaser and definitly not a head.
@iKnowYoureBusyBut...4 жыл бұрын
Interesting about the overuse of the word love taking away from the meaning of the word.
@1DennisK4 жыл бұрын
I've felt love only a few times, and each time was when somebody died; my dad, my grandmother or my dog. When I've been in relationship with another living thing, there always existed, however remote, the possibility of one of us screwing it up beyond repair. Usually always, 'love' is conditional, and that doesn't really seem like love at all. To say "I really really LIKE you" is a lot more honest but doesn't sound nearly romantic. In my humble opinion, "I love you" is just a nice little white lie that we'll all just have to live with.
@lindamahrer17604 жыл бұрын
@@1DennisK : LOVE IS NOT JUST ROMANCE .. IT IS A BOND..LOYALITY ..IT IS CARING. IT IS GIVING OF YOUR TIME, SKILLS, KNOWLEDGE - IT IS SHARING AT EVERY LEVEL IF IT COMFORTABLE FOR YOU AND YOUR FAMILY. WE GIVE, WE DO FOR OTHERS FROM OUR HEARTS. THIS IS WHAT LOVE THY NEIGHBOR AS THY SELF IS.. IT ALSO REFLECTS THE GOLDEN RULE DO UNTO OTHERS AS WE WOULD HAVE THEM DO UNTO US. THIS IS GENUINE RESPECT & KINDNESS TO ALL LIVING THINGS AND CREATION , ALL OF HUMANITY, PETS, FOLIAGE, LANDSCAPE - THE BEAUTY. IT IS BEING THERE FOR OTHERS - STEPPING UP TO THE PLATE OFFERING A HELPING HAND OR OPENING YOUR HOME TO OTHERS WHO ARE IN NEED UNTIL THEY GET ON THEIR FEET. IT IS PROVIDING A PLACE FOR CHILDREN WHO NEED A HELPING HAND. IT IS HONORING A PERSONS CHARACTER/ INTEGRITY/ INNER BEAUTY... BEING GIVING..PROTECTING..HELPING..NOT BEING JUDGEMENTAL. IT IS A DEEP APPRECIATION OF ALL YOU COME TO KNOW AND THAT INCLUDES ( THEIR SKILLS, GENUINE LOVING, GOOD & KIND NATURES) IT IS ENJOYING AND APPRECIATING FAMILY AND FRIENDS. LOVING IS ALSO, A DEEP GRATITUDE FROM THE PERSON WHO HOLDS A DOOR OR SETS YOUR PLATE AT DINNER. IT IS RECOGNIZING THE TEACHER THE ONE WHO TAUGHT DISERNMENT..THE ONE WHO TAUGHT TO LET GO OF PETTINESS..AND CHILDISH THINGS.. THE ONE WHO TAUGHT THAT ONCE THERE IS UNDERSTANDING THERE IS FORGIVENESS...AND WITH FORGIVENESS COMES WISDOM...( IT ALSO, MEANS THAT YOU MUST LOVE, TRUST, RESPECT YOURSELF, BE SECURE WITHIN YOURSELF - KNOW YOURSELF, YOUR STRENGTHS AND LIMITATIONS- THESE QUALITIES AND PRAYER ..MEDITATION..OPEN DOORS...
@wariswaldo97904 жыл бұрын
Chop Tank Lovely words. I think a lot of times relationships start as I really, really, like you. But anyone who has stayed in a relationship through thick and thin and honestly gives their heart and seeks to serve each other and not always waiting to be served. Real partners, no dictatorships, Loyalty, trustworthiness and mutual respect over time blossoms into knowing Love. I feel bad for anyone who doesn’t get there or can’t relate to what I’m saying. Sounds like you know what I’m saying. It’s possible Love was there the whole time, but there comes a time when you really know it’s Love. You love and know you’re Loved.
@lindamahrer17604 жыл бұрын
@@dennissmith5037YOU ARE ABSOLUTELY 💯. EVERY EXPERIENCE GOOD OR BAD IS A LEARNING PROCESS- A LESSON LEARNED. LIFE IS NOT ALWAYS A SHOWER OF FLOWERS. IT IS THE YING and YANG. NAIVE..GULLIBLE.. TOO TRUSTING..IT IS ALL TRUE ESPECIALLY, WHEN YOU HAVE ONLY KNOWN KIND LOVING PEOPLE.. THE REAL SHOCK COMES INTO PLAY WHEN YOU REALIZE THE OUTSIDE WORLD IS A GRIM PLACE-. how do you handle it..one thing for sure one learns that little word Fear can be a blessing or a curse..it sends an alarm, a warning be aware ( this is the healthy fear). Instinctively there are many signals to protect. ( FEAR of the unknown, the what if's, doom & gloom insecurity is the damaging unhealthy fear) DISCERNMENT IS A MUST. ANOTHER KICKER IS WHEN LIFE TAKES A TURN: WISHES, DISAPOINTMENTS, IT COULD BE A SIBLING ETC., OFFER ENCOURAGEMENT, HELP ETC., ( at times nothing is appropriate) YOU STILL CARE but must step back or move on. NONE OF US CAN ALLOW OTHERS TO DEFINE US. I READ SOMETHING THAT STATED: WE ONLY GET WHAT WE PUT UP WITH. TRUTH ISN'T IT ?
