Yeah, I'm old, but I'm darn glad to have the memories of these things and for having grown up in the "golden age" of being a kid.
I agree especially the "Strawberry" Kool-Aid all that sweet goodness and red dye #2 with a couple of Twinkies after school. That's what you call living high on the hog.😂
Born in 63’ and so happy to have all the wonderful memories in my mind.
Ain't the truth-so glad we as kids had the freedom to play outside all day w/out our parents hovering over us!!!! 56yrs old...
The last truly free generation. No one hovering over us, we couldn't be contacted every second of every day. We weren't under surveillance, on sunny days you were outside playing and exploring with friend's. Friends were actual people you knew and not just subscriber's. Best days of my life.
Yes! If you ask kids today about "friends" they think you mean their subscribers on face book or some other social media, instead of REAL people!!
@@reggiedunlop2222 I noticed Paul Newman picture…I recommend reading his memoirs put out by his family…Paul’s words…no one else’s words…
Yes I was born in 1954…a stroke of pure luck for a wonderful childhood/teenage experience…like no other…seems a fantasy now.
Born in 54, witnessing how the world is being turned upside down there is no way I envy the youth of today.
Their memories will be that of walking around looking down at their cellphones all day.
@@musicman7297 With hunched shoulders. It's a medical thing now. Look it up.
Also born in 54. We lived in the best of times. The freedoms and real live friends and adventures, many of which would be impossible today.
I remember when I could get a Hershey and a cherry fizz tor a nickel.
It's better to be old and look back at a fun and exciting childhood than kids today looking back at their boring ones. Man, did we have some adventures!
No computers, no cell phones, those were great days and when you were thirsty there was always a waterhole to take care of it.
I was born in 94, I have nostalgia about the late 2000s and the 2010s. It was a fun time because we had xbox360, PS2 and many other things.
@@bigfan2452Gee. What nostalgia. Have you ever stacked paint cans & made a bike ramp ? You sat around glued to your gaming screen. That's not nostalgia.
Anyone who remembers any of these remnants of the past is not old, except to those under 20. I miss the 70s. That decade was the closest thing we had to Mayberry: Unlocked doors, playing hide and go seek under the streetlight, drive-in theaters, Tang, The Flintstones. Sigh, those days.
Born in 57 and I agree with you. Walking three blocks to school, now it is not safe for my sister's granddaughter to cross the street to get to school by herself.
I hear u l miss those days growing up in the 60's and 70's graduated in 76 I don't envy the kids today with these whole life attached to their phones and social media
We were so lucky to be born back then!
Yes I totally agree with you, I really believe that we were blessed to have experienced those days.
@@petersilecchio4417 Is your family background from Bari, Italy? You last name seems familiar to me.
@@frankrizzo4460
Hi
Yes my father was Born there his name was Angelo. I am is Son Peter. If I remember right he was born in 1907. Passed away in 1996 at 89. I think about him every day. I am 64. How do you know him?
@@petersilecchio4417 My father's side was from that area and his parents as well. Don't know your father but prayers heading his way. Have a blessed Christmas you and your family 🙏🎄☕
Yep, those were the good old days.
I was born yesterday..........in 1952. I blinked my eyes and now it's 2022 and I'm 70. Each year goes by faster than the previous year.
When I was a child, I used to say that I wish I was older. My mother said that I was just wishing my life away. She was right, I'll be 73 this week and can't believe how fast time has gone. My mom died in 1981 and I look forward to seeing her again in a few years 😉👍
@@johnniehall3692 Well just fast enough to get your driver's license then it can slow down, well maybe fast enough for that first new truck, well maybe that new house, then it can slow down. After you finally achieve it all, your too old to enjoy it. 🤣🤣🤣
We may be old and it may be that was an end of an era but oh what an era it was! The best music, riding free ( and we survived 😁) played outdoors from sun up to sun down spring, summer, autumn and winter . The kids that are glued to their devices just don't know what they're missing! I surely do! I still have my music.
I probably gave my son too much freedom but I figured where we live is safe & my brothers & I would kill for a creek & train trestle in our back yard.
We didn't need to wear a wristwatch when we played outside, when the street lights started turning on we knew it was time to get our butts home, no kids wanted to hear one of their parents yelling their names and if one of your parents included your middle name when yelling for you to come home you'd bust your butt to get home as fast as your legs could peddle you there! Oh, yeah, I said when one of your parents yelled your name because in my neighborhood most of the kids had both of them living under the same roof. Sometimes we would tease each other by calling out to a friend or friends, "Your mommy's calling you!" And sometimes when you heard one of the dads yelling for their kid you'd say to the kid, "It's your dad. you better get home."
