Hearing "Normie" in a documentary thats 50 years old really hit me hard
@tosgem4 жыл бұрын
Simp was also a thing back then, which fell out of fashion until very recently
@perryfamilyfilms4 жыл бұрын
It's amazing how much 60's thought and culture is responsible for the things we think are "new" in the present time.
@Inbal_Feuchtwanger4 жыл бұрын
There is definitely a change in meaning to the word now
@overshottyler4 жыл бұрын
@@tosgem did it mean the same thing or was it mostly used as short hand for simpleton
@blueemoji3894 жыл бұрын
Baba booey
@monkeygoesbananas4 жыл бұрын
It's interesting how staying in your home town when you grow up has only recently become synonymous with "failure". For millennia our ancestors were born, had families, and died in roughly the same place unless they were forced out by some calamity. And for some reason hearing these kids say, "I'm happy here. Why would I leave? I already picked out my dream house across the street from my parents," just absolutely blows my mind.
@harrykanhura41784 жыл бұрын
Well, for the Globalist it is imperative to alienate you from the land. Then you don't have roots nor principles or anything to anchor you, then you will do as you are told, and go where they want you to go.
@hewhoadds4 жыл бұрын
lol I’m from the Silicon Valley the kids growing up in, working in, and supporting these cities can not afford to live in the city they grew up it is disgraceful Anecdote Andy here but this seems representative of the conditions of most kids I hear today
@3rdJose4 жыл бұрын
Blows ur mind that they wanna stay in their rich neighborhoods with their rich families and friends?
@MrBleworchid4 жыл бұрын
monkeygoesbananas This is a topic I’ve wrestled with for a while now. How did living and dying in the town a person is from become synonymous with failure? I’m sincerely asking that question again because I just purchased a house in my hometown and although that’s a big accomplishment, I still have this nagging feeling like I haven’t accomplished anything because I haven’t moved out of this town. I’m not sure if this idea that you’re a failure if you die in the town you were born in is from years and years of television watching or what.
@andreyking20624 жыл бұрын
@@MrBleworchid congratulations on your new house. I think if you want to stay in your home town it's a splendid idea. I also intend to but after I have satisfied my wanderlust I will come home
@FreshRose-z3s4 жыл бұрын
The Hippies were the minority. They just got the most media attention.
@mikoliism4 жыл бұрын
The rest were lame and squares lol
@omghalo3rocks4 жыл бұрын
@Natalia Abella lol
@Yamato9804 жыл бұрын
The Hippies got media attention. The rest where normal.
@nicholasrickhoff29124 жыл бұрын
Sounds familiar....
@david_massa4 жыл бұрын
Now multiply that media by 2020 24/7 Instant Streaminf and you have today’s disaster
@itsme-rt7nz3 жыл бұрын
I graduated in 1972. There were the popular kids, attractive, football players, cheerleaders, prom kings and queens. There were the hippies, journalism, school newspaper, year book. There were the greasers, black clothes, greased hair, ratted hair, heavy eye makeup. And then there was the rest of us, most of us I'd say. No strong identity, no labels. We just were who we were. We weren't nonconformists, but we weren't Stepford kids either.
@elgrigorio1 Жыл бұрын
Stepford kids are the most conformist, just FYI.
@itsme-rt7nz Жыл бұрын
@@elgrigorio1 Good point. I'm afraid I don't know what I was thinking when I said that 2 years ago. 😕
@elgrigorio1 Жыл бұрын
@@itsme-rt7nz no, that's ok. If you want more clarification, as to what went wrong in the 60s, read Ayn Rand's book The New Left: The Anti-Industrial Revolution. She explained and pretty much predicted everything, that is wrong with the world today.
@diddlingdoom31338 ай бұрын
Graduated in the mid 2000's and at least back then those labels weren't so firm or stedfast. There was a lot more of "the rest of us" that just kind mingled with most of the crowds. Except for the drama club, most of everyone just found them annoying so we avoided that group.
@johnking62528 ай бұрын
Fairly accurate although in my case I bounced around in which ever group I could when the opportunity presented itself and back again when it suited ME. Yours truly. P.S. peace out dude. Hahahaha. ✌️🇺🇲
@radtech214 жыл бұрын
“We asked all the 16 year olds at Webster High to answer a THIRTY-SIX PAGE questionnaire. After this, all of them wanted to rebel.”
@7Steveski4 жыл бұрын
Do you think the average student today would fill out a 36 page questionnaire?
@AllIsntEverything4 жыл бұрын
@@7Steveski lol...the product of rebellion. Congrats everyone!!!
@johngalt974 жыл бұрын
@@7Steveski Are you asking for a grant to study this question?
@7Steveski4 жыл бұрын
John Galt 😂
@alain99v64 жыл бұрын
@@7Steveski they won't even fill a 36 questions questionnaire lol
@Ayiura3 жыл бұрын
"It's important to have a car, so you can go out and park." nice
@alexanderdamm15253 жыл бұрын
Wasn't "to park" slang for fucking back then? 😂
@alltheworldsastage47853 жыл бұрын
@@alexanderdamm1525 Yeah, it was.
@ryanabbott2023 жыл бұрын
Park my maserati in her garage
@davidjs97_3 жыл бұрын
@@alexanderdamm1525 that’s what I thought. When I heard that, my expression was more like 😳 than 🤨
@theworldoverheavan5603 жыл бұрын
@@ryanabbott202 lol
@daveschmarder-US19504 жыл бұрын
I was that age then. I took shop all through high school. Wood shop, then metal shop then 3 years of electronics shop. I never felt that I was any lower than the other students. I had my small (very small) circle of friends. But it was those shop kids that now keep our cars running, the lights working and the toilets of the world flushing. I always enjoy your work.
@mr.bnatural37004 жыл бұрын
I would love to see the same people interviewed later in 1969/1970; so many people changed their viewpoints about everything.
@elzoog4 жыл бұрын
Yeah, the "academics" don't appreciate the intelligence it takes to be a competent carpenter, plumber, or electrician.
@mebeasensei4 жыл бұрын
Dave Schmarder You know, I think they do - privately - appreciate the intelligence required, but they also appreciate the salary, working conditions, and social status you get working in a metal shop, industrial sites, factories, and that ruined back you get in your forties from carrying power tools up ladders etc. They also, I guess, realize that humility is for mugs and university education gets you places that carry you to a safe place. Th only problem might be, you reach your fifties, and wonder whether you actually did anything useful in your life.
@eemoogee1604 жыл бұрын
@@elzoog They do when something needs to be fixed!
@efogg34 жыл бұрын
@@elzoog exactly
@chukken36173 жыл бұрын
So interesting that the police officer was the most rebellious adult interviewed.
@behrens97 Жыл бұрын
If cops were like this today we wouldn't have such a policing problem
@blakemcnamara91056 ай бұрын
@@behrens97We don't.
@JohnnyBlair-tj2sl5 ай бұрын
@@blakemcnamara9105we do
@pinanti4 ай бұрын
He was a nice man.
@patcurrie9888Ай бұрын
He was bored, not much 'activity'.
@izzyj.devlaeminck14874 жыл бұрын
"I don't think any 16 year old child should be burdened with the problems of the world" oh buddy, do I have *news for you*
@just835424 жыл бұрын
the problems of the world infiltrated the systems of control that trained our youth, and then America began to decline.
@averat844 жыл бұрын
@@just83542 Marxists found out long ago that it was easier to stir up shit and get revolt with Third World Crap Holes. So the goal turned into importing the problems of the Third World into developed countries, stirring them up there.
@just835424 жыл бұрын
@@averat84 do you think this is what Marx intended, or do Marxists use his work with an ulterior motive?
@TristanHayes4 жыл бұрын
@@just83542 I don't know if Marx wanted communism to come about in the manner in which it's being prescribed to the American people (as described by former KGB operative Yuri Bezmenov kzbin.info/www/bejne/sJjQmGWMe71ja5o&ab_channel=WiseWanderer ), however, the end goal remains the same as Marx's end goal which is to say the destruction of objective morality, religion, the nation-state, the family unit, and any other structure that stands in the way of communism and the redistribution of wealth.
@ryanhwang53924 жыл бұрын
What 16 year old child is burdened with the problems of the world?
@FlavourlessLife4 жыл бұрын
Is it just me or do most of these 16 year olds look like they’re in their mid 20s by today’s standards of appearance?
@taperpowell5584 жыл бұрын
Yes, they do. They dressed better and in general took better interest in their overall appearance. Call it conformity or whatever you want, but they were more well put together than most kids today (and better than I was in the mid-1980's when I was their age, for that matter).
@JNJG19994 жыл бұрын
@Awaiting Input. That's funny you say that because I'm 21 but everyone tells me I look 16 lol xD (But on a serious note most teens back then were much smarter, respectful and well dressed and mannered then teens these days.) I was raised and live with my gran and she looked older than me when she was my age :P
@BETAmosquito4 жыл бұрын
Before MOD popularised teen fashion, this is all they had. The weren't "teenagers" they were mini adults and they wore smaller versions of what their parents wore.
@Cr8Tron4 жыл бұрын
It's the sound of a lot of their voices that initially catches my attention.
@Cyba_IT4 жыл бұрын
Huh, yup I would've said 18 - 19 at least.
@churchether4 жыл бұрын
KZbin is the closest thing we got to a time machine.
@Chipiliro6134 жыл бұрын
Ever heard of a book?
@anishlakhe86034 жыл бұрын
@@Chipiliro613 that was good
@Iceypatek4 жыл бұрын
@@Chipiliro613 yeah but he means by an actual visualization of that era not just paragraphs of it -_-
@johnnysalami274 жыл бұрын
Really a time capsule
@Yetipfote4 жыл бұрын
youtube is a marvel. If it wasn't for the censorship... :(
@AureliaLambrechthey3 жыл бұрын
Interesting documentary. I graduated in 1966 and grew up in a military family. At 13 years old, I went to work as a carhop while attending middle school. Having a job gave me a feeling of freedom and independence. The values instilled in my siblings and myself were important life skills that have served us throughout our lives.....
@robertpope27833 жыл бұрын
I was raised in a military family as well and graduated from high school in 1964. I graduated from college four years later. For me, college gave me the freedom to grow as I wanted and needed to grow. I took it seriously, and I took it with joy. I began in those years what has become my life, and my field of study was so much more than that. It was the world in which I would thrive. Life happens to everyone, and we get knocked this way and that, but my rudder was in the water. Thank God.
@AureliaLambrechthey2 жыл бұрын
@@robertpope2783 Your comment is appreciated, Robert. I believe that military life was an education in itself, in that we were exposed to situations that required us to be fearless...often having to 'adapt and overcome' as we had no choice but to do so...an important life skill. In my case, for example, to smoothy fit in to the new school, and struggling with my siblings and having to adjust to our shell shocked (CPTSD) ww2 suffering father who was a tanker..North Africa and Omaha Beach. Much like you have mentioned, 'your rudder was in the water.' I believe that that strength developed out of the hardships you experienced and the self discipline values and courage instilled throughout life, albeit sometimes seemingly harsh and unfair they served as a guide to create the life you built for yourself...We never gave in or gave up...Hats off to you, Friend.
@linterpretemehariste90812 жыл бұрын
@@AureliaLambrechthey The harsh thing at the army is not that they teach you what they want, but they insist on teaching it rapidly, russian in three months only for example, it's a brainwash! The recrutes are nearly going nuts in the last month... But as 15 out of 20 reach to pass their exams, at the end they say: Congrats! See that it works? Just trust your superiors and you will become quite important for the HQ! Welcome to the EloKa! That was meant as a compliment for succeeding... BTW: What is a "shell shock"? What does the abbreviation CPTSD stand for? Was it a shrapnell that hit his helmet (do you call his helmet the "shell"?) or something else? Would like to know more about it. Did he end up as PoW? P.S.: North africa... Did he get in contact with the camelmounted "compagnies sahariennes" of General De Gaulle or with the desert Tommies of General Patton? Did he fight for or against that german "Feldmarshall" the french called "le fennec" cuz he was always already gone when they cruised up? Did he take part in "Erwins Bastelstunden"? Omaha beach... Do you mean the place on the north shore of Normandy where they once have had their longest day on duty ever (in june 1944)? What a hell! If so, your dad must have been one of the toughest guys ever if he had survived that! Chapeau!
