Walter Cronkite "The 21st Century" March 12, 1967

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  • Опубліковано 30 вер 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 1,6 тис.

  • @someguy2135
    @someguy2135 3 роки тому +515

    "Computers may be as common as today's telephones."
    Computers *are* today's telephones!

    • @josephgaviota
      @josephgaviota Рік тому +28

      _Computers are today's telephones!_
      Or, vice versa!

    • @yourlifeisagreatstory
      @yourlifeisagreatstory Рік тому +5

      A guest can bring his own inflatable chair…..
      Out there are men and women focused on home computing but Carl’s engineering “Ballon Chair!” (But hey, I had one circa 1998, 6th grade, that I got from Spencer’s…. Thanks Carl.

    • @WVgrl59
      @WVgrl59 11 місяців тому +5

      I know, I wish I had known that when they called me back in the 80s to see if I wanted to invest and cellular phones. But I thought who would want to carry a brick around?
      Besides, if we were late coming home, no phone or dime to call. Lol

    • @curtyeomans8446
      @curtyeomans8446 11 місяців тому +7

      I chuckled when he said people would have four different screens at their desk to read the news, check the weather, stocks, call people and check security cameras in the home. What would they have said if they knew we’d be able to do all of that and more on just one screen

    • @someguy2135
      @someguy2135 11 місяців тому +2

      @@curtyeomans8446 Not only that, but being able to do all that with a single device that is small enough to carry around in your pocket!

  • @bluepandaman
    @bluepandaman Рік тому +1157

    What they DIDN'T predict is that nobody would be able to afford a home in 2023.

    • @jM-bs3yc
      @jM-bs3yc 11 місяців тому +60

      Let alone a 30 hour work week, a month vacation and a second home...

    • @elihubildad6677
      @elihubildad6677 11 місяців тому +50

      He was right on when he said in the 21st century the home would be unattainable to the average man. 21:25

    • @schreckpmc
      @schreckpmc 11 місяців тому +16

      “The house is a thing of the 20th century.”

    • @jasonw6688
      @jasonw6688 11 місяців тому +22

      I bought a home in 2023.

    • @AshleySpeaks4U
      @AshleySpeaks4U 11 місяців тому +5

      Right! "Robots are coming-not to rule the WORLD, but"-oh but they now DO. We have robot clerks, robot switchboards, robot cars, robot vacuumes, robot pets and $10/month buys you a digital partner. So yeah-not being able to buy squat-they never thought!

  • @BradiKal61
    @BradiKal61 2 роки тому +219

    1967- "One day children may use computers for schoolwork"
    2022- "Please inform the school office if your child does not have access to a home computer"

    • @shable1436
      @shable1436 Рік тому +6

      That was in the 90s

    • @yourlifeisagreatstory
      @yourlifeisagreatstory Рік тому

      2023 - Little Johnny has been suspended. Our system shows he bypassed the security program to access FeetFinders.

    • @kkittycatkat1990
      @kkittycatkat1990 11 місяців тому +9

      2023: Now the computer does the homework!

    • @garyowen9044
      @garyowen9044 11 місяців тому

      Please be informed that your school teacher has groomed your child, and they/ them now demands puberty blockers.

    • @philipmcdonagh1094
      @philipmcdonagh1094 11 місяців тому

      Wouldn't send my child to that school.

  • @pprimiani
    @pprimiani 2 роки тому +1099

    In 1976 my sixth grade teacher told us that one day we'd all have a computer in our house and do our shopping on it, and I thought, "No freakin way. I don't believe it." Maybe he was a time traveler. Or an alien.

    • @andybaldman
      @andybaldman Рік тому +100

      Or just smarter than you.

    • @mderline4412
      @mderline4412 Рік тому +76

      @@andybaldman
      Well, she would have been around 11.
      So one can certainly hope!😉

    • @TheLastOilMan
      @TheLastOilMan Рік тому +12

      or taking orders from his masters ?

    • @AbeBSea
      @AbeBSea Рік тому +21

      ​@@andybaldmanbut, lemme guess, not as smart as you?

    • @andybaldman
      @andybaldman Рік тому +7

      @@AbeBSea I'm a slightly later generation. So we knew we'd have computers and do shopping online, when we were told it was coming.

  • @williambirmingham1074
    @williambirmingham1074 Рік тому +45

    Welcome to 2023. The middle class can no longer afford to live! Lol.

  • @OuterGalaxyLounge
    @OuterGalaxyLounge 11 місяців тому +43

    "In the 21st century, people will want to go back to the 1960s," was the prediction not made in this documentary.

    • @Badgerlust
      @Badgerlust 7 місяців тому

      Am black so why the fuck would I want to go back to the 60s what so I can get lenched under a fucking tree

  • @karencolizzinoonan3234
    @karencolizzinoonan3234 6 років тому +157

    I remember watching this show when i was a kid with a bunch of cousins. We got a paper and pencil and figured out how old we'd be in the year 2001. I was shocked to see that i would be ***43*** years old!! ha - i can only wish i was 43 again......

    • @TralfazConstruction
      @TralfazConstruction 5 років тому +7

      Exactly. Best wishes.

    • @KevinBrownAZ
      @KevinBrownAZ 5 років тому +9

      You are the same age as me. My favorite episode from the summer of 1967 was when Walter played Asteroids on a mainframe computer. Imagine my surprise when Atari released it in 1979, only 22 years later and 21 years before the 21st Century! And on a computer much smaller than a mainframe.

    • @brianarbenz7206
      @brianarbenz7206 4 роки тому +4

      @@KevinBrownAZ And Karen Colizzi Noonan -- the three of us are the same age. And over the decades, I constantly thought of Walter's 1967 show and what the heck happened. For a long time, the 21st Century program seemed laughably off, but as the home computer came along, Walter was shown more and more to be right.

    • @bunjwunj7042
      @bunjwunj7042 3 роки тому +2

      WELL. guess you were dissapointed. didnt get to live in a sky dome and fly around in flying cars. Oh well.

    • @bunjwunj7042
      @bunjwunj7042 3 роки тому

      Silly Silly KIDS! oh so cute!!!!! Wanna play with some tinker toys?

  • @merilee222
    @merilee222 5 років тому +286

    Month long vacations and 30 hrs work week the norm by 2000 due to technology? We certainly missed that mark!

    • @someguy2135
      @someguy2135 3 роки тому +40

      Europeans are a lot closer to it than we are here in the USA.

    • @LucasFernandez-fk8se
      @LucasFernandez-fk8se Рік тому +8

      @@someguy2135yea but we have a better standard of living here in first world nations like the US and Canada because we work harder. Europe is a second world hellscape of communism with 13% unemployment rates because of their low work hours and regulations mandating low work weeks and unionization. Not saying us Americans don’t deserve more but the average European lives in a crappy apartment and can’t afford kids or a car. The average American can afford a mcmansion, 2-3 cars and 2-3 kids (well pre 2020 that is)

    • @jeshkam
      @jeshkam Рік тому +42

      ​@@LucasFernandez-fk8se You sure know a lot about us, Europeans. Make sure to visit Norway, Switzerland or Monaco next time you're here. You'll be surprised AF.