@@davidcobb2693 We only had 25 houses in our development w/60 kids. Bells were rung on occasion 😂
It just shows how short life is , those were the absolute Best Times. ✌️
I remember the big night when the Wizard of Oz was coming on, all us kids would go to Grandpa and Grandma's house to watch because they had a color TV, it was so exciting to see Dorothy wake up in Oz and it was in color
And if we were fortunate enough to be at the grandparents' house on Sunday evening, there was The Wonderful World of Disney and Bonanza in color after dinner.
And then with VHS tapes and DVD's coming after them "The Wizard of OZ" lost it's impact when you could watch it anytime you wanted. It's no big deal anymore even though it was a stunning, timeless achievement, just like so many movies made in 1939, the BEST year in American cinema history.
" they had a color TV" Now about the rest of the story.
You show comes on at say 7PM but before you can watch TV:
A:
1.) Turn the TV on at least 5 minutes before the show starts to let the tubes heat up.
2.) Turn the channel to one of 3 stations.
3.) Have someone outside turning the aerial antenna. " STOP!" "BACK THE OTHER WAY!! TOO MUCH!" "SLOWLY, SLOWLY, STOP RIGHT THERE!" could be heard all over the neighborhood.
4.) Adjust the vertical and horizontal settings.
If TV does not turn on:
1.) Unplug TV and remove the back.
2.) Remove all the tubes.
3.) Hop in car and drive to Woolsworth.
4.) One by one insert each tube in the tester till you find the bad tube. ( test ALL the tubes). Open drawer at bottom of tube tester, find new tube, pay. Hop back in car and drive home.
5.) Insert tubes back into TV.
6.) Replace back of TV and plug TV in.
7.) Turn TV on and repeat steps A1 through 4.
8.) Call neighbors to find out what you missed.
I was a kid of the 70's, a teenager of the 80's and a young person of the 90's, so grateful...
@@rebeckylee157 funny when I used the phrase Ditto around young people they say what??? Or I mentioned Carol Burnett and they said who???? Just grateful....lol
"Where's the Beef?" I enjoyed that commercial.
Believe me it's not anywhere to be found anymore. Even Wendy's has gone down hill.
That's an epic commercial unfortunately when Wendy's first came out they were so expensive only the rwel off $ could eat at a Wendy's as opposed to the other chained fast food restaurants in the 80s, 30 years later they're still expensive as hell for half the quality that they want to had. 🤦♂️ Better than Burger King McDonald's though. Only when I'm desperate will I eat at those other two restaurants.
These videos are a glimpse into a better time. In 2022 it feels like we are entering a dark period of Malaise and I often yearn for the better times of the 70s and 80s and yes even 90s.
I'm now somewhat thankful I never had children. The world is not the happy place it once was.
@@thenightporter Me too. Sometimes I have my doubts but not often. I don't remember having all the mass insanities years ago we have now, "crisis" after "crisis," one just following the other. What kind of world are today's kids going to inherit once common sense is gone?
The old Christmas movies really were the best. I loved those and looked forward to them every year!
I'm older but sure am glad I grew up in the 70's and 80's . I would hate to know that I was growing up in this era. Gives me night terrors just thinking about it.
i remember all of these and am proud and thankful to be old as some people never see old age.
Wax bottles and candy cigarettes. I remember them. Boy, am I.... old. LOL 😂, better than growing up in this day and age.
I rem. them being thrown on sidewalks and melting in the hot summer.
They were terrible messy things leaving spots all over walkways.
About the candy cigarettes...
If you weren't a fan of the candy, you could buy the gum versions of them. It was basically the same thing but it was a cylindrical stick of gum with a paper wrapping emulating the cigarette.
Also about the wax candies...
I remember that they also made a musical harmonica-type wax candy. I think they were called Wowee and were kind of like a pan flute with short sections at one side and them getting longer as you go down it's width.
@@TBaker-xu5is As I remember it, the bubblegum with the paper band around it was the bubblegum version of a cigar. And thank you for mentioning the wax harmonica! I had forgotten about it, but I remember it now after reading your comment.
@@TBaker-xu5is You're correct. Funny the things they sold us kids to eat. You had the cigars that were gum ,they came in a few different colors.
I love the "You maybe old" segments. I am old and I grew up in the 70's and 80's. I wish we could go back for just a day. That's when everything seemed so simple. To this day I still have my childhood friend and the girls I went to school with. We are always talking about our times either in the old neighborhood or school. I love and cherish each and everyone of them. I have known these girls over 40 years now. Thank you for letting me relive all of the wonderful things I grew up in.
