I know time was rough for most by modern standards... but I would live to have experienced this era... really ecerything from 1880s through 1930s... what an amazing, exciting, transformative and beautiful epoch!
Same here... love this stuff... reminds me of sitting down with my Great Grandparents and listening to their stories of life during the 20-WW2.. They are long gone but this is reminiscent of ALL they had to say.. THANK YOU For Memorializing this and NOT as a caricature like, ALL Women were Flappers...My GGM thought they were mostly "fast" women... being from the Piedmont of the Carolinas, that's Not a Surprise.. Thank You again!
If I could, I would travel back to the mid 1920s. I would be a musician in a gigging jazz band and I would have a lovely Flapper angel as my girlfriend.
The girl in the photograph is so gorgeous! I love that she retained her long hair while getting the short bob look. I often find these magazine clips from the 1920s on line, such a fascinating look into people's thoughts one hundred years ago. Thanks for the upload!💕🙏
Oh gosh Poindexter likes to watch . He would be uncomfortable being within his picture frames . Brilliant observation and insight into the mind of the watcher ....the observer observed. 😊
Just to add... the writing and vocabulary of the author you are reading from puts all modern english language journalists to shame.... we have really fallen quite far as a civilization...
There's an old radio show called "Nightwatch", where a reporter travels with police- an early audio version of "Cops", done live at the time of the recording. Even the worst crooks om the show are far more elequent that most of the professors I had in college.
It's why I love old movies so much. It's a look into the past, even if it's a Hollywood version of the past. They way they dressed, even the criminals wore a tie and a jacket. The dialogue, the cars, the clothes, the story telling. We have fallen so very far, in such a short time. Cursive is no longer taught. Before the Federal Board of Education was formed in the 70's, America was ranked first in education. Today, America is somewhere very close to last.
Yes, I agree. Let’s not let language evolve ever and go back to the days of old English, where people REALLY knew how to write and speak “pRopEr” English 🥴 Sir, I hate to break it to you, but that’s how languages works. It’s always changing as time passes. The world isn’t ending just because our ways of communicating ideas and concepts have changed.
Omg. I love this channel. Makes me wonder what teenaged girls and young women were like in the 1910s? I suspect that poverty was more widespread... media was just becoming a thing...(radio came about in the 20s) I think the new money+ widespread radio+ movies and movie stars = a reinventing of the young woman. Much like how internet changed the youth
Wow. Psychology yes ; but the article also reads like Vanity Fair magazine & National Geographic..meets 1920s *The Great American Novel* ,speak. Intellectual & wordy , but I went with it & enjoyed it. Thank you for sharing this article.👍🏽
I mean,i guess this is from the point of view of teen girls in 1920s US.Also,teens didn't truly exist as a term until the 1940s or so.Not,all girls or even boys went to school in the 1920s,and the teen girls would indeed depending did marry young.Also,if this is so what was of the teen girls of 1900s,1910s or the 19th century?
I have a couple of fossils from hundreds of thousands of years ago. They’re not very hard to find and buy but they’re technically the oldest things I have.
I have fossils and they're obviously old...my best old thing belonged to my grandmother and she recieved it at her wedding shower in 1932. A full set of Schumann dessert/luncheon dishes that date to 1924.
It was a beginning of the women’s movement earlier in girls. Fortunately many by the depression era and late thirties were beginning to mature earlier and consider the consequences of life.
Free and Easy! Now there's a tune. Sometimes I get flashback of living in the city in the '30's...but enough of my insanity. As a musician I love Jesse Crawford and know lots about him, and play organ. Jesse invented his great 1920's signature glissando from hearing a woman swoon behind him while he was playing organ to the film. Every time he played a glissando she'd swoon. So Jesse would spend mornings before the matinee practicing the technique. You'll enjoy *Legendary Theatre Organists* doc1988ish. Maybe -gotten the bug- seeing that, well here's a little closer up. - *Eric Lord Plays the Style of Jesse Crawford" . Oh you could be the hit of the ball if you had this beauty of a *1966 Rodgers custom built Theater Organ* on the e bay ...Oh if I were only closer to Carson City Nevada!