    • @pamelajaye
      @pamelajaye Рік тому +18

      ​@@LucasFernandez-fk8se I think you better do some more investigating because I know a lot of European people and it's not true. But they really do have a lot of vacation. If you want a hellscape try Africa or maybe Russia. And, at the moment, parts of Ukraine.

    • @sjlinton
      @sjlinton Рік тому

      ​@@LucasFernandez-fk8se I am willing to bet a large sum of money that you voted for the Donald and tbelieve everything you're told without question. Oh- and I have a bridge for sale if you are interested - being American you can of course afford such things.

  • @BobBrandon
    @BobBrandon Рік тому +171

    The future looks remarkably like 1967.

    • @GABRIELDRUSIN
      @GABRIELDRUSIN 11 місяців тому +2

      😂😂😂😂

    • @acspicer
      @acspicer 10 місяців тому +1

      But there's lots of STEREOPHONIC sound

    • @brianarbenz1329
      @brianarbenz1329 10 місяців тому +3

      Yeah, but where's my Computerized Communications Console?

  • @merrywalsh2809
    @merrywalsh2809 11 місяців тому +241

    Things we did not have in 1967 when I was 17: home computers, large screen TVs, portable phones or even answering machines on landlines, microwaves, robot vacuums, surround sound. I did my homework with a pencil in cursive writing. Our TV screen was the biggest you could get at the time: it was probably 22 inches. There were three networks only. A couple years later in college, I used a typewriter and white erase to complete assignments. Not even a word processor yet. No seat belts in cars. Power windows were only on the high end cars. Dick Tracy, in the comics, had a computer on his wrist. I vowed to live long enough to see if that would become reality. I type this on my iPad, while wearing an Apple Watch on my wrist.

    • @johntate5050
      @johntate5050 11 місяців тому +20

      Ironically it was better in the 1960s.

    • @googleuser7454
      @googleuser7454 11 місяців тому +12

      I wasn't born until the 90s and it is fascinating to see how fast a desktop computer has become a flat-screen and smartphones are so accessible

    • @merrywalsh2809
      @merrywalsh2809 11 місяців тому +20

      @@johntate5050 At the risk of sounding like an old timer, the 60s was a fabulous decade.

    • @brianarbenz1329
      @brianarbenz1329 11 місяців тому +8

      Of course we didn’t have that 30-hour workweek and 4-week vacation in 1967 like we do today! 😉

    • @653j521
      @653j521 11 місяців тому +8

      @@johntate5050 Ironically, posters online are no better informed about the past than before the information tsunami.

  • @kilburnvideos
    @kilburnvideos Рік тому +504

    I watched this entire series as a little kid when it first aired. It was glorious. So much hope for the future. And now, so much disappointment.

    • @EmeraldView
      @EmeraldView Рік тому +23

      Twitter and TikTok isn't the future you imagined?

    • @mankind8088
      @mankind8088 Рік тому +34

      Me and my wife are running away from it...........I was a Dell warranty tech, a BOA migration engineer, I assisted with the Wells Fargo takeover of Wachovia and I was a corporate account installer for HP.
      I knew exactly what was going to happen 10 years ago and left the profession. Now I'm in logistics, work when I feel like it, and stay outside on my days off, living on three acres with farmers as my neighbors. Only computer I use is my phone. As soon as I can figure out how to live without it I'm getting rid of that too.

    • @kilburnvideos
      @kilburnvideos Рік тому +15

      It wasn't until the 1980s when William Gibson and C. M. Kornbluth showed me that dystopia was the most likely future.

    • @cbalan777
      @cbalan777 11 місяців тому +4

      @@mankind8088 When you say you knew what was going to happen what do you mean?

    • @wheedler
      @wheedler 11 місяців тому +4

      What are you disappointed about?

  • @mikehunt8997
    @mikehunt8997 Рік тому +144

    I'm still waiting for that 30 hour week. Why hasn't that come into fruition?

    • @MsTexas73
      @MsTexas73 11 місяців тому +11

      Right! With the month long vacations. With the way things go here, we’d leave for vacation and come back replaced by robots.

    • @alexxbaudwhyn7572
      @alexxbaudwhyn7572 11 місяців тому +19

      Funny that one of the demands of the current Uaw negotiations is a 32hr work week.
      The continuous weakening of union power over the past 40+ years is largely responsible for workers getting less pay, less benefits, less paid leave, less vacations, etc.
      The only way for workers to improve these is through group power, ie organizing via unions, guilds, etc

    • @nedludd7622
      @nedludd7622 11 місяців тому +12

      Whose going to support our billionaires' life-styles?

    • @hepphepps8356
      @hepphepps8356 11 місяців тому +16

      It has! I have 30 hour week and 8 week vacation in my completely normal mid-range european job. Only $70000/year, but free healthcare and very cheap kindergarden for the kids.
      Am I an union? Yes I am. I adore unions.

    • @MistaTofMaine
      @MistaTofMaine 11 місяців тому +2

      ​@@hepphepps8356curious which country you are from, Europe varies quite a bit from what I've gathered.

  • @jscottfischer
    @jscottfischer 11 місяців тому +18

    Unfortunately they failed to predict that everyone in the 21st century would be absolutely out of their minds crazy

  • @bobjordan5231
    @bobjordan5231 3 роки тому +169

    I remember in elementary school we'd gather in the auditorium on Fridays and watch the 21st Century with Walter Cronkite. I was fascinated. I went on to be a licensed professional engineer...

    • @blackjackreward4456
      @blackjackreward4456 3 роки тому +6

      Think of how further ahead you and your classmates would be if they aired Star Trek, the Original Series and/or 2001: A Space Odyssey

    • @brianarbenz7206
      @brianarbenz7206 2 роки тому +7

      You had a good elementary school.

    • @tarstarkusz
      @tarstarkusz 2 роки тому +6

      They got pretty much every detail wrong other than microwaves that already existed at the time.

    • @johanvangelderen6715
      @johanvangelderen6715 2 роки тому +8

      @@tarstarkusz
      Look up Arthur C Clark products the future.
      He was a science fiction author.
      He predicted the internet and modern communications in 1964.
      Also home computers and our telephones.

    • @tarstarkusz
      @tarstarkusz 2 роки тому

      @@johanvangelderen6715 He was a pedo and got almost everything wrong. I've read like 1/2 or more of his books.

  • @underthetornado
    @underthetornado Рік тому +168

    Everyone laughed at me in the 60s when I said one day we'll buy water in bottles like soda.😂❤

    • @EmeraldView
      @EmeraldView Рік тому +17

      And me when I said we'd be able to get whatever porn we liked at the flip of a switch on our video screens.

    • @gregorydahl
      @gregorydahl 11 місяців тому +2

      We had water on the wall in faucets . Hot and cold . When i see people buying water in bottles i wish my dad had given them a quarter . 🤧

    • @wizardmix
      @wizardmix 11 місяців тому +12

      @@EmeraldView If we're all being honest with ourselves, porn was the starter fluid for the internet.

    • @653j521
      @653j521 11 місяців тому

      @@wizardmix Meaning for adolescent males.

    • @wizardmix
      @wizardmix 11 місяців тому

      @@653j521 You can keep telling yourself that if it helps you sleep at night.