@sunnymane2 жыл бұрын
Thanks for sharing Aurelia! Feel free to share your stories on here or Tiktok!
@AngelasJoys3 жыл бұрын
I wasn't a rebel. I had a full time job after school starting at 15. I wasn't from a wealthy family. Ended up married at 18 and had two kids. Bought a house and cars. I still live in the house I bought in a lovely suburb of NY. My husband passed young. I worked all my life. I raised great kids I'm very proud of and also proud I was a 60s teen. I would change the fact that we all married too young back then. Old before our time. I danced. I should have danced more.
@francesbethodendahl85273 жыл бұрын
Sounds nice to me. No, 18 isn't too young, Angela Joys. It is just right. I would have followed the same path as you. Life is a dance with the right partner at your side.
@francesbethodendahl85273 жыл бұрын
You can still dance even when you are married 😊
@snurgumwurgum82383 жыл бұрын
It's never too late to start dancing again. It's never too late for anything. The truly blessed are those who learn this young.
@luisdurango_man53863 жыл бұрын
She regrets getting married and having kids being "too young" and not being able to "dance more" . Should've danced more, had your fun then settled down got hitched and had kids. Modern woman mindset.
@Ancoraimparo12193 жыл бұрын
@@luisdurango_man5386 🤦🤔
@deltatango57654 жыл бұрын
I am a Boomer who grew up poor with 8 siblings. A little background: Despite a miserable marriage, my parents stayed together and both suffered for it. We almost never had anything new. Our clothes were given to us by well-off cousins and family friends. Almost everything I owned belonged to an older brother before, yet we were relatively happy, because my parents somehow managed to buy a shack of a home, so we didn't have to stay in the projects. I grew up during the Vietnam War and the draft. Every adult told me that when I was 17 I would be drafted and go to Vietnam. It was just the way it was for those who could not afford better or didn't have political connections. As such, I made no plans for my future, nor was I encouraged to do so. The war was winding down as I graduated high school at 17, so I managed to avoid that, and never got drafted. I was a tech nerd when transistors were cutting edge technology, and educated myself by going to the library and taking out books every 2 weeks. I managed to make a career of technology, which I work in to this day. I am near retirement today and have very little saved because I was never told by anyone how important it was, so I'll most likely have to work until I die or become permanently disabled, but still, I have been very lucky my whole life , considering my situation. My point? This video only shows one aspect of a 3-dimensional society. Don't think it was all like this. No one ever interviewed anyone in my neighborhood.
@MissMarinaCapri4 жыл бұрын
So, with out a doubt this documentary is not inclusively complete. I totally get that! Towards the end of the 1960s I was able to understand that by becoming a hippie. It was only then that My Consciousness woke up and I understood what was really going on around me. Today I marvel at the stupidity of humanity.
@MissMarinaCapri4 жыл бұрын
@@Iwas11 , Hhmmm, could be. Que the music.
@braydenkenney33134 жыл бұрын
I've never felt so guilty about the "okay boomer" trend in my life.
@MissMarinaCapri4 жыл бұрын
@@Iwas11 , Thank you for pointing out the proper spelling and usage of the word “cue”, the music. I just don’t feel that marveling at the stupidity of 90% of humanity is bad form. I am more embarrassed for my country after seeing the first presidential debate. I really didn’t see all of it I just couldn’t stand to see the President and former Vice President acting like juveniles. Can you imagine foreign countries seeing us behave this way with each other. I am proud we peacefully change leadership, while many others use violence. Now all of a sudden where is all the peaceful people and the peaceful demonstrations, what’s going on here?
@deltatango57654 жыл бұрын
@@HairyPixels Not sure exactly what you mean by that, but I blame my own ignorance for not saving. I guess I always thought I would have plenty of time. I just didn't take it seriously until recent years. I got laid off many times in my life, and honestly, I never kept track of my 401K savings after getting laid off each time, and I'm wondering what happened to all of them.
@dbabakh89114 жыл бұрын
"What 16 year old child has any real convictions?" 2-3 years later that child is getting married, having kids, and expected to act like an adult.
@swilson53204 жыл бұрын
I was thinking that too. Like dang y’all have marriage and a baby early
@jacobingerson50814 жыл бұрын
And the boys were sent to Vietnam
@tbbart64634 жыл бұрын
It's projection. When your "convictions" are fed to you without a question, all one has is blind obedience and dogma. Parrots.
@irarameztli1794 жыл бұрын
Back in the day children grew up differently than we do now. The way our education has been changed has created long drawn adolescent mentalities..you can see it in the 60s
@Peachy084 жыл бұрын
Right! I was born in the late 50s. At 17 I was being grounded at 18 I was a mom.
@susanverhoeven4962 Жыл бұрын
I am a 74 year old lady boomer who finds this interesting. I never saw views like these when i was in school, graduating in 1967. I was from a predominately working class area. Modern young people seem to have the same get ahead values as the kids in this video. I wish yountube would show videos on how the majority of boomer kids lived, not just the upper middle class ones. I am getting tired of the younger generation thinking that my life was as privileged as the life of these kids. My family and others near me just got by, snd our expectations were limited.
@DavidHoffmanFilmmaker Жыл бұрын
I have many videos posted on the subject, interviews with those who did not live in the upper-middle-class back then. David Hoffman filmmaker
@jenniferpearce10528 ай бұрын
I just was in a comment thread with a kid who thought Helen Keller's story wasn't plausible because she couldn't possibly write a book because she couldn't see, among other nonsense thoughts. Young people don't think people could have lived anyway but in privledge because they aren't thinking! They haven't been made to practice it!
@inkey27 ай бұрын
ANOTHER THING........no mention of boomers being raised by "war crazed" , disabled alcoholic fathers with hair trigger tempers. Everyone had an ex-military father and they all were pretty hard azz
@NickDavid-dd3el6 ай бұрын
Ehh fuck you you still had it way easier than today's generation.
@baconbits2295 ай бұрын
I work with people your age every day for work, I sell and help with phones at a network aimed towards old generations and I always say people don't give many boomers nesrly enough credit. I'm only 20, and while yes I have had the "none of your generation wants to work", the vast majority of customers I get around talking to can see "things today are harder than it was when I was a kid" you and I live in the same world. not to mention how many are struggling just as much, if not more, because we live in the same world!!!
@BandrewScott4 жыл бұрын
So in the 60’s they already had the term “Normies”.
@Ingodwetrust1234 жыл бұрын
But It seems like it was directed to the ones who weren't basic af
@Eiramilah4 жыл бұрын
I noticed that too
@bringusofdingus4 жыл бұрын
REEEEEEE
@BandrewScott4 жыл бұрын
bringusofdingus wait for him to release footage from the stock market crash in the 20’s where everyone was screaming g “reeeee!” We didn’t even come up with that.
@gomo78334 жыл бұрын
That is a good point
@m.d.sharpe88923 жыл бұрын
"You should spend an absolute minimum of 2 hours...." Me: well thats not so bad "For every ONE hour that you're in class" Tf is he smoking
@christianmiddletonfreeman74113 жыл бұрын
For those of us that do 7 hours a day of school, we won’t be sleeping, no we literally study 24 hours a day I guess
@masada28283 жыл бұрын
I agree, a bit much. I attended school 0830 to 1600 daily & did 3 hours of homework and study every night. I was in bed by 10 & up by 0630 to catch 3 buses to school. Seven hours a day is unrealistic, one has to sleep.
@BaneRain3 жыл бұрын
Its because of all the lead poisoning making the boomers big dumb. Have to study 3x more
@olivermiller89433 жыл бұрын
That’s 3/4 of your day
@Chron0ClocK3 жыл бұрын
Well they only spent three hours a day in school back then. 16 hours a week. Look at the chalkboard.
@greatcesari3 жыл бұрын
I love your “show don’t tell” approach to journalism. You’ll occasionally explain things in an unbiased way, but mostly you let the recordings talk.
@DavidHoffmanFilmmaker3 жыл бұрын
Thank you for noticing. David Hoffman Filmmaker
@David-mh2jn3 жыл бұрын
I had 3 older sister who were all teens in 66, two were twins. One (a twin) married a Naval aviator who was in Nam for two years. They were obviously conformers, but both were killed in a 69 plane crash in the Sierra Nevada's. The other twin was a conformer as well and married a law student who became a successful Tax Attorney. They had 4 kids and are still together. My third older sister, youngest of the 3, was a hippy rebel. She left home a month before her 17th birthday and went to SF with 5 friends. She stayed there for a year and a half before calling my father and crying that her boyfriend had beaten her and thrown her from the apartment. There were 6 of us kids, but my hard working middle class father got in the car and drove from our Chicago home to San Francisco to bring home his daughter ...... She hadn't called once since she left. She came back and got a job with a dental office. About 6 months later a rich and handsome young doctor was looking at the office for rent next the one my sister worked in, and they met. The hippy is now a grandmother of 3 and still living in Bel Aire, CA with her retired cosmetic surgeon husband. He is a great guy. The lesson is that the hippy life was okay if you were a beautiful blonde that could afford to spend what should have been your junior and senior years of high school in San Fran smoking dope and dropping acid.
@David-mh2jn3 жыл бұрын
@Tom Spencer ..... LOL.... Nah, not really. Just tellin' our history as it is, better and luckier than some families, not as blessed as others. Trust me, I would love to have been a San Fran teen for 69-71
@jenjuice4322 жыл бұрын
So what I'm gathering is, You're implying the only reason she found success or comfort as a former hippy runaway...is because she was blonde and beautiful? And if that had not been the case, she would have continued to suffer to her poor decisions? 🤔 Perhaps her to-be husband found her interesting and free-spirited, but recognized she got wrapped up in the hype of the late-60s. It's called being young and dumb. I know it's your story, but I don't like how you spin the narrative. Your sister is much more than a once pretty teenager who ran away, and she didn't necessarily escape her mistakes based on looks alone.
@jenjuice4322 жыл бұрын
@The Richest Man In Babylon I suppose you could say that for everyone in life. Good looking people tend to be favored, but it's unfair to attribute all of her success based upon her looks.
@jenjuice4322 жыл бұрын
@The Richest Man In Babylon How does anything I said relate to feminism in any way whatsoever? It's common fucking sense. You should try using it.
@sunnymane2 жыл бұрын
Thanks for Sharing David! Really cool story lol!!
@adencain82983 жыл бұрын
1960 teens: I want to make money! 2021 teens: I wanna die
@colleen63413 жыл бұрын
i also want to make money but if something were to happen to me, say a speeding car with a careless driver, i wouldn’t fight it
@SuperSaltyFries3 жыл бұрын
@@bloodycrow1153 We can tell. They grew up to be greedy, soul-sucking CEOs and owners who look at every given opportunity as "I need to get mine, fuck everybody else". They destroyed the environment and then blame it on young people. They destroyed our futures and got bailed out, then they have the gall to act surprised that young people hate them so vehemently. The sooner they die off the better.
@EvanSaltare3 жыл бұрын
@@SuperSaltyFries tbf they had so many chances handed to them to make mad money. Which is what makes it so crazy seeing a boomer that had these views but didn't come out of the 80s flush.
@ianmoore3223 жыл бұрын
@@SuperSaltyFries With that attitude, you're apart of the problem.
@MysticalStd3 жыл бұрын
I to wanna die anyone wants to join?