You're lucky. I'm a bit older than you and my last friend who I could share these memories with passed away a couple years ago. There was one span where I was going to 3 funerals a year.
@@Matt_from_Florida I'm sorry to hear that. I do not like getting for that reason. As soon as my mom passed all kinds if aunts and uncles passed too. Now I get excited when I get a senior discount.
@@bextar6365 I couldn't agree more. People today are very disrespectful and just do not care. My nephews don't even call me "Aunt". They call me by my name and I blame my brother for never correcting them. They are very disrespectful to not only me but my 89 year young dad
@@mariewoodward9713
So disrespectful ~ I would have never done that to my aunts and or uncles, and would not be allowed to by my parents many years ago ! Yes blame your brother for sure.
I remember all these things! A wonderful time to grow up! It's so sad how everything has become so screwed up!
Love the whole "You Might Be Old" series. Totally forgot about the Pizza-Hut reading rewards program. I was a reader anyway, so I made a killing on free pizza during grade school. I also remember listening to Casey Kasem's Top 40 on the weekends just waiting to hit the PLAY/REC buttons whenever a favorite song popped up. Good times!
Pizza Hut was still doing Book It! in the 2010s. My son is a great reader, he got a free pizza every month when he was in elementary school.
Omg i had cases n cases of tapes that were strictly from the radio. When i ran outta blank tapes n didnt wanna tape over them i took a regular old cassette i didnt want anymore n put electrical tape over the squares on the top n voila..u could record over it..anyone remember that hack?
@@LeeLeeCRN HaHa! Yep, that was the fate of my copy of "Vanilla Ice: TO THE EXTREME". Before you judge, it was a Christmas gift from my Aunt who preferred winging her holiday shopping.
@@johnnygee4206 lmao no judgement here..i had it too🤦 i ended up recording over a lot of the little girl tapes i grew out of like my rainbow bright cassette n "'christmas day in the cabbage patch" 😂
I used pencils on cassettes quite often! It was like they were made for it! 📼✏
If I could "groundhog" a decade, I think I'd choose the '70's with the '80's second. Those were the 2 best decades (for me) to live.
It was the 60s and 70s for me. Honestly, I hated the 80s because it was so different from the earlier decades.
I concur. It wasn't all good of course but it was FAR from all bad. Good times all around!
For me it was pretty much just the 70s. Ages 8 - 18. But man oh man I hit the jackpot with this decade! THE BEST ONE!! You're right. I wouldn't trade my memories for anything! ❤
Recently passed the 3/4 century mark and am always thankful that I was blessed to live during those wonderful times!
I'm 76 and remember most of these. A lot shown here was after I was already grown. I never had kids so didn't experience many firsthand. Yes, I'm OLD but it beats the alternative.
Going to Drive-in in the station wagon was the most memorable family get-together for me. We would play on the swings in front of the big screen before the movie started, run and get food at the snack bar durring intermission and the smallest ones would fall asleep before the second movie on a double-feature showing would end.
Yes. Laying on blankets on the hood of the pickup watching a movie with my favorite foods was the best Saturday nights ever.
My dad would make a HUGE brown paper bag filled with popcorn. One time me and my brother ate so much popcorn we were throwing up out the windows on the way home. We always brought our pillows too. A lot of times they had a small playground right in front of the screen that we took full advantage of.
@@ttgyuioo When I was about five, I got a bag of popcorn from a Sears store (they actually had a small popcorn kiosk at the front of the store) but it must have been tainted or didn't agree with me, because I had to ride the porcelain bus for a while when I got home........I couln't stand the smell of pocorn for years after that.
Don’t forget about having a shy bladder and trying to pee into a trough in the men’s bathroom. Great times.
You settled it, I am now old. I made mp3 files of my last mix tapes 20 years ago. I can still remember how the candy cigarettes tasted - like pepto-bismal.
They weren't good. The fact that they looked like cigarettes and made people do a double take was literally the only reason we ever bought them. You can still find them here and there. There's a giant candy shop in Nevada, somewhere between Vegas and Tonopah, I forget where exactly, but they have them. Along with every kind of licorice you never wanted.
They're online. There are several great vintage candy and soda shops online. Lots of this "forgotten stuff" is actually still made. Sometimes the same as it used to be, and sometimes not exactly.
Pepto?! 😂 I think the teenager at your drugstore swapped out your candy cigarettes for something else; mine tasted like wintergreen mints.
