I was not a huge party guy. So in the summers I watched him every night. Sure I went out some, but Johnny was almost like family to me. Least it seemed that way...
Fred... you're killing me! Every time I view your videos tears well in my eyes. I'm a grown man with tears streaming down my face wishing I could relive my childhood. No, it wasn't perfect... but it was better than what's considered "growing up" in this day and age. There's so much I remember so vividly... and it becomes so much more clear when viewing and listening to your videos- these are the BEST videos on Ytube (to me anyway). I do remember very well hanging out at K-Mart nearly every weekend laying on the carpet in the TV section and playing "Pong"... thee 1st video game, The people who worked in that area never bothered us- just let us play. Of course- watching Saturday morning cartoons and creature double feature, As kids we built forts, go-karts (still some photos), etc. all from scraps we found in the local junk-yard. We rode bikes with banana seats and attached playing cards to the forks with clothespins to make the wheels (spokes) sound like a motor; we'd have water balloon fights, squirt gun fights, play kick the can, kick ball, run through sprinklers in the grass, cowboys and indians (with cap guns), in the locals woods, sell lemonade for a nickel a cup on the side of the rode, go fishing on Saturday morning after digging for night crawlers the night before, buy slurpees at the local 7- eleven, drop a dime in the big water-jug hoping it would land in the little glass at the bottom (never did), hide-n-seek, draw in the road with chalk, play sand-lot "all sports" nearly everyday in the summer, go to the cinema once every 2 weeks, go to the beach (ocean), about once every 2 weeks, eat Kool-pops, popsickles, fudgesickles, creamsickles, pixie stix, drink Kool-aid, lemonade (soda-pop was a luxury), save up box tops from cereal boxes to send in for whatever toy was advertised on the back of the box, play "pitch" with baseball cards, play "hot-potato," build ramps for our bikes to jump over, climb trees, roll down grassy hills to see how dizzy we'd get, deliver newspapers (paper routes), [shovel driveways for a few bucks in the winter, snowball fights, building snowmen, sledding down hills, etc.], chase the ice-cream truck when his bell rang, go to the local ER when we got hurt and watch the nurses and Docs smoke cigarettes behind the counter, play with the dogs who ran free in the neighborhood, wait for the mailman to come and hand out candy to us kids (Imagine that- "Stanley" the mailman would park his mail truck, walk through the neighborhood and hand out candy while he delivered the mail. What a great guy he was!!), make flavored ice cubes with tooth picks and suck on them outside in the sun, buy "Wacky Packs," at 7-Eleven, have carnivals using the "Jerry Lewis Telethon Carnival Kit" and then send the whopping $25 dollars to the address marked on the kit, go swimming at the local YMCA, ride our bikes to our little league and Babe Ruth baseball games... and the list goes on. "Woolworth's" was a Christmas extravaganza! Not long after kid-dom (in early teen years), start listening to groovy and CooL music while starting at black-light, velvet posters, etc. Then when we finally traded in out bikes for driver's licenses, all those kid activities started fading... and quickly. The girls that were just "one of the boys" during years of kid-dom were seen through different eyes, all of a sudden. They looked pretty and smelled nice, wore flowers in their hair... and eeryone wore bandanas. Started going to high-school dances, trying to kiss a girl but refusing to dance, taking booze form our parents liquor cabinet... and yes- buying "Boonesfarm wine" at the local "package" store while underage (or trying to). Having a crush on the girl from "the other side of the tracks"... but never seeing her again after high school. PLaying in a Rock band hoping the girls would ask us out or come and knock on our doors... and in such a hurry to become an adult for the same reason that we wish we could relive out childhood- so life would become better or so we thought. All these thought swirl around my head when I view your videos, Fred- they truly are amazing. Thank you so much... and sorry for rambling!!
That describes my childhood to a tee, and I would do it all again in a heartbeat, being an adult truly does suck, I tell kids today enjoy it while it lasts, because before you know it its all over, it go's way too fast, although I never drank Boons wine, or smoked any weed, hated the smell.
I'm 60 and I would love to be living in Minnesota on 40 acres again doing the morning chores before waiting out front of our farm for the school bus before sun up. The coolest part was winter. Yes it was like a winter wonderland til you where in it for more then 10 minutes. Thank God for parkas
Do you have any idea what these posts mean to me? I graduated in 1972.... Your videos allow me to time travel. I was young, excited, full of good health, hopes and dreams. What did I worry about? How to keep my long curly hair straight for my date, what to wear on that date, was my dad going to tell me my mini skirt was too short (young lady... Get in there and change before he picks you up! And he better come to the door this time!!!) Would I get grounded? Pass algebra? I loved my record player, 45s, albums, and my girlfriends who knew all my secrets. How could I have known I'd lose that flat tummy that allowed me to tuck shirts into my bell bottoms? How could I know that youth is so fleeting, so special, so gone with the wind...❤✌
Everytime I hear that song my eyes well-up. That, and "We'll Sing in The Sunshine" Those days and colors are long, long, gone. On my life, things really did have a softer hue to them in the 60' and 70's. It' true. God, how I m.j iss those days. Little money, but lot's of friends and good times. The things that were taboo back then, pass as innocence by today's standards. I always had to be the first one up and out of bed to open an unlocked front door to get the cool whole milk and dozen eggs deposited in the styro-lined square tin box every 2 days. Remember the pull-off foil lids on the glass milk jugs? Then you had to somehow re-fit the foil back on the top. The eggs came in a square paper box to fit the cool-box. We were always trying to stabilize the black and white picture on TV. There was always lines running up the TV before we got our colored Zenith console TV set. I wanna' go back......
@@starjunkie2804 😂😂😂😂 I feel you !!! I wanna go back too. I was an adolescent kid during that time, but I remember it well. Now a lot of issues are politically correct and it's all about the almighty dollar.
IF I could go back and relive my teen yrs, also the 70's, I'd gladly forfeit the rest of my life now, just to have those experiences one more time...life was simpler then...
Although I was born the year of 1972 I would go back and relive my teen years as well. The world was so different then but at least we have our memories. I just wished I could “redo” those years just 1 more time. 🤔
This gives me goosebumps. So many memories. I’m younger, having graduated in 83. But I grew up in the 70’s and I’d cut off my right pinky to go back and do those days all over again. Best years of my life. And on my 18th Birthday, senior year, I bought a bottle of Boone’s Farm -Tickle Pink. Yeah, that was back when you had to be 18, not 21. So, so many memories. I have tears in my eyes. Great music by the way. American Pie is the best.
The manager at the 7-11 was a lesbian but we didn't care. She would let us kids restock the shelves and take inventory for a large ICEE. At the time, I live in Charleston Heights on "The Strip". That is what they usually called to bad parts of town right outside of Navy bases, and there were Tribulator motorcycle gangs and thugs and drunks carousing late at nights and we still didn't care. We were carefree and everyone watched out for kids back then.
Class of '82 here -- not only my pinky, but I'd throw in a cut off thumb to boot to relive my earliers years in the 70s and early 80s. They were the best of times, and I think of them often, especially now in 2020 with the meseed up world we're currently enduring.
@@FredFlix Not to mention your openness about your life and what happened in it...you remind us that, as Billy Joel said--"the good old days weren't always good"
We had an entire store dedicated to Thom McAns in the local shopping center. Just a small storefront. And the Hush Puppies shoeboxes and posters with the B&W photo of a long-eared Basset hound...
