1950s Cabbie Reveals What "Real" Men Did & Didn't Do. An Ordinary Guy Speaks His Truth

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  • Опубліковано 4 лют 2019
  • Melvin considered himself an ordinary 1950s Washington DC guy. We interviewed him in 1989 as one of the characters for my television series, Making Sense Of The Sixties. He was frank and honest about what he remembered and how he felt about it at the time when this interview was made. Obviously not every man at that time felt like he did. But my experience interviewing hundreds of men at that time who had grown up in the 1950s and 1960s is that many more felt like Melvin then would admit to it in the 1990s when some level of political correctness and decency changed how men expressed their feelings and to some extent how they actually felt. Melvin describes hanging out on the street, something many did in the 1950s. Not being too impressed with the political movements of the 50s and the 60s. Staunchly anti-Communist and anti-Russian. Not into the sexual revolution. When I was doing my television series we did some research on what percent of the 60s generation, the baby boomers, felt that they were part of the 60s generation and participated in its activities, social or political. A very small percent were political activists during the 1960s. A much larger percent felt that they were part of the social cultural activities of that time - long hair - freer sex - marijuana - rock 'n' roll - more loose social activities then the moral rules parents and schools taught back in the 1950s. I call Melvin and "ordinary" guy because that is how he saw himself. He was a cabdriver for most of his working life and enjoyed it. Some ask about his accent. I believe he was raised in Delaware.
    You can see more of him here - • Ordinary 1950s Man Did... #1950s
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  • @DavidHoffmanFilmmaker
    @DavidHoffmanFilmmaker  4 місяці тому +85

    Full video on my Channel named “1950s Cabbie Reveals what Real Men Did & Didn’t Do. An Ordinary Guy Speaks His Truth”

    • @heyokaempath5802
      @heyokaempath5802 4 місяці тому +4

      David, where was this interview taking place? Midwest? Wonderful bit of nostalgia. I grew up in Cincinnati (in the apartment complex that was owned by Fred Trump) with black kids, Puerto Rican kids, mixed kids, Jewish kids--and we all played together and went to each other's houses. I would hear about the "racial hatred and bigotry" on the evening news during dinner, but it seemed none of us was certain what that meant but we were pretty sure it must be in far-off China, or Hollywood...and nowhere near our small world. Nobody had any money but we didn't know we were poor. We learned a lot about our differing cultures. My friend and neighbor Charlie Ogg was Jewish and his mother, Rosie, made the best matzo ball soup on the planet; my friend Yolanda Shepherd's daddy was a Reverend at Allen Temple AME and there was no spice level her daddy couldn't enjoy; Paul Greene's mom had had polio and walked with arm crutches, but made the butteriest Town House cookies in the world...the list could go on. My point is that no one felt lesser or greater than anyone else. It wasn't our parents or us as kids who saw any fault in being different. We learned it from the news. We learned it from school books. We didn't know we were different and that being different was *bad.*
      We have been programmed to react , to demonize, to marginalize and *generalize*...to find fault because we're told it is there. This brainwashing has gone on too long.
      The childhood I described was from 1976-1987.

    • @Drey_doll
      @Drey_doll 4 місяці тому +1

      Sounds like a normal Indiana man to me.

    • @brazenstudent6212
      @brazenstudent6212 3 місяці тому +1

      Man I get some of what he said but the ending about losing touch with the world is sad

    • @locomotive9000
      @locomotive9000 3 місяці тому

      The shorts include footage not in the video. What gives?

    • @thomasmarzec934
      @thomasmarzec934 3 місяці тому

      I can’t find it ?!! Can you post the link please ?

  • @dawnye1
    @dawnye1 5 років тому +20032

    When an elderly dies: it’s a library that goes to ashes.

    • @mannynoneya7143
      @mannynoneya7143 4 роки тому +229

      In my opinion, it’s more like the old library information is transferred onto other libraries. Today, the library’s are transferred onto usbs lol

    • @michaelhaulotte689
      @michaelhaulotte689 4 роки тому +171

      I believe that’s an old African saying , it may translate to museum though. We get the point. Very true .

    • @NotShowingOff
      @NotShowingOff 4 роки тому +156

      manny noneya all books are politicized. The top guy is right. The life experience of an elder is unique and cannot be found by just old books.

    • @mannynoneya7143
      @mannynoneya7143 4 роки тому +21

      Arvind Talukdar books and writing can relay thoughts better than the original speaker, cause it makes it easier to think about things, and relay thought better

    • @JerryDLTN
      @JerryDLTN 4 роки тому +84

      I had wished I had videoed a conversation with my grandmother about her life (being born in 1917, moving from Germany before the SHTF, and just her opinion of 'life') but I didn't. I also wished I did the same with my Dad....I had intentions of doing it (and wrote out questions) but when he got too ill, he went quick I didn't get the opportunity.

  • @gab31282
    @gab31282 4 роки тому +10051

    This was filmed in 1989. He thought society was going downhill then. Imagine if he saw all the confusion and crazy shit going on today.

    • @g3rdus12
      @g3rdus12 4 роки тому +307

      glad he didnt

    • @patriciax3677
      @patriciax3677 4 роки тому +190

      pay more attention... we have a dishonest plutocrat running the show. Are you even listening to the Dems at all? Americans have no patience to learn...that's why we have this idiot in control right now.

    • @billlyons7024
      @billlyons7024 4 роки тому +48

      Who says he isn't still alive?

    • @gab31282
      @gab31282 4 роки тому +299

      @@billlyons7024 He died within a few years after this interview.

    • @yermom014
      @yermom014 4 роки тому +347

      @@patriciax3677 You're an idiot, how about look at the shit the Dems just tried passing during this Covid panic then get back to me.

  • @TysonDylan0
    @TysonDylan0 Рік тому +602

    "I get off work, I go home, and I shut my door"
    I appreciate how relatable this is

    • @RideAcrossTheRiver
      @RideAcrossTheRiver Рік тому +21

      You have to educate employers by silently not replying to e-mail or calls outside business hours.

    • @lifeasithappens
      @lifeasithappens 9 місяців тому +3

      So basically just existing not really living!!!

    • @hstrangemusic
      @hstrangemusic 9 місяців тому +6

      @@lifeasithappensno shit we know

    • @Kacky
      @Kacky 8 місяців тому

      @@lifeasithappens as humans, our lives have been 'living and not existing' for the 250,000 years since we achieved what we have chosen to call 'sapience'. be lucky you can type such lame shit into the internet.

    • @Jeffreydefinitelynotdahmer
      @Jeffreydefinitelynotdahmer 4 місяці тому +4

      Yeah it's fun ​@@lifeasithappens

  • @PockASqueeno
    @PockASqueeno Рік тому +1015

    This is why I adore the elderly so much. Listening to old people’s wisdom and hearing them talk about their lives is so fascinating, eye-opening, and frankly humbling.

    • @Bellathebear777
      @Bellathebear777 Рік тому +12

      I'd bet There are 1000s in your town, that have noone to talk to. Left for dead, in a so called cAre facility, after theyre kids got they're inheritance. The lack of integrity is astounding. Those same people will be in for a rude awakening, when it's there turn. Thank God For the people that bring in Dogs & Cats, & a Welcome ear, so these people can share whatever it is, they want to share. I know a few people in a senior fAcilty" they wouldn't let us enter during covid......we're sure the abuse of those that can't speak for themselves, was off the charts.....these facilities are Beautiful looking""" places They were also nice enough to steal the items we brought this woman....Even the so called Best""" Care facilities, in the BEST" areas,. Hire criminals..They'll toss your dentures into the trash, if they feel like it. Its uncommon for the elderly to be treated with 100% Respect, & dignity..Beware if you ever put a loved one in a cAre home. I recently witnessed first hand, the cAre friends received, .in a commiefornia approved establishment. If someone wanted too, they could easily feign being ill & record the way these people treat the elderly. Just a heads up to anyone that's going to put there loved one in a facility. Abuse in many ways, isn't the exception, it's the rule. I witnessed it, first hand. Nurse ratchet deciding when & how she will administer the drugs. Making decisions her way. .The Dr cleared that up, but it took a week..I wish I had it on RECORD" this is in a facility that is considered THE BEST" Let's just say, she was removed, & she is grateful, I help her. Oh yah, the lack of respect, for even the Doctors orders! Was WTF! To any & all NURSE RATCHETS" @.....we're coming for you!.🙏💕💪✌️. And there will be no mercy, for how you treated the disabled.....Can you hear the jail door slamming? We can.

    • @Traumglanz
      @Traumglanz Рік тому +6

      @@Bellathebear777 Things like this are a disgrace and all to common. Really a shame that America lost her way in the 50's and 60's right after she had her best years. But like a
      German punk band once wrote:
      It is not your fault that the world is like this. It is only your fault if the worlds stays like this.

    • @karenh2890
      @karenh2890 Рік тому +2

      @@Bellathebear777 You lost me with "commiefornia." There are problems in every state. Fortunately, my elderly relatives most frequently died in their sleep at home or in a hospital after a very short stay. My mom needed lots of help and support to stay in her own home until her death a year ago at nearly 91. Her children made certain she did not end up in a care home.

    • @annnee6818
      @annnee6818 Рік тому +3

      Not all elderly are wise but otherwise I agree fully

    • @tb8573
      @tb8573 Рік тому +2

      ”the elderly” - as if that is a homogene group. Jeez...

  • @ravenwilson7979
    @ravenwilson7979 4 роки тому +9356

    This is why documentaries are so important. If we don’t interview people about their experiences, we’ll misinterpret the past.

    • @41510ciscokid
      @41510ciscokid 4 роки тому +96

      Facts I’ve never heard someone say that but that makes a lot of sense

    • @josephjones5070
      @josephjones5070 4 роки тому +115

      It's funny you say that...
      Do you think that this man represents the majority culture of his era?
      Where did the majority of Americans live in the 1950's?
      Did they live in highly urbanized areas like this man?
      How many had shop owners for fathers? And the resources to go out every night?
      What were their values outside of the materialistic ones that this man focuses on?
      Do you find it odd that this man never talks about religion? Donyou think that religion was important to the majority of Ameticans on the 1950's?
      Why do assume that this man represents the American culture of the 1950's? Because he references Happy Daz and aligns with the spirit of that TV show?
      Does popular media today a accurately represent American culture?
      Misrepresentation of history indeed...

    • @hatiroth7919
      @hatiroth7919 4 роки тому +170

      @@josephjones5070 You're right, but also wrong. I think she understands that, you're just reading into her comment in a way that furthers your doom&gloom perspective.

    • @josephjones5070
      @josephjones5070 4 роки тому +35

      @@hatiroth7919
      You assume my perspective.
      I actually see the degeneration of society as a plus for myself and my kin. Although it is always a shame that so many are lead astray.
      As the chaff is burned away, my line will stand the test of the fire.
      I simply try to bring light into the world by asking questions that might open some eyes. So that the blind can walk away from the precipice. This is my duty.
      The will of God is done despite the scheming of evil men. So what would be the purpose of gloom and doom?

    • @simplyhuman3982
      @simplyhuman3982 4 роки тому +61

      @@josephjones5070 it definitely doesn't represent all. It is but a glimpse. Like looking out a window to the world. This his personal experience. Must watch more like these to get a better understanding. And still we will never get the whole picture.