@@thenightporter I remember both those tastes in candy cigarettes. They seemed to have been created by the same confectioners that created Necco Wafers.
Yes sir! We were very lucky to have grown up in the last best decades of America! I remember EVERY ONE of these.
When I was little my Grandmother would often say, enjoy your time because it goes very fast when you grow up! She was so right. Born in 64 and now 58 I just can’t believe that these times were so long ago because it really seems like it was just a decade ago. That kid on the big wheel looked exactly like me especially with that bowl haircut and the color of it.
My great aunt said the same thing, I remember where we were when she said it and like it was yesterday. She was the age I am now when she said it.
I had a big wheel exactly like that. I had to take a second look to make sure that wasn’t me.
I remember all of these. One thing about Pizza Hut - I remember when you bought a World's finest chocolate bar you would get a coupon for Pizza Hut. In case you forget Worlds Finest would make candy bars for school fundraisers. They are still around today but the candy bars are smaller.
Best memories ever. I just can’t see how my grandkids can have terrific memories of when they were young, when most time is spent indoors or watching screens.
This brings back such joyful memories from my childhood. I miss those days.
Olin Mills wasn't the only company that did those portraits. Sears had a portrait studio too, and we can not forget Glamor Shots where females would go to have glamorous photos of themselves taken to share with their spouses or certain friends.
Regional stores like these studios were available in my hometown. Ours was called Vincent Price Studios.
Yeah baby! Remember the 'Glamour Shots' portraits on-display in the store window in the Mall? How many men, husbands and boyfriends talked their girlfriends, wives and local ladies they knew into getting a Glamour Shots photo session done for Christmas or the dudes birthday. All expenses paid of course.
When I went to Glamour Shots, I brought my own wigs, beaded gowns, feather boas, and big ostrich feather fans---all from my stage wardrobe when I sang in cabarets. The results were so good that several photos were included in the slideshow to attract customers. This caused a problem when people asked to wear the gowns or use the boas and fans, and the staff had to say I'd brought my own.
You are correct; we cannot forget Glamour Shots, try as we might. I cannot tell you how many older execs I worked with who had a 5×7 or 8x10 GS portrait of their wife on their desk. The worst were the ones with the wives in the fringe jacket , cowboy hat with her thumb and forefinger on it. 😂
@@johnpatterson4272 yes, I remember and years of therapy haven't helped me forget.😂
I'm 66 soon to be 67 and I am starting to feel nostalgic for the 1960s and 1970s and even the last 2 years of the 1950s. I remember getting my 1st camera for Christmas it was a Kodak 126 film camera
Wow! I remember I had one of those as well. I thought my dad was high tech because he had a 110 and used a flash bar instead of a cube.
@@jasont9522 As a photographer the 126 was better as the negative was about the same as 35mm the 110 was a little over a 16 mm frame. I went from it to a used 120 and later to a 4x5 inch view camera and a 35 mm Nikon. That gift got me into photography.
March 10,1956 for me. We are so blessed to have grown up in this time period!
the old phrase " they don't make em like they used too " has never been more pertinent.
I have an old Canon AE1 stashed away. 35mm, it used to belong to my mother. My husband sold his Nikon 35mm years ago and bought a nice DSLR. For me, the nice part about digital is being able to image old photographs. I have imaged dozens of my parents' old photos using my phone (20 megapixels is perfect), my goal is to color correct the favorites faded by time.
Thank you for the walk down memory lane. It was a kinder world. Human Beings knew how to be HUMAN!
Between using maps and Mapquest, before the internet was popular, if you were a AAA member, you could go to your local AAA office and have them make you a TripTik which will provide you construction zones location and other areas of interest along your route that other maps did not provide. I remember them grabbing random pages out of drawers, taking a highlighter and highlighting the route and then stamping "construction zones" along the route, also some of the pages flipped out that gave you a better look of the road maps in the area, after they were finished, then they would bind the pages together and off you go.
Rankin/Bass also produced The Little Drummer Boy, another Christmas special to watch.
Yes and sadly it's not on regular tv anymore. I used to watch it with my Mom as a kid.
That was a tear jerker every year. Even at 62 I'd get a tear from watching it .... and I'm a man.
That was my mom's favorite Christmas show.
It was great looking through that week's TV Guide to see what and when the specials were going to air. Nowadays, everyone has them on DVD and they're not as special as they used to be.
And The Little Drummer Boy Book 2, and Nestor the Long Eared Christmas Donkey.
Clara Peller, the 'where's the beef?' main character, was basically deaf when the commercials were being shot. Someone literally tugged on her dress when it was time for her to say her line.