May of 72. Finishing up my junior year in high school. Lot's of partying. The guy who could never get anywhere with chicks (me), had a hot blonde girlfriend. Reefer was 20 bucks for a four finger bag. Nice mellow, Jamaican, not the crazy paranoid stuff around now. Rock music would reach a peak in 72 (IMHO) Led Zep IV had just come out. Deep Purple - Machine Head, Allman Bros - Live at the Fillmore, Jethro Tull - Thick as a Brick, Stones - Sticky Fingers, Yes - Fragile, Doors - LA Woman, on and on. They were the best of times.
Yeah, good times. I was more into Merle Haggard and Jim Reeves, still am. By 75 I was playing their music in local bars, though they made me stay on stage because I wasn't 21 yet. Our unofficial class motto was : "Sin Sex Hell War, We're the class of 74".
This man Fred Flix is slightly younger than myself. He is an astonishing true artist, a weaver of stories and teller of memories that we all can share and enjoy. May his rich and deep memory never leave him and may he never cease taking us for virtual time travel trips. His choice in background music is totally dead on.One of the great experiences of UA-cam-Fred Flix.
You now know that I answer as many comments as I can personally, BlueprintOfYesterday (though I don't always get notified). I'm touched though perhaps undeserving of your kind praise. But it made my day!
BlueprintOfYesterday... You stated so eloquently exactly how I was feeling. Thank you for writing so beautifully what I'm sure so many of us think. He IS an astonishing artist who has a special gift for touching that place deep inside our hearts where magical memories live. For a few minutes we do indeed get to travel back... I am so grateful for the gift he brings to us.❤✌
Thanx for taking me back once again! I remember well those space food sticks, Sonny and Cher's show, Clint Eastwood movies, cigarette ads disappearing from TV, all of it actually, but some of it stands out in memory more than other stuff. You capture not only that it was a special time, it was truly a magical time as well. That's what we know now that we didn't fully appreciate back then, IMO. Fantastic!
So nice that we had three channels and a couple of VHS ones but the next day everyone could talk about tje same stuff . And could sit in a movie theater all day on $1.00
Dan Reese, we actually had a common national culture as a result. Everyone was on the same page, so to speak. I could go visit my cousins 300 miles away and they would have seen the same TV shows I had the night before and we'd discuss them. Adults at the time (women especially) would call each other in the morning while having their coffee and talk about who was on Johnny Carson the night before. Now we are fragmented nationally with hundreds of stations and Netflix and UA-cam and not everyone is on the same page, so to speak.
@@RichardVernadeau Thanks Dude, the world was much smaller then as cultures as music and what we were about . Sad how teens today are so hard for them.to get out and have fun but I admit 1st hand video games and the internet keeps them inside the house. Boy I miss those Sundays at the park when all the local bands jammed the girls in halter tops and cut offs but now we are old farts. LoL
Remember, this is a single perspective. Believe me, there were other people that had vastly different experiences than Fred, way more money, way more drugs, way more into the anti-war movement, way more into cooler music, way more into counter-culture. It is a moment in time, it is not retrievable.
@Dehydrated Water You would be too young to get the "70s, you were 4 when the Beatles were on Sullivan, you were 12 when the draft ended, not even old enough to get punk music in '76.
I graduated in '78, but your posts just take me back. I must be 5-6 years younger than you, but I was 12 when you graduated and I loved Don Mclean. Keep up your video masterpieces. It was such a great time to be alive.
This is great. It shows me how things evolved over the years to how they are now. It reminds me that the older I get, the more I understand I have been played.
Thanks for this. I was in junior high school at the time, dorky and unpopular. But I would love to go back and relive it--with my present mind, my present life experience. It would be like visiting a foreign country, at once both familiar and exotic. And quaint. Because that world and those young, innocent people are now merely ghosts of long ago. If there were a door that opened into the seventies I would walk through it without hesitation, leaving only the car keys and a note to my wife: "I've gone back to 1972. Follow me. I'll be waiting. "
A special time it was the best year of my life by far. We held our graduation at Wolf Trap State park in northern Virginia first week of June of 72. Remember cruising afterwards listening to the same tunes as yourself. Man those were the days. Back in may my best friend from that time passed away after a long battle with cancer. This video flooded me with memories of him and a tear came to my eyes. RIP John Wheels Wheeler!
You would have thought American pie and my sweet Lord were the only two songs played on the radio back then lol I can't listen to American pie anymore but George Harrison I still listen to what he put out on the airwaves
Critter T RIP Buddy Holly, Richie Valens, and “Big Bopper” Richardson. They were killed in a plane crash. Buddy Holly was Rock and Roll, together they were great. The beginning of our great Generation of rock! American Pie is in memory of them, by MacClean.♥️
1972. I was 15 and hanging with everyone from high school. What a time,. God, it was great to be young, care free, and indestructible. I had a 1967 Buick Riviera, boat of a car with a 454. FINE TIMES INDEED.
Just stumbled upon this. Thanks. Good stuff. I was shocked at how it made me feel. Time flies. I wouldn't want to relive the 70's but I would sure like to spend a few days revisiting.
This is so spot-on for life of 17 year-old in the 70's! That bottle of Boones Farm wine brought back many memories of sneaking out of the house, meeting your friends at a designated spot, rocking out and then waking up the next day with the worst hangover, ever! The drinking age, here, was 21 but, everyone knew if you went to the convenience store, just outside of town, the little old lady there never asked for ID! If there was any pot smoked, it was either fake or some guys home-grown shake that was crap! But, MAN! the music was great back then!!!
I love your videos. I'm a few years younger than you but it was the same for the class of '79. So much appreciate you sharing! Takes me back to a magical place in my life. I know there were hard times in the '70's but you seemed to have grown up very similar to me and everything seemed better. I grew up in Northwest Arkansas but we did the same things as you did. I feel sorry for anyone that didn't grow up in the '70's, and even the ones who grew up in big cities or didn't know the real fun belonged to us a little more rural kids; especially southern kids. Hope to see more of your life. ❤️☮️🎵
Thank you, Shannon. I have a dozen or more Day in the Life videos on this channel and also three Week in the Life. You're right about the Southern rural lifestyle in the 1970s (and 1960s).
Graduated in 80 and this brings back memories. Boones Farm, oh my; it's been decades 😄 Lived and worked in Vietnam and Sri Lanka (mentioned in the video).
Graduated in 1980, as an early grad, left the country in 81, lived in Europe till 98, man was it a cultural shock returning to the USA. 81-94 worked in base as a civilian with the US Army, many co-workers were Nam Vets that did European outs, and did not return after the lack of welcome they received after the first tour. Lots of memories I seem to share, watching Nam news with Cronkite, space launches, Kmart, early days of malls. My parents were more Strick, and a tighter leash. Dad was an area manager for the Movie theaters. Lived in North Augusta SC kindergarten till 1st grade, Signal Mountain TN Elementary till 5th, then Effingham County GA till graduation.