  • @57Jimmy
    @57Jimmy 11 місяців тому +123

    Walter Cronkite…was to adults as Captain Kangaroo was to children!
    I am happy to say my life has been blessed by both!💕🇨🇦

    • @653j521
      @653j521 11 місяців тому +6

      He was beloved because he didn't know any more than you did. When it finally !! dawned on him Vietnam was unwinnable and he said so, LBJ told his inner circle the war, and the election, was lost because "when we lost him, we lost America". This series is painful to watch; the level of astuteness is ridiculously low. A lot of his work was similarly lacking in depth and clarity, unlike the much more intellectually-gifted Huntley and Brinkley. Yep, like Captain Kangaroo. A security blanket for superficial thinkers.

    • @DW-ts5ki
      @DW-ts5ki 11 місяців тому

      Turns out Cronkite was no more than a deepstate mouthpiece. Like Cooper

  • @UBJibbs
    @UBJibbs 3 роки тому +26

    a 30 hour work week ? , here's what they got wrong, people are working 2 jobs just to make ends meet, I guess they assumed everyone was going to be rich, the opposite happened, we have more working poor than after the great depression.

    • @billbillards569
      @billbillards569 11 місяців тому +2

      This was when America was at it's peak and the majority were middle class.

    • @benjaminharrison1522
      @benjaminharrison1522 11 місяців тому

      Simple stop being poor lmao

  • @frenchmarky
    @frenchmarky 3 роки тому +58

    "And here, take a look at another piece of furniture that might be in a 21st century home. When you're finished with this little children's chair, just throw it away. It's made out of paper. We bought it at Ikea."

    • @gregorydahl
      @gregorydahl 11 місяців тому +2

      He knew kids would be called " its" in 1967 . But not throwing them away .

    • @evm6177
      @evm6177 11 місяців тому +2

      🤣😆 'The Throw aways'- could be a new episodical 📺 series about a dystopian world were the gettos are being over run by the networks and every one at home is stuck watching, while kids get thrown out before they grow up if your kids can't find their own damn chair.. filled with enough retarded politics, comedy, drama and of course plot armour to beat any House of cards episode any day!

    • @Civsuccess2
      @Civsuccess2 11 місяців тому

      The first thing I think about after seeing the furniture is IKEA.😂

  • @purefoldnz3070
    @purefoldnz3070 11 місяців тому +21

    Walter did live to 2009. He must have been really disappointed when 2000 came around

    • @marcse7en
      @marcse7en 10 місяців тому

      Walter Cronkite lived to 2009 you say?
      That's an impressive age! 👍🤣

  • @simonjones7727
    @simonjones7727 Рік тому +310

    Imagine if someone had told Walter Cronkite that in the year 2023 going to see Mick Jagger and The Rolling Stones in concert would still be a "thing". Dionne Warwick, Bob Dylan, Van Morrison, Diana Ross: all still going strong!

    • @dirthologram
      @dirthologram 11 місяців тому +11

      Imagine if he knew about the Psychic Friends Network!

    • @tracieh215
      @tracieh215 11 місяців тому +4

      But most of them are not

    • @simonjones7727
      @simonjones7727 11 місяців тому +19

      Well, Mick (Sir Mick, now) and "Keef" are still touring and have a new album out, Van Morrison was nominated for an Academy Award last year, Bob Dylan is still on his Never Ending Tour and Diana Ross sung at the celebrations for King Charles III at Windsor Castle. As for Dionne Warwick I saw her myself in concert last year. She was fantastic!

    • @ChrisLawton66
      @ChrisLawton66 11 місяців тому +7

      ​@@tracieh215all of them are

    • @WVgrl59
      @WVgrl59 11 місяців тому +4

      Walter would have cracked up

  • @exospaceman8209
    @exospaceman8209 2 роки тому +72

    It’s both funny but sad seeing this because at some point people though the future was gonna be awesome only to find out we went on a different dark path

    • @jeshkam
      @jeshkam Рік тому +8

      Basically that's the path we've been always on.

    • @OMGWTFLOLSMH
      @OMGWTFLOLSMH Рік тому +10

      Uh, the future was awesome. We have great medicine, better education (too bad some people don't participate), safer and more comfortable/fuel efficient cars, electric vehicles, heated floors in our homes, dishwashers, computers in our pocket, giant TVs, access to almost anything with the click of a button, etc.

    • @enginerdy
      @enginerdy Рік тому +3

      @@OMGWTFLOLSMHit is a bit disheartening that the issues we face today with housing cost and availability are a natural outcome predicted in the first segment of this video, “in the future, urban sprawl is unsustainable”.
      Well, we found out.

    • @vamseemk
      @vamseemk Рік тому +4

      the only dark path is negativity, every year humanity is getting better than the previous year. would you prefer the crusades? of 10th century south america? or middle age european plague? or growing in siberia? ...sheesh. the current in as awesome as it can get and things are continuing to get better.

    • @evm6177
      @evm6177 11 місяців тому

      Lol, imagine time travellers from that time their journal possibly would read - 'They did it! They finally did it!! Damn you.. Damn you all to HELL!!!' - Planet of the Apes 1968, Oh just the irony if it.

  • @Absolute_Joker
    @Absolute_Joker 2 роки тому +65

    Anyone remember when people thought the 21st century would be good?

    • @goldenager59
      @goldenager59 Рік тому +6

      Good? I'm afraid I don't, actually...but I do remember when people thought it would at least be BETTER than old Twentieth. (Certainly just as, if not more, exciting.) 🧐 👽

    • @howtubeable
      @howtubeable Рік тому +4

      Yes. Mid-20th century optimism was great! Sadly, they didn't see the Baby Boomers getting wasted and trashing everything.

    • @samnichles447
      @samnichles447 11 місяців тому +5

      The first 23 years of the 21st century have been much more peaceful that the first 23 years of either the 19th or 20th Century. Recall that during Walter Cronkite’s main job of presenting the nightly news he was reporting around 300 American soldiers dying each week in Vietnam and that American cities were frequently exploding in riots.

    • @653j521
      @653j521 11 місяців тому

      @@howtubeable troll

    • @Asfgxff
      @Asfgxff 11 місяців тому

      @@653j521 everyone knows it's true. The boomers just don't want to take any responsibility for it.

  • @Gorilla_Jones
    @Gorilla_Jones 11 місяців тому +19

    30 hour work week and month of vacation? 😂
    We’ve gone in reverse.

    • @darringraham2613
      @darringraham2613 11 місяців тому +1

      Businesses used to be closed on Sundays, when they changed that is when they took the wrong turn on that idea 🤔🤷‍♂️

  • @Archie2c
    @Archie2c Рік тому +33

    It's always fun to watch these and see where the futurists got it right or wrong. As I Watch this on my Phone.

    • @OMGWTFLOLSMH
      @OMGWTFLOLSMH Рік тому +4

      It was all guessing. If you throw enough darts, you hit a few bullseyes.

    • @MK-hh1vo
      @MK-hh1vo 11 місяців тому +1

      ​@OMGWTFLOLSMH Some of it made practical sense in terms of being more efficient. I think those ideas are more than mere chance.

  • @KeytarKris
    @KeytarKris Рік тому +59

    They certainly nailed the look of the 70s for sure.