That's funny, because now that I think about it, she always looked like someone was pulling on her dress to prompt her to say her line. I thought she was just doing that way to make it funnier. 😂
Remember her with Nedra Volz in Moving Violations from 1985 driving her 1968 Biscayne on the airport runway?
Yes, I remember. I'm old and so glad I grew up then. Sunday night meant Ed Sullivan Show. I think Bonanza also was Sunday.
I'm glad I'm not the only one who misses the good ol days, makes it a little easier to take and don't feel so alone
Born in 66, and So Thankful to Jesus I was! Those years to me were the Best Ever! What memories to cherish. Thank You so much!!!!!
What I miss most about Book It wasn't the free pizza, but the fact that almost everyone I knew could read easily and fluently. When I listen to even teenagers reading these days, I just shake my head and how hard it is for a lot of them. Being able to read well is so, so important.
@@sherrieburcham6287 To be honest I'm really up in the air about cursive writing. It's too bad so many young people don't know how to do it, but I also really do wonder how important it really was for us to learn. It was good hand eye coordination exercise of course, and having a nice signature is good, but I wonder if it is really necessary anymore other than for reading old documents! Kind of like digital clocks ... yeah, being able to read a regular clock is good but necessary? I just don't know. Then again, we don't need to only restrict ourselves to learning things that are necessary!
@@sherrieburcham6287 Or writing at all...people can't spell or use grammar correctly at ALL anymore.
@@lilsheba1 Exactly. I don't know if it's because people think it's cool to not write properly, or if society is just filled with a bunch of knuckleheads.
Most big city public schools no longer teach kids to read as we were taught. I remember sounding out each letter and then putting the letters together to form a word. i was a good reader by second grade. A lot of kids today graduate without knowing how to read --- very sad.
Thank you so much for putting this together and airing it. A lot of it resonated with my past, especially the sunday dinners. There was absolutely no shame in telling friends that you were committed to Sunday dinner with Grandma and absolutely NO shame in mentioning you were going to church. Those were signs of good manners and good morals. Great times. I loved the stories my grandparents AND great grandparents used to tell at those gatherings.
Basically society lost the wisdom of elders ...and we see the results sadly
We lived out west so we saw our grandmothers on summer vacations and Thanksgiving and Christmas. Our Sundays meant church in the morning followed by a meal at Luby's Cafeteria. I always wanted the fried chicken and the colorful cubes of jello in the fancy serving glass. Indeed, great times (I do envy you the weekly large family gatherings, though!).
I'm so old. I already have my plot at "FOREST LAWN" ! I remember ALL of these things. The Candy cigarettes were my favorite ! I loved the ones that weren't candy, but had a foil colored tip and when you blew into it, powder would come out like real smoke ! It was so cool ! I also bought the wax lips, teeth and mustache! I was 10 !
I remember foil wrapped chocolate cigarettes. I never saw the non-candy ones that had powder like pretend smoke!
ha ha... I do remember the ones w/ the fake smoke and those wax lips and teeth. My sister would form them over her top teeth and wear them all day. There were also these wafer thin "ufo"s filled w/ nonparells.
This sparks great memories of things we enjoyed and family and friends who are not with us anymore.
It sounds crazy, but, we definitely did use Sunday as a reunion once a week. It was an all afternoon event with all our cousins and uncles and aunts, and we were outdoors nearly the whole time. TV was NOT on, and ...video games of course weren't a thing. It's amazing to think of any of us having the capability of doing this now on any sort of regular basis. The time pressures we have pushed on ourselves, along with the change in priorities, has gotten rid of those sorts of lazy days, that were probably much more healthy for us than we ever want to admit...
It certainly helped that everything was pretty much shut down on Sundays! I miss that quiet day now!
As a truck driver back when they would sell special "Trucker" versions of an atlas every year. Yearly updates included long construction jobs etc. Lots of cool bits. Right next to it was the annual or semi annual truck stop location book. Basically told you what was at most exits that you could park a truck at. Both books where basically mandatory for trip planning for Over The Road drivers.
The trucker atlases are still easily available. You can get them online or in just about every truckstop.
The Rand McNally atlas, either paper or the much more durable and easy to lay flat, spiral bound with laminated pages version is EASILY available. If you want one. And when the new ones come out, the older version is usually put on sale. There's very little difference, so that's the best deal.
I don't know if the big print, laminated version is still made or not. But if it is, it would be online. And older versions might be available online.