Lollypop, you paint an extraordinary picture of the times, so reminiscent and completely relatable no matter our sex. Those were the best times, because youth still held us captive in its magical hold, our hearts filled with excitement of the unknown about to happen. At 14 my heart belonged to Barry Cowsill of the Cowsills, by 17 I was well over him though I spent years lusting after him and catching up on all his well published escapades in all the American teen mags Tiger Beat, and my personal fave, 16 Magazine. We had plenty of Australian and British teen magazines too. Graduation must have been wonderful, I went to a private Catholic Girls school, at end of last year of school we would have a celebratory mass and a month later await our exam results which were published in The Sydney Morning Herald as they still are to this day (before we received our passing certificates in the mail on same day), it was nerve wracking. It is lovely that you were so understanding that your dad was too ill to attend your own graduation, I know he was a huge figure in your life as you fondly mention him a great deal in your series of a Day in the Life. I can just imagine you at 17, burgeoning manhood, you and your friends invincible and daring and excited and raring to get on with your lives. I am glad you were not subjected to military service. We had 4 channels in 1972 in Sydney, ABC, Nine Network, Seven & Ten, my father had slightly relaxed his idea about too much TV, as he had by the 70’s started to like TV more than he cared to say. Though we had spam in our supermarkets, I have never tasted it, who knows one day I might buy a can and see what all the fuss is about. I loved the Sonny & Cher show, it was whacky, and it used to make me laugh. When I was in Lake Tahoe, I went to Mt Heavenly and passing overhead in a gondola you can see the exact spot where he crashed into a tree. Your country is gorgeous, I have never been to the South, but hope to someday. The first time I tried KFC I did so with my best gal pal Ellen, we got a lunch pack which consisted of 2 pieces of chicken, fries, mashed potato and gravy (small) and bean salad (also small) it was delicious and we were delighted with it….needless to say, these days it tastes nothing like it did then, they have taken all the flavour out of it, employ dopey teens to cook and under season it, and WORST OF ALL, bean salad is no longer available wahhhh it was better than the chicken for me…. Lastly and most controversially Woody Allen, I am a life long fan, his movies silly and funny and highbrow in their subtle intellect. He is in my esteem a comedy genius. His (not) son, Satchel now known as Ronan (who really is Frank Sinatra’s son) persists in damaging Woodys reputation which I believe is driven by Mia who was badly scorned and cannot forget their messy breakup. I do not condone Woody’s marriage to Mia’s daughter, but only speaking of his movies, I love them all. Sorry this is so long, thanks for another wonderful video, you are the best ox
Miss Melly, I enjoyed your comment very much. It's by no means too long. You always speak eloquently from the heart. I, too, am a Woody fan, speaking of his movies (and books). He has always been an inspiration to me. His personal life is a different matter. That's his own to deal with. I can only hope the worst of it is NOT true. But, like you, I am able to separate the art from the artist and enjoy the art. I'm amazed at your memories of KFC. But, please, don't try Spam!
Sweetie, my memory of KFC is clear because it opened in the early 70's, first in an outer west suburb of Sydney, and then one in my very own suburb!!!! We were excited to see it being built it was like the biggest thing happening in our town, everyone talked about it especially after the failure of Hartee's a burger chain (also in my suburb), then the day of the grand opening, the smell of fried chicken permeating and abounding every corner of every street near by, it was the most rapturous fragrance, foreign, mouth watering, sinking ones teeth into that first piece was a moment in time, I can tell you. At that time there was no eat in so we sat on the side brick fence and got our bum's bitten by ants, so we headed home and finished it off there. Mother was not greatly impressed, but she learned to like it, and then love it....shame as I said it tastes no where as good as it once did (in Australia at least) as they have taken out all the bad good things that used to be in it...LOL....oh well c'est la vie!
Hi Neil, well yes I did say we had 4 channels, I did not include the technicalities you have outlined LOL....as I had/have no idea of such....so thanks for the info :)
Love these! So fun to relive those times. I laugh at the fashions and the cars! Going to the store to buy Tiger Beat magazine! Watching Archie Bunker, Mary Tyler Moore, Sanford and son.
Tiger Beat, Tiger Beat Spectacular, 16 Magazine, or Teen, or Seventeen, or Fave or Flip magazines. None more than 35, 50 cents or in extreme cases, a dollar.
I enjoyed your video immensely! I liked it even more that you put general things like a lot of videos do, but you also put things exclusive to your experience (like pics of you and your friends, the girl you had a crush on). I have depression and thinking about my own school years is something that triggers it very quickly, but I can reminisce about other peoples' all day!
Thanks for the memories, good and bad. Also in May 1972, Dan "Hoss" Blocker died suddenly at 43, and Alabama Governor and presidential candidate George Wallace was shot and crippled for life, ending his presidential aspirations.
May 1972 I was 12 years old and getting ready for elementary school graduation. My friend Xavier played upright bass and I played guitar. We were asked to play a song at the ceremony. So we did a rendition of "House of the Rising Sun".. hey.. it was 1972 and people didn't give a shit..lol. I picked out the guitar chords and he played the melody on the bass, weirdest thing you ever heard but it was cool playing "rock star" for the first time. Also for the first time in my life the girls new who I was and then 3 months later my dad moved us 60 miles east out in the middle of nowhere, where I didn't know a damn soul. Took me about 6 months to stop being pissed at him but now I miss the old guy, especially around the holidays. Keep up the good work Fred and Happy Holidays :)
How cool was it to be in high school in the 70s I started in 1976 and loved every single day these films take me back to a simple time thanks for sharing this
Man I drove my parents crazy with this song. I was only 4 years old. I had the 45rpm and had to turn it over when side 1 was over. You added a picture of it. The great memories for both of us!
@@FredFlix + I am a musician, so I guess it was in the dna. My dad would give me cassettes like Salsbury by Uriah Heep, and another I can't remember at the moment, but it was a classic. My dad was a freelance artist so music was always on in the car, and in his art studio.
@@FredFlix I remember the video you did for that. It was awesome and then you dropped the bomb. I didn't even know you but it was like a friend lost his dad. RIP.
I can truly say that the time just before my high school graduation until the end of that summer was the best of my life. No responsibilities to speak of. My friends and I got together almost everyday, sometimes going to the beach, other times just hanging out. I had my first love that summer as well (talk about angst!) Little did I know that when the summer slowly faded to Autumn, life would never quite reach those highs again. Many of my friends left town for college (I went to a local college, and only one of my friends went there), and there were a good number of them I would rarely if ever see again. Sometimes it seems like life moved on for most people, but never really for me. While I have been mostly successful in life, I would give a great deal of it up to go back to that summer. At least I have the memories
Wow! you are two years older than me but so much of this rings true! I wish I could have been so thurough about keeping photos, documents etc through my youth like you did. Hats off to you dude
This is so awesome! I'm just a hopeless romantic when it comes to history but you are right on one thing shopping was alot more about discovery than it is now shopping was alot more fun even when I was a kid & a teenager but unfortunately there isn't to many places to go nowadays anyway thanks for sharing your 17 year old experience:)
Another fine memory packed ride in the FredFlix Wayback machine... :) Don Mclean... American Pie. I really loved that song. It's one of those songs that I know all the words to. Another one is "Taxi" From "Heads and Tales" by Harry Chapin... Gosh Fred you know how to raise those goose bumps.. Thanks again Big Bro!
Thanks for the memories! 1972 was a very important year for me because I just turned 13! Now 60 and how I wish I could go back. Not to be 13 but to be 60 in 1972: no cellphones, no Starbucks, no slutty girl music, more decency in life in general and much more hope for a happy, decent future.
I was 12 in 72 but remember all things well . We lived in sanfrancisco area until 69 then moved to the redding area so we lived in the heart of the 60s where everything was happening.
Fred congratulations on your ability to make others fill so nostalgic about our pass. PS: Boone's farm!! man you where rich, We bought something stronger and cheaper night train and ripple. Talk about bad hutch. That night I came home and my father Rev Lopez made it so I would never forget.🤕 Man I miss em both.
So many memories, alot very painful but I was 17. I was so in love with someone I didn't deserve and he moved on and I'm still in love. All these years later. 1 husband, 2 children and 5 grandchildren. And I'm still in love with him!
Just read how the guy who has been watching these videos teared up. Man I'm with you on that 👍... I'll soon be 63 ... and EVERYTHING I've watched is right on. The hot summer nights with mosquito sprayer coming down the road...cars.. stores.. music.. dating...time frames all add up to a more beautiful way of life that was unknowingly taken for granted. Of course some of us had to grow up a little faster.😳.