  • @crxpilot13
    @crxpilot13 5 років тому +5316

    Melvin H Baker died December 25, 1991 of congestive heart failure at Frederick Memorial Hospital in Maryland. White house tour guide, taxi driver, and a Boy Scout leader! RIP Melvin, thanks for sharing your memories. You will be missed!

    • @EarthChickadee
      @EarthChickadee 5 років тому +242

      Crxpilot,
      Thank you for the update, sir.
      I am kinda glad he is not around to see what we have become.
      It is a far cry from not wearing socks in rebellion to shooting up schools with assault rifles.

    • @carpediem6568
      @carpediem6568 5 років тому +110

      He was the quintessential American man, and a good one. Would throw up if he knew who lived down the street in the big white house.......

    • @hanoitripper1809
      @hanoitripper1809 4 роки тому +51

      So this is from the 80s

    • @bonniemoerdyk9809
      @bonniemoerdyk9809 4 роки тому +144

      @@EarthChickadee ...I remember reading an article years ago that was a survey asking teachers back in the 50's or 60's what was their biggest problem with students...their answer was: Chewing Gum! Far cry from today sadly!

    • @matthewclark855
      @matthewclark855 4 роки тому +20

      Good ole Frederick. I’m from the area my self

  • @joeychick9045
    @joeychick9045 Рік тому +265

    If half of the kids today had a father like this. This is a real man.

    • @dallasgraf6442
      @dallasgraf6442 4 місяці тому +2

      😂😂😂😂😂😂😂

    • @ayo0o0o0o0
      @ayo0o0o0o0 4 місяці тому +4

      It’s families with no fathers that are the worse. Listen up women.

    • @randomgaming667
      @randomgaming667 2 місяці тому

      @@ayo0o0o0o0fr

    • @michaelwills1926
      @michaelwills1926 Місяць тому +2

      The part about college or trade school is dead on. Good man, wise with age and experience

    • @tdb517
      @tdb517 Місяць тому +2

      ​@@ayo0o0o0o0families with no mother's aren't better

  • @meepenjaap7999
    @meepenjaap7999 Рік тому +385

    Everybody's life is interesting. Can't believe I never saw this channel. I graduated HS in 1980. I fully think the loss of trade classes is what is missing in society. We had auto shop, printmaking for newspapers, electronics, wood shop( I was the only girl in this class). Then we had creative classes like art, ceramics, drama, sewing and cooking. It is a great way to go into a trade or just learn how to take care of yourself.

    • @Bellathebear777
      @Bellathebear777 Рік тому +9

      I'm grateful you had that as well. I remember the home economics class. Kids now would be WTF is home eck?. Imo kids should be taught starting in 5th grade, the basics of how a home is maintained. Cooking, Growing Vegetables, etc. The school system in commiefornia is a political play. I know there are good teachers. That love & respect the children. Unfortunately the curriculum is biased. I would never allow any child to go to public school in commiefornia. In the inner city schools, they talked of Cleaning them up decades ago....while they feed the kids slop" & most can't even do basic math, cuz ya know, math is rAcist in commiefornia. But obesity is ok. These kids are being sent up river without a paddle. In San Francisco CA, the kids can get an education on drug use, & how to shit in the streets. Pelosis district is a friggin joke....All those classes you mentioned, were removed for a reason. The dumbing down of kids in commiefornia has been going on, for far too long. Now they want to vaccinate em.....it really is criminal.

    • @jimkirk4181
      @jimkirk4181 Рік тому +6

      I love what you're saying every trade is a dying art now.born into carpentry as a family trade tinker with cars for fun.in high end millwork now at 47 and no kids walking through the door not interested in hard work and skill sets and pride.damn shame

    • @jarrodholden533
      @jarrodholden533 Рік тому +6

      I graduated in 89 and we had lots of good stuff too. There was a forestry class that you went out and logged for a couple hrs once a week

    • @RetroCaptain
      @RetroCaptain Рік тому +2

      Now the worthless magic of "doin it online" mines minerals transports food works iron paints buildings etc etc.
      Doin it in person with your own hands...what's that..

    • @dig1272
      @dig1272 Рік тому +3

      I did Dental Assisting my Sr. year of high school in 1982-1983, I agree! I had an A+ when I finished, did assisting for 1.5 years and then went to college full time and got a B.A. I really gained a lot of confidence because of ROP (Regional Occupational Program).

  • @Cruelaid
    @Cruelaid 5 років тому +8084

    Guy has a great voice

    • @StevieStitches
      @StevieStitches 5 років тому +247

      @Dark Angel Fake news. Drinking "manly" whole milk and beer and eating "manly" hot dogs, bacon, sausages, ribs or dog food doesn't give you a deep voice, just a fat beer belly and life-threatening clogged arteries. Voices naturally change and deepen with age. Smoking cigarettes does give you a deep voice and also gives you premature wrinkled skin, lung cancer and respiratory failure. Food, generations has nothing to do with voice, macho bravado is fakery.

    • @brettgreen1467
      @brettgreen1467 5 років тому +74

      Baltimore accent

    • @yellowblanka6058
      @yellowblanka6058 5 років тому +30

      @@StevieStitches - I wouldn't waste time preaching logic to an obvious troll, it's not worth the effort. More on point, he does have a good voice, reminds me of James Arness.

    • @StevieStitches
      @StevieStitches 5 років тому +20

      @@yellowblanka6058 His voice reminds me of Peter Graves.

    • @chriscollesano8463
      @chriscollesano8463 5 років тому +74

      Growing up in the 70s as a kid, most men had deep rough voices. Mostly due to breathing in factor air and 3 packs of smokes a day. Another thing I’ve noticed is that nobody has those huge Adam’s apples like some dudes did back in the day.

  • @TheNoodlyAppendage
    @TheNoodlyAppendage 5 років тому +3349

    The older i get the more I understand old people.

    • @AnonYmous-ip5xp
      @AnonYmous-ip5xp 5 років тому +105

      not old *Experienced*

    • @elijahgavin6706
      @elijahgavin6706 5 років тому +56

      No shit

    • @KingRalis
      @KingRalis 5 років тому +107

      "The older you get the smarter your parents get"

    • @yourhandlehere1
      @yourhandlehere1 5 років тому +14

      The damn ground keeps getting further away.

    • @Bluntino
      @Bluntino 5 років тому +5

      Shut up old man

  • @bluewatersnipe2227
    @bluewatersnipe2227 Рік тому +173

    Grew up in the 2000’s. My dad owned a convenience store and a lot of the older fellas used to come and sit and watch TV. Quite a few vets from the WWII and Korea generation, I learned a lot from those guys and I’m lucky to have had that opportunity.

    • @clockwerk35
      @clockwerk35 Рік тому +7

      I would have loved to have someone in the family that had that kind of livelihood, at least here in the US, convenience stores like that seem to attract a certain group of people that always have interesting things to converse about. I always wanted to have a store like that in my big Midwestern town

  • @jackspring7709
    @jackspring7709 Рік тому +521

    These interviews with those from generations past are invaluable. I was lucky enough to be around when the WW1 generation were still alive. They were stoic, solid, tough without putting on an act, and strong: I feel very lucky to have known them.

    • @Bellathebear777
      @Bellathebear777 Рік тому +22

      The GREATEST GENERATION! I wish I had more time with them. When I was a kid, I was around a large group of that generation. Let's just say, the judge sent me..They were the best thing, that ever happened to me. We would go to coffee for a couple hours, & ld learn through they're joking around, about Billy running booze, the chain gang, the war, These people LOVED there country. I don't love this guvmint, but I LOVE OUR COUNTRY! for geez sake kids should start learning apprentice skills in 8th grade. Art music, woodworking, auto mechanics,. Or at the very least, the inner workings of the homes they live in.. One 30 something, I met the other day, didn't know how to turn down the hot water! Or change the HVAC filter. Or how to properly CK the air in his tires, or change his own oil. Or even how to properly CK it. I learned that stuff when I was 10. I didn't.like it at first, but I had to go to the dealership where my dad worked, on Saturdays. The men there, we're so cool! Friendly, kind, hardworking.... I still think about them. If they're still living, they're in they're 80s. Popeye Dennis with forearms bigger than most people's thighs. Love you Dennis. Tiny, was huge.....Cud Louie the service manager. Quite the talker" cud. Anyhow, I'm grateful for having been made to go to work. It was a blessing. Imo most Kids should be learning the basics of home maintenance, starting in 8th grade. If they're a step ahead, & they know, electricity can kill em,. You can start teaching them, when they're 5.
      The sooner the better.. There's no way, I would allow my child, to sit all day, with a cell phone in hand. Lol, unless they were listening to music. Get the kids back outside, to run, & play! It gives me no pleasure to be more physically fit, than most 20 something males in commiefornia.
      Or to see a 10 yr old Outweigh me by 50 lbs, heading into mc deez. Our eyes nearly pop out daily, as we see obese children everywhere. Nutrition needs to be #1 in the classroom, starting in kindergarten. It's pretty obvious the so called representatives in the state of California,. Could careless about these children. Half of them, can barely walk, unless it's into mc donalds to get themselves a nice cold salt laden WOKAH COLA. It's a crime. Imo These children are neglected, & malnourished.
      The rate of obesity for school children doesn't go down every year. It goes up. It's pretty obvious the education system in commiefornia, is a complete dumpster fire.
      Rant over.
      🙏💕💪✌️🎵🎶🎵.For geez sake people, take the friggin phone out of your kids hands. Or don't. Chunky boy & girl, will remember how you let them sit on they're azz, & basically do nothing. Rant almost over.
      No one ever drowned from sweating. I'm grateful my parents, made me work. If a neighbor kid came by today, & asked if he could water, or trim the bushes, was the car, or do something to earn ,$ i'd hire them. What a shitty way to allow your children to live. Eat, sit, sleep repeat. Smh

    • @huntclanhunt9697
      @huntclanhunt9697 Рік тому +2

      They were still with us until 2012.

    • @apparentlyjeremy
      @apparentlyjeremy Рік тому +2

      @@Bellathebear777 I agree on most things. I feel ignorant not knowing basic electrical stuff around the house or whats inside of a car engine etc. We got access to internet but this type of stuff needs to be practiced in real time for people to learn. Schools need to teach people these essentials, as well as cooking, cleaning paying bills. Fortunately I taught myself the last 3 things

    • @jakobmcgraw8962
      @jakobmcgraw8962 Рік тому +1

      Ww1 generation made the same mistake as all others fighting rich mens wars while the rich men profit off of both sides! Truth is that until the rich and powerful are put in there place people will never be free…

    • @montanagal6958
      @montanagal6958 Рік тому +2

      real men

  • @Mike-xt2ot
    @Mike-xt2ot 3 роки тому +7630

    This gentleman should have had a career as a narrator. Great voice and tone for telling stories

  • @patrickhutchison5343
    @patrickhutchison5343 3 роки тому +3092

    I like this guy. Level headed. Has opinions but doesn’t think he knows everything. Open to ideas but he is who he is.

    • @user-vm6lx5yx1k
      @user-vm6lx5yx1k 3 роки тому +4

      I don't

    • @danh5150
      @danh5150 3 роки тому +39

      @Bugsey Magee I'm guessing by the Russian name that it's because he doesn't trust Russians. ;o)

    • @danh5150
      @danh5150 3 роки тому +11

      @Bugsey Magee Can't argue that. I guess that's one of the many sad things about growing up in a police state. The government uses the people to spy on each other so there's no trust. That's pretty much the way of life in North Korea.