I have several older laminated whole nation trucker atlases (probably the latest us 2019 or 2020). I use them alongside the GPS. Each has pluses and minuses when you're trying to figure out how to get somewhere.
Also, I have a very old (20 years or so) Chicagoland Low Clearances paper map. That one saved my butt on many occasions. It's covered in tape now. I wouldn't go to Chicago anymore these days. It's not worth it. It never was actually.
It's highly doubtful if many of these "steering wheel holders" would even know how to read a map, much less trip plan. Many just use a car GPS and call it good. Until they end up stuck on a one lane dirt road, or hung up on the railroad tracks.
You can never go back. But my memory hasn't failed yet and I remember all of it.
All In Memories
At 63 years old, I still watch all the Christmas shows that I did at 6 years old. Guess it takes me where I wish I could go again.
At 5:33, seeing that big wheel brought back memories. My brother and I used to ride ours all the time. I also remember Pizza Hut back then, pizza made from freshly made dough. They tasted so good and the atmosphere in those Pizza Hut restaurants was cool. The one we went to had a sit-down Pac-Man game to keep us occupied before our Pizza showed up at the table.
I love Recollection Road. They take me back in time
I was one of those who taped music off the radio. I would get so annoyed when a DJ would talk over the intro or cut off the ending.
Same, and I also taped some of my favorite TV themes. It used to piss me off when the announcer would urge viewers to stay tuned during the end theme (longer & more complete than the intro).
Recollection Road THANK YOU!
I am old. My parents weren't rich. But my brother and I got a BIG WHEEL to share. Thats what they called it in the 70s. It was a blast. So cold outside at Christmas. Mom and dad let us ride it in the house. That was a blast....wish the kids no days had experience like that.
I wouldn't give up one of my great memories for the kids today! How blessed we all were to grow up back then and be "old" now! Priceless!❤😊
Recollection Road is my go to channel for the fond memories of yesteryear, an escape from the horrible nowadays reality. People were connected in a much more realistic way than how they are today by paying attention and caring more for one another. Thank you RR in helping me escape the dreadful days of the 2020's even if its for just 10 min.
Count me amongst the "old" then.. because I certainly do remember all that stuff!
I remember this all. Yes, I am old, and it's a privilege being my age. I love that I grew up in such an amazing time. Kids today don't know what they're missing. I have blessed in so many ways.
I agree. It was great growing up in a time where the biggest dangers were poison ivy and broken bones. We played outside without supervision and respected our elders. The only bad part is that too many of my friends, old and younger are gone.
I love that so many of us aged treasures are here to comment on our lives. We knew the times before computers and streamlined electronics. We left the house at 9 am Saturday morning and did not get back until sundown. Our parents always knew whose house to call or where to look for us if we were late.
Born in 52 and remember so much of these and other offerings on your channel. It's fun watching these with my grandkids and having to explain so many of the pics. Thank you for rekindling so many great and fond memories. To me, your show is priceless. Thank you!
Your videos always bring tears to my eyes, it was such a great time to grow up.
I had a big wheel as a kid. Rode it across streets on my block like a boss, completely oblivious of the traffic not being able to see me below their high dashboard sightlines. We had winter sleds but the hills were all too short in my neighborhood, so we'd end up in street traffic after sliding down too far. It's a miracle I'm still alive but I wouldn't change a thing and I miss those days. Kids today have no clue what an active, carefree fun time it was.
Oh yes! I loved my running board! Especially on school snow days!😋 always a challenge to get down my long hill road before the salt truck or plow would come!
Remember playing king of the castle on huge snow piles? Pushing each down ,tumbling, rolling , smashing into each other ! Kids would be charged for assault for doing that now lol ...man the world changed way to fast for our own good.
My children loved their big wheels. I miss a lot of these old things. I miss getting maps in gas stations.
Well, color me old. For I remember it all. Thank you for this delightful trip down memory lane.
I rem movie palaces in Chicago when I was a kid....25. cents for kids back then.
So many bitter sweet memories...that's the meaning of nostalgia. I love these videos from my childhood. Please keep them coming.
I'm 61. I remember some of these things. But I also believe the past needs to stay in the past. Cherish the memories, but know today is just as important.
Born in 1960. It was a great time to grow up then!