@@FredFlix you sure are welcome..👍... what you put on this site...is constantly on my mind... before I found this. It's just RIGHT.......... on... couldn't get more accurate.👍👌🤧😂😊😳🤔🤔😰
I distinctly remember having an Am/ Fm radio pressed to my ear while Doctor My Eyes played on it while I delivered newspapers. Thanks for the memories.
Hi Fred, I graduated in 1972 also. I grew up with Chinese, Jewish, Japanese and black friends and we all had a great time. Never really thought too much about differences, just fun. I think it is time we stopped talking about differences twenty-four hours a day and watch them disappear for the most part.
I don't remember which songs you had on your earlier soundtrack here, but I loved hearing "Joy" by Apollo again. I remember dancing around to this record (probably an older sister had bought it) when I was 6 or 7 years old. I've seen a copy of the single posted elsewhere here, and Johann Sebastian Bach is rightfully credited as the sole author, since the tune was his own "Jesu, Joy of Man's Desiring". My oldest sister graduated from HS in late June of 1972 and went on that fall to attend NYC's Fashion Institute of Technology (FIT) for 2 years. I remember attending her graduation there in June 1974 in NYC's famed Carnegie Hall.
Just one more comment I promise... I'm so sorry about your dad and his accident. I'm sure there was an awful ripple effect on your family.(Besides the financial devastation) it sounds like he was a hard worker. Also, you sure were lucky to grow up in such a beautiful place! I was landlocked in Illinois. I didn't like it back then. Now I wish I had those ruby slippers. 😘
I know this is an old filmstrip but a footnote, Carson is still the king of late night even dead. We are about the same age. I get a good chuckle every time. 🇺🇸
When I saw the part at 3:58 about shopping for some things you will need for the night, I said in my head do not forget the Boones farm, when I saw it at 5:04 I laughed then cried, it brought back so many memories of my youth, growing up in the 70's was truly a special time, thanks for taking me back.
As far as I'm concerned, Johnny Carson is STILL the King of Late Night!
agree
He always will be!
I was not a huge party guy. So in the summers I watched him every night. Sure I went out some, but Johnny was almost like family to me. Least it seemed that way...
There is and always will be one king, and that was Johnny.
Fred... you're killing me! Every time I view your videos tears well in my eyes. I'm a grown man with tears streaming down my face wishing I could relive my childhood. No, it wasn't perfect... but it was better than what's considered "growing up" in this day and age. There's so much I remember so vividly... and it becomes so much more clear when viewing and listening to your videos- these are the BEST videos on Ytube (to me anyway). I do remember very well hanging out at K-Mart nearly every weekend laying on the carpet in the TV section and playing "Pong"... thee 1st video game, The people who worked in that area never bothered us- just let us play. Of course- watching Saturday morning cartoons and creature double feature, As kids we built forts, go-karts (still some photos), etc. all from scraps we found in the local junk-yard. We rode bikes with banana seats and attached playing cards to the forks with clothespins to make the wheels (spokes) sound like a motor; we'd have water balloon fights, squirt gun fights, play kick the can, kick ball, run through sprinklers in the grass, cowboys and indians (with cap guns), in the locals woods, sell lemonade for a nickel a cup on the side of the rode, go fishing on Saturday morning after digging for night crawlers the night before, buy slurpees at the local 7- eleven, drop a dime in the big water-jug hoping it would land in the little glass at the bottom (never did), hide-n-seek, draw in the road with chalk, play sand-lot "all sports" nearly everyday in the summer, go to the cinema once every 2 weeks, go to the beach (ocean), about once every 2 weeks, eat Kool-pops, popsickles, fudgesickles, creamsickles, pixie stix, drink Kool-aid, lemonade (soda-pop was a luxury), save up box tops from cereal boxes to send in for whatever toy was advertised on the back of the box, play "pitch" with baseball cards, play "hot-potato," build ramps for our bikes to jump over, climb trees, roll down grassy hills to see how dizzy we'd get, deliver newspapers (paper routes), [shovel driveways for a few bucks in the winter, snowball fights, building snowmen, sledding down hills, etc.], chase the ice-cream truck when his bell rang, go to the local ER when we got hurt and watch the nurses and Docs smoke cigarettes behind the counter, play with the dogs who ran free in the neighborhood, wait for the mailman to come and hand out candy to us kids (Imagine that- "Stanley" the mailman would park his mail truck, walk through the neighborhood and hand out candy while he delivered the mail. What a great guy he was!!), make flavored ice cubes with tooth picks and suck on them outside in the sun, buy "Wacky Packs," at 7-Eleven, have carnivals using the "Jerry Lewis Telethon Carnival Kit" and then send the whopping $25 dollars to the address marked on the kit, go swimming at the local YMCA, ride our bikes to our little league and Babe Ruth baseball games... and the list goes on. "Woolworth's" was a Christmas extravaganza! Not long after kid-dom (in early teen years), start listening to groovy and CooL music while starting at black-light, velvet posters, etc. Then when we finally traded in out bikes for driver's licenses, all those kid activities started fading... and quickly. The girls that were just "one of the boys" during years of kid-dom were seen through different eyes, all of a sudden. They looked pretty and smelled nice, wore flowers in their hair... and eeryone wore bandanas. Started going to high-school dances, trying to kiss a girl but refusing to dance, taking booze form our parents liquor cabinet... and yes- buying "Boonesfarm wine" at the local "package" store while underage (or trying to). Having a crush on the girl from "the other side of the tracks"... but never seeing her again after high school. PLaying in a Rock band hoping the girls would ask us out or come and knock on our doors... and in such a hurry to become an adult for the same reason that we wish we could relive out childhood- so life would become better or so we thought. All these thought swirl around my head when I view your videos, Fred- they truly are amazing. Thank you so much... and sorry for rambling!!
I enjoyed your comment very much, mmojorissen.
Good times!! You bring back some of the best and most awesome memories. Thank you for that!!
That describes my childhood to a tee, and I would do it all again in a heartbeat, being an adult truly does suck, I tell kids today enjoy it while it lasts, because before you know it its all over, it go's way too fast, although I never drank Boons wine, or smoked any weed, hated the smell.
I would love to go back to the '70's if just for a day
ahh, yes my friend
Me too and I’m 16 NOW
I'm 60 and I would love to be living in Minnesota on 40 acres again doing the morning chores before waiting out front of our farm for the school bus before sun up. The coolest part was winter. Yes it was like a winter wonderland til you where in it for more then 10 minutes. Thank God for parkas
My can was in Vietnam fun oh yea so if u want to go back to the Car crash have fun
Better than that Ms.Stout.I would love to go back, and NOT come back to the 21st century,I would die in 1999!
Do you have any idea what these posts mean to me? I graduated in 1972.... Your videos allow me to time travel. I was young, excited, full of good health, hopes and dreams. What did I worry about? How to keep my long curly hair straight for my date, what to wear on that date, was my dad going to tell me my mini skirt was too short (young lady... Get in there and change before he picks you up! And he better come to the door this time!!!) Would I get grounded? Pass algebra? I loved my record player, 45s, albums, and my girlfriends who knew all my secrets. How could I have known I'd lose that flat tummy that allowed me to tuck shirts into my bell bottoms? How could I know that youth is so fleeting, so special, so gone with the wind...❤✌
Beautiful comment, Jan.
Yes, a beautiful comment. Thanks for that, Jan! 🙂
@@rafaucett Thank you so much Bob❤✌❤
You paint a great picture Jan. And I would always come to the door!