@quinnrafferty46354 жыл бұрын
I’m always amazed at the vocal inflections and verbal mannerisms they used in speaking back then.
@peppers17584 жыл бұрын
Its cute
@SunGodCadena4 жыл бұрын
@Daardoor Waarvoor You just don't understand that it's a different language, basically a sub language. Your ignorance means nothing as long as the communication between people is understood. You alienate your fellow human being because they aren't like you and you brew hatred with that train of thought. Maybe understand a little more, you don't have to like it, but maybe you'll have patience to speak a different way.
@SunGodCadena4 жыл бұрын
@Daardoor Waarvoor Everyone is a child in the eyes of a parent and whatever God you might or might not believe in; as every dog is a puppy and cat is a kitty in the eyes of the "owner". You clearly have been treated awful to shame you from being the child you once were/are. You're a human being and being an adult is a concept that keeps you in line to be a cog in the machine like these boomers. Your ignorance only kills you in the end.
@RegionalRadioShackManager4 жыл бұрын
@@SunGodCadena that’s cool bro, there’s still no excuse to speak like a fool
@SunGodCadena4 жыл бұрын
@@RegionalRadioShackManager the fool is the one who thinks they aren't
@artiescrugs14 жыл бұрын
I was a "shop kid". I took four years of high school technical shop classes: machine shop, electronics, sheet metal, welding, drafting, metallurgy, technically applied math and became a master machinist cross-trained in a half-dozen other crafts. After fiteen years of doing this, I commanded hourly rate that rivalled a lawyer's fees as a self-employed craftsman. I retired in my forty's to write history books and work on inventions. I have two books published, have patents and, now at 60, I am comfortable, happy, and volunteer at a museum using my "shop kid" skills. I have a trade that is vastly in demand and I could work at any job i want to do (as opposed to have to do) until I die at nearly any pay level I demand and work the hours I want. Do not knock the "shop kids". As I did, they are following their bliss and knew at an early age that this is the life for them. The streess is far less, work is readily obtainable if you are willing to relocate and cross-train and it's honorable. I never knew a machinist who was accused of financial shenanigans or had an ulcer. I have known many though, who had families, retired in their fifties and enjoyed their leisure years comfortably and happy. They may not have been able to do the new car thing every year, but who needs that? Its all about life contentment.
@monkmchorning4 жыл бұрын
I took shop as a freshman and mechanical drawing as a sophomore. I remember the ridicule of the "shop kids" from some of my collegiate "friends." I became a software grease monkey and I credit those classes for showing my how to fit ideas together so they didn't fall apart.
@ThanxBeToGod4 жыл бұрын
Shop Kid Culture is whats missing today
@onthehill33814 жыл бұрын
My husbands identical twin has a PhD and is on antidepressants. He remained in the big city they grew up in. He has no desire to peruse interests or travel in retirement is humorless and cynical. My husband (not on antidepressants), is a retired chef with a community college degree who moved out of the same big city when he was 18. He is easygoing and is active and surfs. Up until Covid, traveled. They are the same age as this group of kids would be today. They are vastly different due to choices made and the environment they lived in.
@SuperchiefApache4 жыл бұрын
I love this response!!!! PERFECT!
@cjimcook4 жыл бұрын
Ever work on a car, perform (or explain) wood repair, sweat your own pipes, fix house wiring or simple consumer electronic repair (soldering), then stop and think how few have the ability to do all these things these days? I thank my Dad, whatever his faults, for instilling through example and projects the curiosity that makes those of us that understand and are multi-disciplinary able to do this. Are we a vanishing breed? I wonder.
@suzannelawson92153 жыл бұрын
Wow!! I went to high school in Los Angeles in late 1960's. What a world of difference between the kids at this Missouri high school and where I went to high school. My friends and I were hanging out at night at coffeehouses and the Sunset Strip and all over Hollywood. Lived in that area so I was close to everything. It was a lot of fun!!! I wasn't a hippy but more of a flower child. We had love-ins on Sunday afternoons in Griffith Park in Los Angeles. People just hanging out in this huge park, singing, dancing, playing guitars, tambourines; dressed in all kinds of unusual garb and burning incense. It was a weekly happening! Mostly teenagers and young people in their 20's or early 30's.
@meeeka2 жыл бұрын
Me too!!! Grew up in Silverlake but went to school in Alhambra as a boarder. We may have seen each other on Sunday afternoons in Griffith Park (tho no one in my family knew I was there!)
@tinxxb Жыл бұрын
That sounds so fun! I wish I could experience something like that. I'm 17 and that kind of stuff doesn't happen anymore at least in my area :(
@yodservant9 ай бұрын
You were fortunate to experience that time period in Hollywood....had a taste of coffeehouse nightlight living in Europe in the early 80s
@sandracheeks18113 жыл бұрын
At 16 yo they already look like actual adults...I think it’s the clothes and hair.
@mud68663 жыл бұрын
@AudioJeep Subliminals even frail bones from lack of excercise... kids are looking ill these days.
@cookiemcboingboing26573 жыл бұрын
@Ted Cee 😂😂😂
@cookiemcboingboing26573 жыл бұрын
they sounded more mature too
@seth51433 жыл бұрын
@Ted Cee Found the 'back in my day' boomers. It's exactly the opposite. Young people today are exposed to *too* many hormones through the heavily processed food we eat. Look at the actual data rather than your quickly fading rose-colored memories to see that the American diet back then was just as shite as it is now, they just weren't eating steroid-addled animals from factory farms. You still lighting up a Winston or five after meals, grandpa? As for exercise? It was a complete joke back then. We may do less of it now, but at least we know what we're doing. Put me in a time machine & I could throw each & every 'man' in this documentary over their own house. Even after the asthmatic krill at 7:30 killed some of my gains through osmosis.
@seth51433 жыл бұрын
@@sharonmorine5407 Which wouldn't be so bad if people would burn them off. Fact is, it's actually easier to access healthy food along with nutrition & exercise information now than it was then; people simply won't do it. We also know about practices like intermittent fasting now, & they're becoming more socially acceptable. If you tried to pull something like that in the overly conformist culture of the '60s, you'd likely be ostracized. When I tell people my age that I don't eat until 1 PM now, they kind of just shrug & say ok even if you can tell it's still considered kind of weird nowadays. Cases in point, my mom, despite efforts to educate herself regarding the growing body of empirical data suggesting that IF is indeed a very healthy practice, still can't decalcify her neural pathways enough to escape thinking that it still must be harmful in some way My grandmother literally thinks I'm going to starve to death doing it. These things evolve.
@scottevans94543 жыл бұрын
Three years later ¾ of the guys in this class was in Vietnam. When they got out it was a different world.
@bharatkrishna70823 жыл бұрын
Not exactly, maybe I am wrong but there were ways the elite could dodge the draft
@christiancastillomusic23193 жыл бұрын
@@bharatkrishna7082 these small town Missouri kids weren’t the sort of financial elites that could buy their way out of the draft.
@mizzury543 жыл бұрын
@@christiancastillomusic2319 Have you ever heard of a college deferment ?
@rustyshackleford66373 жыл бұрын
@@christiancastillomusic2319 Webster Groves is not a small town it is a very well established suburb of St Louis very close to the city.
@cousinzeke48883 жыл бұрын
Only a third of the troops that went to Vietnam were drafted.
@sandrasamuelson47964 жыл бұрын
I graduated from Webster Groves High School in 1965. I was in Miss Rep's choir. (too bad they recorded them on a day when they all were flat) Wish they would have spent more time with non-Soccies. (gee--first time I ever thought to write that word down--don't really know how to spell it) . Maybe the Normies could have given a better view of life at WGHS
@Shermanbay4 жыл бұрын
Ah, yes, Replogle! She was at Webster forever. I even found her in my dad's 1936 yearbook. I don't think she ever retired.
@desultorydilletante41204 жыл бұрын
Sandra, They weren't flat. The film was so old that it stretched, which caused the sound to wobble. 🎶
@Shermanbay4 жыл бұрын
@S. Williams Must be! Ever try talking back to her? She was invincible and immortal!
@sonquatsch85854 жыл бұрын
@@desultorydilletante4120 i think maybe she must know this because even when people sing flat, it doesn't sound like that.
@Kardamitiano4 жыл бұрын
@@ChristoherWGray You should give yourself this advice.
@kylieb7772 жыл бұрын
Thank you David Hoffman for recording all of these videos in the past for us to watch now. That was very smart and considerate of you to think of us future kids who would be curious of these things. You are a miracle and an inspiration.
@defan21054 жыл бұрын
I wish you would interview the "kids" now and see how they turned out and how their opinions changed or didn't. No right or wrong, just interesting.
@carlbowles18083 жыл бұрын
They are old, broke and afraid. The systems of belief and security of their era crumbled.
@GasLightyear693 жыл бұрын
@@littlerussianmax5831 yes
@jessewilson86763 жыл бұрын
But to allow a POC to attend “their” school or move into “their” neighborhood and all hell would break loose.
@dungeonmaster62923 жыл бұрын
@@jessewilson8676 Why would you want POCs into your neighborhood? POCs don't even want them in their neighborhood.
@ace62853 жыл бұрын
@@carlbowles1808 Nope, I was one of those. Not broke
@frasertones85194 жыл бұрын
The girl that's already picked her house out!! Too funny. She's 70 now... hope she's happy
@fernandososa65074 жыл бұрын
@atomic3939 Knowledge? Experience? You don't have to pursue a life of academics and money in order to go to school
@yellowblanka60584 жыл бұрын
@atomic3939 Back then on-the-job training etc. was far more common, and a high school diploma was given more weight. You didn't need a Bachelor's in Journalism to write for a local paper or click-bait articles on an online portal, merely to demonstrate ability and a willingness to work.
@yellowblanka60584 жыл бұрын
@atomic3939 Well yeah, there are always going to be shallow women/men, always going to be those who want to work hard/better society or help their fellow man, and those who will try to slither through the easy path in life. This likely won't change anytime soon.
@sirenthomas45954 жыл бұрын
She might be but her daughter who probably wanted different was probably shamed for her choices.....baby boomers seem to think everyone wants to get married and have kids LOL
@yellowblanka60584 жыл бұрын
@@sirenthomas4595 Her daughter would have been born during/after first-wave Feminism hit, so it's highly unlikely she would have been shamed for her choices, at least not by her peers.
@steveking16603 жыл бұрын
The one kid who spoke with internal conviction was the young man in the shop class, who actually made things!
@maTThu30003 жыл бұрын
Absolutely
@mrkazman3 жыл бұрын
His defensiveness was heartbreaking. In a world of perfection, he saw only himself as a failure.
@mitchmitchell31423 жыл бұрын
Theres still kids like that today, there always will be. Honestly this is still true today overall, the surface level stuff like fashion and music sound and clubs have changed in appearance but the principles are still pretty dang valid. The "sociys" are now just the "woke kids" and the normies are on tick tok and the outcasts are invisible since they're not on social media and too busy doimg rebiouls things like working, starting families and joining the military lol
@jahermos3 жыл бұрын
There was also the blond kid who described the community as bland, culturally uniform and complacent. Showed a good degree of awareness.
@Databyter3 жыл бұрын
That occurred to me too. And he had an excellent point. That looked like a complex shop with complex machining equipment. I have a background as a machinist and I can PROMISE you that many of the "soc's" who went to college to not have the IQ to do shop math or think creatively like an engineer. You can train people in college to know certain things, but that does not equate to aptitude for those things, and many of the kids that gravitated for shop; would have been a much better pool of aptitude for engineering degrees. Databyter
@jackmccormack48166 ай бұрын
Tnx…..I’m 81 n u just brought me on a roller coaster ride of my life.
@TylerDickey14 жыл бұрын
That shop class kid had it right.
@harbour084 жыл бұрын
It's funny I just started in construction in my father says some people think that they will hate it until they get into it and find out that they really liked it.