@keithjohnston68614 жыл бұрын
We are now in the age of Aquarious that is why there is so much upheaval in the world. It is no different from an pieces person's beliefs compared to a aquarious beliefs. The pieces is about the best for the individual ware the aquarious is about the best for the community.
@camerrill4 жыл бұрын
Thank you, David. I was only 11/12 in 1967, and never got sucked into being a hippie, but it was a good time to be love, to speak it, to act lovingly.
@georgejones47653 жыл бұрын
Thanks for your hard work and fairness, Dave. I was born in 1960, just greeted my first granddaughter, and I’m still enthralled by it all. Life is definitely worth examining. Love y’all 🌸🙏🏼💜😎🕊
@DavidHoffmanFilmmaker3 жыл бұрын
Wonderful, George. Congratulations. David Hoffman filmmaker
@ajisstillright4 жыл бұрын
Yess more late 60s videos and hippie topics!!! I gotta pack me a bowl for this one, cheers and stay educated and medicated all💯🔥🌱🌻☮
@RandyR2 жыл бұрын
Am a aging Hippie. Also a recovering addict. Trying to get the hi consciousness without the drugs. Hippie to me is someone who is aware of what is going on. Cares about the world and humanity. They try to bring about positive changes, without violence. Can chase financial security, while helping to bring about changes. ✌️💖 We were having Love Ins from 85 to 93, in Griffith Park Los Angeles.
@BBURKE6174 жыл бұрын
I'm 37 years old consider myself conservative and I love your stuff Sir!! I've been following you for about 6 months now
@DavidHoffmanFilmmaker4 жыл бұрын
I appreciate that
@BBURKE6174 жыл бұрын
@@DavidHoffmanFilmmaker you are wlecome👍
@doofus-gamE4 жыл бұрын
I met Nancy Sinatra in Vegas in 1972, performed with a group in her Vegas show. She was funny, sweet, genuine and gorgeous! I almost knocked Bob Hope down rushing out the theater door as he was coming in to see her show. Bob was startled, but laughed. His hulk of a body guard not so much...
@dominysynclair4 жыл бұрын
Cool story...
@cubul324 жыл бұрын
David, I'm constantly mind blow by the footage you share with us. BLOWN uh-way.
@janiesippel2254 жыл бұрын
Very interesting. The more things change the more they stay the same!
@shaunw92704 жыл бұрын
That was absolutely fascinating ! Thanks David 👍
@poutygorilla26984 жыл бұрын
All we need is love... whatever that means anymore. I'm 69 yrs old and lived through all of this and I have no answers or hope.
@andytaylor54764 жыл бұрын
67- I feel the same.
@usefulidiom4 жыл бұрын
At the expense of sounding like a religious zealot...seek Jesus. For real...my life was without hope as well until I sought Jesus Christ. My life has never been the same. God bless you and I pray you find hope, peace and the answers you seek. Hosea 10:12
@sadhu71914 жыл бұрын
Modern hippies went underground growing shrooms at home searching within. Lots of them today
@haroldhardrada74494 жыл бұрын
@MrHoppers002 Almost all the radical leaders of the 60's were from the silent generation. I tend to think their politics had something to do with them missing the Second World War. To prove themselves they had to downplay the success of their older brothers by showing they fought for a corrupt system.
@jamesb.91554 жыл бұрын
Still plenty of social experimenting going around the world but I don't know if Humans will ever evolve into something really harmonious before we all destroy this planet! There's too much corporate and nationalistic power playing going on and the stakes have never been higher and with an idiot like Trump making it to the WH it's hard to feel like we've been making 'progress'!
@NewArcadian4 жыл бұрын
Good one, David! Does give a strong sense of the many jumping in on the positive vibe rather than necessarily as a considered political decision.
@deborahfairbanks40124 жыл бұрын
I remember the "Diggers" a group in Boston, I think. I am from Boston and attended many a love in on the Boston Common. I am grateful to be alive today...
@0418824 жыл бұрын
Grateful to be alive?
@deborahfairbanks40124 жыл бұрын
@@041882 yes.
@alwayslernin44004 жыл бұрын
@@Citadin some hippies got into politics and worked for change. We got rid of alot of pollution that way. I remember alot of filthy rivers that got cleaned up that way.
@nicolasrossi59784 жыл бұрын
There were diggers in San Francisco and other large cities too. I think they started in S.F
@johnallen27714 жыл бұрын
That sounded like Quicksilver Messenger Service in the background. The "West Coast Sound" or SF Sound was very important in the progression of R&R over the years. Jefferson Airplane, Moby Grape, Grateful Dead, Quicksilver, they all had a distinctive sound banging on those Fender Telecasters. Jack Cassidy was a great bass player. For me the '60s really took off in '66 all the way until the Kent State shooting deaths in 1970. We really thought we could change the world and I still believe that love is the way to go. I see a softening of America somewhat from the hate that prevailed in those days. There are still many hateful people but others have changed to listening to other people and seeing why they are in such pain. We were willing to do whatever we thought it took to break down barriers, even to the point of living with two partners or in a commune where sex with anybody was OK if you wanted it. It didn't work of course. Too much jealousy and ego involved. We disliked money and thought it was the root of all evil. If you got into a higher state of mind, a higher consciousness, it was thought that we could rise to a new level as a society. Didn't happen. Not enough people went along with the idea. But we truly believed that we were saving the world with love. Cannabis and LSD only reinforced these ideas of oneness.