@@usrt46 I just found your post Jack... You are so sweet! Thank you for making me smile... I really, literally smiled when I read it!❤
Damn, I miss the 70's.
A great decade for me, too. I am a 70's chic and proud of it!
Me to.
I hear you for sure it was real music lots better than this RAP garbage
@@ruthresetar5940 it was real music and not this RAP garbage
@@Bobby-mn1xu Yep!
Those were the Days My Friend I'd thought they'd never end ...!!!!!
Hey that song came 4 years earlier in 1968! I think the singer was Mary Hopkins? I need to google it!
Everytime I hear that song my eyes well-up. That, and "We'll Sing in The Sunshine" Those days and colors are long, long, gone. On my life, things really did have a softer hue to them in the 60' and 70's. It' true. God, how I m.j iss those days. Little money, but lot's of friends and good times. The things that were taboo back then, pass as innocence by today's standards. I always had to be the first one up and out of bed to open an unlocked front door to get the cool whole milk and dozen eggs deposited in the styro-lined square tin box every 2 days. Remember the pull-off foil lids on the glass milk jugs? Then you had to somehow re-fit the foil back on the top. The eggs came in a square paper box to fit the cool-box. We were always trying to stabilize the black and white picture on TV. There was always lines running up the TV before we got our colored Zenith console TV set. I wanna' go back......
@@starjunkie2804 😂😂😂😂 I feel you !!! I wanna go back too. I was an adolescent kid during that time, but I remember it well. Now a lot of issues are politically correct and it's all about the almighty dollar.
How that song moved me at at such a young age...god bless Mary Hopkin
Another great stroll down memory lane. Nice job Fred Flix. It's always a better time remembering our past and how much simpler a time it was.
Thanks, C.G.
Those were the days, genuine good times, and the saddest part is that ,it will never be the same again ......
the other vorhees
I was 20, in ‘72, working, and dating, then marriage......
I am 66 and miss those days. I loved the music and the way people were back then.
So very true!
@@jeffmartin8924are you still alive?
IF I could go back and relive my teen yrs, also the 70's, I'd gladly forfeit the rest of my life now, just to have those experiences one more time...life was simpler then...
Trolls certainly need simplicity, don't they?
God yes!!!!!!!!!!
@@small_ed I guess that's why you're so simple.
Although I was born the year of 1972 I would go back and relive my teen years as well. The world was so different then but at least we have our memories. I just wished I could “redo” those years just 1 more time. 🤔
This gives me goosebumps. So many memories. I’m younger, having graduated in 83. But I grew up in the 70’s and I’d cut off my right pinky to go back and do those days all over again. Best years of my life. And on my 18th Birthday, senior year, I bought a bottle of Boone’s Farm -Tickle Pink. Yeah, that was back when you had to be 18, not 21. So, so many memories. I have tears in my eyes. Great music by the way. American Pie is the best.
were there straight women back then ?
Tony Lutz Are you being serious?
@@rosebud6485 Im sure those days were way better than today or even the 90's
The manager at the 7-11 was a lesbian but we didn't care. She would let us kids restock the shelves and take inventory for a large ICEE. At the time, I live in Charleston Heights on "The Strip". That is what they usually called to bad parts of town right outside of Navy bases, and there were Tribulator motorcycle gangs and thugs and drunks carousing late at nights and we still didn't care. We were carefree and everyone watched out for kids back then.
Class of '82 here -- not only my pinky, but I'd throw in a cut off thumb to boot to relive my earliers years in the 70s and early 80s. They were the best of times, and I think of them often, especially now in 2020 with the meseed up world we're currently enduring.
I was missing these "A day in the life..." videos. Emotions run high but that's part of their charm. Thanks.
You're welcome, merce.
@@FredFlix Not to mention your openness about your life and what happened in it...you remind us that, as Billy Joel said--"the good old days weren't always good"
For some reason when seeing the shoe salesman I automatically thought of Thom McCann's.
I thought of al bundy 😛
We had an entire store dedicated to Thom McAns in the local shopping center. Just a small storefront. And the Hush Puppies shoeboxes and posters with the B&W photo of a long-eared Basset hound...
Yeah I got shoes there too!
Lol! Me too!
May of 72. Finishing up my junior year in high school. Lot's of partying. The guy who could never get anywhere with chicks (me), had a hot blonde girlfriend. Reefer was 20 bucks for a four finger bag. Nice mellow, Jamaican, not the crazy paranoid stuff around now. Rock music would reach a peak in 72 (IMHO) Led Zep IV had just come out. Deep Purple - Machine Head, Allman Bros - Live at the Fillmore, Jethro Tull - Thick as a Brick, Stones - Sticky Fingers, Yes - Fragile, Doors - LA Woman, on and on. They were the best of times.
L.A. Woman was Jim's last LP, though :(
Lived in Chicago....saw Rory three times.....no one better than that Irish rocker. I graduated in May of '72.
Yeah, good times. I was more into Merle Haggard and Jim Reeves, still am. By 75 I was playing their music in local bars, though they made me stay on stage because I wasn't 21 yet.
Our unofficial class motto was : "Sin Sex Hell War, We're the class of 74".
Class of 75. Don't forget Robin Trower!
@@thebes56 Bridge of Sighs! Great album.
This man Fred Flix is slightly younger than myself. He is an astonishing true artist, a weaver of stories and teller of memories that we all can share and enjoy. May his rich and deep memory never leave him and may he never cease taking us for virtual time travel trips. His choice in background music is totally dead on.One of the great experiences of UA-cam-Fred Flix.
You now know that I answer as many comments as I can personally, BlueprintOfYesterday (though I don't always get notified). I'm touched though perhaps undeserving of your kind praise. But it made my day!
BlueprintOfYesterday... You stated so eloquently exactly how I was feeling. Thank you for writing so beautifully what I'm sure so many of us think. He IS an astonishing artist who has a special gift for touching that place deep inside our hearts where magical memories live. For a few minutes we do indeed get to travel back... I am so grateful for the gift he brings to us.❤✌
@@janupczak5059 Just saw this. Jan, that was very sweet. I have a new Day in the Life coming next month.
@@FredFlix Thank you Fred! You know I will be waiting! Happy and healthy holidays...❤❤❤
BlueprintOfYesterday Agreed 100%
Thank you from the bottom of my heart.❤
You're welcome from the bottom of mine, Jan.
Thanx for taking me back once again! I remember well those space food sticks, Sonny and Cher's show, Clint Eastwood movies, cigarette ads disappearing from TV, all of it actually, but some of it stands out in memory more than other stuff. You capture not only that it was a special time, it was truly a magical time as well. That's what we know now that we didn't fully appreciate back then, IMO. Fantastic!
I appreciate that, Richard.
So nice that we had three channels and a couple of VHS ones but the next day everyone could talk about tje same stuff . And could sit in a movie theater all day on $1.00
Dan Reese, we actually had a common national culture as a result. Everyone was on the same page, so to speak. I could go visit my cousins 300 miles away and they would have seen the same TV shows I had the night before and we'd discuss them. Adults at the time (women especially) would call each other in the morning while having their coffee and talk about who was on Johnny Carson the night before. Now we are fragmented nationally with hundreds of stations and Netflix and UA-cam and not everyone is on the same page, so to speak.
@@RichardVernadeau Thanks Dude, the world was much smaller then as cultures as music and what we were about . Sad how teens today are so hard for them.to get out and have fun but I admit 1st hand video games and the internet keeps them inside the house. Boy I miss those Sundays at the park when all the local bands jammed the girls in halter tops and cut offs but now we are old farts. LoL
As a 19 year old who’s obsessed with the past (60s and 70s especially) I LOVE your day in a life videos!! They’re so interesting!!
