The cultural view of everyone at the time: Men are "machos" drinking beer, shaving and looking at pretty women (despite being married) Women are all about doing domestic stuff and being "pretty"; Kids are all about doing mess and being hyperactive; And mothers-in-law are always undesired and annoying.
Even Groucho Marx got tired of them. In a letter to a friend dated December 6, 1950, he stated: *"I have solved the television problem by having a remote control installed on the ugly box. As soon as the first word of the commercial is heard, bang goes the little switch and the idiot barker extolling the virtues of Odorono [a deodorant], Lifeguard [television] tubes, Mohawk carpets or Halo shampoo is silenced into instant oblivion. Of course it would be embarrassing if my sponsor [DeSoto-Playmouth, who was associated with "YOU BET YOUR LIFE" on TV and radio during the 1950's] should get wind of this device but they are so busy in Detroit converting from automobiles to five passenger cannons that I think I can continue to play with my luck."*
Not really, since the electric Mundaneum gained popularity, television licenses have been in steady decline. Something they should've already been able to predict back than, bc the Mundaneum, or rather the predator from the internet exists from 1910 and back than, the one who created it, was already talking about the digital version from it.
There are, of course, those killjoys in state legislatures who included automobiles among "deadly weapons" with which one can be charged with committing assault.
I like how, out of everything, the TV shooting a guest, the poisoning of the mother-in-law, the car having a plunging neckline and a dumpy, etc. Tex Avery draws the line at seals.
Tex's World of Tomorrow cartoons are some of my absolute favorites. I really love seeing the ideas the people of that era came up with for future technologies and conveniences. Made all the better by Tex's cartoony comedy.
The ability to unfold a pool from the size of coin purse to a fully diveable platform is insignificant next to the power of a cartoonist's imagination.
I had to laugh at kid asking the tv numerous questions. Tex was ahead of his time in that respect 😂😂. It would be funny if Alexa tells someone to shut up if they ask too many questions 😂😂
Yes, in fact I have 5 holes in my head! But I don’t really like South Park I love gravity falls but these old cartoons are just better to me maybe not to you!
@@TheLakabanzaichrg I don't even know if kids nowaday know how to use an old radio but yeah, same concept, I remember having to press the antenna with my hands in order to be connected (we all had our technique). Also the good old slap on the TV when it wouldn't work properly haha.
Yep the old "bunny ears" - analog tv on VHF or UHF. And some fun facts about that for those born in 2000 or later: If your TV was modern it had numbers to push in the channels. If you had a old set you had a dial for the channels instead of numbers And if it was REALLY OLD it had TWO dials - one for VHF and one for UHF!
I miss when Nickelodeon had Looney Tunes, Ren & Stimpy, Rocko's Modern Life and Ahh! Real Monsters. I also miss Animaniacs and Pinky and the Brain, along with Brain's archenemy- Snowball and the female mouse- Billie. Mainly one episode in which they were dressed like bandits, Billie figures out taking over the world was more important to Brain than her. It seemed at first she was closer to Snowball. But in the end, she admits that she was only using Snowball because he promised to build her water rides. Then suddenly, in response, Brain and Snowball go from expressing their rivalry to their realizations that Billie didn't like either of the two.
Same here, I checked out the subscription service they have now, I definitely recommend it. About $40 a year makes it $3.33 per month, totally worth it for me at that price. Popeye, Bugs Bunny, Scooby-Doo, and I was watching Taz-Mania recently, and soo much more!
4:04 Here you can see just how much the politics of television have changed, as when they show the program for the kiddies, it's nothing but people shooting each other.
@@julienielsen3746 Alas, westerns are pretty much a dead genre as a whole. Not that I ever cared much for them personally, but it's just interesting to see how common they used to be compared to nowadays.
@@gurvmlk Back in the early 60s when I was a kid we watched a lot of. westerns. Still watch them on TV channels that show old shows from the 60s and 70s. Good shows ack then. Can't stand the programs they have these days.
It wasn't just Tex Avery and his writers who had a problem with mothers-in law. Ernie K-Doe, in 1961, released his one-hit wonder of a novelty song.... "Mother-in-Law" with lyrics such as... "Ths worst person I know, sent from down below, Satan should be her name, to me they're 'bout the same."