@carolcaugh71424 жыл бұрын
Great commentary! I am glad Disney made the Love Bug movie. My favorite memory of the 1960’s movement. Of course, I was only 7 years old and was just interested in my morning cereal and playing outside.
@grantkruse18123 жыл бұрын
You didn't know the BEATLES ? Even as a 7 yr old, we mostly were into it...Too bad your parents never opened those doors for you...It's a weird wild wonderful world in the 1960s- but pretty f'd up these days-fossil fuels, you know....
@GeorgeVirginia4 жыл бұрын
This is very interesting. i was born in 1969 to Parents who were drug free uptight stick-in-the-mud People. They're still married to this day...
@kurtfoulke51304 жыл бұрын
Maybe they had a good time before you crashed the party ?
@FLStelth4 жыл бұрын
Me too. My parents married in 1964 and I was born in 67. They are still married today (soon to be 56 years) neither got into the hippie nonsense and were great parents to me and my siblings. My wife and have been married 24 years.
@sooorandom67924 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for your videos! I love learning history on influences of ideas, societal changes, music, culture, fashion trends, etc. I love your channel 💖.
@BraveSquaw674 жыл бұрын
Very interesting! This was from the year I was born. I see nothing much has changed. I didn’t want this clip to end. I wanted to see and hear more.
@guywolff4 жыл бұрын
It is fun to hear other generations talking about how much fun we were having, how lucky we were with Sex Drugs and Rock & Roll when it was really a time of many unseen dangers ..Just having long hair and walking along a country road could get you hurt of worse. We were all just a few months away from the Mekong Delta and that was the impetus that drove our actions .
@user-pq1cj3hy3q4 жыл бұрын
so what was the fuel, drugs and less restrictions from the law as well as less social pressure
@TheAaronir34 жыл бұрын
Yeah no I don't believe that. Your generation literally had it easy if you were white
@robertl.fallin70624 жыл бұрын
@@TheAaronir3 Am white and I was aware of how bad things were for black people. Our ships corpsman (medic for most of you) told me the food onboard ship was not so bad especially since befor enlisting in the Navy he had never had more than two meals in a day while he was growing up in Jackson Ms.. The corpsman was awarded a silver star for duty in Vietnam edit: change "duty" for heroism .
@ryanjacobson25084 жыл бұрын
Violent crime was at its worst from 1990-1992. Most of us would much rather live in the 60's than the depressing and ugly era that started in 1990.
@Dentropolis4 жыл бұрын
TheAaronir3; Pretty much everybody was white in those days, before they allowed in, or didn’t stop immigration legal or otherwise. Did everybody have it good then? No.
@itgetter94 жыл бұрын
The Diggers! They were the real deal. Love this, Mr. Hoffman. Thank you!
@jamesb.91554 жыл бұрын
As a kid I was too young to be a part of' the '67 free love movement but i was in the Bay Area that summer and it was one of the best times of my entire life!
@dashiellhouse4 жыл бұрын
AAAAHHHHHH!!!!! You’re so cool!!! I have been watching your videos for a couple years now and finally my Grandpa Freeman showed up at 7:14 in this one!!!! AAAAAHHHHHHH!!!! COOOOOOOLLL!!!
@KathleenMcCormickLCSWMPH4 жыл бұрын
Thanks for this. I was 14 and just entering the hippie scene in upstate NY. I was a misfit in my catholic school who protested the war during the moratorium and was seeking my tribe. I found it in the park with others who were often much older than I. I have never felt such a sense of belonging and transformation. I took LSD and was never the same. It was the start of my critical view of society and what it could be if we tried to change it. We succeeded in many ways but failed in many others. I have never given up the hope however. I’d like to think I would have answered some of these questions more intelligently but who knows. I was so young and naive. As a hippie I was searching for myself in a society I couldn’t relate to. It took years... A great window to the past!
@DavidHoffmanFilmmaker4 жыл бұрын
Beautifully said, Kathleen. Thank you for sharing just a bit of your thinking. David Hoffman - filmmaker
@questioneverything424 жыл бұрын
I traveled the Grateful Dead for 15 years. I was born in the late 60s. We need this type of power right now more than we ever have in our entire lifetime. Love is the only thing that it's going to fix what's happening around the world right now. The next four days or so are going to be the last days of the five planets in retrograde and more than 20 million people around the planet are and meditating on peace. Thank you, my brother because this is exactly what the planet needs to see right now. Ty kind sir ♡
@christopherherrera9214 жыл бұрын
Thanks David Hoffman for everything. May god continue to bless you.
@onetry74064 жыл бұрын
I would love to see a show like that!
@ADAMSIXTIES4 жыл бұрын
8:10. That guy with the mustache and sideburns makes some great points in the midst of the chaos. I thought all these segments were great and well handled by the interviewer David Silver. Really captures the moment well: 1967! Sounds like word got to Nancy's Dad...then it was game over!
@hanginwithlois4 жыл бұрын
David, I appreciate everyone of your videos. Thank you so much for sharing your life and work with us.
@charlesmasters20454 жыл бұрын
The british guy has a similar style of interviewing to the youtube channel 'all gas no brakes.'
@Orangeflava4 жыл бұрын
That channel is hilarious. Andrew Callaghan has a good thing going and i hope it continues for a while!