@jeffreymuu54514 жыл бұрын
From personal experience shop class beats out any calculus class and physics you’ll take in college not because it’s easy but because you can see what you have done. Meanwhile in calc we are just Integrating over and over which gets real boring and we never get to see the application other than it being on a graph.
@elzoog4 жыл бұрын
@@jeffreymuu5451 Truth is, it's not easy is it? Many of the "calc students" would probably have a difficult time building a cabinet with drawers or rewiring a house.
@redswanmusic36274 жыл бұрын
@@elzoog Am a maths student, can confirm that I cannot work with my hands for shit
@mb4lunch4 жыл бұрын
I was about to say that. he probably owns some awesome businesses now.
@guytorie4 жыл бұрын
It's so interesting to hear the vocal inflections and accents of boomers and their parents during the 60s, in comparison to the way they speak now. I'm fascinated by the aging of the human voice, and videos like this provide neat insight into how my millennial speech patterns will sound when I'm my parents' age and older.
@Llixgrijb4 жыл бұрын
Imagine grandmothers with vocal fry and upspeak!
@wiseforce70454 жыл бұрын
Same exact thought here.
@guytorie4 жыл бұрын
@@Llixgrijb I am so excited to eventually witness grandmothers, and eventually great-grandmothers, with bejeweled starbucks cups, contouring, 2020 lashes, and 2020 sorority-girl-who-smokes voices. It's going to be so annoying to some people, but very endearing to others.
@rogerspacebucks4504 жыл бұрын
I hear it too. I try to explain it to people, but they think I'm just hearing a regional accent. It's definitely a different way of speaking.
@nanmoi85664 жыл бұрын
Hey, Shoelace ..Keep studying/collecting voices.. it’s really more than a cool thing. You’re recording the nuanced change. So much, maybe too much to fast, change in something ch a short time. You’re a true historian/sociologist. Latter decades will thank you. They may b so, so, so confused. So many of us are sooooo confused now.! Good to see your comment here. Isn’t this a great channel? 🌻moi
@uydagcusdgfughfgsfggsifg7534 жыл бұрын
These mini documentaries are so slept on, I can’t get enough! You’re absolutely perfect as a host for this too, insights are great and your voice & vibe fit the whole “documentary with heart” type thing amazingly. The algorithm that leads people to your channel comes and goes, but these videos are timeless and evergreen so they can blow up years later and bring new waves of people here. Keep up the quality content Dave!
@DavidHoffmanFilmmaker4 жыл бұрын
Thank you!
@lighterpath59983 жыл бұрын
In 1966 I was 7 years old and growing up in MA. We didn't have much money, I lived in an unfinished bedroom on the second floor with partial insulation showing and no drywall up. In the winters it was freezing but I learned how to snuggle-wrap myself in what I considered an Indian papoose-style cacoon. It kept me very warm. College was never mentioned in my home neither was much about schooling or grades. My dad had started and owned his own company which took up his days five days a week. I was never encouraged to do either this or that with my life. I was never told who to like or not like. I felt loved and protected, but my parents never told me they were proud of me nor showed much physical affection toward us kids. Toward each other, their kisses every single time they ever separated or came back together was obvious. In ways too numerous to mention, we absolutely knew we were loved, and wanted. All us kids and there were quite a few, felt that love deep into our being. I never worked hard at school or did much if any homework as I grew up. I could only hope by some miracle I might go to college but didn't expect it. Fortunately, I was pretty smart, and even without homework or studying, I did better than average in most classes and even way above average in others. As adults, all of us kids have a very independent mind where we each have come to our own conclusions about life. What's common to all of us, is that we respect others, we feel empathy. We have a very strong sense of family and holidays and traditions. I can easily remember hearing my dad laugh at some joke through the years as he watched various shows on TV. I loved that sound and wanted to bring it to my own children. I think I did, for the most part. But I did always bring, without exception, was putting my family first. This was not putting them first so I could build or mold them into something. It was to put them first so that they might feel and know they were loved just as much as I felt loved by my parents. I told my kids that I didn't care if they were a forklift driver or doctor, as long as they did what they truly enjoyed and that they did it well. If it matters, and it shouldn't, I'm white. There were no blacks in my town. The first time I saw a black person was after getting my license and exploring the small cities by my small town. On the day I saw my first black-skinned person, who was sort of a disappointment because I couldn't see what the fuss was about, I also saw my first person urinate in public. He was white. And that has set my attitude toward people. It's not what they look like; it's what they do.
@onenamlit38614 жыл бұрын
When I started my career as a high school counselor in the early 1990's I inherited the office of a gentleman who retired after 40 years as a guidance counselor. On the office wall was a framed motivational poster that proclaimed: "Conformity Helps Eliminate Complications". The copyright on the poster was 1964. I'm going to guess a copy hung in Webster Groves High's guidance office in 1966 as well.
@onenamlit38614 жыл бұрын
@Andrew Cummings I kept it, hung upside-down, in my office for many years.
@kennedyland14 жыл бұрын
Actually, the 1960's of hippies, and rebels didn't really get into full swing until the summer of 1967 at it's earliest. Up until then, most teenagers looked and acted like those portrayed in this film. The generalization of all the 1960's being long haired rebels is a gross exaggeration. I'd love to see what these kids looked like and what they had to say two years later in 1969.
@timothyrday13904 жыл бұрын
I agree totally. It would probably be around half the teenagers who were in "rebellion" by the early 70s.
@TheConour4 жыл бұрын
Where I grew up, there were maybe 2 or 3 "freaks" per high school class of 100. The rest might have grown their hair a little longer, but were just as conformist as mom and dad. Job with daddy, mortgage, kids. And it was like that all through the 70s.
@TheConour4 жыл бұрын
@Amuro Ray A nuanced sense of history.
@stephenryan78554 жыл бұрын
Yes it's amazing how quickly it happened
@chaseblackstone87494 жыл бұрын
@Amuro Ray incredible comment
@TimothyVincentStBarts-ls7ii4 жыл бұрын
54 percent cheated on tests. That is much higher than I anticipated yet shows the "pressure" to do well to get into college. Great documentary.
@fatshpee71744 жыл бұрын
54% admitted to cheating, so it could be higher than that
@yellowblanka60584 жыл бұрын
And cheating is still fairly rampant. Which highlights a failure of the collegiate system (at least in this country), it's not so much about a love for learning as a desire for the piece of paper that will let you access higher-paying positions and consequently higher social status.
@unknownunknowns4 жыл бұрын
Yellowblanka And the collegiate system goes to show you that getting a degree doesn’t guarantee that social status like it did before. Now, millennials/zoomers are working in menial jobs just to make ends meet.
@yellowblanka60584 жыл бұрын
@@unknownunknowns Probably has to do with insane competition for white collar jobs (which isn't helped by off-shoring). If you have a Master's in certain lucrative fields you have a better chance, but that's obviously because there's less competition with increasing credentials.
@unknownunknowns4 жыл бұрын
Yellowblanka And automation isn’t also helping as well.
@Abouttogoaway3 жыл бұрын
You are a great man! We chatted on line about this “ lazy generation” my words, we chatted and I listened. Well watching every one of your videos, and learning, and still listening. Keep teaching david
@DavidHoffmanFilmmaker3 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much Wade for your comments.
@thwb46613 жыл бұрын
I'm among the oldest Gen Zers here, 1998, some may even think we're Millennials but as a teen during the 2010s decade, I grew up watching these 1960s documentaries about teenagers and it really was amazing to see how teenagers no matter which era it is, they're all the same. Some are moody, some are rebellious, some are depressed, some want to be perfect, some don't give a damn.
@lebe2203 жыл бұрын
And some think only of sex and drugs.
@justinwking3 жыл бұрын
98? You're the youngest of them all.
@haludae3 жыл бұрын
@@justinwking ??????? youngest Gen Zers are like 10 years old
@justinwking3 жыл бұрын
@@haludae You're right, I was mistaken. I guess I had my terms mixed up.
@ict1130903 жыл бұрын
Buddy, what you just said is the most mature thing I've read on the subject of generational comparison.
@johnmaynard12763 жыл бұрын
"I cant express myself." "What do I want out of life, i couldn't tell you." That says it all.
@n.d.m.5153 жыл бұрын
These are teenagers. Do you think teenagers today can answer the same questions differently? Did you know what you wanted or could express yourself very well as a teenager? Chances are they could express themselves if they wanted to and figure out what they want out of life much better than today's youth.
@MrHitmanx2003 жыл бұрын
@@n.d.m.515 Being able to answer these kinds of questions at that age has everything to do with how you are raised. In my family, we start asking these questions when our kids are old enough to talk, we are interested in what they want, not trying making them conform to a set standard. I knew I wanted to be an engineer by 12. My nephew is 15 years old and he has found that he is most interested in machining and cooking.
@virtualpilgrim86453 жыл бұрын
If you're quoting someone in this video or any video why don't you do the courtesy of putting the time stamp so we know what you are referencing?
@b.elzebub92523 жыл бұрын
It really does, lol. The funny thing is she so confidently states that because she can't express herself, surely no one else can either. Boomers in a nutshell right there.
@forestgump83573 жыл бұрын
@@b.elzebub9252 So, you live your life in a vacuum of assumptions I see. The lady that said that would not have been a boomer. This was 1966, the woman that said that looked to be 35 or so. 1946 was the first "boomer" year. The oldest boomer would have been 20 when this was made. Not that it matters, there are as many binary thinkers like you among all the generations. Not just the boomers.
@islander3764 жыл бұрын
Funny how the shop kid sounded like the most intelligent person in the entire documentary.
@chapiit084 жыл бұрын
And fiftysomething percent admitted cheating in order to pass exams but no cheating's possible in the toolroom, you end up wondering who's more real here.
@umiluv4 жыл бұрын
So sad that i saw them get rid of shop after my freshman year in high school in 1995. The millennials didn’t have a chance.
@chapiit084 жыл бұрын
@@umiluv There's a world plan that aims at the destruction of the West which includes the raise of a mass of useless dorks. Small hats, big problems.
@Lambert77854 жыл бұрын
yeah, he was learning something real, and he noticed :)
@runner30334 жыл бұрын
Definitely seemed the most adult of them.
@11cabadger2 жыл бұрын
This is the Boomer life I'm familiar with. Everybody lived the way you were "supposed to live" & that "one-two, one-two idea" was very present. When we moved to LA from our "Webster Grove" community, I cried for months. But then, I started watching the news, reading magazines & newspapers, going to the beach, the mountains. No more one-two, one-two. Never did fit in with any one group but the difference was I was accepted by all groups. The hippies were just one of many. What makes me sad is how much a lot of people are wanting to take us back to those Webster Grove days. Good for some, maybe but definitely not accepting of many. Thanks for this 👍
@bhspenceryt3 жыл бұрын
I would totally watch a Netflix period drama based on the characters in this documentary.
@hobog127773 жыл бұрын
We already have that, it's called Mad Men
@CherryBlossomBlyue3 жыл бұрын
Same
@elkmeatenjoyer34093 жыл бұрын
@@hobog12777 thats about middle age people these are teens.
@michelleguidry98293 жыл бұрын
Madmen
@She-gribble3 жыл бұрын
Definitely.
@pianoraves4 жыл бұрын
Being a boomer that didn't rebel is the most boomer thing
@CKArts63 жыл бұрын
Oh I don't think so at all
@markhenley30973 жыл бұрын
The stereotypical ''Boomer'' are the ones that didn't rebel, since they form a majority of the Boomer population.
@FacepalmVideoss3 жыл бұрын
@@markhenley3097 from what I know, a majority of boomers turned into stereotypical boomers, regardless of if they rebelled. I had plenty of teachers who were rebels, and now they're quite stereotypical boomers.