Remember, this is a single perspective. Believe me, there were other people that had vastly different experiences than Fred, way more money, way more drugs, way more into the anti-war movement, way more into cooler music, way more into counter-culture. It is a moment in time, it is not retrievable.
@Dehydrated Water You would be too young to get the "70s, you were 4 when the Beatles were on Sullivan, you were 12 when the draft ended, not even old enough to get punk music in '76.
Keep these videos coming!! I love reminiscing those times ☺️
I was 8 years old in 1972
How i miss that time
Aw im sorry about your best friend
Steve my condolences
I graduated in '78, but your posts just take me back. I must be 5-6 years younger than you, but I was 12 when you graduated and I loved Don Mclean. Keep up your video masterpieces. It was such a great time to be alive.
Thanks, James.
Bless you for posting this video. I'm sad about your dad. I'm like you, despite the bad things, I'd love to go back and do it all again.
This is great. It shows me how things evolved over the years to how they are now. It reminds me that the older I get, the more I understand I have been played.
Hard to believe that just 26 years later, Sonny would be dead... And Cher would be batshit crazy.
Cher has a bad case of TDS or Trump Derangement Syndrome.
😂😂😂😂🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸Trump2020! I thought she was supposed to move out of our country!
@RIPPER334 FredFlix is-or should be-a politically free zone. Save your partisanship for another site!
Or that Sonny would be elected as a member of the House of Representatives in Congress.
@@Pfsif --- As opposed to ODS...
May 1972 I was off the coast of Viet Nam on the USS Saratoga....crazy year!
Thank you for your service sir I was to young I know you guys were not treated the way you should have coming home god bless you and your family
@@tats5880 Appreciate your thanks....just keep those in harm's way today in your prayers!
Very cool example of that moment in time. Thanks for putting it together to share. Far out !
Thanks, fatabeeno.
Thanks for this.
I was in junior high school at the time, dorky and unpopular. But I would love to go back and relive it--with my present mind, my present life experience.
It would be like visiting a foreign country, at once both familiar and exotic. And quaint. Because that world and those young, innocent people are now merely ghosts of long ago.
If there were a door that opened into the seventies I would walk through it without hesitation, leaving only the car keys and a note to my wife: "I've gone back to 1972. Follow me. I'll be waiting. "
Nice comment, David.
Fred, If someone would invent a time machine,........I'd be the first passenger. ....that's for sure!
Just make sure you have a goo time selected, Rick. You don't want to end up in the Dark Ages (you know...before TV.).
@@FredFlix Fred, I'd punch in the years.....'69 thru '79.......maybe into '81 !
@@ricklaino8996 I'm probably older than you, so I'd punch in 1963 to 1973.
This is the FredFlix Wayback machine.... the rides are always good!
@@5argetech56 And no ticket required!
A special time it was the best year of my life by far. We held our graduation at Wolf Trap State park in northern Virginia first week of June of 72. Remember cruising afterwards listening to the same tunes as yourself. Man those were the days. Back in may my best friend from that time passed away after a long battle with cancer. This video flooded me with memories of him and a tear came to my eyes. RIP John Wheels Wheeler!
I loved American Pie.
Thank you for the memories🎈
You're welcome, Critter T.
You would have thought American pie and my sweet Lord were the only two songs played on the radio back then lol I can't listen to American pie anymore but George Harrison I still listen to what he put out on the airwaves
Critter T
RIP Buddy Holly, Richie Valens, and “Big Bopper” Richardson.
They were killed in a plane crash. Buddy Holly was Rock and Roll, together they were great. The beginning of our great Generation of rock! American Pie is in memory of them, by MacClean.♥️
1972. I was 15 and hanging with everyone from high school. What a time,. God, it was great to be young, care free, and indestructible. I had a 1967 Buick Riviera, boat of a car with a 454. FINE TIMES INDEED.
425, not 454.
Thanks for the memories! Loved traveling back to a simpler time!
You're welcome, Bonnie.
i remember those days just like that, perfect memories. sad to think of them gone for good. it was a good life
You're gonna make me Google who Christopher George is/was? LOL...Oh, he was on the Rat Patrol and his wife was Lynda Day George (now, her I knew)
Christopher George starred in a very short lived TV show, about 1970, 71 called , "The Immortal" I liked it!
Christopher George and Lynda day George were the Charles Bronson and Jill Ireland of TV movies back in the 70's....
Just stumbled upon this. Thanks. Good stuff. I was shocked at how it made me feel. Time flies. I wouldn't want to relive the 70's but I would sure like to spend a few days revisiting.
You and me both, B King.
I was 17 in May '72, growing up in Canada I can still relate to most of this.
This is so spot-on for life of 17 year-old in the 70's! That bottle of Boones Farm wine brought back many memories of sneaking out of the house, meeting your friends at a designated spot, rocking out and then waking up the next day with the worst hangover, ever! The drinking age, here, was 21 but, everyone knew if you went to the convenience store, just outside of town, the little old lady there never asked for ID! If there was any pot smoked, it was either fake or some guys home-grown shake that was crap! But, MAN! the music was great back then!!!
I ❤ the storytelling you put into these!
Thanks, Jennie.
I love your videos. I'm a few years younger than you but it was the same for the class of '79. So much appreciate you sharing! Takes me back to a magical place in my life. I know there were hard times in the '70's but you seemed to have grown up very similar to me and everything seemed better. I grew up in Northwest Arkansas but we did the same things as you did. I feel sorry for anyone that didn't grow up in the '70's, and even the ones who grew up in big cities or didn't know the real fun belonged to us a little more rural kids; especially southern kids. Hope to see more of your life. ❤️☮️🎵
Thank you, Shannon. I have a dozen or more Day in the Life videos on this channel and also three Week in the Life. You're right about the Southern rural lifestyle in the 1970s (and 1960s).
Damn Fred, I graduated in '80, and I can relate to this. Thanks for a great watch!
You're welcome, Bernie.
Graduated in 80 and this brings back memories. Boones Farm, oh my; it's been decades 😄 Lived and worked in Vietnam and Sri Lanka (mentioned in the video).
Graduated in 1980, as an early grad, left the country in 81, lived in Europe till 98, man was it a cultural shock returning to the USA. 81-94 worked in base as a civilian with the US Army, many co-workers were Nam Vets that did European outs, and did not return after the lack of welcome they received after the first tour. Lots of memories I seem to share, watching Nam news with Cronkite, space launches, Kmart, early days of malls. My parents were more Strick, and a tighter leash. Dad was an area manager for the Movie theaters. Lived in North Augusta SC kindergarten till 1st grade, Signal Mountain TN Elementary till 5th, then Effingham County GA till graduation.
I'm only 14 and I got goosebumps watching this, I have no idea why.....
Lollypop, you paint an extraordinary picture of the times, so reminiscent and completely relatable no matter our sex. Those were the best times, because youth still held us captive in its magical hold, our hearts filled with excitement of the unknown about to happen. At 14 my heart belonged to Barry Cowsill of the Cowsills, by 17 I was well over him though I spent years lusting after him and catching up on all his well published escapades in all the American teen mags Tiger Beat, and my personal fave, 16 Magazine. We had plenty of Australian and British teen magazines too.
Graduation must have been wonderful, I went to a private Catholic Girls school, at end of last year of school we would have a celebratory mass and a month later await our exam results which were published in The Sydney Morning Herald as they still are to this day (before we received our passing certificates in the mail on same day), it was nerve wracking.