That is actual real world song? I thought that it is just something that authors of Cities Skylines came with for one of their in game stations and just sounds old.
only thursdays for me 98ish, i watched sabrina jumanji recess and tarzan on 2 different channels at the same time before school. jumanji was time for school but i would be late to watch 10 minutes or til commercial. 07 fridays it was 8 episodes of rachael ray on 3 different channels cuz i was a teenage boy and those ghost shows and waverly place for maria canals cuz i was a teen once again
I remember the pink car with the cleavage was so funny because I used to watch all of these Tex Avery cartoon shorts back on TNT nearly 30 years ago when that cable network used to have a program called TNT’s Wild World Of Shorts then it was then renamed TNT Toons later on in the mid 90’s & don’t forget the beautiful Blonde in the TV scene .
Well, houses built around television sets, with it's opened rooms, the tv room encompassing the whole floor, dining room and kitchen - Mr Avery wasn't wrong.
That's how cartoons were. Cartoons were meant for everyone, hence the jokes and gags meant for the adults of that era. That, I feel, is the fun of it; seeing what gag ages like fine wine, and which gag ages like spoiled milk. After all, humans, as you probably guessed, love dark humor and morbid jokes. And comedy.
I know what you mean, but Saturday morning, cartoons or rather a program for kids was always something to look forward to every Saturday every weekend it made going through school worth it. But yeah, having cartoons like this and others during the week rather than only on the weekends it's pretty nice.... assuming the cartoons are good
Yeah, I remember getting cable for the first time and Boomerang was part of our package. Then Boomerang went to premium and we didn'tget it anymore. I do get nostalgic for antenna TV though. Something about having less channels made TV seem more fun because you had to anticipate when your show was going to be on.
@@CheapSkateGamer96 We had the TV Guide. And if you didn't have that you could usually get the schedule out of the newspaper. What was great about TV before cable was that the shows on the three networks were mostly good shows. There was always a good show on one of them at least. They were competitive and trying to get people to watch their channel.
@@briangaron7609 I remember when we just had TV Land, and Nick at Nite with old shows on. Now I get TV Land, plus COZI TV, Get TV, Antenna TV, FeTV, that have the old shows. Used to get MeTV too but they took that off my cable.
He was quite good a predicting future. Making rooms that way tv can be easily accessible from any corner of house, glass in the oven, even taking care of child with too many questions. Major difference is to give our children tablets or smartphones instead of jukebox like machine. TV with 3 displays (picture in picture mode in many tv's today), Heck even see through glass in fridge (today's equivalent to led display and camera in few fancy models)
Makes two of us. I'm watching saturday morning cartoons with my 2 year old now and realizing a lot of these weren't even made when i was a kid...THEY WERE MADE 20-40 YEARS BEFORE THAT! Welcome to the old farts club!
I love Tex Avery. Chasing pedestrians with a wide bumper car so you can’t miss! Then looking down through a glass floor to see who you ran over. I thought only I was this warped. 😂😂
0:44 they were right, ive worked with my Dad on homes and many have removed walls so the TV can be seen, heres other things they got right that we have and do today 1:30 the power ball lotteries 1:47 Motorize juicers 2:06 every house hold has these now 3:15 ive seen homes with these with my Dad 3:50 of course we have bigger resolution TV's 4:04 Multi monitor set up mainly used on computers 5:08 By law, every motor vehicle is equipped with blinking indicators, that nobody uses 5:50 many car company's have made vehicles with space in mind
Something tells me Tex didn't like his mother in law
I guess mother in law were mean
And Tex don't like women drivers either.
He lived during a time when "being right" meant telling the truth without having to apologize.
Try it. Its fun!
The cultural view of everyone at the time:
Men are "machos" drinking beer, shaving and looking at pretty women (despite being married)
Women are all about doing domestic stuff and being "pretty";
Kids are all about doing mess and being hyperactive;
And mothers-in-law are always undesired and annoying.