I think our flapper need to get Freud drunk... As far as literary works I'm more about *On Stage, Gypsies - A Memoir of a Dancer in the 30's* by Shyrle 'Shanna' Hacker. And, *An Odd Book: How the First Modern Conquered New York* by R. Scott Williams ( about Odd McIntyre, New York's famed entertainment columnist), he was from Gallipolis Ohio originally.
The Psychology Of 1920s Flappers 1848pm 20.6.24 flapper has come to mean someone who frets or gets into a tizzy over any given thing... whereas it was once seen as chic and cool to be dizzy and without a care..... interests in imagery - are they old images made up to look old ie: replete with gals wearing fashions of the era for, say, a photography project................ or are the images genuinely of their time? to meet with a flapper as in one's dream or whilst out walking as in the school of the flaneur would suugest what................? ......maybe one sunday and then an after thought to the pub?
My grandmother married in a teal blue flapper dress in 1924 in Berkeley, California. She was 30.
I know time was rough for most by modern standards... but I would live to have experienced this era... really ecerything from 1880s through 1930s... what an amazing, exciting, transformative and beautiful epoch!
My mom was born in 1922. So I love to watch videos about her time.
The forties?
Same here... love this stuff... reminds me of sitting down with my Great Grandparents and listening to their stories of life during the 20-WW2.. They are long gone but this is reminiscent of ALL they had to say.. THANK YOU For Memorializing this and NOT as a caricature like, ALL Women were Flappers...My GGM thought they were mostly "fast" women... being from the Piedmont of the Carolinas, that's Not a Surprise.. Thank You again!
I always thought flappers came from girls who wore their galoshes unbuckled. What a lovely set of images you have put to this article!
@the 1920s channel. It been a long time since I last watched any content from you however. This was very enjoyable ❤
If I could, I would travel back to the mid 1920s. I would be a musician in a gigging jazz band and I would have a lovely Flapper angel as my girlfriend.
I love the fashion from that era especially the wedding gowns everyone had huge bouquet of flowers 🌺🌺
I'm 62 and still a "flapper". 🐥
Ah...the essence of pubescnce. Lol
The girl in the photograph is so gorgeous! I love that she retained her long hair while getting the short bob look. I often find these magazine clips from the 1920s on line, such a fascinating look into people's thoughts one hundred years ago. Thanks for the upload!💕🙏
Good episode, we learn something new every video, on the 20s
Oh gosh Poindexter likes to watch .
He would be uncomfortable being within his picture frames .
Brilliant observation and insight into the mind of the watcher ....the observer observed. 😊
Pretty interesting. Hope your transition back to the U.S. is going well.
Life in the 1920s sure was FUN!!!!!!!!!
Just to add... the writing and vocabulary of the author you are reading from puts all modern english language journalists to shame.... we have really fallen quite far as a civilization...
There's an old radio show called "Nightwatch", where a reporter travels with police- an early audio version of "Cops", done live at the time of the recording. Even the worst crooks om the show are far more elequent that most of the professors I had in college.
It's why I love old movies so much. It's a look into the past, even if it's a Hollywood version of the past. They way they dressed, even the criminals wore a tie and a jacket. The dialogue, the cars, the clothes, the story telling. We have fallen so very far, in such a short time. Cursive is no longer taught. Before the Federal Board of Education was formed in the 70's, America was ranked first in education. Today, America is somewhere very close to last.
Yes, I agree. Let’s not let language evolve ever and go back to the days of old English, where people REALLY knew how to write and speak “pRopEr” English 🥴
Sir, I hate to break it to you, but that’s how languages works. It’s always changing as time passes. The world isn’t ending just because our ways of communicating ideas and concepts have changed.
Most interesting. Thank you for this video.
Omg. I love this channel. Makes me wonder what teenaged girls and young women were like in the 1910s?
I suspect that poverty was more widespread... media was just becoming a thing...(radio came about in the 20s)
I think the new money+ widespread radio+ movies and movie stars = a reinventing of the young woman.
Much like how internet changed the youth
Me too, i appreciate it as always!
Wow. Psychology yes ; but the article also reads like Vanity Fair magazine & National Geographic..meets 1920s *The Great American Novel* ,speak. Intellectual & wordy , but I went with it & enjoyed it. Thank you for sharing this article.👍🏽
So teenage girls have always thought the world revolved around them.