    • @the_Googie
      @the_Googie 3 роки тому +16

      @@danh5150 always remember, while the soviet government was evil, the people there were men like you and me.

    • @danh5150
      @danh5150 3 роки тому +11

      @@the_Googie 1000% true. I've always been fascinated with the former Soviet Union and the accomplishments its citizens were able to make in spite of their government. Sometimes when I play hockey I'll wear a KHL or CCCP jersey. Would love to visit Russia some day; I have absolutely no problem with the people. And yes; Stalin was every bit the sociopath Hitler was. Russian people (and Ukrainian, Latvian, Belarussian, etc) were victimized by both.

  • @ClydeYouTuber
    @ClydeYouTuber Рік тому +714

    A sensible man, and a great thing to listen to. Plenty of people like this still exist, but viewing him talk is like a time-capsule. We learn from history, whether it be good or bad. That's how we avoid repeating it. Censorship doesn't help us, otherwise those at the top dictate what's "right."

    • @christianglass9139
      @christianglass9139 Рік тому +16

      Does this mean you’re going to power scale 50s men vs millennials

    • @mediaconglomerate4897
      @mediaconglomerate4897 Рік тому +2

      @@christianglass9139 no likes? this is a good comment reply lol

    • @Saber23
      @Saber23 Рік тому +3

      First and for most, big fan of your stuff my guy and 2nd you’re 100% right but hey I guess that’s what you get when you decide to build a top down society as opposed to bottom up, after all if the state controls and imposes everything then morality is eventually going to be included luckily we have elders like Melvin and people like you who can see through all the crap 🙏❤️

    • @martinvanburen4578
      @martinvanburen4578 Рік тому +13

      i agree, censorship never helps. have to reveal the truth no matter how ugly it is

    • @Saber23
      @Saber23 Рік тому +7

      @@martinvanburen4578 this ain’t even about truth anymore it’s gotten so bad that if you say something that could even be INTERPRETED in a way people don’t like it could get you cancelled

  • @mikemcmullan8781
    @mikemcmullan8781 Рік тому +296

    I was a high school teacher in '93. One of my co-workers was about 25 years older than I and had been in education 30 years. I asked him about students and what he thought about their education. He said that writing skills had definitely declined, but test scores had increased (SAT/ACT). Overall, he remarked that thinking skills were seriously lacking and that the best indicator for a child's success in school was dependent on the amount of parental involvement -- more involvement, better students, better learning.

    • @kickyourfacification
      @kickyourfacification Рік тому +6

      “Low functioning parents?”

    • @InTonalHarmony
      @InTonalHarmony Рік тому +19

      Well, with both parents working full time to live in a little less debt, there's not much time left for parent involvement. Thats only for the privileged.

    • @kickyourfacification
      @kickyourfacification Рік тому +1

      Both parents don’t have to work. If u lower ur standards and not buy the latest IPhone when it comes out or the latest car. Stop going into crazy debt. One parent can stay at home and raise the children while the other works. This has been our paradigm for hundreds of years. Only in the last 70-80 years has this changed and everyone is acting like the problems associated with a government education is a Scooby Do mystery. Don’t let the government babysit, educate, and groom ur children. Raising ur children is a privilege and one should not take it lightly.

    • @mikemcmullan8781
      @mikemcmullan8781 Рік тому +1

      @@kickyourfacification Absolutely!

    • @InTonalHarmony
      @InTonalHarmony Рік тому +6

      @@kickyourfacification I'm not talking about us privileged white guys. I'm talking about the 64% of Americans living paycheck to paycheck. You think America is the leader in household debt because of iPhones?

  • @ghostpuppet31
    @ghostpuppet31 5 років тому +2377

    This is called the 'straight talk', no bs, no hype, no agenda, no made up crap. Truth resonates and it shows in the face and tone of voice. Live and learn, from people who lived a real life.

    • @shadegreen5351
      @shadegreen5351 5 років тому +12

      "straight talk, no jive" - neil fallon

    • @ghostpuppet31
      @ghostpuppet31 5 років тому +2

      @@shadegreen5351 precisely brother

    • @asapANTy
      @asapANTy 5 років тому +18

      You act like no one's straight up anymore

    • @devonjenkins6829
      @devonjenkins6829 5 років тому +7

      Wow couldn't just write a simple comment..

    • @ghostpuppet31
      @ghostpuppet31 5 років тому +12

      @@devonjenkins6829 Looks like you missed the whole point of the video. I leave the simple comments to the Devon Jenkins' of the world!

  • @councilestateproduct
    @councilestateproduct 4 роки тому +794

    As an Englishman I find this an absolutely fascinating insight into American culture from a bygone era. Brilliant upload thank you.

    • @josephjones5070
      @josephjones5070 4 роки тому +13

      Why do think that this man represents the culture of the majority of Americans in the 1950's?
      As an American I would say that he is a very special case. One that lines up with the TV show representation of his era.
      However, media very rarely shows the true culture. Rather, it is shaping it for the future.

    • @councilestateproduct
      @councilestateproduct 4 роки тому +43

      @@josephjones5070 an "insight".

    • @josephjones5070
      @josephjones5070 4 роки тому +4

      @@councilestateproduct
      Indeed.
      Simple questions can put things in a more clear light.
      Such as, where did the majority of the American population live in the 1950's?
      Was it in highly urbanized metropolitan areas?
      What does this man focus on, and what does he neglect?

    • @councilestateproduct
      @councilestateproduct 4 роки тому +44

      @@josephjones5070 I really don't get why you're asking these questions? You've got your knickers in a twist over something and I'm not sure why. Google can answer your questions easily I don't get what what answering them would prove.

    • @josephjones5070
      @josephjones5070 4 роки тому

      @@councilestateproduct
      I know the answers to the questions. They were supposed to be for your benefit.
      Oh well.

  • @mo-issa
    @mo-issa Рік тому +27

    he's so smooth and well spoken it's so soothing to listen to him .

  • @juliegood7999
    @juliegood7999 Місяць тому +6

    I was 25 back in 1989 but today, I could sit here and talk about the 1980s with the same nostalgia and sentiment

  • @BuckandOden
    @BuckandOden 4 роки тому +448

    The guy who filmed all these interviews couldn't have imagined the platform he'd have one day to share them.

    • @DavidHoffmanFilmmaker
      @DavidHoffmanFilmmaker  4 роки тому +211

      So true. I didn't.
      David Hoffman-filmmaker

    • @alexandrabiggs5368
      @alexandrabiggs5368 3 роки тому +25

      Rolie O'Leary right honestly I didn’t know the guy who posted these videos was the same guy that took the videos.Thats freaking awesome.

    • @avamasquerade
      @avamasquerade 2 роки тому +2

      @@DavidHoffmanFilmmaker I'm genuinely amazed by whatever it was that you had in you that compelled you to *just keep going*...I mean...

    • @100GTAGUY
      @100GTAGUY 2 місяці тому +2

      ​@@avamasquerade id reckon it may play back into the sayings "the people want to know" and "the truth is out there, you just have to keep looking" that provides a sense of duty and purpose to keep pushing on as a journalist.

  • @AMcG-hf6yx
    @AMcG-hf6yx 4 роки тому +836

    I miss this man and I didn’t even know him.

    • @PC.NickRowan
      @PC.NickRowan 4 роки тому +8

      Me too

    • @lipsmcgee8242
      @lipsmcgee8242 4 роки тому +23

      He just has that wise, grandfather vibe about him. Like you could sit and listen to him for hours as he rambles, not knowing it’s some of the most introspective stuff you’ve ever heard. Kinda makes me miss my grandpa to be honest.

    • @Shivpi3141592654
      @Shivpi3141592654 4 роки тому

      Okay boomer

    • @kelebeck5905
      @kelebeck5905 4 роки тому +10

      He was a good man who was raised right.

    • @donnad6677
      @donnad6677 4 роки тому +2

      I feel the same way...I miss him too, and don't know him...❤❤❤❤❤

  • @chadhill455
    @chadhill455 Рік тому +167

    Man, to think this man has likely passed away, but the words he's speaking back then are touching me even now. He speaks with such under-stated wisdom, the kind you only get from years of living and coming to humble conclussions. It's sad to know he's gone, but his words will hopefully speak to generations in the future

    • @donkey3187
      @donkey3187 Рік тому +2

      why do you say he likely passed away? this was only three years ago and hes like he's strong and healthy here

    • @chadhill455
      @chadhill455 Рік тому +2

      @@donkey3187 The video uploaded was 3 years ago. This video of him, he looks to be an elderly man, and he is recollecting the 1950's. Even if he was only 55 years old in the video, which would mean he can recollect the social status quo's of society from when he was a 5 year old, that would make the man 128 years old right now. My money is he passed away....

    • @donkey3187
      @donkey3187 Рік тому +11

      @@chadhill455 I think you need to work on your math skills. If he was 5 years old in 1955, per your example, that would make him about 72 today. How you got 128 is beyond me but it's hilarious. To be 128 today,. he would have been born in 1894. lol

    • @chadhill455
      @chadhill455 Рік тому

      @@donkey3187 Yeah my math is shit. For some reason I had discounted that I don't know when the video of the man himself was recorded and it messed up my 'calculations'. I should've considered he would have most likely been atleast driving age during the 1950's, since the stories he tells revolves around that age

    • @donkey3187
      @donkey3187 Рік тому +2

      @@chadhill455 That's the real question and the key to the answer isn't it? When was the recording made? But if it was made any time in the last 30 years and he was say 55 when it was made, the most he would be today is 85, which is of course very possible.

  • @aunderiskerensky2304
    @aunderiskerensky2304 Рік тому +182

    He reminds me of my own grandfather, rest his soul. Don't worry sir, I'm raising my kids like the old days; just like I was. Loved this video. Really down to earth.

    • @tb1629
      @tb1629 Рік тому

      Your not but nice try

    • @aunderiskerensky2304
      @aunderiskerensky2304 Рік тому

      @@tb1629 ok bud if you say so. look out everyone it's internet lord TB, he who knows and sees all. jackass.

    • @Traumglanz
      @Traumglanz Рік тому +8

      So they get to feel plenty of that belt? ;-)
      Not everything was sunshine and roses. We made some improvements in our methods of education, but not every new idea is naturally a good one.

    • @alenparker3056
      @alenparker3056 Рік тому

      @@Traumglanz No belt is what creates the pink nailed fatsos blocking people on their way to work because they don't like oil.

  • @igriesert8561
    @igriesert8561 2 роки тому +1181

    It's sad to lose people like this. So rational and down to earth. Salt of the earth type guy.

    • @smkxodnwbwkdns8369
      @smkxodnwbwkdns8369 2 роки тому +10

      He isn’t rational. More like he’s pragmatic.

    • @icebreaker9006
      @icebreaker9006 2 роки тому +11

      TURN TO THE LORD JESUS CHRIST BEFORE ITS TOO LATE, GIVE YOUR LIFE TO HIM AND START WALKING IN OBEDIENCE, WITHSTANDING FROM ALL SIN AND WICKEDNESS, JESUS SAID THE PATH TO HEAVEN IS HARD AND NARROW, AND FEW FIND IT. MATTHEW 7:13-14, HEBREWS 5:9, JOHN 14:15, MATTHEW 7:21-26, 1ST CORINTHIANS 6:9-10, JOHN 3:16-21, JOHN 10:7-8, MATTHEW 10:26, AND LUKE 13:5. GOD BLESS YOU ALL.