@cantbelieveitsnotredacted11173 жыл бұрын
Being a boomer who did rebel and now hates teens who rebel is the most boomer thing
@getthegoods4203 жыл бұрын
the boomers that people complain about are the ones that fucked up America with the shitty politics, not the hippies.
@liljafamilyaccount73064 жыл бұрын
I work near Webster groves, my grandmother was from Webster groves, my mother was 14 when this was filmed. This video shows me their world.
@cernowaingreenman4 жыл бұрын
How is webster grove different today? Do you think most of these kids are still living there today?
@amybobamie73664 жыл бұрын
That is so very cool for you
@pedromeza23984 жыл бұрын
Given that you are the third generation, how many of the Webster values were passed down to you?
@zweij Жыл бұрын
David, I know this video was posted 2 years ago, I am a longtime subscriber, and just wanted to let you know, that you are doing a very important job. I will show this video to my cousin. He is 15. By the way, I made it a habit to play the videos you post and watch them with my fiancee after dinner. You are mentioned often at our home. Thanks for doing what you do. Julia from Poland
@calvinguile13153 жыл бұрын
It's funny how a lot of people think EVERYONE was a hippy in the 60s
@TheFirstManticore3 жыл бұрын
I wasn't a hippy, but I did wear hippy styles. Headbands, granny dresses, love beads, etc.
@lkreinmiller-author3 жыл бұрын
I graduated in 1967 in a class of 176 (huge by my standards). I knew 3 "hippies". 2 were guys in my class, 1 was a girl from California who moved there for her senior year.
@lookfor1253 жыл бұрын
I totally agree..Let me tell you why..Because,the 1960’s ,were taught to later generations ,by the hippies ,and other radical elements of this era…Most people didn’t go out protesting or were attempting to tear down traditional American values..The same thing is happening now..The left doesn’t have the numbers,but they do have big media, big tech, big entertainment, big academia,etc..These institutions ,along with one political party,are trying their best to bring the 60’s utopia to the 21st century ..I’m not saying the right has the correct solutions or answers..I’m just telling you why and who is controlling the messaging..The kids who were protesting ,they all mostly came from privilege backgrounds(especially the white kids)..Therefore,they had the power to get the hear and eyes of the media..(They were children of the elites)
@lkreinmiller-author3 жыл бұрын
@@lookfor125 , and many of them raised their kids with the same attitude. And it is their children and grandchildren who are driving the radical ideology.
@gregorsamsa13643 жыл бұрын
@@lookfor125 Most hippies weren't even particularly politically involved. The people who were actually doing serious activism weren't hippies. And what they did wasn't to "tear down American values". Not unless you think things like Jim Crow laws and unnecessary war are traditional American values. Then again, i suppose they are. Fortunately, so are protest and change
@yakkyjoe14 жыл бұрын
I loved the ditch digger comment. Anyone who was young in the 60s/70s heard that from their parent.
@manictiger4 жыл бұрын
Ironic, since now ditch-digging is the way to make money, more specifically, real estate investing (which includes a little bit of ditch-digging). I have a hypothesis that the loss of manual labor is why testosterone levels are so low now. Work smart, work hard and you'll always have good wealth and health.
@olrikparlez31524 жыл бұрын
Heh! Yep!
@dfpolitowski24 жыл бұрын
I did. I ironic thing was that my father dug ditches for a living at that time and made more money than all of us kids.
@BradThePitts4 жыл бұрын
Nikola Tesla was a ditch digger, at least for a while!
@bologna30484 жыл бұрын
I grew up in the 90s with my parents telling me this, lol boy were they wrong. Seems that this only worked for one generation lol
@IIVVBlues4 жыл бұрын
This was in the middle of my high school years. These kids were much more affluent than most of the kids I knew. Most of the kids in my town were from blue collar families whose dads worked in the steel mill, nickel plant or grain elevators. Our parents were laborers. The doctor's and lawyer's kids were more or less like the kids in the film, but the rest were a lot more earthy. These were the children of Ozzie and Harriet. We were the children of Archie Bunker. If you hadn't told me, I'd have thought this was a documentary of the 50s not the 60s. An interesting documentary would be about what happened to these kids 50 years later.
@verucagash31274 жыл бұрын
I would love to see that documentary! Thank you for sharing your perspective about this era.
@Jackal4 жыл бұрын
the outsiders and the socs
@TubeBrowser24 жыл бұрын
@John Great post.
@mohammadabdulfarooqi30684 жыл бұрын
it was early to mid-60s sir
@Thomasuki2673 жыл бұрын
They bogged down the Senate and suggested Obama was born in Kenya to keep every penny.
@donallenjr20512 жыл бұрын
Many of these parents lived through the Great Depression, and either saw or experienced first hand what real poverty is like: a roof over their head and three meals a day wasn't a given: a good job, a house, and security is something to be appreciated, and they wanted that for their kids. These aren't rich kids: they're middle class in middle America in the 1960s. It was the children of the true elites, bored trust fund kids mostly from big East Coast cities, who drove the hipster/hippie movement, and they had utter contempt for middle class, middle Americans.
@neilpuckett3592 жыл бұрын
Exactly!
@Catlily52 жыл бұрын
I know some old hippies. They weren't all from rich families
@TD-20112 жыл бұрын
Nailed it!
@westtexasphantom2 жыл бұрын
Not to mention those who lived through WWII as well, whether on the home front or the battlefields.
@faye30742 жыл бұрын
that is absolutely not true... hippies came from all backgrounds and levels of income...most weren't trust fund kids, that isn't even a good view point on the era at all. Like there, absolutely, were more middle class to low class hippies, cause rich kids were not that large, of a part, of the society. The contempt came from saying no to an illegitimate war and telling the silent gen politicians to go fuck themselves..Those kids knew not to go to a dumb war, unlike so many generations before...
@abrahemsamander39674 жыл бұрын
I love the way that shop class boy describes his work. It’s honestly very inspiring, he has great conviction. I hope he lived a great life.
@vegeta48824 жыл бұрын
Man I wish my parents would understand that's how I felt about my video games 😔
@HACHIMOTHEDESTROYER4 жыл бұрын
@@vegeta4882 lmao
@gsp494 жыл бұрын
Did you see the lathes and machine shop in the background. 16 years old today wouldn't have the mental capacity to begin to get a grasp on that equipment.
@shirleylangton79673 жыл бұрын
I am exactly this age, and the documentary is absolutely right. Our parents grew up in the depression, and our fathers' were in WWII, and the focus was then on stability, on money, and education which our parents never had.
@bluewaters31003 жыл бұрын
My mom's mother (my Great grandparents) lost her parents in the 1918 flu epidemic. Her brothers and sisters were split up and she was only 5. So sad. My mom had a rough life because of the depression and only finished 8th grade. She married my dad while pregnant with me at age 20. I have never had what I consider a stable home..even now at age 69. We tend to imprint our children with our patterns whether good or bad. I always had love for my mom even though her divorce made my childhood hard. She did her best as most parents usually do.
@Sharpened_Spoon Жыл бұрын
I think the context is important to consider for sure. The parents had seen some pretty serious stuff and I think the dismissal of their kids taking the burden of worldly affairs on themselves is from a place of wishing their kids could enjoy a youth that they couldn’t, and also to focus on security before spending their time demonstrating their political ideals. Of course it doesn’t nullify the impact it had on the individualism and expression of youth in that era, I think many parents were still quite uncertain of the future meaning they wanted to control its direction, by controlling their kids.
@ns2110theonly Жыл бұрын
@@Sharpened_Spoon lol they weren’t controlling their kids they wanted them to have a peaceful life. As a 1963 baby I am so thankful my parents raised me this way. There’s no need to traipse the world looking to impress people.
@Helm-w1q Жыл бұрын
Don't you know us Boomers had it so great. I've been writing we all ate rainbow stew and drank nothing but sweet bubble up. We were as a group,swindled,lied to and cheated. And now,we are only finding out that we screwed up the world.
@dbey84226 ай бұрын
Well yeah when you've experienced real poverty and the food you ate was what you either grew of traded for then yes you will certainly appreciate what a good career entails. Entitled children today or those from the gen x or y or z or anyone born after the 50s have not starved, they don't appreciate how important stability and income security really is. It's okay to hate your job if it means your family isn't suffering or going without. It's noble. Yet for the past decades people complain in their heated houses and full cupboards about how capitalism destroys the world. Sad.
@aucourant99983 жыл бұрын
Really interesting. The girl who planned for the house across the street from her parents was an eye-opener.
@spensert49333 жыл бұрын
Just wait til your husband realizes he is across from mom in law
@minty4resh3 жыл бұрын
@@spensert4933 🤣
@leroyjones72953 жыл бұрын
@@spensert4933 my mother in law is on the opposite side of the planet I’m Australian my wife is from Ireland
@K7classicrockfan3 жыл бұрын
She was a gold digger lol
@mikep81823 жыл бұрын
Today they call that a girl looking for a sugar daddy
@spiralsun12 жыл бұрын
Amazing. I never knew people were motivated like this. It’s like seeing an animated museum exhibit. Thanks so much for this ❤️🔥👍🏻
@peppermintcatsass31414 жыл бұрын
Hilarious that my teachers & family threatened me with low status "ditch digger" future. I've made a fortune excavating for water, power, structure & roadways...lol
@gfox92954 жыл бұрын
Yeah, the whole 1950s mindset for the middle class was all... you're all gonna be rich bankers and Wall Street types. Whole lotta other jobs needing done.
@peppermintcatsass31414 жыл бұрын
@@gfox9295 College was thee only road to success they would say...I was dyslexic with a thyroid condition that made me hyperactive, classrooms were unbearable, thank the creator of demolition & excavation everyday..
@tikigodsrule23174 жыл бұрын
Within the last 10 years its becoming widely covered in the media college is NO guarantee of success. Actually looking into who is rich makes it obvious. Tech company founders for Microsoft and Apple didn't complete college. My memory is failing but I remember Henry Ford completed 6th grade and even he realized I can hire all the highly educated people I need cheaply to make me rich. SpaceX, Tesla car founder Elon Musk speaks often of not requiring a degree to work for him. College, a great way to blow 10 years and wind up in massive debt.
@Blackhawk-ur4vx4 жыл бұрын
People will always need someone to do the dirty jobs ,but not a college degree
@peppermintcatsass31414 жыл бұрын
@@tikigodsrule2317 ...excellent point👍
@waynelast16854 жыл бұрын
Looking back , I used to think home Economics was the least useful course but now as a much older man I think it was one of the most important. Cooking and financial planning are critical.
@AnHebrewChild4 жыл бұрын
Me too. I wish I had paid more attention...
@deanmachine79714 жыл бұрын
Economics was the best class I've ever taken, at least as far as interest and usefulness.
@mikep81823 жыл бұрын
Two cars and a two-story house seems to be the standard back then
@PHlophe3 жыл бұрын
it was the standard dream sold by the mid century architectural digest
@hellomate6393 жыл бұрын
@@PHlophe Ya most people didn't have that.
@Johnconnor.skynet3 жыл бұрын
That’s my dream and I’m 34
@xiny-chi3 жыл бұрын
It's literally my dream
@metsfanal3 жыл бұрын
Back in those days you'd drop out of high school, knock up your girlfriend at 16, and walk in to general motors to ask for a job. "You're hired, start Monday!" the boss would tell you as he hands you an offer letter amounting to 80 grand a year in today's money. Then on your way home you'd stop by the bank for a pre-approved 30 year mortgage for a $20,000 house that you're new wife would clean all day rather than working. Today you go to college for what you're told will be 4 years but turns into 6, walk out with $50,000 in debt, and spend your days filling out hundreds of applications for entry level jobs requiring five years of experience. If you're lucky in six months time you'll have finally landed a job an hour from home that pays fifteen dollars per. By about the time you've turned 35, you saved enough money for a 10% down payment on the most rundown shack in town for five hundred thousand dollars. At last you're ready to start a family, but your girlfriend tells you she's too worried to have kids at her age because of autism fears. You're silently relieved since you're still 30 grand deep in student loan debt on top of the 450 for the house, and you don't know how much of the world will be left for your child to grow up in anyhow.