I was a teacher issuing those Book-It certificates so imagine how old I must be! 👵🏻
They still have the BookIt program. The kids still get a free personal pan pizza.😉
Loved every moment of the 50's and to a diminishing degree the time after '65 till the mid 80's. I remember far back than this video. All the wonderfully dangerous and outragious things which went on. This was Brooklyn NYC Folks... Fireworks. Hot wiring
cars. I remember junior gang fights in grade school to make like all the JD movies we used to see. 😂 My parents made sure we had great food and on Sunday, after Mass we DID go relatives so you were made to mingle with cousins you hated
and we spent time thinking of what we could do to bother them but not set off the adults
As far as candy cigarettes we would bring them into class in the 5th to 7th Grade go up to the girls and ask them if they wasted to take a ride...imitating Marlon Brando.
The girls, who were often tougher than some boys, would either coldly say no or try to punch out one of the guys for that kind of thing.
Hey, it was the Great America back then.....
We grew up in the best of times IMHO
I imagine all generations have felt this way. Personally speaking, the memories of when I was very young are more vivid to me now as I am approaching the big "80". A lot of it has to do with perspective and the aging process itself.
Yep, born in 1959, I remember all of these things. I thank God for the years that he has given me. Even with all of the technology today, I loved those older days.
These videos always make me smile, laugh, and cry. What wonderful memories, yet bittersweet as we miss those great times! Love your videos. Thank you for making nowadays tolerable, by bringing us warmth remembering the bygone days.
As I approach the day to end it, these make me kinda sad and happy at the same time.
Brett its definitely bittersweet ain't it. I'm 44 and already feel the same way
@@musicman7297 yes I may be , only as old as you feel , 44 going on 88 88 going on I've seen enough though to say things are definitely not the way I remember them and it's definitely bittersweet
@Floyd, i remember feelimg that way at age 44. 16 years later, ive learned it doesnt get any better. Imo, its more bitter than sweet.
Rankin/Bass were always staples to watch in our family.
Glad to be old enough to remember these. Thank you!
I'm 62 and remember most of these. We also had a light blue Ford, like the one in your closing. Nice memories. I'm very glad I grew up in the 70's.
I was born in '86 and man im so glad i grew up when i did thru the 90s. No internet no cell phones no nothing like that. Just the great outdoors and the bike rides i went on the mikes i put on my bike.
"What's this stuff"
"Some cereal. It's s'posed to be good for ya."
"You try it?"
"I'm not gonna try it. You try it"
"I'm not gonna try it....."
"Hey! Let's get Mickey"
"Yeah"
"He won't eat it. He hates everything"
....
....
"He likes it! Hey Mickey"
Those words came to mind immediately! Lol. 😆
Btw, it's "Mikey". But all the same. 👍
I think the thing I miss most, are the Sunday afternoon dinners with the whole family. After my grandmother died, several aunts and uncles moved away from our hometown. When she was living, I had seven sets of aunts and uncles, and multiple cousins living in the same town. It was great being able to grow up that close to cousins who were within a couple of years older or younger than me. We had great family football games. And the food every Sunday was the best, as each family brought something different to the meal. I love these nostalgic videos! Takes me back to a great time and place.
What is stopping you from having Sunday dinner with the family that you have now?
Grandma made the best fried chicken, us cousins would play for hours. I inherited the 60-year-old skillets she used to make the chicken in.
I'm 56 and don't think I'm old but really just starting a wonderful life being free! Though, I remember most of these items and especially riding around on my big wheel eating fake cigarettes!!! Thank you for sharing the memories and look forward to seeing more.
Looking back it was a wonderful era. Good music great cars and super home cooked food. And we were safer than our youth are today. Really sad.
Im so glad that music doesn’t play in my head when I remember way back when.
I am so glad I grew up when I did. I was born in 79 and I’m 43. I know that might be younger some people, but compared to the young people running around today with all their devices, I am so glad I grew up when I did.
My mom was the smoker in our family. And I remember buying the candy cigarettes for either .10 or .15 a box. Wanted to be like her. I found a store that sold them a few years ago just to try them again. They were pretty gross.
Drink Kool-Aid by the gallon. And yes, made so many mixed tapes. I don’t remember ever using a pencil for the cassette thing. Just my pinky finger. Ha ha smile.
I'm 42 born in 80 I'm glad that I grew up around that time also I wouldn't change it
The 1990s would have been a great time to be a kid. They were a great time to be an adult, too. 😉
Im 38 (almost 39) n rememeber almost all the things in a lot of the videos. Of course i do have a freakeshly accurate photographic memory of my past going back to detailed memories of being in my crib. I have been told thata somewhat rare..its normal to me...just dont ask me where i set my phone n keys down 5mins ago lol
We had the shadow sillowettes. Watching your videos always brings back memories. There was Avon parties with the high seller getting a pink cadillac, and the welcome wagon showing up with a gift basket when you moved in to your new house. So many things just fade away over time.