@zeusapollo86884 жыл бұрын
Greatest joy
@knottsscary4 жыл бұрын
I literally thought the exact same thing
@TheMobileHomestead4 жыл бұрын
I was born in 1959 so I was just a kid through most of the 60's ...even so , I watched a Lot of TV back then in N.Y.C. after school and on weekends... and if you want to get an understanding of whats going on in a culture ...watching how TV producers decide to tell the story of that Era is always a really good way to understand what's going on... back when I was a Kid you got to see the 60's so-called free love and hippy stuff all the time on Kids TV shows but Hollywood always made sure that there were strong parental types in the shows that would pull the hippy kid back into line when they acted up with an appropriate dash of a laugh track thrown in to imply the whole thing was just a kid acting like kids always do. .... so those who did'nt live back in those days don't get this ..they see a few modern specials on TV about the 60's and think there was this massive social deviation from the Norms ......that just did'nt happen . What did happen was Madison Avenue Advertising houses saw a good thing to make money off of and helped produce this false notion that The 60's Hippy Generation was a bigger artistic and intellectual movement than it actually was ... part of this advertising ploy is when they brought on major narcissists and nonsense spewing hustlers like Rubin who was just the 60's version of a 90's Shock Jock ....this kind of nonsense caused bunches of shy and unsure kids still living under the psychological yoke of the 50's to think they could finally let go and have some fun to want to be part of this and through no fault of their own failed .... they failed not because their concepts were inherently wrong , part of their failure came about because very few people are bullshit artists like some of the obviously phony Beatniks were and just could've reproduce that silliness in their own lives ..and even more important is realizing that American Elite Power Players are perfectly happy with fads and new trends that make them money but they only let you go so far and won't let you rebel to the point where their money is endangered ...so to ensure that... this whole thing was taken over very early on by Hollywood and ad men who were thrilled that they could sell new TV shows and movies and produce tons of groovy clothes and lunch boxes ...but they also knew you did'nt want the society and youth to become anarchists or back to the land hippy types who wouldn't buy their products ...so they dropped showing the Rubin big mouth Types , focused on the Partridge Family Model of Trendy Cool Hippy lifestyles and continued through the early 80's TV shows being all Mod Squad and Cool but always carefully had a way to show the rebellious youth was foolish and needed to be sent to his room for a timeout...
@magnysvoss4 жыл бұрын
Millennial here, can I just say I love these videos. My parents are baby boomers and seeing their generation is really neat to me because I see a lot of similarities actually. The first clip when he’s interviewing kids reminds me of KZbin videos where they ask very similar questions. The kids all hanging out and being weird and quirky is a lot like kids at comic cons and on tiktok. The later interviews again are definitely things you don’t see on tv now but you’ll see them on KZbin/tiktok. I love this and I think we all need to realize that as different as our fads and historical moments were we all go through similar cycles in life. There’s always a new movement with the young adults, there’s always push back from the elder generations and the world will always evolve to new mind boggling heights we could never imagine. At the end of the day I think we do need to remember love. As naive as it may be, compassion and consideration for every being and their experience is what gives us our humanity.
@yiddena4 жыл бұрын
I always enjoy your documentaries. Thank you David for your insights.
@TheAnadromist4 жыл бұрын
Thanks again David. I have for years been putting together some ideas of what happened in San Francisco during the Sixties, which was obviously a pivotal moment for not only the country but ultimately the world. And I see what's happening on the streets today as a Sixties redux. I was in my young teens in San Rafael California. I saw it as a legendary time but also without any romanticism. To me darkness settled upon the whole scene quite heavily by 1969. Anyway I really appreciate these documents. Thanks for sharing David.
@akamano53 жыл бұрын
..I remember there was a parade ..the death of the Haight and the hippie movement..late 60ish... it was on the local news..hippies were marching down Haight with a cofin full of hippie stuff... posters , beads flowers etc..it was on the local news..
@Castropher2 жыл бұрын
"To me darkness settled upon the whole scene quite heavily by 1969." Could you elaborate more on what you mean by this?
@classygary Жыл бұрын
@@Castropher RFK MLK murdered followed by Kent State Nixon re-elected the Manson B.S. Altamont Fest going off the rails Acid Casualties The Beatles broke up and an escalation of the war as the exclamation point ad infinitum . Things definitely shifted gears going into the Seventies . Tis every season turn turn turn .
@ceilconstante78134 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for preserving and sharing footage of this generation. I believe many things influenced these times. Timothy Leary telling the young people to drop out and tune out. The Beatles,. Beatniks, Viet Nam war, communism, the birth control pill and of course drugs.
@captainshiggles4 жыл бұрын
Loved it. Amazing how much of this parallels today’s times. Subscribed.
@davidellis51414 жыл бұрын
The all time classic " Surrealistic Pillow " was being listened to by all. Jefferson Airplane ruled the airwaves.
@davegibbs64234 жыл бұрын
Thank you David for such an illuminating piece on that time. It is usually romanticized and cleaned up. Lots going on.
@Datanditto4 жыл бұрын
I never new the hippies had a distinction from the love generation. Wow!