@WildlifeRescueCare2 жыл бұрын
It would be amazing for these same people were interviewed today !!!!!!!! Thanks you so much for your AMAZING videos David !!!!!!!! (I was ten years old in Dec 1966 born in Calif & parents migrated to Australia in 1969 with us 5 kids 4 to 12 years old to be able to raise us in a better & safer environment).
@nickmckeehan64284 жыл бұрын
Going to college back then just made sense. I can see why the boomers echoed the saying "you have to get a degree to be successful" Now adays it feels like a huge financial gamble.
@hugofontes57084 жыл бұрын
Yeah And somehow a lot of people didn't see how it would turn out Things are often like that, not just with education
@nixl35184 жыл бұрын
Well, what changed is the COST of going to college. If u went to an in-state University back then it was practically free, so most could get a decent education without owing their life to it, thereby practically guaranteeing a financially secure life. This was what society then was prepared to give thru taxes to elevate everyone and this is what's been lost. Unfortunately its Party specific in that Reagan began this process and then it just took off. Today we do not support elevating society, just ourselves and so we have lowered our standard of living by depressing those least able to, forgoing going to school and are dangerously close to losing our Democratic system as a result. These are intimately linked events. Greed will end the American era because we have come to feel that GREED is good!! We have lost our value system and that is more than a shame, its a disaster.
@cristov67974 жыл бұрын
Not in Europe
@katzy37984 жыл бұрын
@@jgunther3398 LMFAO GREEDY LEFTISTS do you even understand what a leftist is? also no. Berkeley couldn't educate everyone for free. that would take lots of resources. resources are finite. that's the corner stone of economics. if berkeley could educate everyone for free we would be living a communist utopian society.
@Jack_of_Hearts44 жыл бұрын
@@jgunther3398 The current "republican" president literally got caught making a fake, for profit college and had to pay millions to the students he tricked into paying for fake degrees.... Granted he was a registered democrat most of his life, a fact that he really doesn't want his cult followers to know, but he had to run as a republican because he was told that democrats would never fall for his con and support him.
@maxfieldstanton54114 жыл бұрын
"What am I working for? What am I living for? What do I want out of life? I couldn't tell you." - The Greatest Generation
@collin89624 жыл бұрын
I loved that line it was so honest.
@gauloise64424 жыл бұрын
Its so strange to me how much the Greatest Generation is romanticized by young kids today.
@MDBenton4 жыл бұрын
Oh she knew Exactly what she wanted, and got it. A wealthy husband, obedient kids, a monochromatic town, etc. Interesting how so many of the parents say their kids are too young to have their own thoughts and ideas when the parents goal was just that, that their kids would Never have their own mind but just conform.
@macvena4 жыл бұрын
The Greatest generation survived the Depression, WWII, were the ones who passed Civil Rights Legislation, lifted the country up to be far more successful than anyone imagined, and still put men on the moon. I say, what followed that act was wanting. Does anyone actually think today is better? At least these people tried to hold it together. Today, folks lie to themselves with astonishing ease and success.
@susanmaggiora48004 жыл бұрын
Maxfield Stanton This isn’t the Greatest Generation. These are Baby Boomers. The greatest generation were folks born in the late teens & 20’s. These are their children, the ‘hippies’ then, later, the ‘yuppies.’
@noecarrier50354 жыл бұрын
Ah, a different era. They thought a bunch of teenagers were going to answer a questionnaire entirely truthfully. What intoxicating innocence.
@GingerOpalArt4 жыл бұрын
My parents are boomers, real salt-of-the-earth people raised on a farm and a ranch and lived a really wholesome lives (still do). They both told me when they were made to fill out those anonymous questionnaires in highschool, they lied and checked every unvirtuous box to make the adults think the worst of their kids because they resented having to take such a stupid test. They (and her likewise wholesome friends who did the same thing) thought it was a good laugh. Just like my siblings in the 80s and 90s lied on those dumb tests. I think I'm the only one who wrote how honestly boring I was on the test because I was SO SICK of the lectures and assemblies we'd get on how not to be depraved drugged-up sex-crazed flunkies. They always reported the numbers of students who anonymously admitted to bad behavior, and all of us students knew it wasn't accurate. Hm, makes me wonder why if so many boomers lied on that test, why they, when they became teachers, were so gullible to believe the test results of their students...
@noecarrier50354 жыл бұрын
@Luffen What generation do you think I am from?
@cris_balm74605 ай бұрын
Awesome thank you 🙏🏼 My mums generation and class. Things have changed and I think for the better.
@WilmerCook4 жыл бұрын
There were others like me, we were not hippies, worked every day had a wife and kids at 19,(1967). But on the week ends, became hippies with short hair. Went to the sunset strip, went to all the concerts and had a good time. I never quit working or was a bum, it was a wonderful time. I've tried everything in those days, now I don't drink or smoke, I am 73.
@richrokk4 жыл бұрын
Sounds like you’ve lived well.
@JPX64Channel4 жыл бұрын
Well enough to know how to use youtube and comment on a video
@Pmtd12344 жыл бұрын
Count me in that category. My wife and I married in 1969, first child a year later. I started working 2 weeks after I turned 14 and worked throughout high school, then after graduating I had my first blue-collar job, then another, and then started working my way up in that organization. I am still working at age 72, and hopefully will continue for several more years. Never did drugs, never related to the hippy movement. Focused on my family and my career.
@waynesmith37544 жыл бұрын
At Least try ..Legal...MJ...You dont have to Smoke it Any Mo
@Blue_9104 жыл бұрын
@@Pmtd1234 Well the hippy movement never really hurt anyone’s life per say. Just some hippy movement people never did anything past it. My grandma was apart of the hippy movement and actually made a very high-paying job out of it in a plant science field. She’s actually the richest person in our whole family lol
@s1lentmusic9083 жыл бұрын
Can you do this documentary now? To see the difference between generations? That would be really interesting
@mrgac95983 жыл бұрын
Facts
@penelopepitstop7623 жыл бұрын
I think there would be bad and good about each. Not all teens today are bad of course, but the ones that are, are really bad. It would be interesting to see a good and bad comparison of the good and bad kids from then and today.
@Holly-fn2gv3 жыл бұрын
@@penelopepitstop762 I feel like it’s a bit subjective to evaluate people as just “good” or “bad”, especially youth, but I see what you mean, it would be interesting to see how the different generations behave around the whole idea of conformity and all. Also I think the “bad” kids who are “really bad” are not the majority, really jsut more spoken about/abrasive than they would have been sixty years ago.
@penelopepitstop7623 жыл бұрын
@@Holly-fn2gv I understand what you are saying. Not all kids are truly “bad” perhaps just more rebellious. I also think society has gotten worse in general and that includes the parents, so it’s not entirely the fault of the kids.
@Holly-fn2gv3 жыл бұрын
@@penelopepitstop762 not that I can really say with much first hand experience, but yeah lol I feel like society has gotten a lot worse a general place, so yeah I see what you mean :)
@Troy_KC-2-PH4 жыл бұрын
This is why I don't consider myself a boomer (I'm too young for the headshop and too old for the mosh pit) apart from the fact that I came from the wrong side of the railroad tracks, my school experiences were much different and my parents' only hopes were that I wouldn't end up in jail. Aside from a night in the klink ...I never went to jail otherwise. I'm a military veteran (just one hitch) and I've almost always had a job except for a few weeks back in 2009 (when I lost my wife, kids, home everything) I have never recovered from 2008-2010 ...still struggling but I can eat and I have a roof over my head and so do my kids and ex wife ...that's something I guess.
@LukenUSee4 жыл бұрын
Yes, it definitely is. Hang in there!
@srvntlilly4 жыл бұрын
Old Gringo You're a survivor! It takes guts to be a survivor! And God bless you for your service in the military! Stay strong and take care of yourself. Jesus loves you more than you know, just like you are. You're precious to him. Hugs...😊🌺💕
@virgie47154 жыл бұрын
Thank you very much for your service. ❤️
@harbour084 жыл бұрын
I am sorry to hear this happened but also happy you shared it. 2009 was a heavy year for me as well as many others, but I thank God that through that time He introduced me to His love for me through Jesus Christ. I would love to extend that same offer to you! It may not be all easy but its all worth it and yes, seek and obey Him and He will take care of you AND your children, Matthew 6:33 and Psalm 37:25
@duke95554 жыл бұрын
It was and is a HUUUGE country and Webster Grove? represented some bible belt mid western Leave It To Beaver reality ..........many of the kids who grew up back then lied about their participation in the so-called 60's which btw didn't actually start until 67-68 1960-1967 were the 50's ( I was a young adult then ) if there actually were the amount of people who say they were at Woodstock ( 8-69 ) the whole of NYS would have been covered in kids ....like 5 million not 400k / Most kids didn't drug out drop out tune out like 90% stayed on the straight and narrow and went through the 60's pretty much like their older brothers & sisters went through the 50's
@carlospinheirotorres94995 ай бұрын
I think this is wonderful!... a gold mine and a 'handsomely ' mined one at that by this insightfull lad - what a treat ♥️
@b__p4 жыл бұрын
Can you imagine seriously suggesting children spend 74 hours a week on their studies?
@matthew81534 жыл бұрын
I was told that same bullshit and I didn’t bother with the homework for more than an hour after school. I failed only one class in high school even though I got nothing but As just because I refused to do the 130 questions per day of homework. I am very proud of that F.
@rusher19774 жыл бұрын
Yeah I was thinking that maybe he was acting for the camera when he was saying that.
@Roboto1294 жыл бұрын
@@matthew8153 Same here, but at least we man up to it. We use the pronoun "I". Some kids today want to blame the World for their poor decisions.
@grantjohnson57854 жыл бұрын
That's probably less than the average in Japan. On that note, I wonder why they consistently outperform U.S. students...
@matthew81534 жыл бұрын
@@grantjohnson5785 They outperform the US on standardized test for those who get tested. One thing people don’t realize about Japan is that their society is so repressive that many people (especially teenage boys) are withdrawing from reality and living as hermits. They don’t even go to school.
@stephenpickells20034 жыл бұрын
the cop had an interesting take on the students' inability for self-reliance, whereas you talked about the adults' apparent inability to be the slightest bit individual. the only thing anybody said about the civil rights movement was that the kids couldn't possibly have an opinion about it. the filmmaker doesn't appear to have asked them, but maybe he wasn't allowed to. the most startling revelation is the amount of kids who admitted to cheating. would it be too much of a leap to suggest that they see the adults cheating their way through life and they probably don't see it as cheating?
@Eiramilah4 жыл бұрын
He sounded like he was talking about millenials
@whitney66414 жыл бұрын
I bet a high percentage of todays kids have cheated before too
@Eiramilah4 жыл бұрын
@@whitney6641 the precautions we had to take while test writing was crazy. Not water bottles unless they were clear, no ball caps, etc.
@MeatCatCheesyBlaster4 жыл бұрын
Or they just get their parents to pay them through college
@rwatertree4 жыл бұрын
Things are much different now, except that kids are taught what think about political issues rather than ignored.
@pagamenews4 жыл бұрын
I totally understand these "young people" back then. They were raised by parents that had to endure the Great Depression of the 1930s. Many of their fathers fought in World War Two. So being "content" with a middle class lifestyle makes sense. Look at our so-called enlightened society today? So many people depend on "Government Assistance". Back in the 1960s,. a college education was affordable. Today young people have debts in the hundreds of thousands of dollars in order to get a "degree"...and then there is no guarantee of a decent paying job. Certainly no job with a true pension that will take care of them in old age. Medical expenses? These kids had it good and they KNEW IT...and that's why they didn't want to rock the proverbial boat.