    • @igriesert8561
      @igriesert8561 2 роки тому +27

      @@icebreaker9006 wtf does that have to do with what I said?

    • @lilcreaper007
      @lilcreaper007 2 роки тому +3

      @@smkxodnwbwkdns8369 most people are like this but I have a bias I've lived in the American Midwest but this guy resonates like the old timers I've met in the north Kansas plains. Note also . Alot weren't racist Kansas was a free negro state the inventor of basketball

    • @smkxodnwbwkdns8369
      @smkxodnwbwkdns8369 Рік тому +2

      @@igriesert8561 he’s witnessing, part of being a christian

  • @briand5170
    @briand5170 4 роки тому +3811

    “College shouldn’t be 10k a semester”
    Oh if only he could see it now

    • @juulpod9718
      @juulpod9718 4 роки тому +171

      O k tbh 10k back then equates to what it costs today. Inflation

    • @aeringothyk5445
      @aeringothyk5445 4 роки тому +97

      I’m seeing no historical evidence that it Ever costed 10,000 in 1950s money.
      If it did, a single semester would be $100,000 in today’s money, which is higher than today’s tuition by a large margin. And considering that tuition being unethical murder of the lower class is a rather recent development, It’s more likely that it costed closer to 10,000 after inflation.

    • @bonchidude
      @bonchidude 4 роки тому +31

      @@aeringothyk5445 actually since the dollar was backed by silver, it would be more like $180,000.

    • @ousooners23
      @ousooners23 4 роки тому +3

      Yeah cuz going to OU was expensive (Oklahoma univesity) probably atleast $5k-10k a semester for in state students lol other kids outside of state were double smfh haha

    • @malachisharp2695
      @malachisharp2695 4 роки тому +8

      At least you have the chance to go to college. Because of my race I've never had the opportunity of a proper education, I am self taught on the majority of my educational skills. Tuff life be grateful because somebody somewhere has got it worse.

  • @danielpohl29
    @danielpohl29 Рік тому +133

    When you are young, you're an idealist. When you are older, you're a realist

    • @markus4925
      @markus4925 Рік тому +4

      Yea. That’s true.
      That happens when the existential crisis kicks in. It never goes away.

    • @joeschmo4646
      @joeschmo4646 Рік тому +10

      Young as in a literal child. Gen Z has had to grow up faster than any generation before them. There’s no time for fun, no time for play, no time for anything except work and coming home to an empty apartment that costs 1500 dollars a month. Crippling loneliness.

    • @ayo0o0o0o0
      @ayo0o0o0o0 4 місяці тому

      @@joeschmo4646nooo way. Half these kids don’t work, stay longer at their parents homes, want to be influencers, professional gamers, and all those useless jobs. Plus fast food restaurants alone are now getting employees $20 an hour, which isn’t bad money. When I was a kid in the early 00s making money was tough. On top of everything, it’s much easier to progress in life as you have the tools all incorporated into a single unit (cell phone, tablets, internet is extremely vast compared to 20 years ago), and the list goes on.

    • @paul66990
      @paul66990 3 місяці тому

      You realise principles come with a price.

    • @murderc27
      @murderc27 2 місяці тому

      ​@@joeschmo4646is that why it _seems_ that materialism is more important to Gen Z than any other gen before?

  • @Roach1776
    @Roach1776 Рік тому +35

    my 76 year old grandmother tells me stories about her childhood a lot, and hearing these perspectives always makes me feel like im learning new things, its nice to hear history from the perspective of people who lived it

    • @noirekuroraigami2270
      @noirekuroraigami2270 Рік тому +1

      My grandma tells me about her family couldnt afford to wear shoes and her father was a bootlegger. And how they weren't allowed to go to the Celtics games. Or when my Uncle was fired from the Post Office for "Co-Habitating with a woman he wasnt married to" even thought they had a child. Or how the FBI, had kept tabs on all my family for years with cointel. Even tried to stop my Nana from getting a job as PA for UCLA, because my Uncle had black panther meetings in her basement
      The past was stupid

  • @jacob8949
    @jacob8949 3 роки тому +1693

    This video really strikes a chord with me. I used to work in a pub, and from time to time on a slow night (usually a Sunday) an older person would come in by themselves and sit at the bar. I had nothing to do except serve them a drink and maybe polish the brasswork, so I'd listen to their stories. They'd tell me about their old friends, whirlwind romances, places they'd lived, brushes with the law, pie in the sky business ventures, hard-earned life lessons and loved ones they had lost. Listen to your elders. You may not agree with everything they say (different eras and all that), but they've seen more of the world than you can imagine.

    • @Twig2250
      @Twig2250 2 роки тому +15

      I work in the service industry (fine dining) so I encounter all kinds of older people well off and great stories to tell so I know exactly what you mean

    • @aliyamoon80
      @aliyamoon80 2 роки тому +10

      That's really lovely! I'm a nurse. I've had the honor of listening to life stories. It's just grand! It's a gift.

    • @redpilloahu_808
      @redpilloahu_808 2 роки тому +7

      Living history books

    • @rswindol
      @rswindol 2 роки тому +6

      I liked listening to my Grandma's childhood stories from when she was a child in the 30s. It was a different world back then.

    • @jonathanotineru5774
      @jonathanotineru5774 2 роки тому

      @@Twig2250 p1

  • @jhutchinsonjr
    @jhutchinsonjr 5 років тому +403

    This was how my father would speak about the 1940s and 50s. Excellent perspectives. My father was born in 1928 and served in 3 wars. I can appreciate this man.

    • @Luke-hk5vx
      @Luke-hk5vx 5 років тому +3

      Geez I salute to him

    • @trollking99
      @trollking99 5 років тому +6

      Wow, I assume WW2, Korea, and Vietnam.

    • @alysiarubyredshoes6267
      @alysiarubyredshoes6267 5 років тому

      Certified Legend y

    • @C.G91
      @C.G91 5 років тому

      @@trollking99 too young for ww2 at the end of ww2 1945 he was 17 and it ended in June so if anything in 1944 he would be 16 so doubt it

    • @trollking99
      @trollking99 5 років тому +6

      @@C.G91 True, but still possible. He could have lied about his age to enlist - happens all the time. Plus, it doesn't necessarily mean he saw combat. I also just realized that 1928 was when my maternal grandfather was born.

  • @andyman8630
    @andyman8630 Рік тому +113

    i'm an engineer, but what always humbled me, was a man such as this! he's a bus driver and yet he speaks with a wisdom beyond not only his profession, but his years

    • @barnabybot
      @barnabybot Рік тому +1

      Not really, hes just less affected then present day people who are much more media savvy and understand the potential of UA-cam.

    • @whitestork3896
      @whitestork3896 Рік тому +3

      Maybe there is more to people than we choose to believe. Maybe of we truly listened we would discover that people are very interesting when they talk about things they know (as opposed to repeating slogans they were told)

    • @kurtangusofficial
      @kurtangusofficial Рік тому +8

      You could have left out the part about you being an engineer. Such an odd angel to come from, because it seems you're putting yourself above others.

    • @barnabybot
      @barnabybot Рік тому +3

      @@kurtangusofficial agreed. It's so qually patronising, superior and ageist at the same time.

    • @andyman8630
      @andyman8630 Рік тому +5

      @@kurtangusofficial
      i guess you missed the point entirely - the point is *knowledge is NOT wisdom* and just because i know a lot, it doesn't make me better than a *wise* bus driver
      i'd suggest you're projecting

  • @jadedcatz7067
    @jadedcatz7067 3 роки тому +3394

    Everyone in the comments complaining that people like this guy are not around today. Why not try and be like this guy?

    • @michaelmcdonald8452
      @michaelmcdonald8452 2 роки тому +189

      Couldn’t agree more.
      a) There are still many.
      b) Stop idolizing people and just BE the best you you can be.
      c) It affects your life in no way how many of “this guy” there are.
      d) I bet this guy would be the first to tell you that he like most of us has many flaws and you can’t draw some idyllic illustration of a person from a fifteen minute interview.

    • @craycraymckay.1535
      @craycraymckay.1535 2 роки тому +74

      People just lived and survived they didn’t analyze everyone and themselves and make so much of themselves they just got up and did.

    • @non_brewed_condiment
      @non_brewed_condiment 2 роки тому +58

      "be the change you want to see in the world"

    • @Noahjames27
      @Noahjames27 2 роки тому +37

      Because people don't generally accept people like this nowadays there's no glory to it beside finding a couple if freinds who are similar

    • @firstnamelastname6193
      @firstnamelastname6193 2 роки тому +82

      guys like him are everywhere, they're just not going to post selfies on insta so a good portion of the population would never be exposed to people like him. Younger people don't venture very far from the screens on their phones and are never in social circles that are truly diverse

  • @justmae7981
    @justmae7981 2 роки тому +1255

    He has a wonderful timbre to his voice.

    • @rvnmedic1968
      @rvnmedic1968 2 роки тому +18

      I thought the same thing. He could have been a DJ or radio announcer.

    • @satiricalsartorial
      @satiricalsartorial 2 роки тому +43

      I love rustic American accents like such.

    • @borp6912
      @borp6912 2 роки тому +54

      Breathing that secondhand smoke since being a baby gives you that nice touch of rasp

    • @helenready1310
      @helenready1310 2 роки тому +7

      right? did he miss his calling as a radio personality or what? panty-dropper vocals....

    • @Ethan.s..
      @Ethan.s.. 2 роки тому +7

      He had a cold during this interview. That is part of his voice here.

  • @kasondaleigh
    @kasondaleigh Рік тому +12

    This guy is a winner. Kind, thoughtful, smart, compassionate. Wow!

  • @jamespn
    @jamespn Рік тому +66

    Parents have a strong influence over their children, when this man recalls that his parents never had a alcohol in the house reminds me of a family that I knew where their parents drank each weekend from Friday evening well into Saturday night. Most of their children had drug and alcohol problems that resulted in an early death.

    • @bluepsiongamer4909
      @bluepsiongamer4909 Рік тому +13

      My parents didn't drink except a glass of wine maybe at a fancy restaurant or a beer on fourth of July. They never told us that alcohol was forbidden or anything like that. Same thing with drugs. My parents made mistakes like all other parents but I think they handled intoxicants correctly. Drugs and alcohol were not forbidden and therefore interesting, but they weren't normalized either. I have a drink a few times a year and none of my siblings have substance abuse problems.
      I don't look down on people that have addictions because I was simply lucky. We learn from example!

    • @frisky9
      @frisky9 Рік тому

      So true!

  • @songohan3321
    @songohan3321 2 роки тому +442

    Just realized that this was filmed in 1989. So much has happened in the 30+ years since this was filmed that it would make anyone's head spin.

    • @andrew2469
      @andrew2469 2 роки тому +34

      Imagine what the next 30 years are going to bring.

    • @iluvyunie
      @iluvyunie 2 роки тому +21

      @@andrew2469
      no ty-

    • @blurglide
      @blurglide 2 роки тому +35

      He is as far from the events he's recalling as we are from when this was recorded

    • @anonymousdude9099
      @anonymousdude9099 2 роки тому +2

      Oh, no. Since I was in the class of '89, it's my turn?

