The ABC news promo is a stunning work of graphic art/animation and compresses nearly an entire cultural sensibility into a few dynamic seconds...how little things seem to have changed.
Jesus, Fred. Were we ever that young? I suppose every generation will ask the same question at some point, but such bittersweet memories. I don't believe we could ever adequately thank you enough. Two simple words, but they can convey so much. Thank you, Fred.
Man....wow! The memories, seemed like a lifetime ago. Life for me was innocent I guess ignorance wss bliss. To quote the phrase if I knew then what I know now....of course being a child in the single digits during the 1970s Saturday morning cartoons, Schwinn muscle bikes, no computers or cell phones. Playing outside then watching TV, we thought we had hit the big time when we got a 19 inch color Quasar wow! Going out to eat was going to Burger Chef, McDonald's, Burger King, and it happen 1 to 2 times a month and I got to drink a Coke a cola and was a real treat! I played with toys and used my imagination no battery where the toy can play by itself today. What a great time and then becoming a teen in the 1980s. The radio and music was the soundtrack of my life always growing up and memories being made. Sadly time marches on and the only constant that there is changes every day.......
I turned 10 years old in 1969 and remember most of these features. Just turned 60 years old and it still seems like yesterday. Thanks for making me feeling young!
A tiny percentage of draft age men ever went to Canada. The numbers are a little hazy but somewhere between 15,000 and 50,000 went to Canada from 1962 to 1975 to escape the draft. That's compared to about 650,000 who answered the call and did their time.
@@brianarbenz7206 My dad's draft number was called up and he reported to the board, except since his dad died when he was just fifteen years old and he was the only son in his family he wasn't called up. He'd have served, though, just like all of his friends did. My parents knew a lot of Vietnam veterans, and some who didn't make it home.
Holy crap, that ABC News bit is AMAZING! Gripping, MTV-fast edits and then-cutting-edge graphics and music that never fails to get me dancing in my seat -- I hope they gave whomever did that promo a HUUUUUGE raise! Oh, and I also used to have that "ABC Movie of the Week" theme song as my ringtone! So timeless! Anyway, my parents were already married and had purchased their first home in 1969 so they were definitely out of the "youth culture", but still young enough to really enjoy life, plus since I wasn't to come along for another ten years I'm sure they had plenty of time to watch a lot of these TV shows and commercials, and unless they were idiots they were DEFINITELY watching that Apollo 11 moon landing! I wish I could ask them but they've been gone for a number of years already. Anyway, thanks so much for allowing me a peek into a world that existed before I was born! I really appreciate it.
Timely! I remember sitting on the floor in front of the TV watching the moon landing, nervous because I thought the lunar surface might not be solid. The ubiquitous voice of William Schallert; The Mothers-In-Law; network movies every night of the week; SO much good stuff! As always THANK YOU FOR POSTING, it means a lot to us.
1969 - I was 5 but I do remember Apollo 11 vividly. I still have the Apollo 11 coin to this day. It was a wonderful year full of magic and fun, except for the Draft Lottery :-( I cannot imagine what those young men and their families went through. Fred, I imagine you were too young for the draft but I'm sure you had friends who had older brothers who were sent to war. Some never came back and those that did weren't the same anymore ....
Along with Burt Bacharach's ABC movie of the week theme, I liked the CBS late movie intro music. CBS must have begun using it at least as early as 1966. I found it hauntingly beautiful and I used to hum it to myself at night layin' in bed waiting to become drowsy. Later, I played it by ear on the piano---I had begun taking lessons in the first grade. This is an especially enjoyable vid for me, Fred. Thanx!
i remember that Saturday of Apollo 11 landing on the moon..i was 11 and my younger brothers and i were playing running thru the house and Mom told us to stop and watch for it was history in the making...it was too....thank you Mother, for i remember you & that day :)
Trix is a gateway drug, silly rabbit! It leads to indolence, disrespect for traditional values, and sex on the golf course while I'm playing the back nine. The ball goes in the wrong hole!
I saw all of the Mercury, Gemini and Apollo missions live on TV with my dad when we weren't at school or work, sometimes my mom and youngest sister watched with us
The only time I ever skipped school (forgive me, Mom!) was to watch the Skylab launch in 1973. I skipped a swimming class. Let's face it, Skylab's launch was more educational than splashing in water.