@Radnally4 жыл бұрын
I remember that almost everything coming out of the media was so opposite of what we all saw and experiencing that we paid no attention to it. It was laughable
@NobodiesReaIm4 жыл бұрын
These videos make my day so much better. It’s really cool when you can see the parallels in history from the past to the present
@cherylcallahan54024 жыл бұрын
TYVM 🌟💖🌟 David Hoffman 1967 Nancy Sinatra David Silver British producer he was cut off. always love your videos David H.
@charlievegas84974 жыл бұрын
Gosh! I'm 35yrs. young 😉 and I just love your content. You are a very good story teller and easy to listen to.
@DavidHoffmanFilmmaker4 жыл бұрын
Thank you! 😃
@donclark46854 жыл бұрын
In 1967 I joined the Navy. It was a weird time, but not weirder than now.
@pronemanoldbutyoung55484 жыл бұрын
I come here now and then and it’s always a well worth time. I don’t watch everything but the videos I do watch has that pure unfiltered quality with the pre and post commentary by you David. And that is refreshing and interesting.
@DavidHoffmanFilmmaker4 жыл бұрын
Thank you for saying so. David Hoffman - filmmaker
@pronemanoldbutyoung55484 жыл бұрын
David Hoffman No I really mean it 🙂
@fjp33053 жыл бұрын
I was born in 1955 and I remember how The Beatles changed the world. They were the spark that lit the fire of a social revolution. I guess it had been brewing for some time. Suddenly everything changed: the music, the clothes, the hair, the behavior of the people. It was more fun.
@johnricco53663 жыл бұрын
too young to have been part of this. in 1964 you were 9 lol. just barely a teen. real sixties influenced people were born no later than 1951 or 1952. had to have been hitting your teens by 1964 (beatlemania) if you were younger it wouldnt have meant as much and just been background noise. i was born in 1949 so the 1950s,which i remember,were mostly background noise to me,unlike someone born about 1942,who would have been entering their teens in 1955 when elvis and many 50s artists broke out.
@ellen4956 Жыл бұрын
@@johnricco5366 And yet they try to push the people born in '55 into the same cohort as "baby boomers"! I think those of us born in '55 are invisible to the world. We were not a part of the 60s cultural revolution, and those of us who tried to feed on the scraps left behind by the so-called revolution soon found out how hollow and meaningless it was. I went to see Haight & Ashbury streets and the surrounding neighborhoods in '72, and the people who hadn't become "Yuppies" had gone home or had become disappointed and burnt out.
@steveschneiderman37614 жыл бұрын
Dave.... this is great and I appreciate your work. This film shows that every generation has their share of malcontents. The only difference now is that one political party is pandering to the malcontents.... the people in this film are completely mild mannered and tame as compared to today. Our democratic way of life is threatened to a greater degree in 2020 than 1967.
@andytaylor54764 жыл бұрын
yes!
@topologyrob4 жыл бұрын
I just love your warmth and insight - what a brilliant presenter. And this footage is priceless.
@DavidHoffmanFilmmaker4 жыл бұрын
Thankyou Robert. David Hoffman - filmmaker
@ahuramazda32 Жыл бұрын
Thanks man. I love your views on these moments in time.
@lilahusain14744 жыл бұрын
I love this channel
@1DennisK4 жыл бұрын
Hated the narcissistic jerk at 7:05. Fell in love with the woman at 4:18. Hope she had a good life.
@owlcowl4 жыл бұрын
The jerk is none other than Abbie Hoffman. No relation to David, presumably. A lot of those folks did have a good life (provided they didnt succumb to drugs), better than many of their peers, and given their youth, most of them are still around.
@1DennisK4 жыл бұрын
@@owlcowl Thanks. He looked like somebody I thought I should recognize. I didn't want to though because he was talking like such an ass. When I was in 9th grade back in '71, I thought his 'Steal This Book' was the coolest thing ever. He died from prostate cancer as I recall. That probably wasn't much fun.
@trudymaenza96724 жыл бұрын
I graduated high school in 1970, and I was not part of the love generation or hippies. Felt like I belonged in the 1950's.
@wj-s43784 жыл бұрын
I noticed a elderly lady watching what was going on. I wish he had interviewed her!! Thank you for sharing this piece of history with us.
@mavhunter87534 жыл бұрын
It's crazy that those kids in the very beginning are all probably Grandmas now.
@annedavis60904 жыл бұрын
They are great grandmas now
@juliebraden48654 жыл бұрын
@@annedavis6090 Not great grandmas unless they started having kids very young. I'm 62, born 1958. The film was made in. 1967. I was 9 that year. The girls look about that. If 3 generations in a row start having kids by 20 yrs old. So technically, but not that likely for most. Gimme a break! Bored due to lockdown. 🙄
@timraldo22494 жыл бұрын
Even the men are grandmas now
@juliebraden48654 жыл бұрын
@@timraldo2249 OMG! Good one Tim! 😂
@Anonymous-wb3nz3 жыл бұрын
@Gene Cox Uh, not everybody pops out kids....
@niamhryan96774 жыл бұрын
Brilliant. I really enjoyed this. These young people just wanted to be free and let loose. One has to consider that the generation before them and the generation before them were so restricted by convention, they went and fought in 2 world wars. I agree with one of the girls interviewed when she said that the older generation were"fixed up". I assume she means conditioned into a way of thinking, doing, living. The young people here are trying to break out of that box. Much love and warm regards always David. Thank you a million times.💗💗💗
@dgillett414 жыл бұрын
It's called 'taking responsibility'. Look around you at the results of free 'love' and 'letting loose'.