@@SuperSylar ahh.... what a GREAT time to be alive! 😎
The 1950s had a strange obsession with hating on mother-in-laws
We still do
@@zhbvenkhoReload Then you are not evolving it seems...
Well they would've been the megalodon karens to today's modern karens
More things change
@@o_ofigures Jurassic Karen
3:33: Even since the dawn of Television, people were already sick of ads, haha.
Were they sick of ads when radio was super popular? Just asking out of curiosity.
@@jordanleland6402 They were of ads in news papers
if only that invention caught on
Even Groucho Marx got tired of them. In a letter to a friend dated December 6, 1950, he stated:
*"I have solved the television problem by having a remote control installed on the ugly box. As soon as the first word of the commercial is heard, bang goes the little switch and the idiot barker extolling the virtues of Odorono [a deodorant], Lifeguard [television] tubes, Mohawk carpets or Halo shampoo is silenced into instant oblivion. Of course it would be embarrassing if my sponsor [DeSoto-Playmouth, who was associated with "YOU BET YOUR LIFE" on TV and radio during the 1950's] should get wind of this device but they are so busy in Detroit converting from automobiles to five passenger cannons that I think I can continue to play with my luck."*
Skip Ads be like nowadays...
Tex was spot on about the whole house being built around the television set
Not rly, today we have out „tv“ always in our pockets, carrying it around
@@user-10021 which is built around that device. just try leaving it at home.....
Not really,
since the electric Mundaneum gained popularity,
television licenses have been in steady decline.
Something they should've already been able to predict back than,
bc the Mundaneum, or rather the predator from the internet exists from 1910
and back than, the one who created it, was already talking about the digital version from it.
@@chiisuigintou Television licences?
@@martabachynsky8545 He must be British. They PAY to watch TV.
I want the fridge with the little door so you can watch the gnome turn off the light.
He won't do it if your looking
They're severly underpaid don't do it to often all they might go on strike and never to on the light
That reminds me I need to get my gnome replaced
Yehoodi. The little man that turns off the light when you close the refrigerator.
Wow- what a life..
God, these are freaking funny. And dark at times. My fave is the bumper for pedestrians. "Let them try to get away."
😆😆😆😆
I've decided to install one for my own car.
They haven't gotten away yet.
There are, of course, those killjoys in state legislatures who included automobiles among "deadly weapons" with which one can be charged with committing assault.
"This model has a clear glass bottom so you can see if one of the pedestrians was a friend of yours."
My favorite's got to be the commercial disposing one
I like how, out of everything, the TV shooting a guest, the poisoning of the mother-in-law, the car having a plunging neckline and a dumpy, etc. Tex Avery draws the line at seals.
A legend here. Always glad to see you here
He likes animals more than humans. That makes him a G in my book…..
You forgot the anti-aircraft guns. A unique gag for sure
Tex's World of Tomorrow cartoons are some of my absolute favorites. I really love seeing the ideas the people of that era came up with for future technologies and conveniences. Made all the better by Tex's cartoony comedy.
Imagine showing Tex Avery the real world of the future
Highlighted the greatest generation and baby’s boomers obsession with not suffering
Yeah I think this is a combo of what he thought but mostly of him making fun of the actuall "world of tomorrow" stuff that happened around those times
@@RocketHarry865would be like putting gasoline on the fire
ovens with a window exist already, it's funny how their joke became true
The lesson to learn here is that Tex Avery really hated his mother-in-law!
Every man hates his mother in law.
It's a stereotype. It's a joke.
Yosef Demby Exactly. People here are obviously too young to get the joke.
Really crack me up a lot.
Also that Tex Avery likes good looking women.
The ability to unfold a pool from the size of coin purse to a fully diveable platform is insignificant next to the power of a cartoonist's imagination.
The force is strong with this one.
@IP3278 the quote come from Star wars, not Star Trek
@@IP-pm7px Your lack of faith disturbs me.
3:31 the mad lad was pitching ad-blockers decades before the intermet was even a thing.
Even way before devices like TiVo or DVR cable boxes
You know.. sometimes I get a feeling Tex Avery was literally insane.
No, he just had an insane sense of humor.