    • @millevenon5853
      @millevenon5853 2 роки тому +1

      @@andrew2469 metaverse from mark zuckerburg

  • @mrgbig6237
    @mrgbig6237 5 років тому +7107

    The lost art of storytelling with no particular point.
    EDIT: it's been a few months and I'm still getting notifications on my phone from this. It's funny to see all the people misinterpreting my comment as disrespect or not getting 'the' point. I said no 'particular' point. Meaning there is no single point. The guy goes from getting sandwiches to talking about kids in the 80's and everything in between. He's telling an open-ended story, not tied to any one point. That's the lost art I was talking about. Everything these days seems to have to have a quick, immediate point.

    • @rsd3719
      @rsd3719 5 років тому +49

      Seinfeld

    • @horseshoe182
      @horseshoe182 5 років тому +133

      i really enjoy older peoples stories, the trouble is, they don,t tell enough of them.

    • @fpscanada3862
      @fpscanada3862 5 років тому +77

      @Donde Merlin its funny thats what you take out of it... did his expression ever seem like he was trying to convey how horrible his generation was?

    • @HighestRank
      @HighestRank 5 років тому +8

      Don't think the points weren't edited out.

    • @Agislife1960
      @Agislife1960 5 років тому +36

      The point was to portray the culture of the 50's

  • @shaunhall960
    @shaunhall960 Рік тому +15

    David, keep doing what you're doing! The more we talk about these types of issues the better we will be in solving them. Stay kind everyone!

  • @TH-hy9kr
    @TH-hy9kr Рік тому +21

    This is a great man. Thank you for sharing his story.

  • @fredchevalier2333
    @fredchevalier2333 3 роки тому +740

    I could listen to this man all day, his accounts are so fluid, not scripted.

  • @briansmobile1
    @briansmobile1 2 роки тому +1773

    Interviews like this are like having a time machine that goes back in time, but it's like a submarine.
    You've just got a window to look out of to gain a little perspective. There's a comment here by Dawnye C
    that goes "When an elderly dies: it’s a library that goes to ashes." David Hoffman, by posting these videos
    is a hero that saves a bit of that library and shares it with the public.

    • @DavidHoffmanFilmmaker
      @DavidHoffmanFilmmaker  2 роки тому +89

      Thank you for your comment. If your resources allow, I would sure appreciate your using the THANKS button under any of my videos including the one you have commented on. It is something new that UA-cam is beta testing and would mean a great deal for my continuing efforts.
      David Hoffman filmmaker

    • @OGKook
      @OGKook 2 роки тому +5

      Great comment cheers!

    • @SavageBunnyGetMoney
      @SavageBunnyGetMoney 2 роки тому +4

      its like The Wire like when Frank Sobokta talks about trying to raise his only son like maybe you should of gone to College but hes right you need money so you sell drugs to actually afford stuff and look at Nick Sobokta like he first was against it then he saw the writing on the wall he was a working stiff but wasnt getting paid

    • @lindabranigan2460
      @lindabranigan2460 2 роки тому +1

      Briansmobile 1
      I am going to look up Dwayne C. Your piece was eloquently written.

    • @cameronforbes2649
      @cameronforbes2649 2 роки тому

      1k like

  • @goodyeoman4534
    @goodyeoman4534 Рік тому +10

    This guy has an amazing voice. Deep and rich and earthy. Blue-collar type.

    • @mda1218
      @mda1218 3 місяці тому +2

      100% male…

  • @DangerousDevilOfficial
    @DangerousDevilOfficial Рік тому +16

    I just talked with my grandmother today. About her parents. So would be my great grandparents. And then we talked about the fact my grandmother actually knew her grandparents who were born in 1871. Imagine that. Here we are in 2022.
    And I still have a window with my 91 YO Grandmother to stories from the 1870’s, she heard firsthand from her grandparents. It boggles my mind. To hear these stories of life, from that long ago by the very first person they were shared with. From near 150 years ago.
    Literally being born in small rural outpost towns where land grabs were still happening. And these areas are now big American cities. It trips me out. And not long after the civil war. I feel very blessed to be able to learn all of this. And only be in my mid 40’s myself. Our seniors like my grandmother and this man are jewels and we need to learn as much as we can. While we can. Because they are not going to be here for all that much longer…
    My Grandmother is now a Great, Great Grandmother. So she could share these stories in a few more years when my grandson is old enough to remember them. And he could literally live another 90 years plus himself. So that would be a direct window of stories of our family history literally traveling directly from 1871 to almost 2100 by that time, by direct people who experienced it at both ends of the history. What a trip! 😳😳😳
    In this man’s case, I assume he has passed some time ago if this video is from the 80’s.

    • @warlordofbritannia
      @warlordofbritannia Рік тому

      1871 is still Reconstruction Era-that’s only six years after the passing of the 13th and 14th amendments. Ulysses S Grant was in his first term as president, stamping down the first iteration of the KKK.
      So long ago and yet so short a time in the scope of history.

  • @assemblyofsilence
    @assemblyofsilence 5 років тому +2630

    This video demonstrates how rarely we ever see a real person just being themselves in the media anymore. I’m not sure how many humans still have a solid sense of identity at this point - hence the contemporary obsession with identity? We need more reminders like this that a decent life requires a decent society. Thanks for posting.

    • @landman2001
      @landman2001 5 років тому +18

      A lot of people don't have their own shit anymore

    • @wecandraw1
      @wecandraw1 5 років тому +51

      I dont understand your comment. To me this video shows me how similiar my peers are to this guy and his youth.
      and plus a "decent society" doesnt really make sense to me either. this is a white guy's perspective. Im sure life was different from everyone.

    • @assemblyofsilence
      @assemblyofsilence 5 років тому +26

      Joseph C: I don’t quite understand your complaint. Are you saying that because he’s a white guy he can’t be decent?

    • @assemblyofsilence
      @assemblyofsilence 5 років тому +9

      Critter: Guy Debord says it best: “Stars - spectacular representations of living human beings - project general banality into images of permitted roles. As specialists of apparent life, stars serve as superficial objects that people can identify with in order to compensate for the fragmented productive specializations that they are forced to live.” ... “The agent of the spectacle who is put on stage as a star is the opposite of an individual; he is as clearly the enemy of his own individuality as of the individuality of others.”

    • @wecandraw1
      @wecandraw1 5 років тому +1

      D :

  • @TheMrFlyBoy18
    @TheMrFlyBoy18 3 роки тому +916

    “People with the kindest hearts have the worst temper.” This is a man that would be your true friend.

    • @ClownWorld69420
      @ClownWorld69420 3 роки тому +52

      true words. also watch out for the quiet ones when they get mad XD

    • @OlSkoolin
      @OlSkoolin 2 роки тому +40

      BS People with bad tempers will ruin your life if u let them, they have no control .

    • @Three_Random_Words
      @Three_Random_Words 2 роки тому +7

      I grew up in W.Oregon, but have spent some time in the South. I somewhat felt the kindness in voice, greetings from strangers or acquaintances, friendliness was a thin veneer. That's true of just about anywhere, but if it was an 8 or 9 elsewhere, then the South turned it up to 11, and with a wider polarity.

    • @OlSkoolin
      @OlSkoolin 2 роки тому +2

      @@aminaedits He said worst temper READ it carefully next time

    • @TuberoseKisser
      @TuberoseKisser 2 роки тому +2

      @@pepperrgirl I'm assuming you're replying to someone and not OP who didn't indicate that temper comes out of nowhere.

  • @jonpark5203
    @jonpark5203 Рік тому +27

    Thoroughly enjoyed listening to this gentleman. Myself as someone who was brought up in 1970s and 80s the values and work ethics of my parents and grandparents were directly handed down to myself. And to this very day iam so grateful for what this generation has instilled within my own mindset, tough times create tough people, hardwork and dedication go along way in creating a strong character with leadership qualities.

    • @jimkirk4181
      @jimkirk4181 Рік тому +3

      You speak the truth i wanted to say something really close to this but it was long winded and to personal but I feel this, born in 76 have all the old school values hard work tell the truth help others when you can, do your best.no one is a saint.take what you need and leave the rest.

  • @scottrupp1539
    @scottrupp1539 Рік тому +12

    This is great. I could listen to him tell stories all day. What a treasure.

  • @Wulfex
    @Wulfex 2 роки тому +761

    "It's a shame, a country like this with all the power and the money we can't do better with the school system here." My thoughts every day.

    • @ShulaOudean
      @ShulaOudean 2 роки тому +40

      Look up: The Deliberate Dumbing Down of America by Charlotte Iserbyte

    • @J8Missouri
      @J8Missouri 2 роки тому +22

      It is done on purpose. Same goes for the college system, some are good but most are crap by design.

    • @billhanna8838
      @billhanna8838 2 роки тому +9

      @@ShulaOudean Fluoride ?

    • @wildbill562
      @wildbill562 2 роки тому

      @@billhanna8838 Fluoride is one toxin they force down our throats without consent. Chemtrails, GMOs, vaccines, glyphosate, etc.

    • @wildbill562
      @wildbill562 2 роки тому +5

      @@ShulaOudean Look up: Recovering the Lost Tools of Learning by Doug Wilson and NEA: A Trojan Horse in Public Education by Samuel L Blumenfeld. Those 2 books set me on a course of Classical Christian education for my daughter.

  • @TheReviewSpace
    @TheReviewSpace 5 років тому +462

    This was recorded 30 years ago! What an interesting time capsule of a person.

  • @JerryKaczmarek-xt2hu
    @JerryKaczmarek-xt2hu 4 місяці тому +6

    David Hoffman, i graduated from high school in 1987 here in New Orleans. Simplicity was the way of life by playing 🏀🏈, riding bike 🚲🚲🚲, and using one's imagination. Really enjoy your informative content.. Education is key and a passport to your future...

    • @leemackay888
      @leemackay888 4 місяці тому

      Same I was born in 1970, can't not look back and see the way we grew up as a blessing over the life kids today with technology...

  • @matthewalkman386
    @matthewalkman386 Рік тому +121

    Crazy to hear that even though the schools were segregated, they all still played and hung out with each other regardless. We aren’t told that kind of stuff

    • @Traumglanz
      @Traumglanz Рік тому +15

      Living areas might be these days more segregated than they we back then. So in practise in many areas there was not that much progressed made since the 50s, America has some pretty strong reactionary forces driving it's politics.
      And instead of trying to solve those easy the democrats choose to fight over semantics.

    • @cooldud7071
      @cooldud7071 Рік тому

      @@Traumglanz Democrats won't solve black people sticking in ghettos or mexicans sticking in favelas.

    • @littlemoth4956
      @littlemoth4956 Рік тому

      @@Traumglanz What are you talking about? What segregation are you talking about? Why did you bring up democrats for no reason? Do you have dementia?

    • @_GOD_HAND_
      @_GOD_HAND_ Рік тому +14

      Blacks and Whites going to separate movie theaters sounds like a great idea tbh

    • @deadmeme902
      @deadmeme902 Рік тому

      Wtf do you mean we aren’t told that kind of stuff, that’s literally a key point in MLK’s life that we know he played with white kids

  • @Ashfielder
    @Ashfielder 5 років тому +1065

    Just talking. No theme, no end point, just talking. Very interesting historically.

    • @styldsteel1
      @styldsteel1 5 років тому +14

      Well yes..he was just asked to describe his life as he lived it. He did it well.