@leatherandtactel4 жыл бұрын
The hippies were conditioned by the media and the record industry, none of these was a natural process. Thinking outside of the box ends up being thinking inside this new box.
@alwayslernin44004 жыл бұрын
@@ReformedWhiteKnight some people with "moral standards" are far from moral. That was the point. Like those moral people that sent kids to Vietnam. Always question authority, that is what our country was founded on. People were conditioned to accept whatever the government said. JFK assassination, pollution, Vietnam all made it impossible to ignore.
@ziva14 жыл бұрын
I really appreciate your correct identification of Howard Zinn. His anti-American history books unfortunately are being taught in most American schools today.
@ravineseder31334 жыл бұрын
Citizens deserve to hear the truth about their country, instead we're as brainwashed as communists about our own culture that few of us realize or see it. What kids are taught in history class is a very sanitized version of history, and one that celebrates US empire and expansionism. Yeah, I know, what's wrong with that, right? Well see what I mean?
@SirLeDoux4 жыл бұрын
Great video David as always. As a 51 year old man I grew up watch the remnants of the hippie culture in the early ‘70’s- I think it was a fantastic time to grow up, but I suppose every generation thinks that. Lol
@AndrewJohnClive4 жыл бұрын
Thank you David!
@marissabones4 жыл бұрын
I wish I could have experienced what it was like even just for a day
@oliviadriver13624 жыл бұрын
I came of age in the 60's and it was fantastic! The music, the living, the loving, it was wonderful.
@azazelone9054 жыл бұрын
The hippie gen were just spoiled and bored. They were wrongly educated brats in my mind. As hypocritical as they come. We had sort of a hippie revival in the 90’s when I was a teen. We wore the clothes, played with “hackie-sacks” while skipping class and smoking weed. Listened to all the classics and did a bunch of shrooms and acid too. Dock martins etc.... I came to realize early on that it was bullshit. Laziness all around. The only good thing that came out of it was the art. Which has its place in the world yeah but the hypocrisy I couldn’t stand. Hating on corporations while eating a big Mac with one hand and playing PlayStation with the other. Note: it’s the hippie gen from the 60’s that pretty much govern academic bodies today. And look what the universities are producing... They’ve done more harm than good. Love my ass.
@louwster30004 жыл бұрын
@freedomisnocrime the washed and shaved pedos running the world are the generation from the 60's dumbass. The 60's had way more wars than they do now anyway. Everyone looks back fond of times when they where young, dont think you are special.
@beth56904 жыл бұрын
Love your work, I was born in 1960 ✌💛🤟🕊💒 kinda in the middle of 60's and 70's growing up guess I'm a boomer 🤣🤗💟 thanks for your videos. God bless you....
@DavidHoffmanFilmmaker4 жыл бұрын
Thank you. David Hoffman - filmmaker
@s.brouwer52644 жыл бұрын
Thanks again ! Great content, as always !
@sj122s4 жыл бұрын
What happens in Hollywood, and what is shown on screen, definitively affects the entire world. I wonder if those people shown here, actually met their objectives, and are now enjoying their lives as they envisioned them to be...
@LaurenOliviArt4 жыл бұрын
I hope you live forever you continue to share amazing things 💕💗
@Josway374 жыл бұрын
I attended college in the San Francisco bay area during the 90s, right in the middle of the rave scene. At it's best, before it was co-opted by profit-minded promoters, I feel like it mirrored some of the culture, ideas and aspirations of the free love scene of the late 1960s. I spent countless nights following hints and clues down dark side streets in the Mission, Haight Ashbury and the wharehousesy that dominated South of Market. We'd pass through unassuming doors into a dark and empty storefront where a disembodied whisper would calli us to the back where a staircase hidden beneath two large metal trap doors in the floor that opened to reveal a basement busily decorated with art and graffitti, each room filled with the sounds of a different DJ or group earnestly performing their particular take on EDM .The whole space would fill with partygoers dancing in outfits that popped up hnn mnnn I p with unwarranted confidence and dystopian optimism. Riuian empty commercial building in the Mission district or some giant warehouse south of market where we'd dance and chat and laugh and make new friends until the sun came up, telling us it was time to catch the first train back down the peninsula to sleep the day away in our dorm rooms.
@russellnentwich87454 жыл бұрын
Man I bet you can tell some awesome stories. Seems you have had an adventurous life. Great video!
@FrancesShear4 жыл бұрын
In the year 1967 I was 11 years old in Canada. Because I was 5 ft. 8 1/2 at 11 years old it got very problematic whenever outdoors in the city where we lived. Most of all whenever trying to walk outdoors with a female relative friend in another city at a family function special occasion there. My parents were fearful for me as a result. In contrast I was a self-confident fool trusting in my ability to take charge if something were to go wrong after growing up the oldest with 2 siblings close in age who just so happened to be male. Since my father as a child at around 6 gave me and my younger siblings 3 sets of boxing gloves and set up a punching bag and from the same age were starting to learn about how to ride horses at the same age when not learning how to box we were climbing trees on weekends on my grandparents and in the winter tearing around on ski-doos. My brothers grew to be at age 14 - 6 ft. 4 soon enough - or so they thought. In the early 1970's one of my brothers by the name of Lyle got beat up in a road rage incident once only becuase of his long hair and because he too was a self-confident fool like me at the time when someone kept on pointing out to hm something was wrong with the rubber tires on his dump truck which my 2 brothers purchased by saving their money from paper routes and for doing farm chores to buy, thanks to a family friend by the name of Barbara Hesse's mentoring of them, silver coins to save before silver coins were no longer in circulation. Good thing Lyle learn enough boxing to get out of that one. Sometimes I wished to have continued on in the free martial arts classes in the highschool we 3 went to. Then the rest is history I guess.