Wow, watching the soft drink commercials, I had forgotten all about the paper straws. Land of the Giants was and still is a favorite. Irwin Allen was a big part of a kids television watching, then; can't imagine a childhood without him. Love Amer. Style, ABC Movie of the week; we didn't know it then, but something so routine as watching T.V. could be an endearing memory in our futures. Another tip of the hat to you Fred. You make the past feel better, thank you.
Wow Fred. What a find! Was that the first episode of Love American Style? The original singers of the theme (The Cowsills) were replaced in season 2 w The Fred Fox SIngers. Such prestine condition. Stewart Margolin ( Angel from The Rockford Files at the start of the clip). His brother Arnold was essentially the program creator.
With a totally unrecognizable Richard Deacon, the beautiful Phyllis Diller and Marjorie Lord (Danny Thomas' TV wife), looking very much like Rosemary Clooney.
Nice. I actually saw Apollo 16 lift off in 1972. Only six rockets have carried men to the moon's surface and I was privileged to see one of them. It won't happen again, not with a rocket as big as the Saturn 5.
Dunno about you guys , but soda ( even Gatorade )was so much better in a glass bottle than crummy plastic that don't last long before going bad . Also you could get a few cents in returning the bottles for recycling though back in the 60's a few cents bought something . Also it seems that ABC network ruled in 69' with its TV shows and movies .
Letty --- Not only that it kept the world cleaner without all the plastic bottle's, I stay away from all plastic that is not recyclable, if possible. And the water I drink comes from filtered water.
That Pepsi jingle: Sung by Barry Manilow, Ron Dante, Toni Wine, Melissa Manchester and Valerie Simpson (or a variation thereof, no doubt..) Thank you for posting this, it revived a long forgotten memory of why I insisted on going barefoot most of the time at age 4 (Mountain Dew) and why I wanted to be a jingle singer when I grew up (I’m a vocal coach and choir leader instead)...
July 21st 1969. I was 19 yrs old. I started at a Paper Mill Aug 27 1969. Big News Between the Moon Landing. August 8th 1969 A Tornado touchdown around 5:00 pm. 9 miles above Cincinnati Ohio. The south end of the town we lived in. Didn't Know a thing about it until the 6:00 oclock news.
1969 I was 10 but remember most of this. My dad controlled what we watched and not too much TV ,he preferred we went to the library to read and check out books.
As sister's and I grew up in Denver Colorado we often saw "Don't litter" as Chief of a tribe face camera a tear roll down his face. As Smokey the Bear encourage citizens put out camp fires to prevent Forest fire.
Feed I have no ideal on how you do what you do or how you locate or compile it but I can believe there is a lot of work involved in it so just let me say thank you fred
Many of the TV ads from 1969 included cigarettes, sugary dye-filled Pepsi soft drink, ham burgers, toxic insect spray, and sugary Gatorade. Explains why older people looked so sick back then. The most sensible and useful ad was the anti-Marijuana PSA.
Robert Klein used to say as part of his stand up act, Armstrong should of yelled out “Coca Cola” when he first set foot on the moon, because he would be set for life.
Very nice video. Great scrapbook and editing job. Super professional job and rare pieces. Thanks! [Maybe you can find the quick clip of Land of the Giants with the huge kitten batting someone with its paw.] Great PSA at 12:06.
👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻 I remember rotary phones and vcrs that ejected on the top of the machine. I remember 8-track tapes and big old microwaves. I remember when it was safe to play outside until dark and to be carefree. Oh yes, I remember......
I was 5. I remember watching the moon landing during dinner, and my parents getting me out of bed to watch Neil Armstrong's moon walk. I was seriously unimpressed, as I was a regular viewer of The Jetsons and found them way more impressive.
Great memory! I was 10, but I know what you mean. Consider Star Trek with Gangsters, a soup kitchen, the Indian princess Mirimani, Spock falling in love with Mariette Hartley, and of course Roman Empire TV, and real space travel seems so dull!
I was 5 as well and thought it must be a big deal because we had a bunch of people at our house watching our 25 inch color TV and my mother bracing a Polaroid land model camera taking pictures of the landing.
I was 9 when the astronauts walked onto the moon’s surface, and I clearly remember the huge family gathering in the TV room to watch-this was history!!!