    • @enxo3995
      @enxo3995 5 років тому

      This comment with your pfp has me dying 😂

    • @andrewternet8370
      @andrewternet8370 4 роки тому +5

      Yeah, it reminds me of the Freudian method, where psychoanalysts would just let their clients talk about whatever crossed their mind. The dude in the video talks about his opinion, and you can tell the more important bits by his body language, tone, and the lark. There are no direct questions on the topic, they're just letting the dude talk and allowing him to make his own point.

  • @nielascension958
    @nielascension958 4 роки тому +3082

    I can smell the black coffee , cigarettes also the after shave through the screen

    • @fightthezionistsuprenazi7026
      @fightthezionistsuprenazi7026 4 роки тому +20

      @PoWeR ToKeR 420 Denmark has what...
      World highest taxes.
      But more or less everyone can afford a car, even people on welfare lol

    • @lilfrezzy456
      @lilfrezzy456 4 роки тому +15

      @PoWeR ToKeR 420 please practice your grammar

    • @publicalias8172
      @publicalias8172 4 роки тому +15

      @PoWeR ToKeR 420 people in euro live in houses with 5-7 families easy.. Americans economy best its been.. Toke on fucko.

    • @2gj906
      @2gj906 4 роки тому +2

      The necessities!

    • @danielc5229
      @danielc5229 4 роки тому

      PoWeR ToKeR 420 what part tho

  • @charlessmith2263
    @charlessmith2263 Рік тому +16

    Thank you for allowing us to hear real people talking about their lives. Everyday people / ordinary people / real people (and especially poor people) give us insights into life based on common decency, fairness, innate kindness and generosity. I feel we should sit quietly at the feet of these newly found grandparents - and listen with the big eyes of children.

  • @jayneweaver8695
    @jayneweaver8695 Рік тому +9

    The Last Best Generation right there describing one of the best generations ever his parents and grandparent(s). LOVE it, thank you so much!!!

  • @dre6289
    @dre6289 3 роки тому +424

    You've immortalized this man. We can't even begin to imagine, this video may outlive all of us.

  • @AMYP6
    @AMYP6 3 роки тому +867

    "I don't understand cruelty one human to another."

    • @mannygutierrez3922
      @mannygutierrez3922 3 роки тому +20

      Crazy thing is I read this comment right when he said it

    • @KyleKuta
      @KyleKuta 3 роки тому +6

      I did the exact same thing

    • @erenjaeger1738
      @erenjaeger1738 3 роки тому +7

      @@mannygutierrez3922 That always happen to me in every videos one of the weirdest things

    • @aodili1
      @aodili1 3 роки тому +9

      This man is very fortunate to grow up not understanding cruelty or abuse. Its refreshing honestly to see the lack of pain and trauma in his past.

    • @mshep4173
      @mshep4173 3 роки тому +6

      @@aodili1 he didn't notice black people? Lynching laws were still on the books, civil rights movement was starting up, MLK and Malcom X were alive and well, we weren't allowed on the beaches or the burlesque or the race tracks lol

  • @robertstrickland2184
    @robertstrickland2184 Рік тому +5

    This man is saying and speaking exactly how I feel on a fundamental level. Kids should never be hungry and they should be taught the right things.

  • @k.c.7637
    @k.c.7637 Рік тому +2

    My absolute favorite UA-cam channel! Thank you so much for uploading these types of interviews. Watching them somehow helps me make sense of the world.

    • @DavidHoffmanFilmmaker
      @DavidHoffmanFilmmaker  Рік тому +1

      Thank you for your comment. If your resources allow, I would sure appreciate your using the THANKS button under any of my videos including the one you have commented on. It is something new that UA-cam is beta testing and would mean a great deal for my continuing efforts.
      David Hoffman filmmaker

  • @agameofdronez
    @agameofdronez 3 роки тому +801

    “I guess maybe I don’t understand cruelty, from one person to another.”
    Well said

    • @jamesrobiscoe1174
      @jamesrobiscoe1174 3 роки тому +18

      That sentence rang out to me, too. The man's character.

    • @Three_Random_Words
      @Three_Random_Words 2 роки тому +3

      @Canadian American < exhibit A

    • @Mark-ok8ss
      @Mark-ok8ss 2 роки тому

      @Canadian American All the key points about the interview you truly missed or just didn't appreciate.

    • @wallyoppal
      @wallyoppal 2 роки тому +1

      Given that mans only natural enemy is man, I'm surprised their isn't more of it. It used to be when the church had more power over the stupid .

    • @davearonow65
      @davearonow65 2 роки тому +1

      I was reading your quote exactly at the same time as I was listening to him say it. It threw my mind into a temporary state of mental pretzelification. I could concentrate on neither the narrator's voice or the words I was reading. My mind was just trying to reconcile how a video could know what I was reading and be able to narrate it in real time. Of course I only freaked out for a second as I was snapped back into reality as my brain reconciled the mechanics of what was really happening. But for a short second or two, I wondered if I was even real. I wondered if I was actually just some simulation programmed by someone else. I was some whimsical and fleeting figment of someone else's not particularly interesting imagination.
      Anyway, back to the narrative.........

  • @LAUGHINGMANWILL
    @LAUGHINGMANWILL 2 роки тому +1452

    "Make sure these kids get some kind of foundation, so they can have decent lives" The truth and understanding this man has, if only more felt this way

    • @walterrising4276
      @walterrising4276 2 роки тому

      Nobody today has interest in their kids because if they did, they would require to give up the conveniences of the modern cancer

    • @val21704
      @val21704 Рік тому +2

      What are of foundations?

    • @blobgooll9395
      @blobgooll9395 Рік тому +15

      @@val21704If you don't know what the word "foundation" means, you don't have one

    • @val21704
      @val21704 Рік тому +23

      @@blobgooll9395 English is not my first language Im not that good

    • @boulderman1357
      @boulderman1357 Рік тому +61

      @@blobgooll9395 lol why just not explain to him instead if just assuming negativity

  • @cold1895
    @cold1895 Рік тому +3

    I'm so gratefull I got to meet some of my great grandparents while I was old enough to remember. They widened my perspective on life one after another. One taught me to listen, the next taught me faith, and the last taught me bravery.

  • @ALaughingWolf2188
    @ALaughingWolf2188 Рік тому +2

    I swear, I could listen and converse with someone like this for hours, it’d be really cool, so much wisdom, consideration, understanding and care for others

  • @thewatchman5656
    @thewatchman5656 4 роки тому +281

    My life is richer because this man shared his life with me. Well done, Sir.

  • @cigarmikey
    @cigarmikey 5 років тому +370

    I’m 45 and was listening like a grade schooler at story time- thanks!

    • @jd1655
      @jd1655 5 років тому +4

      Me too. Exactly... Let see what kind interviews , done today, about the 80s, are received like in 2049...

    • @drzoidberg844
      @drzoidberg844 5 років тому +3

      jd1655 I worry about that day what the future will entail it seems like American Society is falling apart especially with the degradation of family and religious values. Communism is closely linked to atheism and sexual deviance.

    • @neftysnepenthes6821
      @neftysnepenthes6821 5 років тому +5

      @@drzoidberg844 Atheism, sure. Sexual deviance? People will deviate from that regardless of religion, unless that religion punishes it by death.

    • @TheTech660
      @TheTech660 5 років тому +1

      Same here! I'm 44.

    • @SnoopDougieDoug
      @SnoopDougieDoug 5 років тому +4

      I'm a 1975 model and I'm right there with y'all with these comments. My Freshman Year was '89

  • @MrBrightWave
    @MrBrightWave Рік тому +9

    I can listen to him all day long. Wisdom and truth. No filler.

  • @magneto44
    @magneto44 Рік тому +3

    watching these videos over the years has really helped me in trying to avoid looking down on younger people as I’ve gotten older

  • @spellward
    @spellward 5 років тому +1732

    That's what you get for asking a cabbie the time.

    • @hughmungus6838
      @hughmungus6838 5 років тому +26

      Lol

    • @kirkspinelli3815
      @kirkspinelli3815 5 років тому +1

      @@hughmungus6838 I'm a southerner moving to boston, I'll hope I get that line then

    • @jacksquatt6082
      @jacksquatt6082 5 років тому +46

      @@kirkspinelli3815 Cabbies are notorious for stream-of-thought talking with their customers for long lengths of time, even when given the slightest chance to voice the most simple thing. They sit for long hours transporting people, so the only real choices of mental stimulation are either social interaction with their customers or whatever happens to be on the radio, and social interaction is more personable and individualized. Be warned: they're good people, but they don't pull punches.

    • @Kearyjb
      @Kearyjb 5 років тому +5

      That is funny

    • @peachykeen7749
      @peachykeen7749 5 років тому +11

      Lmao! Best comment

  • @johntapp1650
    @johntapp1650 4 роки тому +363

    I could talk to this man for hours. He reminds me of all my "borrowed Dads," who mentored me while I was growing up. My Dad passed on when I was two years old, and all these guys, teachers, coaches, flea market vendors, etc., shared their experiences and their lives. I'm hoping that I myself can be a "borrowed Dad" for a youngster or two. I'm 51, and I still feel young enough to get around, and old enough to impart some history and advice.

    • @unapprovedtruth7116
      @unapprovedtruth7116 4 роки тому +6

      God bless you John Tapp

    • @maggiedoor6093
      @maggiedoor6093 4 роки тому +2

      John Tapp In Ontario here we have Big Brothers and Big Sisters organizations (also for grandparents) Google it , it has stories and information on it. It may give you ideas. People volunteer as little as an hour a week, or more. There are young children and teens that are not experiencing normal family life, not learning social skills and not enjoying nature. As you say they have need of a mentor.

    • @BeastLifeMan
      @BeastLifeMan 4 роки тому

      God bless you Mr. Tapp!

    • @kathrinat9824
      @kathrinat9824 4 роки тому +1

      Formal request for you to be my borrowed dad? Please

    • @Loopedtime
      @Loopedtime 4 роки тому

      💕

  • @justinrogers9010
    @justinrogers9010 Рік тому +7

    I don’t know how this stumbled into my feed, but I said, to heck with it, I’ll just watch it. Just a tremendous amount of common sense, observant, and very well spoken. If this fellow were alive today, he could easily go into the schools and give talks to students in my opinion.

  • @jdean2131
    @jdean2131 Рік тому +6

    This is what a Real Man looks like. Today’s Lesson: There’s no substitute for hard work. Thank you Mr. Hoffman! Nicely Done! ✅

  • @wwilloww995
    @wwilloww995 4 роки тому +198

    This is why I love being a nurse. While I am giving my care I can have the best conversations with the elderly population about their times growing up. Learned so much and helps you appreciate what you have.

    • @DavidHoffmanFilmmaker
      @DavidHoffmanFilmmaker  4 роки тому +18

      Search the word “nurse” on my UA-cam channel. I have done several documentaries Honoring nurses.
      David Hoffman-filmmaker

    • @hevnervals
      @hevnervals 4 роки тому

      For me it's opposite, it makes me sad to realize how much we've lost.

    • @OneBirdAllStoned
      @OneBirdAllStoned 4 роки тому

      As a very difficult seizure patient when i am hospitalized for them. Nurses have nothing but my respect. They are special breed of human.