@stephenabm77794 жыл бұрын
This is where many of our current problems come from in the USA.
@yvonne75914 жыл бұрын
I was 12 then, and traumatized by the assassinations of JFK, MLK, RFK. Surely, this culture implant was a CIA brainchild. Thanks David, great historical snapshot💕
@BunnySlippers824 жыл бұрын
Agreed. And some of what came out of the 60s movement has been the worst thing that's ever happened to our society.
@hawaiingirlbeth4 жыл бұрын
👍Yep
@Gruliet4 жыл бұрын
What do you mean CIA brain child?
@mysticallymerry55234 жыл бұрын
@@Gruliet I think they're referring to the ushering in of Liberalism. NWO agenda.
@akristen49714 жыл бұрын
@@Gruliet if you research the CIA and GHW Bush there is enough evidence of an organized CIA conspiracy to do these assasinations for me to believe this. Bush was the CIA head and top dog in secret societies that JFK wanted purged. When asked where he was the day JFK was killed he says he doesn't remember, yet there is a photo apparently of him in Dallas that day. In the '80's he did a speech in which he chuckles as he says "one deranged madman" did it. There is more but I am not here to convince you, only to offer an answer to your query
@thiosemicarbizidebenzoylal29214 жыл бұрын
Hold up, if thats Michael Lang that stands up when asked are you communist then this is beyond historic television. Its a national treasure. Two years later Lang organizes WOODSTOCK. This early video would be beyond significant.
@tammyjoma4 жыл бұрын
I don't think it is Michael Lang as he didn't seem to have a cleft chin like the guest. Good thought, though. They also both seemed to have a desire to help & serve others.
@tammyjoma4 жыл бұрын
Oh, yes, I see that, Pontiac Soviro. Thank you. I wonder if he and David Hoffman are related.
@phillong70094 жыл бұрын
tammyjoma look like berry Melton
@keef72243 жыл бұрын
That’s definitely not Michael Lang.
@thiosemicarbizidebenzoylal29213 жыл бұрын
@@keef7224 look again
@jolenedelilys25894 жыл бұрын
You have Abbie Hoffman on film here and no one seems to be catching it. He was very young in this film, wearing a dark hat during the circle interview that takes place towards the end.
@theresakaplanamuso63423 жыл бұрын
You have such an utterly cool background-! Amazing!!
@trumpsaid35504 жыл бұрын
As always incredible work!
@robbchastain30364 жыл бұрын
Surely one call from Mr. Sinatra was all it took to remove this Englishman from the American airwaves, and understandably so, Nancy was his daughter and she was simply doing her thing as a pop star. And I think the general premise of what Mr. Silver did was worthwhile--gather young people together and chat about their interests and intents--but some of it seemed wildly out of bounds, like chatting with little girls about their dream dates. And thanks, Mr. Hoffman, for another interesting look into the pop-culture periscope on the past.
@AFaceintheCrowd013 жыл бұрын
I don’t think that dream date segment was inappropriate at all. It was cute and charming, not tawdry or sordid or in any way hurtful. Just listen to those marvelous, well considered, very genuine candid, cheerful responses.
@LisaRichards_1233 жыл бұрын
Thank you for putting a spotlight on the Sixties generation. It is an underappreciated time period, especially among the younger, rightwing channel creators that comprise most of KZbin. There is literally a movement among a lot of them to convince each other in groupthink that “boomers are bad people.” Many of them have tried to spread the belief that being a “boomer” means that you are an evil person. It’s a bizarre version of “Don’t trust anyone over 30.” I’ve seen plenty of those insipid videos. If anything, many boomers risked everything, because of their desire for others to have justice, and that people care about more than just keeping up with the Joneses. Many of the Sixties generation became activists for good causes, like the environment and equality. Young rightwing creators hate that, and they criticize activists, and call them “social justice warriors.” It is my belief as a product of the Sixties that we are all supposed to make this world a better place.
@classygary Жыл бұрын
Thinking of yourself as a “product” of anything, time or one… isn’t ever a good perspective.
@lisalindsey2774 жыл бұрын
It was the best of time and worst of times. Hahaha. That was great TV, David Hoffman.
@jillymouseful4 жыл бұрын
Beautiful ❣️🙏☘️
@nerdbamarich20634 жыл бұрын
Thank you for continuously sharing your wonderful documentary content✊🏾✊🏾
@jaklumen4 жыл бұрын
David, good sir, I will simply say that the clip gives more nuance and context to the counterculture movement than I had been exposed to. At the end of the day, I still think the counterculture was part of a social experiment of a certain intelligence agency, but, I think this tells me that people got involved for a variety of reasons. I thought it interesting that one interviewed suggested that hippies were all homosexually oriented; at least it was him saying "I'm not involved that way and don't give me that label." His comments on Communism and Marxism were also interesting. I think such ideologies WERE involved, but again, I'm getting the impression that people got involved for a multitude of reasons that weren't all easy to pin down.