I mean,i guess this is from the point of view of teen girls in 1920s US.Also,teens didn't truly exist as a term until the 1940s or so.Not,all girls or even boys went to school in the 1920s,and the teen girls would indeed depending did marry young.Also,if this is so what was of the teen girls of 1900s,1910s or the 19th century?
Well, when I was a teenage boy, I revolved around them.
Teenage girls have long passed boys in education at all levels in the UK.
Speaking of Flappers I recommend The Australian TV series Miss Fischer's Murder Mysteries
Thank you!
Strange the researcher/writer to focus on such young girls as flappers. I imagine them as young women partying.
14;49 - I'm totally smitten by this lovely creature
For a pre-made filler video, this is a weighty tome!
Very good. Hope the move goes as quietly as possible.
What is the oldest thing you have in your collection
I have a couple of fossils from hundreds of thousands of years ago. They’re not very hard to find and buy but they’re technically the oldest things I have.
@@The1920sChannel that's cool 😎
I have fossils and they're obviously old...my best old thing belonged to my grandmother and she recieved it at her wedding shower in 1932. A full set of Schumann dessert/luncheon dishes that date to 1924.
@@gertjohnson3851 thats cool
100 years ago, and young women are letting loose and asserting themselves, like never before.
This was fantastic!!!
Enjoyed!
It was a beginning of the women’s movement earlier in girls. Fortunately many by the depression era and late thirties were beginning to mature earlier and consider the consequences of life.
love this!
60S Birds "Beatle fans" was the next development. Now we got Swifties and they are fab to.
Is it just me or does that Flapper in the Thumbnail look a lot like a certain American Pop Singer?
Which singer?
@@fredthejunkman Taylor Swift
i need a dictionary, lol interesting, teen girls haven't changed much
Omg I think I’m a flapper 😮🛍️👗👠👒👛💎
Now you've just got to dress the part. Pro-tip: Most Hollywood portrayals of flappers aren't accurate.
😃
Free and Easy! Now there's a tune. Sometimes I get flashback of living in the city in the '30's...but enough of my insanity. As a musician I love Jesse Crawford and know lots about him, and play organ. Jesse invented his great 1920's signature glissando from hearing a woman swoon behind him while he was playing organ to the film. Every time he played a glissando she'd swoon. So Jesse would spend mornings before the matinee practicing the technique. You'll enjoy *Legendary Theatre Organists* doc1988ish. Maybe -gotten the bug- seeing that, well here's a little closer up. - *Eric Lord Plays the Style of Jesse Crawford" . Oh you could be the hit of the ball if you had this beauty of a *1966 Rodgers custom built Theater Organ* on the e bay ...Oh if I were only closer to Carson City Nevada!
I think our flapper need to get Freud drunk...
As far as literary works I'm more about *On Stage, Gypsies - A Memoir of a Dancer in the 30's* by Shyrle 'Shanna' Hacker. And,
*An Odd Book: How the First Modern Conquered New York* by R. Scott Williams ( about Odd McIntyre, New York's famed entertainment columnist), he was from Gallipolis Ohio originally.
The Psychology Of 1920s Flappers 1848pm 20.6.24 flapper has come to mean someone who frets or gets into a tizzy over any given thing... whereas it was once seen as chic and cool to be dizzy and without a care..... interests in imagery - are they old images made up to look old ie: replete with gals wearing fashions of the era for, say, a photography project................ or are the images genuinely of their time? to meet with a flapper as in one's dream or whilst out walking as in the school of the flaneur would suugest what................? ......maybe one sunday and then an after thought to the pub?
I also do like the elegant English used in this presentation. So Americans are not restricted to expressions like "it nails it" or "it sucks".
Flapper must be German for fresh produce fishing
Lezz-beans!!!
🫀🦖
Is this a digital-produced channel? The narration is soulless.
Your Mother.
Weren’t there male flappers? Only females were cool then? And they were cool af
Jeez, they don't sound like very nice people, kinda psycho really....lol
Not like 45 plus white men in the US then.
Sounds like today’s girls.
Find a sweet one and try hard to keep her sweet.