In 1969 i was five years old My brothers were teenagers during that era all i did was wait for HR Pufnstuf then I remember seeing all this stuff in my tv In Erie Road crystal beach Ontario canada seeing all this makes me feel five years old again
This was my Whole Childhood Summed Up to about 3 years old , , Brings back Memories , Such Susceptible times , a Lot of Indoctrination , I Loved being in those Day's though :) QC
The Archie comics was very popular with preteens (and some teenagers) in the Black-community back then. Then the popularity quickly died after the cartoon aired. People were so disappointed with The Archie Show, later followed by Everything's Archie, that even the comic-book was kicked to the curb. The episode of "Poochie The Dog" on The Simpsons always reminded me of the time my older step-brother's friends (all junior high-schoolers at the time, they call it "middle-school" now) and a couple of my friends (we were still in grade-school) were all gathered at our house to anxiously watch the very first episode of Archie. When it was over, there was mostly silence while everybody looked at each other then a couple of guys just came straight out and said it, "hey man, that was corny". Comparing what we saw on TV to the comic we liked so much, we all agreed, shaking our heads in disappointment. Like I said, that Simpsons episode always reminded me of the Saturday morning when that cartoon show killed the popularity of anything Archie in the hood.
I remember I used to love "The Archies" back then and I was always buying there records. LOL I remember I used to purposely insist to my brother that they were real and he used to get really mad at me!! ROFL
I used to watch The Archies when I was six years old in August of 1969. It was also.my first time in school. I went to Kindergarten half days the year before but firdt grade was something special. I will never forget my first day of school, my mom wpke me up and started singing School Days.
I made my parents buy the breakfast cereal that had that "Sugar Sugar" song on it pressed into the cardboard on the back of the box! (45 RPM vinyl record, you had to cut it out obviously) Can't remember what brand of cereal it was though.
I have a question. What did they use back in the day to make those colorful ABC station IDs? Was it an early computer? Because CBS and NBC had very similar styles, colorful graphics on a black background.
@@FredFlix You're probably right, but it sure looks similar to CGI. BTW, I want to thank you for all the great videos it is such a comfort to remember how the world once was. Thank you Fred!
The ABC news promo is a stunning work of graphic art/animation and compresses nearly an entire cultural sensibility into a few dynamic seconds...how little things seem to have changed.
You can't pay for Cronkite's reaction to moon landing, priceless.
I wouldn't pay 10 cents.
9:32 11:59
I just want to jump into the screen and be back in 1969.
Jesus, Fred. Were we ever that young? I suppose every generation will ask the same question at some point, but such bittersweet memories. I don't believe we could ever adequately thank you enough. Two simple words, but they can convey so much. Thank you, Fred.
1969, I was 14 yrs old. The song by the Archie's "Sugar Sugar" was playing at my girlfriend's house when I kissed her.....my 1st REAL kiss......Wow💑✌
👍😊
Joan Crawford appeared in the "Mountain Dew" ad because it was marketed by Pepsi-Cola {still is}- and she was on their board of directors at the time.
That was actually a plot point in 'Mommie Dearest'.
@@shoresean1237 Quite true and I admired her spirit when she told them off!
"Don't f*** with me, fellas!" And "No more wire hangers!" If I live to be 100, I'll always remember those lines.
But her foot fetish was the thing no one talked about...
She was married to Arthur Steele who was the president of Pepsi at the time.
Second Chance was a 1972 movie of the week.
Good catch, I was about to post the same comment.
Man....wow! The memories, seemed like a lifetime ago. Life for me was innocent I guess ignorance wss bliss. To quote the phrase if I knew then what I know now....of course being a child in the single digits during the 1970s Saturday morning cartoons, Schwinn muscle bikes, no computers or cell phones. Playing outside then watching TV, we thought we had hit the big time when we got a 19 inch color Quasar wow! Going out to eat was going to Burger Chef, McDonald's, Burger King, and it happen 1 to 2 times a month and I got to drink a Coke a cola and was a real treat! I played with toys and used my imagination no battery where the toy can play by itself today. What a great time and then becoming a teen in the 1980s. The radio and music was the soundtrack of my life always growing up and memories being made. Sadly time marches on and the only constant that there is changes every day.......
I made it put of Nam alive and was finishing up my Army tour , on border guard , in West Germany.