    • @UnionWireman292
      @UnionWireman292 4 роки тому +1

      There should be an appreciation for what you have...however if you look a little deeper and listen more intently...you realize we are actually going backwards not forward.

    • @sk8anddestroy792
      @sk8anddestroy792 4 роки тому

      Right before you give them a death shot

  • @jessica_jam4386
    @jessica_jam4386 4 роки тому +901

    I like this man, he speaks with common sense.

    • @winkwildly
      @winkwildly 3 роки тому

      @Gordon Payne What do you mean? He was saying integration is the natural state of people.

    • @Earthdogbonzo3
      @Earthdogbonzo3 3 роки тому +11

      I can smell the wood floors and comfy furniture in the house he grew up in as a kid. And then there's the security of a solid family, mom fixes breakfast for everyone before they go off to work and school. Damn! Mainstream society has fallen so far from what it was.

    • @hsun7997
      @hsun7997 3 роки тому

      @Steve Hunt I don't understand why you're so mad. You're not even black so why are you complaining?

    • @spazemfathemcazemmeleggymi272
      @spazemfathemcazemmeleggymi272 3 роки тому

      @@Earthdogbonzo3 That is why we need a time machine, not for anything more than to escape this time period and leave it to the mainstream XD let them have their utopia and we'll live in ours.

    • @xxDOGFARTxx
      @xxDOGFARTxx 3 роки тому

      @@winkwildly you don’t think people should be integrated?

  • @ChichiNaka
    @ChichiNaka Рік тому +6

    These are so important! my school took us to a nursing home for the day in 6th grade/age 12 and we all had a sheet of questions we thought to ask the elderly we got paired with, I wish we could have recorded that or even took the time to keep that sheet of questions around.
    We had such a great conversation with an elderly couple whos husband/wife had passed over a decade earlier and they were 'dating' in the nursing home, talking about the 30s vs the 40s etc

  • @felixmadison5736
    @felixmadison5736 8 днів тому +1

    I'm 75 years-old and everyone should listen to this man's story. We can all learn some things. He and his passengers must have had some interesting conversations.

  • @judechauhan6715
    @judechauhan6715 4 роки тому +834

    This mans father was clearly around during the depression with his "food on the table, roof over your head" attitude and he didn't teach his kid to be one of those spoiled kids neither.

    • @jenniferwilcox9759
      @jenniferwilcox9759 3 роки тому +42

      I grew up in the 80's with parents that had the same attitude..."...go to work, put food on your table, keep a roof over your head, don't ask for help do it yourself,..etc.). There's plenty of "kids" that are growing up with similar backgrounds and beliefs today.

    • @TonyNaber
      @TonyNaber 3 роки тому +34

      @@jenniferwilcox9759 You're my aunt's generation. I'm 21 now, grew up in the 00s and 10s. I don't have much experience to speak of, and I can't speak for all "kids" my age, but my parents also had the same mentality that existed during the depression. Everyone assumes life got easier, but did it really? My parents have worked middle class jobs their entire lives, incredibly disciplined and motivated, never spent a dime on luxuries except maybe the annual trip to another city in the country, always saved their money so that my brother and I could go to college. Speaking of college... It costs all my body organs to attend one nowadays. I've worked part-time all 4 years of it, that was barely enough money to cover my food and the occasional night out. And it's not just me, that's the average "middle class" person. My grandparents didn't even graduate high-school... I have an engineering degree and speak two languages and have access to all the information in the world. Yet I don't feel any luckier or happier, in fact, my grandparents seem more satisfied. The world is still raging with wars and disease and gets more unstable every day. Did it really get any better?

    • @sharnistevens1428
      @sharnistevens1428 3 роки тому +7

      @@TonyNaber I'm not sure if it got better in the USA, given that living standards seem to have stagnated for the working class over there. I live in another Western country (Australia), where it got better in some ways. We have dishwashers and can eat a varied died of all sorts of cuisines... most families have two bathrooms and even two family cars... But there absolutely was degree/qualification inflation over the decades - my parents never finished high school, their parents never finished primary school. I have a masters degree (and a debt of $60k) yet life is a real struggle because I'm trying to save up for a house deposit before my biological clock leaves me unable to start a family. My grandfather paid off his whole first house in 3 years, and ended up with 8 properties by the time he retired... he was able to gift each of his five kids a house. He was a labourer, grandma was a housewife. You couldn't do that anymore, given a family home with a backyard will set you back a million dollars in an average neighbourhood... its the most messed up thing about my country, the price of a home. Healthcare costs are minimal (what were they like in the USA in the 50s?). But education is getting more and more expensive, and its such a waste. These days you need two incomes to raise a family in my country, whereas in previous generations, you would be comfortable on one income.

    • @k.m.1718
      @k.m.1718 3 роки тому +11

      In my opinion, parents are the one to blame for not educating their children properly. They become awful adults and the world have to deal with them. It’s a form a neglect too, if you do not raise your children to be humble and respectful. It’s a shame really.

    • @karenvillarosa9261
      @karenvillarosa9261 3 роки тому +3

      @@TonyNaber Cry because it is hard, but carry on anyway. It's hard and a lot of hardwork & sacrifice. life is hard.. you don't need to get affected by world news or worry about it. Finish your studies, pay your debts if you have any and struggle with all your might. The load will become lighter. you're doing the best you can, be proud of yourself.

  • @maxspringfield
    @maxspringfield 5 років тому +2077

    Did everyone in the 50s sound like they were in the middle of announcing a ball game?

    • @smartymcfly3957
      @smartymcfly3957 5 років тому +16

      Is that Larry David as your pic ? 😂

    • @asideofaioli4630
      @asideofaioli4630 5 років тому +12

      @@smartymcfly3957 His haircut...goals.

    • @Farquad777
      @Farquad777 5 років тому +1

      I can only hope XD

    • @Seeker0fTruth
      @Seeker0fTruth 5 років тому +14

      max springfield - RIGHT? Smooth sounding like buttuh...

    • @D_Marrenalv
      @D_Marrenalv 5 років тому +137

      Better than today, where everyone sounds and acts like they're in the middle of a Beavis and Butthead cartoon.

  • @lindagarcia8826
    @lindagarcia8826 9 місяців тому

    Mr Hoffman
    This was absolutely outstanding. Thank you for featuring this.😊

  • @bobpaulino4714
    @bobpaulino4714 Рік тому +1

    Absolutely love listening to people like this.
    Mom lived during WW2, was born in Czechoslovakia in 1933 -- dad's mom lived from 1903 to 2003. The things they both saw.
    I thoroughly enjoy listening to Joachim Krauledat's stories. He was born in Tilsit, father was killed in the war a month before he was born.
    After his mother arranged to escape to the west, they moved to Canada, then to the states.
    Joachim was legally blind and loved music. He was involved with the group 'The Sparrows'.
    Later he founded Steppenwolf.

  • @grahampolk9046
    @grahampolk9046 4 роки тому +3145

    I was born in 1921 and will be 99 years old in a few months. The 1950s were one of the best decades in my life and in my opinion the nation. Folks were so content with what they had and appreciated what we had and we did not have much. Folks today want more all the time or the latest anything. And folks they worked hard back then. Mostly if they didnt they didnt eat or their families wouldnt eat. The filthy plague of racism was slowly washing away from the centuries before And the nation was becoming more of one nation instead of two divided by ones color.
    I was born raised and lived my entire life in the Brushy Mountains of North Carolina. I have had a bacon sandwich every morning of my adult life. I smoked for 60 some years (Not that I am endorsing it as it is unhealthy). I have my teeth. Did not drink coffee but sure have drunk my share of iced tea with lemon.
    The 1950s were to me the best time period of my life. Where I live then in the 50s church members got together and built the churches themselves. No mortgage or loan to build it. Neighbors and friends got together to help theirs build their homes or barns or what ever they needed. I did not have a lock on the front door of my home I still live in and grew up in until 1990s. I could leave anything outside it would be right where I left it when I returned. Food was good for you then when you went out to eat the few times we ever did. I would go back to the 50s in a heartbeat if I could. Seems like another world to me from today.

    • @rebelcowboy5.7l98
      @rebelcowboy5.7l98 4 роки тому +131

      Yep the innocent days are long gone. Peoples choice in entertain ment music, lifestyles divorce etc are a far cry from then

    • @KROEKERR
      @KROEKERR 4 роки тому +194

      Graham Polk hello sir! Please pm me I’d love to hear about your life and the past times. As a 27 year old I have endless questions to ask.

    • @AcapellaFella
      @AcapellaFella 4 роки тому +224

      Its cool that you are on UA-cam

    • @ch55555
      @ch55555 4 роки тому +19

      Stay Lit420 he’s 99 not 7

    • @CaesarAugustus27
      @CaesarAugustus27 4 роки тому +8

      @@staylit4209 years and years of experience

  • @osheebaugus
    @osheebaugus 2 роки тому +874

    This dude rules. He has a kind of timeless set of morals and a strangely anachronous sense of open-mindedness

    • @leospring6264
      @leospring6264 2 роки тому +6

      I agree. Interesting assessment of this man.

    • @justforever96
      @justforever96 2 роки тому +77

      I doubt it is that anachronous. We are just told that everyone was absolutely bigoted and racist and sexist in the past, but from various accounts I have read, that is frequently just not true, or extremely exagerrated.

    • @RedZed1974
      @RedZed1974 2 роки тому +27

      @@justforever96 I think (for whatever that's worth) that the religious south helped fuel a lot of those stereotypes of everyone back then being a raving racist/bigot. Likely because the zealots are usually the loudest and the squeaky wheel gets the media coverage, err....grease.

    • @AlanSilva-bu1kp
      @AlanSilva-bu1kp 2 роки тому

      yep...

    • @adepressedcatwithabadnicot246
      @adepressedcatwithabadnicot246 2 роки тому +7

      @@justforever96 idk, I study history as a hobby, plenty of photos and videos to show it's not exaggerated.

  • @tedgraves6366
    @tedgraves6366 Рік тому +4

    The family is the foundational base of every society, values and manners are taught through example. This is an excellent example of the mentoring I sought out as a youth. . .

  • @distortedperception716
    @distortedperception716 Рік тому +44

    Being born in 2003, the education system for me was definitely wish washy partly because I moved around a lot as a kid. Most of the schools I went to would just kinda give up on you if you weren't excelling as well as other kids. Never really got as many opportunities as those other kids because I was growing up kinda poor and I let my trauma from a toxic home environment define me for a long time which would trickle into my school life as well. Not trying to play the victim at all but to be honest, I never put a lot of effort into school because of that. Don't get me wrong, I'd give anything to change how I performed in school because I let outside bs stunt my potential. Opportunities of trades were never really brought to light until my sophomore through senior year. The point is that if you're not "easy" to deal with while you're at school whether that's behavioral issues or getting bad grades, you hardly receive the help you ask for unless you have good teachers that care. You're just kinda pushed aside and considered a lost cause. The US definitely needs to make opportunities that kids are actually interested in apparent.

    • @Leadwithlove654
      @Leadwithlove654 Рік тому +2

      Born in late 2003, I feel so glad and happy to see people like you thinking that way.