    • @kristinmudra8553
      @kristinmudra8553 11 місяців тому +3

      Exactly!😂

    • @freetruth123
      @freetruth123 11 місяців тому +1

      Do you think this is staged?

    • @KeytarKris
      @KeytarKris 11 місяців тому +1

      @@freetruth123 nope. Predictive trends are tough

    • @freetruth123
      @freetruth123 11 місяців тому

      @@KeytarKris Yes, I see what you mean.

    • @childrensorg856
      @childrensorg856 9 місяців тому

      Yep looks 1977.

  • @richardblayneamerican8149
    @richardblayneamerican8149 11 місяців тому +36

    I was born in 1955, and remember watching this program. What I remember best is the computer screen that reads, "Good Morning, Mister Cronkite." How cool, I thought. Like so many people, I anticipated a future world that would be free from poverty, crime, and war. 9/11 was the first wakeup call that showed me the 21st Century would not be the gateway to a perfect world.

    • @rickcoona
      @rickcoona 11 місяців тому +1

      it could have been. look up *"Roadmap For A New American Century"* that should clue you into what the 'social masters' had planned for america in the 21st century...so far things have been going as planned for them.

    • @brianarbenz1329
      @brianarbenz1329 10 місяців тому

      I wonder how the game between the Woodmere Wasps and the Stoneybrook Samurai came out.

    • @richardblayneamerican8149
      @richardblayneamerican8149 10 місяців тому +1

      @brianarbenz1329 Timely comment; perfect distraction in an imperfect world. You might recall that Stoneybrook's goalie was injured in the last game. His substitute blocked two of Woodmere's attempts to score the melon, but only because of performance enhancing drugs, so he was disqualified. But that didn't stop Stoneybrook from crossing the 5000 meter line as the steam whistle blew, and claiming their fourth Weedgie Trophy in a row. Hail Stoneybrook!

    • @brianarbenz1329
      @brianarbenz1329 10 місяців тому +1

      @@richardblayneamerican8149 That explains their long reign on the Wheaties Box!

    • @richardblayneamerican8149
      @richardblayneamerican8149 10 місяців тому

      @@brianarbenz1329 Second only to Michael Jordan. ✌️

  • @Chuckt961
    @Chuckt961 11 місяців тому +29

    30 hour work weeks and month long vacations. Oh the innocence. The house still looks 60s-ish. Crazy

    • @thany3
      @thany3 10 місяців тому

      How many hours you work does nothing to the total length of a holiday. But yes, why not? What barbaric country do you live in that hasn't got fair employee rights and standards in law yet?

  • @itannoysme3348
    @itannoysme3348 Рік тому +77

    I was born a week before this show. I'm 56 now and look as different from then as the world does. One thing remains constant, however: hope. Hope that my future will bring good health & happiness and hope that the world will advance on a path of knowledge, peace, and love.

    • @BeliaLastes
      @BeliaLastes 11 місяців тому +6

      I was born February 21st in 67 Gen X just like you and can only hope for the best in this day and age as well, but if I had a time machine I would go back to the 70's and 80's as well because those were fun happy times for me 😊❤

    • @itannoysme3348
      @itannoysme3348 11 місяців тому +3

      @@BeliaLastes 🙏 Wish we had a time machine, but at least we have UA-cam!

    • @Seeklip6T
      @Seeklip6T 11 місяців тому +4

      The only hope that matters is the one who purchased your salvation. Jesus Christ. The world is not going to get better because this world is not our home. Normal isn't coming back but Jesus is.

    • @igordewit7357
      @igordewit7357 11 місяців тому +1

      Well...Hamas kinda shot that hpeful peace- idea down,didnt they?

    • @653j521
      @653j521 11 місяців тому

      @@BeliaLastes Back to the womb emotions.

  • @veevintage2619
    @veevintage2619 11 місяців тому +37

    I LOVE how the 1960’s envisioned us like we were The Jetsons,😂 and all the while the home of the 21st century as seen through the eyes of 1967 seems delightfully retro today. I dig that groovy sunken living room!!!

    • @bemhibbits4157
      @bemhibbits4157 10 місяців тому +1

      Honestly, the Jetsons were prophetic. Video calling. Online doctors. As a kid, I always wondered why they NEVER showed the ground, though. What happened?? Did the Jetsons predict climate change? LOL

    • @SuV33358
      @SuV33358 10 місяців тому

      Me too!!

    • @Pepprjack1
      @Pepprjack1 9 місяців тому

      I like how the big screen TV is just a really large old 60s tv

    • @RobertR3750
      @RobertR3750 5 місяців тому

      @@bemhibbits4157 You're wrong. The Jetsons did show the ground.

  • @youtoobe169
    @youtoobe169 Рік тому +35

    He nailed it about the working remotely on a "device"

    • @thany3
      @thany3 10 місяців тому +1

      I wonder if in 2001 we had a device to work remotely on. I imagine most people didn't yet. Nowadays, sure, but the future being imagined is set 22 years in the past from now...

  • @theweatherman5617
    @theweatherman5617 Рік тому +47

    Funny thing is I think that the home of 2023 is fundamentally not very far off from that of 1967, with mainly just the addition of computers/internet and improved versions of tech that already existed back then (TVs, home appliances, cars). I believe that a time traveller from the 1960s would be a little underwhelmed (at least based on this video’s expectations) - the computer and pseudo-internet predictions were pretty spot on but I can’t imagine automated cooking or 3D printed dishes becoming common anytime soon (not to mention inflatable furniture)

    • @imagine4free
      @imagine4free Рік тому +3

      Advancements tend to come in batches. We are overdue for another batch of world changing tech. I think AI will make it happen

    • @inefekt
      @inefekt 11 місяців тому +6

      And don't forget this show was talking about life in 2001, not 2023. UA-cam hadn't even debuted, and perhaps wasn't even conceived as a concept in 2001. There were no smart phones, no 3D TVs as they reference in the video, hardly any electric cars....it was a world closer to 1967 than it is to 2023. Put that time traveler in 2023, and depending on what you show him/her it might be an amazing experience for them. Take them directly from their time machine and put them into a fully electric Tesla or brand new Mercedes with its full digital console and voice recognition commands. Drive to your modern house with Google home or Alexa or any other voice command system that allows you to turn on lights, TVs etc. Watch them step over your robotic vacuum and turn on your 120" 4K smart TV with 100s of channels, Netflix, UA-cam etc. or hand them an iPad or smart phone and let them play around with it. Take them for a walk in an ultra modern city like Tokyo or Times Square in NYC with an overwhelming display of multiple large video screens.....let them fly over Dubai with its megatall buildings or any number of Chinese metropolises with their Blade Runner like aesthetics, video advertising adorning skyscrapers etc. Put a high end VR headset on them and let them walk around on the surface of Mars or the Moon or play any number of amazing video games. Show them Boston Dynamic robots in action or have them speak with Ameca, the robot with lifelike facial expressions.
      Sure, you could also put them on any inner city suburban street that hasn't changed much in 50 years and have them be very underwhelmed but there are many things you could show them to blow their minds...

    • @wingedhussar1453
      @wingedhussar1453 11 місяців тому

      Automated cooking is already a thing.there is robots that do this or even veining machines

    • @evm6177
      @evm6177 11 місяців тому +2

      Lol, imagine time travellers from that time their journal possibly would read - 'They did it! They finally did it!! Damn you.. Damn you all to HELL!!!' - Planet of the Apes 1968, Oh just the irony if it.