Thank you and glad you got back .
Hey! I don't remember seeing "It was a Short Summer Charlie Brown!"
I turned 10 years old in 1969 and remember most of these features.
Just turned 60 years old and it still seems like yesterday. Thanks for making me feeling young!
God bless & keep.
Memories to go back & be there all over again.
100 more videos? I'm retired , your Station is one of my new interests and I have nothing but time. Bring em on Brother.
1969-when the military draft was televised and the NFL/AFL Draft wasn't.
Any young man of the right age was watching that night, with a full tank of gas in the car and the Canadian motel reservations made!
All but too true. Who wants to fight a war against people who never did a damn to us?
A tiny percentage of draft age men ever went to Canada. The numbers are a little hazy but somewhere between 15,000 and 50,000 went to Canada from 1962 to 1975 to escape the draft. That's compared to about 650,000 who answered the call and did their time.
@@brianarbenz7206 My dad's draft number was called up and he reported to the board, except since his dad died when he was just fifteen years old and he was the only son in his family he wasn't called up. He'd have served, though, just like all of his friends did. My parents knew a lot of Vietnam veterans, and some who didn't make it home.
@@ladyi7609 My Dad was drafted to and he Joined the Air Force. Thank you for your Dad's service and my Dad served in Vietnam as well.
Thank you fredflix. I'm 61 years old and I remember all of what you show in these.to quote a great man thanks for the memories.
You're welcome, James.
I sure would love to see It Was A Short Summer Charlie Brown. I love watching The Peanuts specials.
You're genius. I could watch and watch these. You really capture the essence of the times. Love them all!
I appreciate that, Susan.
Holy crap, that ABC News bit is AMAZING! Gripping, MTV-fast edits and then-cutting-edge graphics and music that never fails to get me dancing in my seat -- I hope they gave whomever did that promo a HUUUUUGE raise! Oh, and I also used to have that "ABC Movie of the Week" theme song as my ringtone! So timeless! Anyway, my parents were already married and had purchased their first home in 1969 so they were definitely out of the "youth culture", but still young enough to really enjoy life, plus since I wasn't to come along for another ten years I'm sure they had plenty of time to watch a lot of these TV shows and commercials, and unless they were idiots they were DEFINITELY watching that Apollo 11 moon landing! I wish I could ask them but they've been gone for a number of years already. Anyway, thanks so much for allowing me a peek into a world that existed before I was born! I really appreciate it.
Amazing how fast the lyrics and tag lines from those Pepsi and Twix ads in particular came back to memory from other 50 years ago.
The ABC news promo was top notch.
It was horrible. 1969 was a terrible year and the full fledged converging of society was already in full swing.
Timely! I remember sitting on the floor in front of the TV watching the moon landing, nervous because I thought the lunar surface might not be solid.
The ubiquitous voice of William Schallert; The Mothers-In-Law; network movies every night of the week; SO much good stuff!
As always THANK YOU FOR POSTING, it means a lot to us.
Three VW Beetles in the Love American Style opening skit.
Thanks for all these great promos.i watched the Apollo 11 landing with great interest as my father worked on the space program
That's very cool, Mark.
My God, I was 8 at the time of the ABC news prom and still remember it, left a big impression on me a dynamic decade indeed!
good evening from ABC NEWS ...YEAH BABY YEAH ! ,,,,=^oo^=,,,,
1969 - I was 5 but I do remember Apollo 11 vividly. I still have the Apollo 11 coin to this day. It was a wonderful year full of magic and fun, except for the Draft Lottery :-( I cannot imagine what those young men and their families went through. Fred, I imagine you were too young for the draft but I'm sure you had friends who had older brothers who were sent to war. Some never came back and those that did weren't the same anymore ....
Oh my God! I can remember 50 years ago! I was 5 years old sponging up everything around me. 🐛👨👩👧👦 🐵🐢🌑🌞📖🎵🎶
Along with Burt Bacharach's ABC movie of the week theme, I liked the CBS late movie intro music. CBS must have begun using it at least as early as 1966. I found it hauntingly beautiful and I used to hum it to myself at night layin' in bed waiting to become drowsy. Later, I played it by ear on the piano---I had begun taking lessons in the first grade. This is an especially enjoyable vid for me, Fred. Thanx!
i remember that Saturday of Apollo 11 landing on the moon..i was 11 and my younger brothers and i were playing running thru the house and Mom told us to stop and watch for it was history in the making...it was too....thank you Mother, for i remember you & that day :)
For God's sake, let the Rabbit have Trix!