It is lovely that you were so understanding that your dad was too ill to attend your own graduation, I know he was a huge figure in your life as you fondly mention him a great deal in your series of a Day in the Life. I can just imagine you at 17, burgeoning manhood, you and your friends invincible and daring and excited and raring to get on with your lives. I am glad you were not subjected to military service.
We had 4 channels in 1972 in Sydney, ABC, Nine Network, Seven & Ten, my father had slightly relaxed his idea about too much TV, as he had by the 70’s started to like TV more than he cared to say.
Though we had spam in our supermarkets, I have never tasted it, who knows one day I might buy a can and see what all the fuss is about.
I loved the Sonny & Cher show, it was whacky, and it used to make me laugh. When I was in Lake Tahoe, I went to Mt Heavenly and passing overhead in a gondola you can see the exact spot where he crashed into a tree. Your country is gorgeous, I have never been to the South, but hope to someday.
The first time I tried KFC I did so with my best gal pal Ellen, we got a lunch pack which consisted of 2 pieces of chicken, fries, mashed potato and gravy (small) and bean salad (also small) it was delicious and we were delighted with it….needless to say, these days it tastes nothing like it did then, they have taken all the flavour out of it, employ dopey teens to cook and under season it, and WORST OF ALL, bean salad is no longer available wahhhh it was better than the chicken for me….
Lastly and most controversially Woody Allen, I am a life long fan, his movies silly and funny and highbrow in their subtle intellect. He is in my esteem a comedy genius. His (not) son, Satchel now known as Ronan (who really is Frank Sinatra’s son) persists in damaging Woodys reputation which I believe is driven by Mia who was badly scorned and cannot forget their messy breakup. I do not condone Woody’s marriage to Mia’s daughter, but only speaking of his movies, I love them all.
Sorry this is so long, thanks for another wonderful video, you are the best ox
Miss Melly, I enjoyed your comment very much. It's by no means too long. You always speak eloquently from the heart. I, too, am a Woody fan, speaking of his movies (and books). He has always been an inspiration to me. His personal life is a different matter. That's his own to deal with. I can only hope the worst of it is NOT true. But, like you, I am able to separate the art from the artist and enjoy the art. I'm amazed at your memories of KFC. But, please, don't try Spam!
Sweetie, my memory of KFC is clear because it opened in the early 70's, first in an outer west suburb of Sydney, and then one in my very own suburb!!!! We were excited to see it being built it was like the biggest thing happening in our town, everyone talked about it especially after the failure of Hartee's a burger chain (also in my suburb), then the day of the grand opening, the smell of fried chicken permeating and abounding every corner of every street near by, it was the most rapturous fragrance, foreign, mouth watering, sinking ones teeth into that first piece was a moment in time, I can tell you. At that time there was no eat in so we sat on the side brick fence and got our bum's bitten by ants, so we headed home and finished it off there. Mother was not greatly impressed, but she learned to like it, and then love it....shame as I said it tastes no where as good as it once did (in Australia at least) as they have taken out all the bad good things that used to be in it...LOL....oh well c'est la vie!
@@MissMellyVee It might taste better here. I don't remember a drop-off. xoxo
A drop-off? what do you mean?
Hi Neil, well yes I did say we had 4 channels, I did not include the technicalities you have outlined LOL....as I had/have no idea of such....so thanks for the info :)
June 12th, 1972 I graduated high school. I remember all this. Thanks for the memories.
Love these! So fun to relive those times. I laugh at the fashions and the cars! Going to the store to buy Tiger Beat magazine!
Watching Archie Bunker, Mary Tyler Moore, Sanford and son.
Tiger Beat, Tiger Beat Spectacular, 16 Magazine, or Teen, or Seventeen, or Fave or Flip magazines. None more than 35, 50 cents or in extreme cases, a dollar.
Life will never be the same again but it's nice to peek back into history via your videos. Thank you so much !!!
It was a special time. I graduated in 1972. Love to go back. Thanks.
You're welcome, Marcus.
I enjoyed your video immensely! I liked it even more that you put general things like a lot of videos do, but you also put things exclusive to your experience (like pics of you and your friends, the girl you had a crush on). I have depression and thinking about my own school years is something that triggers it very quickly, but I can reminisce about other peoples' all day!
Glad you enjoyed it, WVW.
Clint Eastwood was doing commentary on the 2019 AT+T Pro Am at Pebble Beach in San Diego,he still as it,cool and funny!
Thanks for the memories! Was 18 at the time going through life a day at a time, send me back!
You're welcome, Mr. C.
Thanks for the memories, good and bad.
Also in May 1972, Dan "Hoss" Blocker died suddenly at 43, and Alabama Governor and presidential candidate George Wallace was shot and crippled for life, ending his presidential aspirations.
You're welcome, Joseph.
Joseph Posavac
RIP all!
I loved Hoss, so sad 😭
Not that far behind you, Fred. Thanks for sharing your walk down memory lane. It was generous and appreciated. :D
And so are you, Dannan.
May 1972 I was 12 years old and getting ready for elementary school graduation. My friend Xavier played upright bass and I played guitar. We were asked to play a song at the ceremony. So we did a rendition of "House of the Rising Sun".. hey.. it was 1972 and people didn't give a shit..lol. I picked out the guitar chords and he played the melody on the bass, weirdest thing you ever heard but it was cool playing "rock star" for the first time. Also for the first time in my life the girls new who I was and then 3 months later my dad moved us 60 miles east out in the middle of nowhere, where I didn't know a damn soul. Took me about 6 months to stop being pissed at him but now I miss the old guy, especially around the holidays. Keep up the good work Fred and Happy Holidays :)
Same to you, onefatstratcat. Too bad you moved to nowhere because those girls would have flocked around you.
It's how guitars work..lol @@FredFlix
I see all these pictures and I could go back there like it was yesterday and never miss today
to all my fellow Graduates of 1972 ..... CONGRATS!!...
Philip Y thanks and same to you!
Right back to ya, buddy!
How cool was it to be in high school in the 70s I started in 1976 and loved every single day these films take me back to a simple time thanks for sharing this
You're welcome, Claude.
The reason for your many subscribers is you do a great job.👍
agree
Yes, and a talented creator!
Man I drove my parents crazy with this song. I was only 4 years old. I had the 45rpm and had to turn it over when side 1 was over. You added a picture of it. The great memories for both of us!
I'm surprised you liked it being only 4 years old.
@@FredFlix + I am a musician, so I guess it was in the dna. My dad would give me cassettes like Salsbury by Uriah Heep, and another I can't remember at the moment, but it was a classic. My dad was a freelance artist so music was always on in the car, and in his art studio.
really awesome video fred 1972 was such a good year hope your having a good start to your week bud :)
Thanks, Brandon.
I graduated in 74, you took me back to that time. Thanks !!
You're welcome, Scott.
Love me some Strawberry Hill the official wine of high school. Love your videos. I graduated in 75.
Thanks, Ellens Story.
For sure... Boones farm strawberry hill drink of HS seniors! Lolp
Pagan Pink Ripple. Nectar of the Gods in '71.
this was great Fred I was one year older than you, so you are hitting the ball down memory lane for me.
A great video and yes the seventies were great, hope your dad did recover from the accident.
Thanks, Rolf. Unfortunately, he didn't. His life spiraled downward and he ending up killing himself.
@@FredFlix Oh that is bad, sorry for your loss.
@@FredFlix I remember the video you did for that. It was awesome and then you dropped the bomb. I didn't even know you but it was like a friend lost his dad. RIP.
@@joeheid2776 That's nice to hear, Joe. I really appreciate it.
@@joeheid2776 yeah, man, me too...
These are great memories you shared, many that mirror my own experiences when I graduated high school back in the late 80s.