@larsswig9124 жыл бұрын
But these were the same kids that went on to vote for minimum wages to be lower and lower.
@lurelurche4 жыл бұрын
they wanted their conformity or they say they wanted that because they were taking a survey at school where taught to behave? or because they saw no other option? I mean traveling the world was not so common back then
@KarlSnarks4 жыл бұрын
Keep in mind that these were the people who brought about the current situation. They chose the wrong policies to continue the economical prosperity they were born into. And I'm not talking about the progressive changes in the late 60's early 70's (most of the figureheads of those changes were from the silent generation or the earliest baby boomers), but about the Reaganomics and Yuppie culture. Short term gains at the expense of sustainable growth.
@Stret1734 жыл бұрын
@@larsswig912 guys you seem to think that their votes had any effect(gore or bush? and anyway lobbist dollar is worth more than a ten grand voters voices to the top men) or that they were voting in a vacum with no influence(ITS THE AMERICAN WAY!)
@WielkiTana4 жыл бұрын
WoW. Good conclusion, but left politicians spoiled your country and demolished all the values, like they did here in Eastern Europe. Socialism cancer, best regards from Polanad
@BluDrgn4262 жыл бұрын
I don't know how I got here, but I really appreciate this analysis and look back.
@Garagecouchofjohnnyyz4 жыл бұрын
At 16 your a child at 18 your old enough to fight in a foreign land.
@DasReBooT14 жыл бұрын
... and not allowed to vote nor buy alcohol legally.
@sean.furlong19894 жыл бұрын
@@DasReBooT1 You can get married (with parental consent) in all 50 states at that age though.
@ohhansel4 жыл бұрын
But at 17 you're allowed to donate your organs.
@ThomasBMagwn4 жыл бұрын
You can still do all of these things at 18 but but you can't simply buy a bottle of beer! Pretty fucked up!
@JellyrollHorton4 жыл бұрын
@¿Eres Cristiano? Myth.
@amazingjason4554 жыл бұрын
Go interview 16 year olds and their families in the same town today. I’d like to see the contrast.
@bradleyweiss10894 жыл бұрын
Ask the same questions. If they’re even relevant.
@janethebluemouse4 жыл бұрын
That would be interesting
@TheNinjapancake144 жыл бұрын
@@janethebluemouse I too, would love to see it
@williamjohnson65884 жыл бұрын
Webster Groves has a ton of arts kids now. Or at least it did when I was there 4-5 years ago.
@a4000t4 жыл бұрын
you couldn't get them to look up from their cell phones long enough to answer 5 questions LOL
@mainstay.4 жыл бұрын
I wish you could go back to Webster Grove in 2021 and do the same documentary. That's why the ' 7UP ' series was such a useful vital social experiment.
@Trokonzah3 жыл бұрын
This was really interesting to watch. And your commentary added a lot to the experience, helping to put things into perspective. You helped to shape the perspective we should take on to be able to appreciate this some 60yrs later. Thank you for this.
@jaymaloney83214 жыл бұрын
As they say, "A little context, please." The teenagers in '66 were the children of men and women who had lived as children who had lived through the depression and WW2. Material deprivation (the depression and WW2 rationing) sure as shooting wasn't EVER going to touch the children of the WW2 generation, not if Mom and Dad had a voice in it..
@cuauhtemoc83504 жыл бұрын
You are correct. It's the same dynamic currently playing out in China. Former peasants don't want their children to suffer material deprivation so they instill materialism on their children.
@GrimSleepy4 жыл бұрын
@@rogerwilco99 '84 baby here... I find it to be fairly rare that my peers received the same discipline, survival skills, and self-sufficiency that my father tried to instill in me. The problem is most of the children of the Silent Generation, The Baby Boomers, were concerned over materialism and self promotion to forward the ideals and virtues that were afforded them by their parents. :(
@bostonseeker4 жыл бұрын
That's true, but there were those of us were aware of what our parents went through. As a result, we didn't think our parents were terrible or fascistic, even when we had our differences with them. Many of us were aware of how lucky we were, our material comforts and opportunities. The big gulf of the 1960s was cultural, not political. My parents and many of their generation supported civil rights and birth control, for example, and became skeptical of the Vietnam War. What they mostly did not do was abandon their families, take drugs, or otherwise become dissolute. They didn't dress or talk like hippies, who were curiosities in the 1960s. My mother said she couldn't take being around Boomer girls who put on make-up that looked like shoe polish -- and she was politically very liberal :)
@CaptainBones2223 жыл бұрын
@@bostonseeker I think what was consideres politically liberal back then is now considered conservative
@chasbodaniels17443 жыл бұрын
@@CaptainBones222 Pretty much accurate. Barry Goldwater of Arizona ran for President in 1964 against Lyndon Johnson, and was considered a *far right wing wacko who scared many voters. He got destroyed at the polls. *Today's Republican Party* consists of (a) Big Business shills and (b) The less-educated and bible-thumping crowds who vote against their own economic interests and think Cheeto's populist mentality will somehow benefit them.
@KathleenMcCormickLCSWMPH4 жыл бұрын
Excellent. I was in the hippie 30% but went to high school with the more conventional students who were upper middle class. I didn’t fit in for many reasons and gravitated to often older friends who went to high school and college and hung around in the park. I’m so glad I did. I think I lived a much more adventurous life. And the cop! What a social critic! He was thinking more critically than anyone else in the film!
@dcasper85144 жыл бұрын
What ever happened to freedom of speech ?
@user-rd4cd7ph7x4 жыл бұрын
Fools like you handed our nation over to foreign interest and damned all our future generations to 3rd world living conditions.
@gavinsnow97744 жыл бұрын
Cop? Thinking critically? Nah... too good to b true
@ITIsFunnyDamnIT8 ай бұрын
Thank You for sharing all these documentaries with us. I was not born till 1970, but my parents wee baby boomers. What I get so tired of is this these younger generations think that everybody did drugs in the 60s, and they argue with me that my parents did drugs because they were young adults in the 60s. I know my parents never did drugs and were most certainly not part of the hippy culture. They were no saints I know that, but my parents totally believed in reefer madness and thought hippies were dangerous people. These documentaries are so insightful and interesting
@MagnumMike443 жыл бұрын
It would be interesting to see a sequel of this program that shows where all of those individuals are living and what they're doing, or what they did for a career they were planning for in 1966.
@rapasvi3 жыл бұрын
Yes
@divergentsenior3 жыл бұрын
I graduated in 66z 40 year reunion was interesting. Some were still happily married to high school sweetheart.
@MagnumMike443 жыл бұрын
@@divergentsenior Reunions are interesting that's for sure.
@linterpretemehariste90812 жыл бұрын
@@divergentsenior For sure I'll stay married to my highschool sweetheart until I die. As she was a swabian Fraulein, until this day I don't have any really strong reason to complain about this decision. I would choose the same Fraulein again, only I wouldn't drive her lil red car like if it was an army truck and scare her to death with my driving stile any more, I would try to adopt to a more civil way of conduct now! ... ;-)
@divergentsenior2 жыл бұрын
@@linterpretemehariste9081 Congratulations! I am envious of people who found "their person" at all, let alone early in life. I was not that lucky, but managed to escape unjaded by not finding a soul mate. I have had a a long, happy and adventurous life. I wish you continued love for all time.
@barkasz60664 жыл бұрын
Parents: “At 16 or 17 or 18 to throw themselves at concepts like racial prejudice is ridiculous.” Also parents: “Well son, you are 18 now. Do you want to get married before or after you go to Vietnam?
@tikigodsrule23174 жыл бұрын
Exactly what I was thinking.
@thecatguy43014 жыл бұрын
That's a bit of an over simplification. And a far reach to suggest those parents were happy to see there sons go to Vietnam.
@jordanjordan90224 жыл бұрын
Interesting perspective. One thing is for sure, the communists had zero problem with illegality, supporting and instigating illegal wars, illegally interfering in the politics of whichever nation they chose. The big question in the 1960s became whether to continue to let them do it or not. A question that's still being asked in a different form today.
@thecatguy43014 жыл бұрын
@@jordanjordan9022 Ya, they infiltrated America at that time and we are now dealing with them at all levels of our society.
@tikigodsrule23174 жыл бұрын
@@jordanjordan9022 as if the US has not done the same?
@lgwappo4 жыл бұрын
I was about 10 when this was filmed. My parents were obsessed with public image & conformity & so were my grandparents. Looking back I realize that came from fear & insecurity. Their self-esteem was rooted in social acceptance, not self-acceptance. Once I left home at 18 & spent time around functional people I began to understand how weird & unhealthy that was.
@Anna_Stetik4 жыл бұрын
That's my parents. I am an 80s kid, my parents were a little older than these kids, but they still had the same mentality. It's not your happiness that matters, it's what the neighbors think that matters. I absolutely rebelled against that! However, I think some of those a decade or more younger than me went to the extreme opposite side of the spectrum. When that girl said she was happy and had nothing to complain about, I almost fell over in shock. NEVER heard that from the people who are now in their 20s or 30s - they complain about everything.
@jjhhkkful4 жыл бұрын
@@Anna_Stetik maybe that would teach us that balance is one of the most important aspects in life..
@skatingfreak16704 жыл бұрын
There are problems that come with self acceptance as well
@deesee36224 жыл бұрын
@Igwappo promotes narcissism too and even malignant narcissism
@lgwappo4 жыл бұрын
@Darla Markle Wrong. Teaching values to kids is good. Teaching kids to live for the approval of others is bad.
@laceybutterfly21733 жыл бұрын
I've been binging these videos. It makes me feel so happy to watch glimpses from the past. To think this was NOT that long ago as it may seems for someone as young as me, it makes me feel nostalgic.
@DavidHoffmanFilmmaker3 жыл бұрын
I invite you to keep on bilging.
@corlyssd4 жыл бұрын
Sounds like a younger Charles Kuralt narrating. I was 20 in '66, 2 years into college. I was comfortable in my academic work, happy at home, confident in my future. It was my last carefree year. In Jan 67 my dad was diagnosed with cancer, and I began my really adult life.
@MsBee4 жыл бұрын
I mean, that IS Charles Kuralt narrating isn't it?
@mjears4 жыл бұрын
12:57 That’s him on camera.
@dfpolitowski24 жыл бұрын
@@mjears Good Job!
@finejustgivemeaname4 жыл бұрын
I lost my dad when I was 22. I understand what you mean about becoming an adult.
@dcasper85144 жыл бұрын
That was Charles Kuralt.
@colleen63413 жыл бұрын
this was my grandmother, she didn’t rebel and led a life that was almost identical to what is portrayed here, it’s sad hearing her talk about how she never really was allowed to be herself because she wanted to fit in, i’m happy she gets to be as wacky and outgoing as she wants now without anyone batting an eye
@artofmghow64193 жыл бұрын
What does it mean to you - being herself? You think she was less happy than most of females these days?
@luisfersm3 жыл бұрын
@@artofmghow6419 As if kids these days weren't slaves to stupid trends and standards, they see all these influencers on Instagram traveling around the world and driving exotic cars which makes them feel unaccomplished and frustrated.
@RaumdeuterYT3 жыл бұрын
@@luisfersm fucking facts lol
@RyanJK883 жыл бұрын
"expressing yourself" is such a dumb meme at this point.
@Chino_Shorts3 жыл бұрын
@@luisfersm I went through your channel and saw you followed alpha male channels and multiple social media influencers. Do you follow them ironically?, or have we all (including me and you) fallen into the same fault that you wrote in your comment which is wanting to fit in. If it’s unironically, I hope you know that being yourself and living in the present is the best way to live life, not listening to some “alpha male” teaches you how to live an “ideal life”.