    • @texasscifi3431
      @texasscifi3431 11 місяців тому +3

      Plastic furniture was uncomfortable and sticky in the 60s why did they think it would be widespread in 2000?

  • @cliffhoelzer6895
    @cliffhoelzer6895 11 місяців тому +172

    I live in a house built in 1890..a beautiful condo that utilizes 90% of the original finished, stained glass, tigerwood floors, fireplace lined with beautiful delph tile, mahogany pocket doors and 12 foot ceilings. No house built in the 21st century can match it beauty and artist quality built by 19th century craftsmen. So much for progress!!!

    • @cjb8010
      @cjb8010 11 місяців тому +7

      What??? You mean those Expo ‘67 housing modules can’t compare?

    • @penultimateh766
      @penultimateh766 11 місяців тому +10

      Yeah, rich people have always been able to afford longer-lasting houses.

    • @cliffhoelzer6895
      @cliffhoelzer6895 11 місяців тому +21

      @@penultimateh766 Even the wealthy today couldn't duplicate the Victorian town houses for their wealth of materials and craftsmanship. The main reason is these craftsmen don't exist anymore!

    • @thistree9028
      @thistree9028 11 місяців тому +9

      My grandfather designed, hand cut and installed parquet floors at around the turn of the century. I think there will be eventually younger people who are bored with or tire of technology and want to bring the uniqueness of some of these crafts back. probably with more modern hand tools, but with similar ideas of individual design not mass produced. I loved the description of your house, thanks..Lucky you!
      I lived in a small apartment in an old brownstone in the 80’s which I loved. The fireplace was defunct but looked amazing. On the ceiling was a decorative plaster cap (not sure what you call it, or how to describe). I’m now in a modernized old building, but the bay windows, outer building, and arched entryway facade with columns on each side and balustrades on top are intact and wonderful! Flowering cherry trees (in May) right outside my upper floor front windows. Reading your comment reminds me of how I appreciate where I live too. When I was younger I lived in various neighborhoods with ugly houses and buildings, little to no trees-wastelands really. Pity some developers have no creativity or imagination even with limited budgets (or little motivation in that due to greed). I also appreciate some 50’s modernist homes. Some of those can be interesting..not like those modules in the vid though.

    • @Jeo-fq1zw
      @Jeo-fq1zw 11 місяців тому +3

      My home as well...I was fortunate:-)

  • @206Wheels
    @206Wheels 11 років тому +26

    It's funny to see which predictions were right on and which were just silly.

  • @leeclark4495
    @leeclark4495 4 роки тому +30

    Think we've learned that the maintenance and repair of those handy dandy gadgets is more trouble than just it's worth. For example: It's a lot less costly and troublesome to just take cups and saucers off a shelf, and wash them, than maintaining some contraption that creates them, drops them through a tube, melts them down after use and remolds them again. Could you imagine the cost and maintenance of a contraption like that?

    • @fujifrontier
      @fujifrontier Рік тому

      Well, we’d only use it on special occasions like if we broke something and it needed to be replaced 😅

  • @Parpyduck
    @Parpyduck 11 місяців тому +6

    1967: A post-scarcity technological utopia is just over the horizon!
    2023: You will own nothing. You will live in the pods. You will eat the bugs.

  • @TheELO-podcast
    @TheELO-podcast Рік тому +27

    Man, how do I get one of those house robots that CLUNK! CLUNK! CLUNK! through the house? I'd love to hear that all day for the rest of my life. :D

    • @MommyDontSeeMe
      @MommyDontSeeMe Рік тому +7

      Yes - when they said that we might be awakened by the pitter patter of robot feet - that sounded more like a Terminator...

    • @duey1083
      @duey1083 10 місяців тому

      ​@@MommyDontSeeMeYour comment gave me a really good laugh...thank you for that!

  • @bilcoferentine3567
    @bilcoferentine3567 11 місяців тому +13

    The corruption now is sickening.

  • @brianarbenz7206
    @brianarbenz7206 6 років тому +53

    It's the 21st Century -- so am I going to walk into my living room some night and find Walter Cronkite sitting on my couch showing people in 1967 how my computer works?

    • @bunjwunj7042
      @bunjwunj7042 3 роки тому +4

      No you're gonna walk in and see me sitting there telling you some bullshit about the future that doesn't exist.

    • @brianarbenz7206
      @brianarbenz7206 3 роки тому +2

      @@bunjwunj7042 Yeah, but we'll always have that Empty repetition and tasteless sterility!

    • @goldenager59
      @goldenager59 Рік тому +3

      If it happened to me, I think I'd pay money to see my face. 😁

    • @TheCrossroads533
      @TheCrossroads533 Рік тому

      In the 21st century, Walter Cronkite will be replaced by hack, partisan journalists.

  • @voyaristika5673
    @voyaristika5673 Рік тому +27

    The "computerized communications console" work at home set up was a pretty good call, but I didn't see a single cat sitting on any of it. So, they missed that one.

  • @roefully
    @roefully 11 місяців тому +31

    In 1988, I told my college professor if in the near future we would no longer need textbooks. That we could have that information at our fingertips on a laptop. He said no because we couldn’t put a computer chip that big in a laptop. I wonder if he ever thinks of me. 😆

    • @aaronhuffman4852
      @aaronhuffman4852 11 місяців тому +4

      Funny how my teachers always would remind us that we need to learn math problems and show our work on assignments since we won’t be walking around with a calculator!

    • @Hexnilium
      @Hexnilium 11 місяців тому +4

      I bet he's deceased already because your insight and his denial did him in.

  • @TerryReedMiss
    @TerryReedMiss Рік тому +58

    I watched this show from home when it first aired - and LOVED it. Look at all the things that came true! Wide screen TVs, sunken pits for seating (remember pit groups?), and so much more! Lots did not happen but for the most part, lots DID happen including men walking on the Moon! We lived through some of the most exciting times imaginable and to this day, it's still happening! I remember the show's theme tune differently though ... it was all great. Hard to believe Mr. Cronkite is gone, as so many others like him have gone on, too. But more will come! More ideas, more trial and errors, more experiments .... JUST MORE OF EVERYTHING!
    Thanks for airing the old shows, Ms. Martino. Taking walks down memory lane incites new things to happen! Yay!!

    • @goldenager59
      @goldenager59 Рік тому +7

      You get an 'A' for optimism! 😀

    • @TheLastOilMan
      @TheLastOilMan Рік тому +4

      enjoy the kool aid. Moon .haha

    • @jeffd.2390
      @jeffd.2390 Рік тому +3

      I remember watching this when I was a kid too. I was fascinated by it!

    • @OneofInfinity.
      @OneofInfinity. 11 місяців тому

      There will be more social/gen experiments and more of everything for sure but not for the "peasants", only for the stealing corpos using "AI" to control your every move and punish you for wrong think/talk through your social score and bank account, great future 👍🏼

    • @kgoundan
      @kgoundan 10 місяців тому

      Walter Cronkite died in 2009, so he did live to see the 21st century.

  • @JerryFisher
    @JerryFisher 11 місяців тому +37

    Shows like these take me back to my childhood. There was so much more optimism.