Not really, just had a sense of humor
Best kinda sane
No he is IN sane. Not insane like the twitter folks
Well here’s a secret…
All the best people are
"The home of tomorrow will be built around the television set" yeah, that was pretty on the nose there.
I had to laugh at kid asking the tv numerous questions. Tex was ahead of his time in that respect 😂😂. It would be funny if Alexa tells someone to shut up if they ask too many questions 😂😂
Even other Alexa clones AND ChatGPT.
Pretty much predicted ipads and siri
@@lrod312 yup 😂😂
This is something we all wished we had to shut up any kid who asks us annoying questions that would drive us up the roof.
This is so much better than normal television today. I love these old cartoons.
You’d have to have a hole in your head to think this is better then like gravity falls or South Park
@@byHextedits still better then those 💩holes modern cartoon , you probably have a hole in your head so be quiet
Yes, in fact I have 5 holes in my head! But I don’t really like South Park I love gravity falls but these old cartoons are just better to me maybe not to you!
@@byHextedfar better and witty.
@@byHextedit’s better than South Park for sure not gravity falls though
2:22 I didn't realize old TVs would be affected by overhead planes. That's interesting
Up to the 90's Antennas used to be very fickle and even where someone was standing could interfere with the signal
Much moreso then under-head planes
@@TheLakabanzaichrg I don't even know if kids nowaday know how to use an old radio but yeah, same concept, I remember having to press the antenna with my hands in order to be connected (we all had our technique). Also the good old slap on the TV when it wouldn't work properly haha.
Yep the old "bunny ears" - analog tv on VHF or UHF. And some fun facts about that for those born in 2000 or later:
If your TV was modern it had numbers to push in the channels.
If you had a old set you had a dial for the channels instead of numbers
And if it was REALLY OLD it had TWO dials - one for VHF and one for UHF!
I love my iPhone:)
These were always my favorite.
Same
Man, I sure do miss the old Boomerang
In my country it was aired almost exclusively by Cartoon Network, before they shitted the channel with life action shows to copy Nickelodeon
I miss when Nickelodeon had Looney Tunes, Ren & Stimpy, Rocko's Modern Life and Ahh! Real Monsters. I also miss Animaniacs and Pinky and the Brain, along with Brain's archenemy- Snowball and the female mouse- Billie. Mainly one episode in which they were dressed like bandits, Billie figures out taking over the world was more important to Brain than her. It seemed at first she was closer to Snowball. But in the end, she admits that she was only using Snowball because he promised to build her water rides. Then suddenly, in response, Brain and Snowball go from expressing their rivalry to their realizations that Billie didn't like either of the two.
Same here, I checked out the subscription service they have now, I definitely recommend it. About $40 a year makes it $3.33 per month, totally worth it for me at that price. Popeye, Bugs Bunny, Scooby-Doo, and I was watching Taz-Mania recently, and soo much more!
I do also !
R.I.P. Tex Avery (1908-1980)
I really wish i could have met him.
@@JCarey1988me too my friend.
So it was Tex Avery who inserted the image of a feminine car butt in my head as a kid. Thanks, Tex
Okay, time for some recent history.
This is the 1950s.
*This is the **_entire_** 1950s?*
Yes.
Family guy reference.
The glass bottom car was savage! XD
4:04 Here you can see just how much the politics of television have changed, as when they show the program for the kiddies, it's nothing but people shooting each other.
Good old days when kids loved to watch westerns.
@@julienielsen3746 Alas, westerns are pretty much a dead genre as a whole. Not that I ever cared much for them personally, but it's just interesting to see how common they used to be compared to nowadays.
@@gurvmlk Back in the early 60s when I was a kid we watched a lot of. westerns. Still watch them on TV channels that show old shows from the 60s and 70s. Good shows ack then. Can't stand the programs they have these days.
Westerns will comeback in style. Everything is a cycle. Anime borrows a lot from westerns.
@@julienielsen3746 Alas, I was born in the mid 80's, so most of what I've seen in regards to the genre came before my time.
It wasn't just Tex Avery and his writers who had a problem with mothers-in law. Ernie K-Doe, in 1961, released his one-hit wonder of a novelty song.... "Mother-in-Law" with lyrics such as...