@sadietravels62134 жыл бұрын
Interesting the “Summer Of Love” preceded some of the most tumultuous years in our recent history 1968 and 1969. Now we have the Seattle mayor calling 2020 the new summer of love, I think not. However there is no doubt our country is entering in more tumultuous years. I am grateful my parents were very straight and considered square by the hippies. I love the extra story regarding David Silver and outing Nancy Sinatra’s various physical augmentations. Let’s say her papa Frank had a lot power in those days. Heads would and did roll.
@zzzzxxxx3414 жыл бұрын
Thank you for bringing us to yesteryears. 😎😎😎
@katstephens65714 жыл бұрын
I was a kid then but I hated the war in Nam. I remember how uptight and hypocritical most adults were. To my parents horror I was drawn to hippies. They should used less drugs and tried to build a more sustainable revolution. I think people had enough of war and were tired of poor and middle class young men being drafted to go fight a war no one could connect with being our business. War with dinner sucked
@iGame3D4 жыл бұрын
Johns Hopkins research has revealed that LSD & Mushrooms do make a person more empathic, less racist and care about the environment more, so of course they were made illegal from 1968 on. It's alcohol that makes people monsters and it's available every quarter mile.
@boonerobbins27594 жыл бұрын
Thank you game 3D for showing this girl the real meaning
@OutandAboutWithDiane4 жыл бұрын
When he ask if older people "like 30" could enjoy this.... AHH I think that is the first time I have felt OLD at the age of 32. I ALWAYS wish that I could have been alive to witness the 60s and 70s.
@RowdyRory4 жыл бұрын
Very interesting. Thanks.
@AlistairAVogan4 жыл бұрын
Great stuff. Thanks for sharing. What is there to be critical of? Every generation tries to leave the matrix. Every generation tries to get it right. Give us twenty years and we'll look approximately as ridiculous, if this is ridiculous...
@dougking10084 жыл бұрын
Thanks for having a great channel 😎🇺🇸
@keineahnung61244 жыл бұрын
I grew up in Hollywood,graduated from Hollywood high School in the summer of '68, the hippie movement was all around me but never fell in the trap of " self discovery" or change society or any of that BS, did what I had to do ,I got a medical deferment from the army ( no bonespurs) and went to college.I guess I had a solid base at home,we were not spoiled middle class white kids.just newly arrived immigrants grateful to be in America.
@EyeLean52804 жыл бұрын
Love your commentary, thank you.
@ung4274 жыл бұрын
The words "I Love You" are meaningless if they have been said a lot, only if you depended only on the words themselves to be the source of Love, rather than your own heart.
@paperplains72854 жыл бұрын
Just now realizing that most hippies were privileged college kids. Reminds me of when I learned flappers were only super rich women. Correct me if I'm wrong.
@vintagelizziegirl4 жыл бұрын
Mr.David, In the intro you forgot to mention Gen x. The" love generation" is mostly our parents and the millennials grandparents. Love your documentaries, Elizabeth.
@tehrinny70314 жыл бұрын
If you're in the older bracket of the millennials (those approaching 40) their parents could be boomers. My mom was actually at the tail end of the silent generation. My dad's at the beginning of the baby boomers. I was born right at the start of the millennials. My husband's parents are baby boomers but near the end of that generation. Likewise, Gen-X could be parents to Gen-Z, or Millennials could be Gen-Z parents. It's not really so strict in this generation definitely had children of the next. Normally, this falls into 15-year spans of time where the events that happened in that era shaped the generation. Women can begin having children as young as their first period and until as late menopause. Men can make babies from puberty onward. For a woman, that could be a near 40-year span of time she could have children (but normally something closer to 30 years? Depends on the person.) So it would make logical sense that a parent of one generation could be 1-2 generations behind them depending on when the mother gave birth. :)
@pandap50614 жыл бұрын
What about the generation younger than the millenils like me
@rosemaryangela18254 жыл бұрын
Hi David! This was fabulous! TY so much. All over Nancy Sinatra? What a waste of a talent.
@BrightSeaStar4 жыл бұрын
David - I like you and your videos, but to subtly sneer at Nancy Sinatra's song - NO ! "These Boots Were Made for Walking " was unique, and a classic. Loved it !
@AFaceintheCrowd013 жыл бұрын
David, this was so good. What’s striking is how well-spoken the wo/man on the street was at that time. Why does the public seem like a pack of illiterate slobs when shown on TV today? Maybe it’s lack of education. David Silver was wonderful, too. Great stuff!
@DavidHoffmanFilmmaker3 жыл бұрын
Thank you for your comment. If your resources allow, I would sure appreciate your using the THANKS button under any of my videos including the one you have commented on. It is something new that KZbin is beta testing and would mean a great deal for my continuing efforts. David Hoffman filmmaker
@AFaceintheCrowd013 жыл бұрын
@@DavidHoffmanFilmmaker Happy to oblige.
@johnacord56644 жыл бұрын
I do remember the summer of 67. The people around me seem to mellow out. The ones close to me were not quite as judgemental. The people I worked for were a little more tolerant. After the Labor Day holiday, the crap started up again. I let it be known the first chance I get, I am out of here. Gone like a wild goose in Winter.