  • @andybaldman
    @andybaldman Рік тому +40

    “We were promised flying cars, and all we got was 140 characters”.

    • @Cjnw
      @Cjnw 11 місяців тому +1

      @ElonMusk

    • @Spartan536
      @Spartan536 10 місяців тому

      As a pilot I don't want the vast majority of idiots that drive cars to fly anything. The amount of people that do not know how to drive yet somehow possess a license disturbs me greatly. Then we have to talk about what people always forget about with their cars... MAINTAINENCE, oh the horror stories.

    • @andybaldman
      @andybaldman 10 місяців тому

      @@Spartan536 Ok, but none of that is the point of that quote.

  • @scdoty777
    @scdoty777 11 місяців тому +90

    Loved this series when I was a kid. “Robots may even help us, unless they become self-aware and try to kill us”

    • @oldestgamer
      @oldestgamer 11 місяців тому +2

      Bender the Offender!

    • @theblubus
      @theblubus 11 місяців тому +2

      you mean "Robits"
      I love the old pronunciations for robot lol

    • @OneofInfinity.
      @OneofInfinity. 11 місяців тому

      I rather have them become sentient than being controlled by corpos.

    • @rickcoona
      @rickcoona 11 місяців тому

      @@theblubus the pitter-patter of tiny 'robit' feet... *>CLUNK< >CLUNK< >CLUNK

    • @Ascendantmusic
      @Ascendantmusic 9 місяців тому

      @@theblubus I imagined the pronunciation as "robuts". Either way, it sure is funny to hear

  • @alphabeets
    @alphabeets Рік тому +14

    Man, 2001 was 22 years IN THE PAST already!

    • @Spartan536
      @Spartan536 10 місяців тому

      please shut up... I already feel old.

  • @BradiKal61
    @BradiKal61 3 роки тому +40

    I remember watching this on the TV in a daycare playroom in the mid 1960s. I never forgot it.

  • @GooglyBear
    @GooglyBear Рік тому +5

    CBS vs Reality. You'll end up in the same house your granny lived in, in 1967...

  • @sharksport01
    @sharksport01 Рік тому +10

    Wish i could go back to 1967.

  • @farnumbp
    @farnumbp 3 роки тому +36

    I remember watching this when it first aired. I got old. I want my flying car

    • @someguy2135
      @someguy2135 3 роки тому +4

      Me too. And a robot servant that does more than vacuum the floor.

    • @ernesthill4017
      @ernesthill4017 2 роки тому +2

      I WANT MY FLYING CAR!

    • @stevensuarez4843
      @stevensuarez4843 Рік тому

      Go back to 1985 or 2015. 😂

    • @farnumbp
      @farnumbp Рік тому

      @@stevensuarez4843 ok thank you

    • @Hexnilium
      @Hexnilium 11 місяців тому

      If you drive fast enough over a speed bump, your car is technically "flying" for a moment.

  • @jackdunne6152
    @jackdunne6152 11 місяців тому +5

    Here I sit, almost a quarter century past what they predicted, living in a house built before this was filmed.

  • @orgenoburt8988
    @orgenoburt8988 4 роки тому +16

    Computers may be as common as today's telephone and a pocket size unit that fits in your pocket. Woweee!🤓

  • @qqrk1372
    @qqrk1372 10 років тому +20

    Where the Hell's my robot? This place is a mess!

    • @bunjwunj7042
      @bunjwunj7042 3 роки тому

      exuse me . he calls them "robutts" but if you want a human ROBOT. I might be able to help you. Yes they are on the market. But they cost as much as a fuckin house to own. but PERKIES! you can have sex with them. so thats good.

  • @jimbauer6326
    @jimbauer6326 11 місяців тому +6

    One day you will have a 10'x12' control panel crowding your living room complete with switches and levers as your guests are seated, conversing on gaudy 1960s furniture. Meanwhile Nancy prepares a meal for everyone getting her recipes from her new fangled 948 pound teletype machine that rattles the house like an earthquake while robits loudly clank through the house, scuffing up floors. Grandma walks in with her transparent inflatable chair and due to her cataracts can't see it and misses, stumbling to the floor. Ralph checks the levers to see what to do next while the guests see the robit ready to sweep grandma away and toss her into the Super Trash Compactor 24 thinking she's a piece of trash...

  • @trenthink
    @trenthink Рік тому +16

    When my fourth grade teacher told me that the Apple computers we were loading multiple 5-1/4” floppy disks into could someday easily fit on your wrist, I thought, “my teacher must be totally nuts!”
    Then again, I don’t think anyone is waiting around for their plastic plates to be melted and re-forged.😂

    • @sabrinatscha2554
      @sabrinatscha2554 11 місяців тому +3

      Yeah I feel like Walter was just blowing it out his arse for a lot of this stuff. like disposable and inflatable portable chairs… it doesn’t take a genius to see the inefficiency behind that idea, and that’s dismissing all the waste that it would create just to sit down for 5 minutes.

  • @whall5477
    @whall5477 11 місяців тому +5

    What they didn't predict was what Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac were going to do to house prices by the 21st century. When this was made, those ticky tacky houses he's griping about were built to encourage people to own a home that would reflect an annual year's average salary, so they would be a home owner in five years. Contrast that with now a moment. Acreage, come on. I live in Montana, everyone' out here has a raging hard on for acreage, when they get it, believe me, they are taxed accordingly. More land, more taxes. Point is to live how you can afford to, and that's what is really becoming impossible, people can't afford anything any more, it's all debt.

  • @damnjustassignmeone
    @damnjustassignmeone 11 місяців тому +6

    I don’t go anywhere without my inflatable chair in a bag.

  • @yeahyeah5976
    @yeahyeah5976 Рік тому +4

    Lol second homes, 30 hour work weeks, working from home, one job per family. Seems like an often romanticized time actually had different hopes for the future. Shame how we turned out.

  • @roachtoasties
    @roachtoasties 4 роки тому +38

    I prefer Walter's 21st Century to what we're stuck with today. One thing he didn't predict are all these social media "influencers" who are the brain deadest of the brain dead. :/

    • @bunjwunj7042
      @bunjwunj7042 3 роки тому

      Oh dont be such a sour puss. You are brain dead as well. You are just as bad because you do like these silly kids do...stare at a screen. You have been doing that your whole fucking life. And then you have an "opinion"? oh! YOU had something to say right now? Think about it. You are no more good or bad than these kids just having fun. being obnoxious. and giving you the fuckin middle finger. Let them be kids. They will grow up someday. And someday you will grow up to be A BIG KID TOO!!! YAYY!!

    • @bunjwunj7042
      @bunjwunj7042 3 роки тому +1

      Thank you for your support.

    • @ernesthill4017
      @ernesthill4017 2 роки тому +4

      Don't let anyone tell you that stupidity is not contagious 😵‍💫

  • @CrashingCrockery
    @CrashingCrockery 3 роки тому +7

    Poor Mrs. Krashaw (or whatever it was) having to work in a kitchen with a noisy teletype computer in there going on all day, for dad, for the kids, sounds like the stock exchange floor while she tries to make a pie for 14 people...