"Ths worst person I know, sent from down below, Satan should be her name, to me they're 'bout the same."
Let's hear this gem: ua-cam.com/video/6EN5eJf5h_k/v-deo.html&ab_channel=MANNYMORA
Mane was spitting bars
That is actual real world song? I thought that it is just something that authors of Cities Skylines came with for one of their in game stations and just sounds old.
Watching cartoons in the morning before going to school (80s) fun times
only thursdays for me 98ish, i watched sabrina jumanji recess and tarzan on 2 different channels at the same time before school. jumanji was time for school but i would be late to watch 10 minutes or til commercial. 07 fridays it was 8 episodes of rachael ray on 3 different channels cuz i was a teenage boy and those ghost shows and waverly place for maria canals cuz i was a teen once again
I remember the pink car with the cleavage was so funny because I used to watch all of these Tex Avery cartoon shorts back on TNT nearly 30 years ago when that cable network used to have a program called TNT’s Wild World Of Shorts then it was then renamed TNT Toons later on in the mid 90’s & don’t forget the beautiful Blonde in the TV scene .
Ah, the Mother-In-Law jokes, some of my favorites.
6:10 that credits was perfectly cut
Well, houses built around television sets, with it's opened rooms, the tv room encompassing the whole floor, dining room and kitchen - Mr Avery wasn't wrong.
The clear window in the oven became true. Sort of. Also the computer that’s answers all your kids questions.
And the Device to dispose of commercials, think of TiVo and DVR‘s from your cable company
4:42 Oh god ! This show is soooo relatable
Funny thing is the oven in 2:07 has existed for awhile now and is pretty much a standard in ovens
I would personally love if a anti aircraft was my tv
I LOVED Tex Avery and Droopy cartoon reruns in the 90s.
Wow things have changed alot
Have they??
No I don’t think they did
Amazing how much he got right.
I wish real life was exactly like this cartoon lol. I want a TV with 3 screens that shoots down airplanes.
3:26 Bruhhhh how tf you gonna tell me they been predicting our habits since the early days lmfaoooo 😂
Castor Oil? Or poisons?
@@jordanleland6402 i think the castor oil.
They nailed the all house built around the tv very well.
It's crazy how this 1950s cartoon predicted a lot of the future
Yeah crazy in hindsight that they predicted the national pastime of running over pedestrians for sport
The TV for the tired business man is OnlyFans.
@@SpencerWilliamsIVOr just legal Pr0n channels in general.
Oh, these would be a delight at any public event nowadays.
The glass bottom car so that WHEN you hit a pedestrian, you can see if he was a friend of yours.
That one killed me. 😂🤣
That pedestrian felt the same way.
I love Tex Avery. Them old Droopy/Spike cartoons are hilarious!!!😆
The "This (Item) was designed for every member of the family" has the same energy as most basic modern memes.
3:11 Cars 4 meeting lightnings mom
I’ll always be grateful to Tex for his wild humor and for mentoring the other wild man of animation, Bob Clampett.
5:30 shut up and take my money!🤣💵
The TV with a flac cannon though. Imagine if we hadn't of had cable or lcd technology
And for the Mother-in-law.
“The world of tomorrow will be built around the television set”
Me not being able to do anything without having a UA-cam video on in the background 😂
at 0:53 it's hilarious, that kid and the 'pre Alexa' design...lol.
...I kinda wanna hear the story of who in the 1950s had a pet giraffe.
What? Your parents didnt have one???
@@RedKing64 I mean... my parents would have to be immortal for that to make sense or they just decided to start a family really.... really late.
In the early 2010s, Alan bought a giraffe in Hangover 3.
2:05 I love how they actually predicted that 🤣
But ...that existed.
@@WitchKing-Of-Angmar well...
in 1950s probably few, but most of them were without it.
The *_MOST_* accurate prediction they ever made.