@jackwillis6804 жыл бұрын
17:02 that’s honestly sad, a grown woman with a child still doesn’t know what she wants in life but they expect their children to know exactly what career path they want to pursue by the time they’re 18. This old idea that college is the only way to be successful probably messed a lot of people up.
@Fireboat524 жыл бұрын
Most people don't know what the "want to do" in life and are just along for the ride and that's fine. Most people on earth are like that. The notion that our kids all have to go to college hasn't worked out so well. Higher education full of kids without a mission has turned out to be disastrous as we can easily see. That is what too much money does to a country.
@dixonpinfold25824 жыл бұрын
@@Fireboat52 The "opening up of educational opportunity" as it was so attractively and optimistically called, also went hand in hand with an immense relaxation in standards. How else could you possibly increase the proportion of people attending college from 5% to 50%? Students from the middle of a high school class simply cannot graduate from college programs designed, as they formerly were, to fail students from below the top tenth. Neither can you inflate the ranks of professors ten times and think quality hasn't plummeted. Anyone who does think so should be asked what we'd have if we fired the worst 90% of them now. Low standards have ruined the universities. Ruined universities, in turn, have no way of producing the people needed to design and run society and everything in it. It has been long assumed now that material abundance and the basic unalterable decency of people are all that's required for a good society, but that's false. You need highly qualified elites firmly in charge, and they're gone. When I want to make fun of what happened to the universities and the elites that come out of them, which is all the time, I call it The Great Dumbening.
@user-ru6mq5sc5n4 жыл бұрын
I totally respect her honesty. Today people will and do lie directly to your face. That is much more sad!!!
@jackwillis6804 жыл бұрын
@@user-ru6mq5sc5n that’s true, at least she’s humble enough to admire she doesn’t know what she wants.
@willguggn24 жыл бұрын
… and up to that point they shouldn't be bothered with any real world problems. They wanted to raise complacent sheep. :D
@SoleSolSoul2 жыл бұрын
You may go to dances but you don’t get to dance, you don’t help plan them.. wow. It’s stunning. Like, stuns me. “Everyone is the same, has the same ideas.. everybody comes out like that..”
@sgtjohnson493 жыл бұрын
"The wild ones, the weird ones, the intellectuals" And that, folks, says it all.
@liitutereuiui46873 жыл бұрын
@Green Tangerine It would explain why everything's gone to shit if intellectuals are marginalized
@phantomlover14673 жыл бұрын
If I lived back then, that would be MY crowd
@bigdavey88633 жыл бұрын
That was the group that had and made the best things for sure. All the creativity they had the supposed superiors uncomfortable.
@Nightbird19143 жыл бұрын
@@phantomlover1467 it was my crowd.
@TwinSister19573 жыл бұрын
What about the Stoners ?
@ctrlaltshift4 жыл бұрын
As someone who just finished highschool, I find this fascinating. There's so many things I can make parallels to in my highschool experience when I watch this. I'll say this: the main thing that caught my attention was the academic stress these students talked about. I guarantee you that the majority of teenagers nowadays feel the same as the students in this documentary did. Teens are still stressed about doing well in school because they still think their education will directly impact their future happiness and success. As a teenager the adult world is so foreign and unknown to you that the only control you can have on it is your current education. Teens hate school, but they put up with it because it's the only control they have on their future. Thanks for the great videos David!
@Eiramilah4 жыл бұрын
It was the same in the 90's
@karaa75954 жыл бұрын
The school system does that on purpose - makes the adult world foreign to you and here you are, getting thrown out into the adult world. Whereas homeschooled kids are familiarized with the adult world because their parents understand they are raising adults, not kids.
@staypositive43584 жыл бұрын
You nailed it! I'm a full generation behind you and let me tell you: nothing changes! Realizing that now will serve you well. People were just as clueless and brainwashed as they are today. Nobody knows everything. Follow your dreams to the fullest and ignore the naysayers. You'll be much happier this way.
@ctrlaltshift4 жыл бұрын
@@staypositive4358 Will do! Thank you!
@jakevote89784 жыл бұрын
I’m a 20 year old and I went to trade school for precision machining while In high school. That shop class got me certified by the time I graduated high school and I make $80k a year with no debt. I run the same machines they ran in that shop class. Where’s my interview? When they look back on this generation I want you to know I’m not like these other people.
@robd.1534 жыл бұрын
Put away 15% of what you earn into 401K or Roth... stay out of debt. You will retire a multi-millionaire.
@jcrva46334 жыл бұрын
Jake Vote Dude! You’re in a great position to be financially independent or retired by 40 if not sooner. Time is your greatest asset, don’t wait til the last 1/3 of your life to spend it doing what you want with those you love (ie retirement at 64). I hope you read up on something called the FI/RE movement.
@robroux50594 жыл бұрын
@@robd.153 But hes so replaceable. He will be replaced by Outsourcing or Manufacturing improvements (aka Robotics) . Enjoy that $80K a year, he probably has 5 years to save up before $80K a year becomes like $30K a year when the market gets overflooded by Indian and Chinese kids reading his comment that have plans to immigrate here.
@Katie-t1b4 жыл бұрын
Good for you!!
@ericwanderweg85254 жыл бұрын
Good to hear Jake Vote. I took a similar path. Trade school, machining, completed an apprenticeship, etc. Except I’m in my mid 30s now. I can remember vividly my 8th grade guidance counselor telling me I was too smart for trade school and I should go to college. She actually got frustrated that she couldn’t sway me in the direction she wanted me to go. I’m glad I had the insight at 14 to know better, at least to know that I wanted to work with my hands and my brain. Long story short, after 20 years in the trade I’m still paid by the hour making well over 6 figures and supporting a wife, 2 sons and 2 stepdaughters. Not bad for someone who didn’t go to college. I think the biggest thing is simply getting educated about how to manage money. Investing, saving, staying away from credit cards, and learning from successful people.
@JaneRathbun2 жыл бұрын
Thank you for this excellent documentary. I was 16 in 1966 in Maine, graduating in 1967. There were so many life changes from 1966 - 1971 when I graduated from university. This documentary brought back many memories.
@5roundsrapid2634 жыл бұрын
My parents were “boomers”, but they grew up poor. Their parents were even poorer in the Depression. They never rebelled because they knew how good they had it.
@kevinruiz9034 жыл бұрын
They grew up good but they had it good? Not trying to argue, jus trying to understand better
@barnabyjjones23484 жыл бұрын
@@kevinruiz903 no they didnt rebel because if they did they would become more poorer than they were before
@FernandoTorrera4 жыл бұрын
What do you define as rebel, because the white college kids who marched with mlk were also rebelling. Taking drugs and being homeless isn’t rebelling. Questioning the laws and status quo is.
@5roundsrapid2634 жыл бұрын
@@barnabyjjones2348 They definitely had their own point of view. They didn’t always agree with the establishment, or the “rebellious” Boomers.
@barnabyjjones23484 жыл бұрын
@@5roundsrapid263 ah ok i was just saying what i thought it mean
@saltysouthernmomma93544 жыл бұрын
My Dad graduated high school in 1968, my Momma in 1970. Both were rebellious. Looking back, I wish they wouldn't have been. They both ended up making questionable decisions in raising me & by the time I was 16, they were both remarried to other people. Momma has passed & Dad won't have anything to do with me or his only granddaughter & only great grandson. His rich wife won't let him. So Dad is a narcissist and married an even bigger narcissist. My Grandfather's generation (WW2 generation) was the greatest generation. Then they spoiled my parents generation I think. Thanks for this video!
@nicolaslatorre8104 жыл бұрын
This is gold .
@heathstjohn67754 жыл бұрын
Thanks for that honest, insightful appraisal. God bless you all.
@pagamenews4 жыл бұрын
My friend, you really hit a home run with your comment here. I know others like you (who are a bit younger than me). They don't have a lot of good things to say about their mothers and fathers and their child raising skills. But, they heap praise upon their grandparents that showed that they really cared about their grandchildren. There is one young man that is close to age 40 now, so he was born in 1980. Every time I talk to him about his youth, he never mentions his baby boomer father; but he always talks about his grandfather in glowing terms.
@prittyugly864 жыл бұрын
I was raised by a mom narc.... your dad was probably co dependent and mom was head narc. For me yes... my great grandma told my dad she was always telling my grandma to put my mom down when she was a baby. My great grandma said my grandma never let my mother cry as a baby and never put her down, she was always holding her. fast forward 30 plus years later my mom knows how to manipulate everybody in the family without saying a word. Oh I wonder where she learned that from? Infancy.
@dixonpinfold25824 жыл бұрын
Excellent points. Rebellion, sometimes a healthy response to mistreatment, is commonly, however, a result of being indulged. This makes it a narcissistic power-grab which continues until it his a wall of resistance (other people won't stand for it) which sometimes never comes. Parents who think they'll make their children happy for life by giving them a childhood full of gratified desires are well-meaning but stupid. It always backfires.
@raedog683 жыл бұрын
My mother was 16 in 1966!! This is too cool. She was more like these teens. She didn’t get radical till her 50’s lol.
@resonantdave3 жыл бұрын
Never too late.
@camnelson13 жыл бұрын
My grandma was 16 in 1966 too
@ZT_Performance3 жыл бұрын
@@camnelson1 Damn my parents were born in 1959 1960 lol Grandma in 1934
@yorkshire_tea_innit80973 жыл бұрын
So what you mean is, she confirmed here whole life. Considering ofcourse that 60's rebel is the new norm, and 60's normal is the new rebel.
@22z833 жыл бұрын
Too cool? this is too fucking lame
@wealthaddict8800Ай бұрын
I've never been to Webster but I'm from Southwest MO. I was born in the late 90s but the 60s rock is one of my favorite genre of music. It's really cool having preserved these documentaries that captures the lives of people in the mid 60s. It's crazy to imagine how much the styles started to change from the more formal styles from the early 60s to the more informal but still cool styles as potrayed in the Hippie movement. Even some of the music that came out sounded ahead of its time.
@IsabellaDemarko4 жыл бұрын
thank you for this very valuable content! it is so important to share :)
@amhey14 жыл бұрын
It would be really fun to put together a movie of " Where are they now?". If each sent in a 30 second selfie it would make an interesting documentary.
@raam7264 жыл бұрын
Really, Izzy??? Is that all you have to say????😒
@onlyonewaymon20604 жыл бұрын
Yes Isabella, I concur w super high Doug's suspicion of more insight you ,yourself may have to share about the depth of this documentary. It's meanings being multi-level deep as opposed to your short and sweet, albeit somewhat shallow comment.☺️😐
@tenko55414 жыл бұрын
Your work has no equal. Very fascinating.
@michaelmcneely91694 жыл бұрын
The cop saw through Webster Groves because his salary probably didn't pay enough for him to live there. His perspective was that of an outsider from the real world.
@dafunkmonster4 жыл бұрын
Or he simply had a lot of run-ins with these teenagers when they ran afoul of the law.
@donnabaardsen53724 жыл бұрын
Excellent point, Michael McNeely.
@mmiller2124 жыл бұрын
The real world...
@2bobaf3 жыл бұрын
@@howardfortyfive9676 Not sure, I believe you. No person who has worked in the real world uses nincompoops. Sounds more like you lived in Websters Grove.
@crankyoldperson68713 жыл бұрын
@@2bobaf I hate living in the real world. It’s not much fun, so I often use silly words or phrases to lighten things up a bit. I learned the word nincompoop from watching reruns of lost in space as child in the 70’s. Nincompoop sounds so haughty and grandiose. Wonderful, silly and hilarious.
@cheezestixx2 жыл бұрын
Another brilliant documentary my friend! 🙌 We should all make damn sure none of our daughter's ever, EVER, have to tolerate the sexist stereotypes of our past!
@thechelseapeck3 жыл бұрын
My mom was the quiet mathematician and farm girl, and my dad was the rebellious and charming track star. To this day I don’t know what brought them together.