    • @brianarbenz7206
      @brianarbenz7206 2 роки тому +3

      On another youtube of this broadcast, the middle daughter, who is shown using the computer, posted just a couple of years ago. She had never seen the program since its original broadcast in '67. It was fascinating to encounter her.

    • @CrashingCrockery
      @CrashingCrockery 2 роки тому +1

      @@brianarbenz7206 That is so cool! I live in Phoenix and was surprised I somehow never heard of this or the family what with the internet being what it is anymore. I wonder what it was like for her to see this? Herself young again, her parents-? Wow

    • @mimavox-swe
      @mimavox-swe 2 роки тому +1

      And all these predictions ALWAYS talked about recipe management as an example of what computers could be used for. Well into the 80s.

    • @goldenager59
      @goldenager59 Рік тому +1

      @@CrashingCrockery
      Doubtless the grandchildren she almost certainly has by now should be slackjawed... 🤭

  • @newforestpixie5297
    @newforestpixie5297 7 років тому +22

    in the uk in 1950, the state (or local councils) built 1000s of three & four bedroom semi detached houses-often with 100 ft gardens - for working class families for very low, no time limit rents. In 2015, houses of this size & space are built & classed as 'executive' homes -and at 600k to buy in southern england, certainly are bloody executive or 'exclusive' ! Space & Time in the 21st century will be for them that's done alrignt only. ...love from the new forest.

    • @telcobilly
      @telcobilly Рік тому +1

      Living the western lifestyle in western countries is almost unreachable for retirees in 2022. I'm in a 4br townhome in the Philippines with all the modern conveniences and able to live comfortably on a US SS retirement check..

    • @oldestnic
      @oldestnic 11 місяців тому +1

      True. The housing situation in the UK now is largely a result of post war planning restrictions which have prevented a free market in housing, combined with politicians who believe in a free market for housing but have forgotten that the planning laws prevent it. So the number of houses constructed per year has fallen from 0.5 million + in the 1950's to as low as 0.25 million now, whilst the population has risen significantly. In addition the cost and availability of public transport and lack of construction of road capacity (no significant motorway construction) has meant that many houses are effectively cut off from working locations., and the transport problems have also constrained productivity and enterprise.
      Two problems, that will not be adjusted until the politicians have the will to tackle the problem, and that is difficult because it will mean reducing the real cost of houses, which will make the current house owners unhappy. It is a more or less self inflicted injury as only 3% of the land is actually occupied by housing, and that has barely changed over the last 100 years. The solution is obvious and we could return to building "proper" houses quite easily. But it will not happen.

  • @andybaldman
    @andybaldman Рік тому +6

    Remember when people were excited about the future?

  • @ND-jv4hg
    @ND-jv4hg 4 роки тому +22

    In 1967 they probably thought it was farfetched to believe that we'd all have computers, accessing our entertainment from a desktop console in 2001. And in 2001 they probably thought that it was farfetched that we'd be doing the same from a pocket computer in 2020.

    • @anonUK
      @anonUK 11 місяців тому +1

      The first "desktop consoles" for the home were brought out in the mid-70s, although they were glorified calculators until 1987-88, when 16-bit computers that were actually capable of anything much started to come out.

    • @OneofInfinity.
      @OneofInfinity. 11 місяців тому

      Dumbphones where already here in 2009.

  • @CartoonMitchell
    @CartoonMitchell Рік тому +4

    If you want to see Housing for All in the 21st Century, visit a Homeless Shelter.

    • @howtubeable
      @howtubeable Рік тому +1

      Or a tent city, or drug addicts sprawled on city streets.

  • @larrydirtybird
    @larrydirtybird 11 місяців тому +7

    This reminds me of the predictions I made as a teenager for what my adult life would be like in 35 years. Well it’s 35 years later and nothing I predicted came true. Nothing.

  • @pastlifewife4
    @pastlifewife4 11 років тому +13

    The Jeffersonian ideal of the individual, detached home (spoken of by Phillip Johnson) is more than a Romantic notion to be replaced by progress and a burgeoning population. It is a basic spiritual need, epitomized by the Japanese garden. Contact and communion with earth feeds yet undiscovered terrain within.
    This was a timely report by a true journalist, Walter Cronkite. God, I miss his like...
    ~Thanks for the post.

  • @mattbermudez2876
    @mattbermudez2876 11 місяців тому +6

    “The kitchen of tomorrow could look more like a laboratory” my wife’s cooking is definitely an experiment 😂

  • @Underhills
    @Underhills 11 місяців тому +6

    Walter was right. I'm consuming this on my computerized communications console.

  • @PrimaryIgnition
    @PrimaryIgnition Рік тому +5

    Too bad they didn't say "a Ford F150 will cost $75K and a decent house cost a million" to freak people out.

    • @YAOMTC
      @YAOMTC 11 місяців тому

      I'm fine with the F150 becoming more expensive. It should be a tool for commercial use, not how most people generally use it as an overpriced, oversized commute car.

  • @erinrising2799
    @erinrising2799 Рік тому +15

    Teachers: you can't have a calculator in class you won't always have a calculator on you
    *Classroom in 1967...*

  • @leonardbrown7751
    @leonardbrown7751 9 років тому +17

    I WANT my FLYING CAR!!!

    • @sorinonose8774
      @sorinonose8774 3 роки тому +2

      I don't think you want a drunk driver to get into your second floor room's windows

    • @bunjwunj7042
      @bunjwunj7042 3 роки тому +1

      well they do have flying cars. just a matter of whether or not you can afford one.

  • @sabrinatscha2554
    @sabrinatscha2554 11 місяців тому +14

    50’s people: *in the year 2000 we will have robots doing housework*
    Robots in 2000’s: *dutifully spreading dog puke around the house for 9 hours straight*

    • @thany3
      @thany3 10 місяців тому

      There's a replacement for the dog as well since a little while, it's 75,000 USD and its made by Boston Dynamics. They can't wag their tails though, but they are obedient. Mostly.

  • @kasimirdenhertog3516
    @kasimirdenhertog3516 Рік тому +5

    18:58 ‘We may wake up to the patter of little robot feet…’ CLONK CLONK CLONK 😂

  • @nathanlewis4483
    @nathanlewis4483 Рік тому +8

    1967- "One day children may use computers for schoolwork"
    2023 - "Alexa, what's the answer to this homework question?" and "ChatGTP just passed my exams for me"

    • @milfordcivic6755
      @milfordcivic6755 Рік тому

      They won't be able to ask chat gpt to do their job for them.

  • @goldslinger
    @goldslinger Рік тому +4

    Our teacher and news said We were going to be in the midst of an ice age. 1974. Butter was claimed to be poisonous and margarine was there to the rescue. Women started working because feminism made them feel worthless if they didn’t, so that lowered wages to where today, both parents have to work to make ends meet, leaving kids to raise themselves, and this mess is what we are witnessing today.

  • @laurenlongfellow9714
    @laurenlongfellow9714 Рік тому +4

    “In the future we might wake up to the pitter-patter of little feet..robot feet.”
    The robot: **CLANK CLANK CLANK** 😂

  • @wecontrolthevideo
    @wecontrolthevideo Рік тому +6

    The world population just passed 8 billion, in 1967 it was less than half, at about 3.5 billion.