Or get him into a Trix rehab center!
Trix are for kids
Believe this or not, the Rabbit had Trix twice and one was this commercial!
Notice it was right after the PSA for "hula-hoop of the jet generation", "the noxious weed" Marijuana? Silly rabbit has the severe munchies.
Trix is a gateway drug, silly rabbit! It leads to indolence, disrespect for traditional values, and sex on the golf course while I'm playing the back nine. The ball goes in the wrong hole!
I saw all of the Mercury, Gemini and Apollo missions live on TV with my dad when we weren't at school or work, sometimes my mom and youngest sister watched with us
The only time I ever skipped school (forgive me, Mom!) was to watch the Skylab launch in 1973. I skipped a swimming class. Let's face it, Skylab's launch was more educational than splashing in water.
Wow, watching the soft drink commercials, I had forgotten all about the paper straws. Land of the Giants was and still is a favorite. Irwin Allen was a big part of a kids television watching, then; can't imagine a childhood without him. Love Amer. Style, ABC Movie of the week; we didn't know it then, but something so routine as watching T.V. could be an endearing memory in our futures. Another tip of the hat to you Fred. You make the past feel better, thank you.
Dude, I seriously just listened to my Archies greatest hits yesterday.
Love the Burt Bacharach song "Nikki" (written for his daughter) for ABC's "Movie of the Week". Great song!
It was usually the best part of the movie, too.
When journalism was objective and trusted. 9 years old. I'm so glad I was born in that decade.
I thank you for this channel. It;s a real blast to the past.
Loved the Pepsi commercial gingle when I was a kid.... Thanks for the memory!!
You're welcome, ElizBeth.
Wow Fred. What a find! Was that the first episode of Love American Style? The original singers of the theme (The Cowsills) were replaced in season 2 w The Fred Fox SIngers. Such prestine condition. Stewart Margolin ( Angel from The Rockford Files at the start of the clip). His brother Arnold was essentially the program creator.
I wondered about the name shared. Thanks for that info!
With a totally unrecognizable Richard Deacon, the beautiful Phyllis Diller and Marjorie Lord (Danny Thomas' TV wife), looking very much like Rosemary Clooney.
recorded the moon landing on cassette...listened to it in school
Nice. I actually saw Apollo 16 lift off in 1972. Only six rockets have carried men to the moon's surface and I was privileged to see one of them. It won't happen again, not with a rocket as big as the Saturn 5.
Great content fred. Keep the memories coming, we need it right now.
I was only three, but the Pepsi (especially that jingle), Mountain Dew and Trix commercials all seem familiar to me from a very young age.
Back when life was simpler and the world seemed better in so many ways especially compared to 2021.
Thank you for this fantastic video. I was 8 years old when a lot of this went on.
Dunno about you guys , but soda ( even Gatorade )was so much better in a glass bottle than crummy plastic that don't last long before going bad . Also you could get a few cents in returning the bottles for recycling though back in the 60's a few cents bought something . Also it seems that ABC network ruled in 69' with its TV shows and movies .
Dan Reese , yes soda was better, and my mother used to send us kids to the store lugging those bottles to get the deposits back. Good times!
Letty --- Not only that it kept the world cleaner without all the plastic bottle's, I stay away from all plastic that is not recyclable, if possible. And the water I drink comes from filtered water.
Plastic makes drinks taste weird. I much prefer glass.
Same with milk. Stays colder and tastes better from a glass bottle. You I treat myself to the expensive milk since I don't drink very much.
My parents always returned the glass bottles to the grocery store for a refund or was it a return?
Wow Fred, another classic gem.❤❤❤❤
Thanks again, 5arge.
Turned 11 that summer. Thank you for letting me be a kid again!
That Pepsi jingle: Sung by Barry Manilow, Ron Dante, Toni Wine, Melissa Manchester and Valerie Simpson (or a variation thereof, no doubt..) Thank you for posting this, it revived a long forgotten memory of why I insisted on going barefoot most of the time at age 4 (Mountain Dew) and why I wanted to be a jingle singer when I grew up (I’m a vocal coach and choir leader instead)...