    • @DiegoFernandez-xc9ew
      @DiegoFernandez-xc9ew Рік тому +3

      I was born in 1999 and I'm from Spain, and all the experiences you've had happened to me when I was younger. Got moved a lot as a kid, a deficient family with lots of bs, and when I was around 13/14 (a really important age for the development of a young adult) some of my new school teachers bullied me because I wasn't doing as well as other kids, so I did get put aside also, and that's when everything got worse because I just didn't care anymore about school or education, it was horrible, because I couldn't understand anything and when I asked they just made fun of me. Anyway finished high school somehow, and then I decided that I wanted to go to university, fast forward a couple of years and a shit ton of work, next thing you know is that I'm graduating next year of my mechanical engineering degree.
      So just don't give up, and as David Goggins says: Stay hard!

    • @Janellabelle
      @Janellabelle 3 місяці тому

      Thats life. Be proud you made it through. Youre a strong person. ❤

  • @stevetech5150
    @stevetech5150 5 років тому +636

    Absolutely loved this. I'm 50 yrs old and this guy reminded me of listening to my grandfather and some of my uncles from back in that time period. sounds just like they did back when i was a kid in the 70's & early 80's. they were the real deal while today, even at 50, i feel like I'm a kid pretending to be an adult. weird thing.

    • @jaywa3363
      @jaywa3363 5 років тому +20

      I grew up with old people too. My mom was a late in life baby so I was a kid with WW2 vets around me. I think about those guys all the time. The women were all tough old broads in the best way and the guys were all real, no phony bullshit, they just hung out and played cards. Best times of my life was when they were around.

    • @67NewEngland
      @67NewEngland 5 років тому +46

      "Feel like a kid pretending to be an adult." I know exactly what you mean.

    • @jeffwhite3268
      @jeffwhite3268 5 років тому +5

      im 44..i feel like that to..

    • @Smoke-qv5mu
      @Smoke-qv5mu 5 років тому +1

      Jason Roy g

    • @daniellogan-scott5968
      @daniellogan-scott5968 5 років тому +20

      You wrote that you are 50. My first thought was you should remember the time period he's talking about, but then I remembered. "Wait -- I'm 51. He's my age." Funny how when I think of people in their 50's, I think of people who were in their 50's when I was a kid. So yeah, I relate to feeling like a kid pretending to be an adult. Yes, it is weird and impossible to explain to someone not in the same mind place.

  • @Ole4735
    @Ole4735 5 років тому +897

    This camera quality is surprisingly good for 1989

    • @sly_snootles1639
      @sly_snootles1639 5 років тому +143

      If it was 35mm film it would be good quality. Film is still better resolution than digital video. 70mm is equvalent to about 6k in digital, whereas 35mm film is sub 4k but still high resolution. Most tv was shot in video in the 80s and 90s because it was cheap, giving the impression that the quality wasn't there, but it was and why film is still used in making movies today.

    • @ivanj.conway9919
      @ivanj.conway9919 5 років тому +12

      @@sly_snootles1639 : I can't believe how fast it deteriorates over this site even. If you watch any show going back just, a few years it's utter, crap compared to when it was first, uploaded. Unless it's channels recopying things endlessly here, thus reducing the quality that way.
      I also, continue to say that modern day, flat screen, TV sets have poorer quality visuals than I remember from the TVs of the 80s. If you want me to be bluntly, honest; I think MOST, things seem to be gradually, deteriorating with time. Piss poor quality everywhere today, and no one seems to give one, sweet, frig.
      My Best. Out.

    • @ivanj.conway9919
      @ivanj.conway9919 5 років тому +9

      @Nostalgia For Infinity : I remember TVs from the 70s, 80s and 90s and the shit they have today. What I remember from the TVs from the mid 80s or so, onward, is great picture quality when you had extremely, good reception. I remember a far, more natural image compared to what we have today, where it's almost, TOO, crisp and rather pixelated it seems. The movement is not natural and flowing as you say, and that can be a bet jarring on the eyes at times, as well. And these god damn, stupid, idiotic, black bars in the top and bottom of the screen drive me completely, mental. I hate that with a bitter, passion and can't understand, for the life of me, why they have not found a way to fix that yet. Stupid kids may go for it but I fucking, don't that's damn, well, sure and I refuse to believe I'm the only one who feels that same way. It's total, shit and completely, unneeded. Right?
      My Best. Out.

    • @flatrockfiend
      @flatrockfiend 5 років тому +8

      All TV broadcast looked this way originally, the distortion, blur, and color fade that you see on most old clips is just VHS tape that has deteriorated over time. Although modern HDMI TV"S and BLU RAY look slightly better than CRT TV's hooked up with RCA cables, the difference isn't as big as many people would like you to believe.

    • @freyaaldrnari6086
      @freyaaldrnari6086 5 років тому

      Blame technology

  • @ro22ss
    @ro22ss Рік тому +10

    Everything he speaks is social wisdom. We all should take notes for our own lives. Today's world misses the point on what true community really is. We don't know what means to be civil, polite, respectful, diligent, and full of integrity. Today being a good "boy scout" is laughed at or teased as if those worth while character traits are juvenile or naïve.

  • @ballsdeepe1120
    @ballsdeepe1120 Рік тому +21

    problem is, in todays society, even if you work 60-80 hours a week, there is nothing left to take the gf/wife out at the end of the week, in fact, your probably still behind on the rent/bills

  • @jimbeckert7946
    @jimbeckert7946 4 роки тому +550

    "When you get older, you'll understand what I'm saying." Truer words were never spoken.

    • @manuelarivera718
      @manuelarivera718 4 роки тому +1

      So true

    • @larrysmith647
      @larrysmith647 3 роки тому +8

      @ Jim Beckert---But, it's too bad that we have to learn THAT the HARD WAY !!!

    • @estebanb7166
      @estebanb7166 3 роки тому

      Cliche as all get out lol

  • @ramstrom6399
    @ramstrom6399 5 років тому +298

    My dad was born in 1938. I was born in 1990...
    I like to think that, although he died when I was 16, I was fortunate to have exposure to that era.

    • @themiz7550
      @themiz7550 5 років тому +33

      Dam he was old to be having kids..lol

    • @themiz7550
      @themiz7550 5 років тому +7

      My mom was born in 55...I was born in 75

    • @weissmag
      @weissmag 5 років тому +13

      @@themiz7550 Men are biologically designed and capable to have children until they die and in the past men had children well into their 50's before population reduction became a thing in formerly White Nations, but don't be too enthusiastic because the people that are now being brought in by the corporations as a surplus labour force and populating formerly White Nations like in North America, Oceania, The British Isles, and Europe are still living by the older natural system and with a strict Semitic code of male Patriarchy so they are producing children from 16 to 60 and will re-establish the populations in their new colonies.

    • @themiz7550
      @themiz7550 5 років тому +2

      @@weissmag I'm well aware of all that sir...thanks for the paragraph..I didn't want to read

    • @patrickfarrell5887
      @patrickfarrell5887 5 років тому +3

      He gave you Life. That's awesome

  • @matthewcote5634
    @matthewcote5634 Рік тому +1

    I love this man... thank you for posting

  • @MikeBassCovers
    @MikeBassCovers Рік тому +6

    Great storyteller. It's an underrated gift.

  • @mackenziekid
    @mackenziekid 2 роки тому +1820

    The reason we all love this man, is that the vast majority of us ARE like this man. Fair, hard working, reasonably honest, and thoughtful. It's just the nutty media (social and otherwise) that features the fringe nut case views as if they were the majority.

    • @jamesbenz3228
      @jamesbenz3228 2 роки тому +98

      People who are content spend less money, they don't feel the need. Keep people scared or angry and that's where the money is. I'm like this man too. And I agree that the vast majority of people are like this man.

    • @manofculture7852
      @manofculture7852 2 роки тому +12

      Males nowadays are like their mama... operates from emotions/ego, no logic or common sense, impatient, no morals, no values... there are not many men anymore. Lets not lie to ourself and make believe men from back in the days, when boys were boys and men were men are like the emasculated mess of today

    • @colinbrazier8836
      @colinbrazier8836 2 роки тому +5

      @@manofculture7852 very true the attack on humanity from mass indoctrination has turned men into simps, being shouted at and ordered around by there pathetic wife's who haven't got a clue and are only interested in showing off her latest purchase

    • @SuperCrazyEstonian
      @SuperCrazyEstonian 2 роки тому +116

      @@manofculture7852 "A generation of men raised by women"
      The nuclear family is falling apart and it´s effects are showing.

    • @byst017
      @byst017 2 роки тому +31

      Facts bro 👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾

  • @steveculbert4039
    @steveculbert4039 3 роки тому +1516

    His accent portrays his birthplace: exactly on the dividing line between North and South.

    • @unicorncatcher7537
      @unicorncatcher7537 3 роки тому +69

      I thought the same thing then he mentioned Baltimore. I'm from and live in Baltimore, that's why I noticed it.

    • @bctsct117
      @bctsct117 3 роки тому +42

      @@nummernein Nope, It's a DC/generic mid-atlantic accent.

    • @victorsolano6369
      @victorsolano6369 3 роки тому +14

      Hes prolly from the dmv area

    • @blackchewy8435
      @blackchewy8435 3 роки тому +4

      steve culbert
      Very perceptive!

    • @mtronaut1694
      @mtronaut1694 3 роки тому +5

      6:29

  • @bartzed4305
    @bartzed4305 Рік тому +4

    my God I can relate to this guy so much, crazy how some things never change

  • @AntiNubDevice
    @AntiNubDevice Рік тому +2

    My dad was born the same year Melvin remembers his first TV. It's not quite the same, but being born in the early 80s, this really makes me thankful my dad was in his mid-30s when I was born. People from this era have a different mindset, and I'm thankful I got that as a kid.

  • @genshin16
    @genshin16 2 роки тому +824

    0:01 Biography
    0:37 Social Life
    2:03 Material Possessions
    3:16 Family Mentality
    4:01 Entertainment
    4:58 Washington Sports Teams
    5:20 Family History
    5:28 Soviet Fears
    6:29 Race
    8:00 Civil Rights
    8:42 Children Needs
    9:20 Wars
    10:35 Education
    11:19 Tuition
    11:49 Work Life
    13:17 Mannerisms
    14:09 Fulfillment
    14:43 Rebelliousness
    15:29 Changing Mindset
    16:07 Politics
    17:01 Social Programs
    17:44 Anti-People Person

  • @joneschelsea118
    @joneschelsea118 5 років тому +238

    His voice is putting me to sleep. So soothing. He makes me miss my grandpa who was the storyteller in my family.

    • @lelapenny7720
      @lelapenny7720 5 років тому +2

      Chelsea J I was thinking the same thing

    • @whit2642
      @whit2642 5 років тому +1

      Chelsea J I was just thinking the same thing about missing my gramps. He loved to tell stories too. 😥

    • @blazingphantom2813
      @blazingphantom2813 4 роки тому +1

      I envy you guys. My grandparents never spoke English so I could never speak to them on a personal level. Would’ve loved to hear all of their stories and experiences.

    • @DoctorEdgarMcQuack
      @DoctorEdgarMcQuack 4 роки тому

      Johnny Cash

  • @sluggzmcgee6272
    @sluggzmcgee6272 Рік тому +4

    I admire the way he grew up and his values and the way they knew how to make a little look like more and still have the time of their lives. You DEFINITELY don't see that today.

  • @Spartan-pr7yg
    @Spartan-pr7yg 3 місяці тому

    I adore this guy’s storytelling. His voice and demeanor just invites you to sit criss cross apple sauce and listen. A conversation with the elderly is truly time travel 😵‍💫