When we bought our house ten years ago, the mailman welcomed us and our neighbor brought over a welcome plant in a cute metal plant stand. I still have it in our garden. We had Avon ladies, not parties. I loved the tiny Avon sample lipsticks, my mom scored those for me every year from her friend. The makeup parties were Jafra (great stuff), Mary Kay, and a company I cannot remember that sold aloe vera based cosmetics (1990s, also great stuff).
Born 1953, and yes I am old, and yes these are all good memories! Thanks
I look at the kids today and feel sorry they didn't grow up when I did. Riding bikes all day and playing with friends and having fun. I'm glad I was born in 79 and not today
Yeah, I remember all those "old things"! Funny, they've gotten old, but I'm still the same!
Once again you stirred up great memories in all of us. Stirred up great memories with the Rankin- Bass Christmas specials , because of Rudolph I have a massive “ Bumbles” Collection I put out every year. Merry Christmas everyone!
I grew up in the '90s realized that 1999 alone is almost 24 years ago. It's crazy how time passes you by. I'm almost 36 and I wish I was a kid again even though I didn't have much of a childhood, but it beats being an adult.
Yeah, I saw a kid the other day with a '23' on his high school jacket. I graduated HS in 89 and remember how strange it seemed to see kids wearing jackets with '00'. Now, even that was over 20 years ago.
@@jasont9522 I always envied the kids who were 1 year older than me, their jackets all had '69'.
Yeah, I'm 63, and the time seems to go by faster the older you get. I personally, miss the 60's because it was a time of innocence. A time of learning, and a time of family. A loving family is what I remember the most.
I did, luckily lived through a lot back in the 70s/80s... Class of 85!, and you're damn right I'm still alive!!! Love to all yinz!!!
I remember. Beautiful were the days of my youth. How i miss them. I wish I could do that all over again. Merry Christmas everyone.
I just finished watching the video and I remember everything from back 🔙 in the day and I was born in 1957 and grew up in the 1960's and 1970's. I also remember the 1980's and 1990's.
I was born in 1958. We were so Blessed to have seen those years and enjoy all that Great Time it brought us.
You could at least say older rather than old! Love your videos. They bring back so many fun memories! What’s really cool is some of the old Christmas shows can be found on DVD! Love that idea. I have a copy of my favorite “How the Grinch Stole Christmas!” Dr. Seuss!!
Yeah, and now Dr. Suess went out the window with "cancel culture", so it's a good thing you have the Grinch movie on tape, cos I don't know if it's "PC" to show it on network television anymore.
You can never be old when you believe in the positive message those old Christmas shows gave us.
@@qmnnvrdyz8965 yes. Cancel Culture has ruined so much that was never intended to be inflammatory.
We have a teenager. When he was young, we bought ALL the stop motion Rankin-Bass Christmas specials on DVD. We alo have "How the Grinch Stole Christmas (we were chuckling over that a few weeks ago), and the Peanuts holiday specials, all on DVD.
I think some people enjoy putting other people down because of their age. They want to make you feel ancient, out of place, like you do not belong to a world that's made for the young. I just laugh at the time their kids and their grandkids call them "old". They will have to drink from the same fountain we seniors have to now. It's like you are penalized for not having died!!!
How refreshing it is to see and hear about my childhood days . it tickles me so ! Thank You RR
Born 1933. Best time was 1960's and 1970's. Best music and most happy times in the world.
I’m 49 y/o now and loved my childhood! Thanks for the memories
I remember so much I can't comment on them all!!! What great memories!!!
I'm old enough to remember having a home with a mom and dad, people only had two genders, families went to church, people showed respect toward their elders, and schools actually taught you something relevant.
Why do I want to cry watching all these wonderful memories
I miss them so much
I was born in 1967 and still have my old Talking Viewmaster. ..and it still works! I remember showing it to my kids and they were amazed that we could have fun with such 'low tech' and 'simple' electronics.
I love to be old enough to remember all these
Thanks!
Do a video, on "STARTER HOMES, of the 20's, 30's, 40's, these homes were built like rocks,
They were 3 bedrooms, simple kitchen and bathroom. Starter homes were YOUR FIRST HOME, till you got that big promotion in life. Most starter homes could last a hundred years.
You can still find them today in old neighborhoods. Across America. I love the beautiful simple strong function of these homes.
Can't forget about the green rideable inch worm.
So I'm. Old
Not sure of when the narrator was born. If it happened in the 60s and 70s , then I remember. Not just for this one but other videos as well. With the exception of stores that weren't in the area where I lived