July 21st 1969. I was 19 yrs old. I started at a Paper Mill Aug 27 1969. Big News Between the Moon Landing. August 8th 1969 A Tornado touchdown around 5:00 pm. 9 miles above Cincinnati Ohio. The south end of the town we lived in. Didn't Know a thing about it until the 6:00 oclock news.
The one that hit the festival at St. Gertrude's Catholic church.
This is like a time capsule, awesome! Thanks!
1969 I was 10 but remember most of this. My dad controlled what we watched and not too much TV ,he preferred we went to the library to read and check out books.
Great Dad. On top of Learning. Great.
Fred-Great retrospective!-Keep them coming.
THANK YOU! 🙏❤️👍👏👏
This was very heart-warming to watch! I wasn’t even 10 years old yet.
You're welcome, J/K.
thanks, I remember most of this. Seeing the preview for the movie of the week I actually remember seeing that.
As sister's and I grew up in Denver Colorado we often saw "Don't litter" as Chief of a tribe face camera a tear roll down his face.
As Smokey the Bear encourage citizens put out camp fires to prevent Forest fire.
Feed I have no ideal on how you do what you do or how you locate or compile it but I can believe there is a lot of work involved in it so just let me say thank you fred
I appreciate that, Michael.
I was born in October of 1968 so probably my crib? I love your videos!
This is so awesome! The year of my birth, love this!! thank you for sharing 😊
You're welcome, Cari.
Many of the TV ads from 1969 included cigarettes, sugary dye-filled Pepsi soft drink, ham burgers, toxic insect spray, and sugary Gatorade. Explains why older people looked so sick back then. The most sensible and useful ad was the anti-Marijuana PSA.
Thank you, Fred!!
a great collection
I got in trouble for eating a whole box of Space Food Sticks at once. I believe it was the peanut butter ones.
Robert Klein used to say as part of his stand up act, Armstrong should of yelled out “Coca Cola” when he first set foot on the moon, because he would be set for life.
Houston... this is tranquility Bay....the eagle has landed. My dad, mom, and my brothers we watched all of this.
Very nice video. Great scrapbook and editing job. Super professional job and rare pieces. Thanks!
[Maybe you can find the quick clip of Land of the Giants with the huge kitten batting someone with its paw.]
Great PSA at 12:06.
Just saw this. Thanks, r (for short). I think the LOTG kitten clip is part of the season two theme. You can probably just search for it.
👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻
I remember rotary phones and vcrs that ejected on the top of the machine. I remember 8-track tapes and big old microwaves. I remember when it was safe to play outside until dark and to be carefree. Oh yes, I remember......
I was 5. I remember watching the moon landing during dinner, and my parents getting me out of bed to watch Neil Armstrong's moon walk. I was seriously unimpressed, as I was a regular viewer of The Jetsons and found them way more impressive.
Great memory! I was 10, but I know what you mean. Consider Star Trek with Gangsters, a soup kitchen, the Indian princess Mirimani, Spock falling in love with Mariette Hartley, and of course Roman Empire TV, and real space travel seems so dull!
BlueBuddha , I was 5 years old too, and I remember all of this stuff especially the moon landing. Good times!
I was 5 as well and thought it must be a big deal because we had a bunch of people at our house watching our 25 inch color TV and my mother bracing a Polaroid land model camera taking pictures of the landing.
I was 9 when the astronauts walked onto the moon’s surface, and I clearly remember the huge family gathering in the TV room to watch-this was history!!!
BlueBuddha that’s because you subconsciously knew they weren’t landing on the moon
thanx for posting these, I was born in 1957 and love nostalgia so your videos bring back a flood of great memories.
You're welcome. I see this videos as a public service.
Fred, you are so right! couldn't have said it better myself!
And a welcomed service it is!
thanks.. love these posts
You're welcome, Dan.
In 1969 i was five years old
My brothers were teenagers during that era all i did was wait for HR
Pufnstuf then I remember seeing all this stuff in my tv
In Erie Road crystal beach Ontario canada seeing all this makes me feel five years old again
Ike Godsey (Joe Conley) from the Waltons at 1:50.
...and Avery Schreiber on the billboard at 2:17
Jon H: I THOUGHT that looked like Avery Schreiber! He was always in the Doritos commercials in the early '70s.