  • @brianarbenz7206
    @brianarbenz7206 6 років тому +19

    "Empty repetition and tasteless sterility of a suburban tract development." Think Walter didn't like the suburbs?

    • @bunjwunj7042
      @bunjwunj7042 3 роки тому

      well he didnt know what the fuck he was talking about. He might as well have been tripping on LSD with the hippies.

    • @someguy2135
      @someguy2135 3 роки тому +3

      @@bunjwunj7042 Would you rather live in a custom built home, or a cookie cutter box in the suburbs?

    • @brianarbenz7206
      @brianarbenz7206 3 роки тому +3

      @@someguy2135 The move back to the old neighborhoods to restore classic homes is the big development Walter didn't see coming.

    • @someguy2135
      @someguy2135 3 роки тому +1

      @@brianarbenz7206 He didn't say so, as far as I know. I wonder if anyone did.

    • @brianarbenz7206
      @brianarbenz7206 3 роки тому

      @@someguy2135 No one ever really does. But I love seeing old forecasts of the future.

  • @zms8092
    @zms8092 Рік тому +4

    That living room of the future looks like a living room from 1967.

  • @pancudowny
    @pancudowny 11 місяців тому +5

    Can you imagine trash-talking, bullying someone or even trolling on a social media site via teletype? Seems laughable, right? But then, it's like the man said: "We will not simply do what's currently done in new ways via computers... we will create new jobs that make use of them in ways we've yet to even imagine."
    And with those words, I recall a line I once heard in a Sci-Fi show: "Every time I hear how something will change the way we do everything, I find I still use a shovel to dig holes...!"😁

  • @trinikaukver8946
    @trinikaukver8946 10 років тому +15

    I'm not so sure people do work harder than ever before. My mother did a lot of cooking from scratch...most people pop things in the microwave and there is dinner. My great grandmother had a wringer washer. THAT was a lot of work. I can't justify the statement now people work harder than ever before. People today have it much easier than people did eighty years ago, I'm quite sure.

  • @Authorthings
    @Authorthings 3 роки тому +8

    Robots may not cook your breakfast, but they vacuum and play music

  • @halverde6373
    @halverde6373 3 роки тому +6

    No mention of sex robots!

    • @blackjackreward4456
      @blackjackreward4456 3 роки тому

      I riddled my friend on this theme five years ago:
      What is surely going to be invented if not already;
      that serves a societal good;
      but is so grotesque, that you cannot discuss it;
      to the extent that you would be afraid even to google it?
      Hint below, but if you want to try figure it out on your own, just don't read a few inches below this text:
      Hint: It solves a problem of Epstein proportions.

  • @sgringo
    @sgringo 11 місяців тому +3

    "We may wake up to the patter of little feet."
    *WHOMP! WHOMP! WHOMP! WHOMP!*

  • @patrickstowman3402
    @patrickstowman3402 Рік тому +3

    Y'know, the thing that strikes me most about this is the one thing they Didn't predict: the decline in Journalism! What happened There?!

  • @ChrisTopheRaz
    @ChrisTopheRaz 11 місяців тому +5

    In TWO THOUSAND AND, ONE!!!!……..22 years after 2001……😂 Walter, just be thankful you didn’t make it this far.

  • @jaymorgenthal9479
    @jaymorgenthal9479 3 роки тому +5

    in 2021 millions still hungry. the planet is warming. people still dying of cancer and heart disease. People killing each other in record numbers with guns. how far have we really come?

    • @brianarbenz7206
      @brianarbenz7206 2 роки тому +2

      What truly determined our future (present, that is) were changes in economic and social policy, foremost among them the excess power of corporations. The suffering caused worldwide by the unprecedented economic inequality has a million times more to do with our lives than robots cooking our breakfasts.

    • @mimavox-swe
      @mimavox-swe 2 роки тому +2

      And now in 2022, approaching WWIII...

  • @JPKnapp-ro6xm
    @JPKnapp-ro6xm 11 місяців тому +6

    "I don't believe in picture windows, which allow people to see inside my house." I guess he never heard of curtains.

  • @MrShobar
    @MrShobar 10 років тому +15

    I did my high school trigonometry problems (1970) on a teletype terminal just like the one shown. It was more reliable than my slide rule, and quicker than handbook tables.

    • @MsTexas73
      @MsTexas73 11 місяців тому +2

      I was saddened on Friday to learn that the Algebra 2 that my students are learning does not include Trigonometry, as it did when I took it over 30 years ago in the same district 😩🤷🏽‍♀️😢

  • @AndieBlack13
    @AndieBlack13 11 років тому +4

    Abandon the suburban "sprawl"? We all still don't want the Urban life, noisy, crowded..hearing your neighbors. What we did get was McMansions in even smaller land areas. Too bad a lot of them were built with monetary shell games....Very few of them could actually afford them. Fuel Cells? No not quite, perhaps some have a corny lookin solar hot water heater, a throwback to the seventies. You call that comfortable furniture?Chairs from "2001 A space Oddessey" All silly notions of the future.

  • @derryk1
    @derryk1 2 роки тому +7

    Same model home mockup featured in "Year 1999 A.D. House of Tomorrow" also made in 1967. That's the one with Wink Martindale starring.

  • @rwalkertrs1
    @rwalkertrs1 3 роки тому +5

    That kitchen didn’t cook anything it just served up food that was already cooked.

  • @tony3313
    @tony3313 11 місяців тому +2

    1967 the summer of love. A cultural revolution was taking place. The youth of today don't know how radical it was for men to have long hair and listen to Rock music played on electric guitars. To come together and protest a war all to the total dismay of the older generations.

  • @jayjay-bz3rr
    @jayjay-bz3rr Рік тому +4

    Even Walter Cronkite knew that the 21st century began on 2001. Not 2000. All the celebrations that went on in 2000.

    • @scarbo2229
      @scarbo2229 10 місяців тому

      Yeah, there was so much fascination with the last year of the 20th century, but the beginning of the 21st century wasn’t such a big deal. 😊

  • @videosuperhighway7655
    @videosuperhighway7655 3 роки тому +2

    Lol its 100x worse tikitaki paper zerolot Mcmansions. I bought a house built in 1960’s to avoid 21st century garbage. 30hr workweek 1 month vacation, lololololol.

  • @rickcoona
    @rickcoona 11 місяців тому +5

    56 years later and folks are fleeing the endemic violence of the 'dark urban jungle' of inner city, back to the safety and tranquility of the countryside

  • @joelcda6883
    @joelcda6883 Рік тому +3

    "Row-buts," not row-BAHTs!😀

  • @annode
    @annode 3 роки тому +5

    The future looked like an interesting mix of true concepts, 'The Jetsons' and Rube Goldberg inventions.

  • @mikepelletier1399
    @mikepelletier1399 11 місяців тому +3

    I was promised flying cars in 2000... I want my flying car now.

  • @SydneyChandler
    @SydneyChandler 4 роки тому +8

    Okay, that sunken living room, I could get behind today. Especially with that humongous big screen TV.

    • @googleuser7454
      @googleuser7454 11 місяців тому +2

      it was really popular but a lot of injuries were caused. I don't know why they could just put a railing in

  • @nzfreeski
    @nzfreeski Рік тому +6

    I love how guesses at the future always has a style from their present time :-)