Thanks for watching, MisterHot.
Our last Kmart closed last month how time flies
I can truly say that the time just before my high school graduation until the end of that summer was the best of my life. No responsibilities to speak of. My friends and I got together almost everyday, sometimes going to the beach, other times just hanging out. I had my first love that summer as well (talk about angst!) Little did I know that when the summer slowly faded to Autumn, life would never quite reach those highs again. Many of my friends left town for college (I went to a local college, and only one of my friends went there), and there were a good number of them I would rarely if ever see again. Sometimes it seems like life moved on for most people, but never really for me. While I have been mostly successful in life, I would give a great deal of it up to go back to that summer. At least I have the memories
1972 my most memorable year!! 17 at the time
Wow! you are two years older than me but so much of this rings true! I wish I could have been so thurough about keeping photos, documents etc through my youth like you did. Hats off to you dude
Thank you!
Aw, Fred! Yes, Worker Comp was a wonderful thing. Still, even though we all pay into it,:it’s a fight to get. I hope your Dad made a good recovery
Thank you for these wonderful videos I was 17 in 1972 I can relate to all of them 💕
You're welcome, Evelyn.
Thanks for all your hard work lots of memories there for me.
Yeah Fred those were the best of times 😃👍❤
Love your video memories, brings it all back with a smile thanks 😃
You're welcome, Alice.
This is so awesome! I'm just a hopeless romantic when it comes to history but you are right on one thing shopping was alot more about discovery than it is now shopping was alot more fun even when I was a kid & a teenager but unfortunately there isn't to many places to go nowadays anyway thanks for sharing your 17 year old experience:)
You're welcome, Florence. Thanks for your comment.
@@FredFlix your welcome:)
Florence Chestnut
Another fine memory packed ride in the FredFlix Wayback machine... :)
Don Mclean... American Pie. I really loved that song. It's one of those songs that I know all the words to. Another one is "Taxi" From "Heads and Tales" by Harry Chapin... Gosh Fred you know how to raise those goose bumps.. Thanks again Big Bro!
You're quite welcome, 5arge.
Thanks for the memories!
1972 was a very important year for me because I just turned 13!
Now 60 and how I wish I could go back. Not to be 13 but to be 60 in 1972: no cellphones, no Starbucks, no slutty girl music, more decency in life in general and much more hope for a happy, decent future.
13 here too! My first concert..Three Dog Night:)
straight women did they really exist
@@denisebutler618 I was born in 58 also..my first concert was Yes✌️
I was 13 then too.
@@denisebutler618 Joy To The World!
Fred thank you..... you made my day , going back to the good old days....
You're welcome, Julieann.
I was 12 in 72 but remember all things well . We lived in sanfrancisco area until 69 then moved to the redding area so we lived in the heart of the 60s where everything was happening.
For sure,if we could relive those times again how much more we would have appreciated them!miss them alot!
Remember When J Edgar Hoover died we were all dancing around the university quadrangle singing ding dong the witch is dead
Yep my dad made a comment that the air smelled better.
Fred congratulations on your ability to make others fill so nostalgic about our
pass. PS: Boone's farm!!
man you where rich, We
bought something stronger
and cheaper night train and ripple. Talk about bad hutch.
That night I came home and
my father Rev Lopez made it so I would never forget.🤕
Man I miss em both.
So many memories, alot very painful but I was 17. I was so in love with someone I didn't deserve and he moved on and I'm still in love. All these years later. 1 husband, 2 children and 5 grandchildren. And I'm still in love with him!
Thanks for the stroll down memory lane.
You're welcome, Renee.
These vids bring back so many memories I thought I'd lost forever. Thnx so much!!!
you work so hard thank you.. i spread the word on your channel all the time..my subs love your stuff..keep up the great work
I appreciate that, Joe.
I notice how the last song was recognized as "Joy" by Satellite Orchestra. Actually, the band was Apollo 100.
Just read how the guy who has been watching these videos teared up. Man I'm with you on that 👍... I'll soon be 63 ... and EVERYTHING I've watched is right on. The hot summer nights with mosquito sprayer coming down the road...cars.. stores.. music.. dating...time frames all add up to a more beautiful way of life that was unknowingly taken for granted. Of course some of us had to grow up a little faster.😳.
Thanks for your comment, John.
@@FredFlix you sure are welcome..👍... what you put on this site...is constantly on my mind... before I found this. It's just RIGHT.......... on... couldn't get more accurate.👍👌🤧😂😊😳🤔🤔😰
@@johnmccree8941 I'm glad you enjoyed it, sir!
Another great one, Mr. Flix!
Thanks, Dawn.
I distinctly remember having an Am/ Fm radio pressed to my ear while Doctor My Eyes played on it while I delivered newspapers. Thanks for the memories.
May 18th, 1972 .....* I turned 9 ..wow, seems like a dream now at 55 !
i know life sure goes fast im 57. these videos are a great reminder of how life was a little more simple back then.
Fun to watch - excellent piece of work.
Thanks, Kathleen.
I remember 1972! Great year!!
Hi Fred, I graduated in 1972 also. I grew up with Chinese, Jewish, Japanese and black friends and we all had a great time. Never really thought too much about differences, just fun. I think it is time we stopped talking about differences twenty-four hours a day and watch them disappear for the most part.
Thanks for your comment, Marcus.
I don't remember which songs you had on your earlier soundtrack here, but I loved hearing "Joy" by Apollo again. I remember dancing around to this record (probably an older sister had bought it) when I was 6 or 7 years old. I've seen a copy of the single posted elsewhere here, and Johann Sebastian Bach is rightfully credited as the sole author, since the tune was his own "Jesu, Joy of Man's Desiring". My oldest sister graduated from HS in late June of 1972 and went on that fall to attend NYC's Fashion Institute of Technology (FIT) for 2 years. I remember attending her graduation there in June 1974 in NYC's famed Carnegie Hall.
Jon, the original video had Heart of Gold and The First Time I Saw Your Face.
@@FredFlix Thanks, Rick. Those are both good songs, and they both peaked right around May 1972.
Another great back in time video. I'm so sorry about your Dad's misfortune though.
Thanks, Derrick.
Just one more comment I promise... I'm so sorry about your dad and his accident. I'm sure there was an awful ripple effect on your family.(Besides the financial devastation) it sounds like he was a hard worker. Also, you sure were lucky to grow up in such a beautiful place! I was landlocked in Illinois. I didn't like it back then. Now I wish I had those ruby slippers. 😘
He left a failing business and no money. I moved back in with my mom to help her. We made it, though. Thanks, Jan.
I know this is an old filmstrip but a footnote, Carson is still the king of late night even dead. We are about the same age. I get a good chuckle every time. 🇺🇸
I've ben watching old Carsons on UA-cam lately.
Fred,I do recall integration was a patchy time....some unrest in S.C......When I went to Pensacola full riots in HIGH SCHOOL..ESCAMBIA.
The unrest was a few years earlier than '72, I believe, Eli.
@@FredFlix It varied wildly in the US, it depended where you were. Remember Boston '74 to '76? I do.
Fred, these are amazing. The music is excellent, too. Thanks! :)
You're welcome, ND.
Been there, lived that…..😎
When I saw the part at 3:58 about shopping for some things you will need for the night, I said in my head do not forget the Boones farm, when I saw it at 5:04 I laughed then cried, it brought back so many memories of my youth, growing up in the 70's was truly a special time, thanks for taking me back.
You're welcome, Murray.
Better days. What happened? (hint: technology)
I know. We were better off before technology.
class of 74...we tend to block out the bad times but the good times were ever so good