Good Spotting!
hey Fred, that was greatest ! like Tony the tiger would say.
Famous guest stars notwithstanding, Stuart Margolin and Barbara Minkus were the faces of Love American Style.
That ABC news intro was awesome! (I say that as a history buff.)
So true. History meant something.
Had forgotten about that Intro,
Meanwhile, Roman Gabriel held the record for most fumbles by a QB!
Jimi Jamm but damn he was famous
There was a Tang commercial from 1970 that I have not seen since, someone has the audio only posted here and it's the Archies singing.
Great stuff again mate
Thanks again, Mick.
Hey I hear that Rick Dalton, aka Jake Cahill from Bounty Law, was in that episode of FBI. 5:55 😉
This was my Whole Childhood Summed Up to about 3 years old , , Brings back Memories , Such Susceptible times , a Lot of Indoctrination , I Loved being in those Day's though :) QC
How could I forgot about the draft lottery my parents tensed every time it came on because of my 2 oldest brother
The Archie comics was very popular with preteens (and some teenagers) in the Black-community back then. Then the popularity quickly died after the cartoon aired. People were so disappointed with The Archie Show, later followed by Everything's Archie, that even the comic-book was kicked to the curb. The episode of "Poochie The Dog" on The Simpsons always reminded me of the time my older step-brother's friends (all junior high-schoolers at the time, they call it "middle-school" now) and a couple of my friends (we were still in grade-school) were all gathered at our house to anxiously watch the very first episode of Archie. When it was over, there was mostly silence while everybody looked at each other then a couple of guys just came straight out and said it, "hey man, that was corny". Comparing what we saw on TV to the comic we liked so much, we all agreed, shaking our heads in disappointment. Like I said, that Simpsons episode always reminded me of the Saturday morning when that cartoon show killed the popularity of anything Archie in the hood.
The voice over for the Trix commercial was Tom Bosley, aka Mr. "C" from "Happy Days".
I remember I used to love "The Archies" back then and I was always buying there records. LOL I remember I used to purposely insist to my brother that they were real and he used to get really mad at me!! ROFL
star trek You mean they weren't real? WTF?
itiswhatitaint anditaintwhatitis nope... look up Ron Dante (Barry Manilow's co-producer 1973-80) and Toni Wine.
I used to watch The Archies when I was six years old in August of 1969. It was also.my first time in school. I went to Kindergarten half days the year before but firdt grade was something special. I will never forget my first day of school, my mom wpke me up and started singing School Days.
I made my parents buy the breakfast cereal that had that "Sugar Sugar" song on it pressed into the cardboard on the back of the box! (45 RPM vinyl record, you had to cut it out obviously) Can't remember what brand of cereal it was though.
Me too, I also collected the comic books. - To answer the age-old question: Veronica. Nothing against Betty - I just thought Veronica was hot, LOL.
I still LOVE Mountain Dew!
1969 was 16 years old and in high school
Bet Vietnam made you nervous as hell.
Love the Sir Galahad bit.👍
Uncle Walter.
Love the f.b.i.and miss watching movie of the week some how movie being made available all the time don't feel the same
The ABC news spot was intense..kinda gave me a panic attack!
that is only time I saw Richard Deacon with hair!
That blew me away!
50 yrs ago ? --- watching the Archies !
I have a question. What did they use back in the day to make those colorful ABC station IDs? Was it an early computer? Because CBS and NBC had very similar styles, colorful graphics on a black background.
They didn't use computers. It was art and animation.
@@FredFlix You're probably right, but it sure looks similar to CGI.
BTW, I want to thank you for all the great videos it is such a comfort to remember how the world once was. Thank you Fred!
@@AiMR You're welcome, Eric.
I remember this, I was 7.
More slam-bang ‘60s nostalgia from FF. Where do you get all that top quality color vintage video? That ABC News intro is mind-blowing.
"Noxious Weed" is a good name for a band.
Little Sally is so sweet.
The Whopper at 12:00 has a HUGE top bun! That’s a ton of bread!
My childhood....
From Draft Lottery to see who goes to Nam to NBA draft lottery to see which idiots get paid millions in less than a generation.
Watching these programs
Seven years old at this time in history... Damn....
2:18 Avery Schreiber sighting!
And that was a standout moment from Woodstock for you... when it was over?