I like how some of the future jokes legit came true
the house being built around the tv is kinda tru in the sense we bring our various media around in our phones all over the house haha
Fuckin’ hell man
I don’t remember these being hilariously dark 😂
That's how cartoons were. Cartoons were meant for everyone, hence the jokes and gags meant for the adults of that era. That, I feel, is the fun of it; seeing what gag ages like fine wine, and which gag ages like spoiled milk.
After all, humans, as you probably guessed, love dark humor and morbid jokes. And comedy.
These are cherry picked
5:29 "just let them try to get away!"
3:02
Car guys:
That's hot!! 😍
Glad I was a little kid back when they showed these cartoons on TV during the week. Better than the saturday morning cartoons.
I know what you mean, but Saturday morning, cartoons or rather a program for kids was always something to look forward to every Saturday every weekend it made going through school worth it. But yeah, having cartoons like this and others during the week rather than only on the weekends it's pretty nice.... assuming the cartoons are good
Yeah, I remember getting cable for the first time and Boomerang was part of our package. Then Boomerang went to premium and we didn'tget it anymore. I do get nostalgic for antenna TV though. Something about having less channels made TV seem more fun because you had to anticipate when your show was going to be on.
@@CheapSkateGamer96 We had the TV Guide. And if you didn't have that you could usually get the schedule out of the newspaper. What was great about TV before cable was that the shows on the three networks were mostly good shows. There was always a good show on one of them at least. They were competitive and trying to get people to watch their channel.
Nick at night
@@briangaron7609 I remember when we just had TV Land, and Nick at Nite with old shows on. Now I get TV Land, plus COZI TV, Get TV, Antenna TV, FeTV, that have the old shows. Used to get MeTV too but they took that off my cable.
3:33 has to be my favorite.
Today these are both amazingly hilarious and knowingly "wrong"
He was quite good a predicting future. Making rooms that way tv can be easily accessible from any corner of house, glass in the oven, even taking care of child with too many questions. Major difference is to give our children tablets or smartphones instead of jukebox like machine. TV with 3 displays (picture in picture mode in many tv's today), Heck even see through glass in fridge (today's equivalent to led display and camera in few fancy models)
They were at least correct about oven windows
I'm pretty sure most if my it all of these were made as jokes or over exaggerations of actual ads
don't forget the see through fridge too
I like the one with the turkey in the oven, the see-thru door and the turkeys reaction to being seen.😁😁😁
Not to mention the television that allows the viewers to see all of the picture.
Want something to answer all your kids questions? Hey Alexa to the rescue.
I think the director had issues with his mother in law 🤣🤣
They all did
3:32 Why haven't we funded this? This can especially work if we're watching UA-cam on TV!
Thanks to "House of Tomorrow" I realized that my country wasn't the only one that had those jokes with the in-laws, specially the mother in-law jokes.
yep z
Automatic juicer is damn hilarious...🤣
What’s sad is that I actually remember watching this after school or on Saturdays. Guess I’m officially an old fart!!😂
a legend one for sure
Makes two of us. I'm watching saturday morning cartoons with my 2 year old now and realizing a lot of these weren't even made when i was a kid...THEY WERE MADE 20-40 YEARS BEFORE THAT! Welcome to the old farts club!
The missus got a DUMPTRUCK
I love Tex Avery. Chasing pedestrians with a wide bumper car so you can’t miss! Then looking down through a glass floor to see who you ran over. I thought only I was this warped. 😂😂
This cartoon has made a nice mockery of futurist magazines that used to be sold in the market 5 decades back.
Showed my granddaughter the one about the penguin in the fridge. Now she quickly opens it whilst peeking inside to catch a glimpse.😄
5:28 Just another day in Los Santos.
siempre amare el estilo de Tex Avery casi 100 años y sigue siendo genial!!!
0:44 they were right, ive worked with my Dad on homes and many have removed walls so the TV can be seen, heres other things they got right that we have and do today 1:30 the power ball lotteries 1:47 Motorize juicers 2:06 every house hold has these now 3:15 ive seen homes with these with my Dad 3:50 of course we have bigger resolution TV's 4:04 Multi monitor set up mainly used on computers 5:08 By law, every motor vehicle is equipped with blinking indicators, that nobody uses 5:50 many car company's have made vehicles with space in mind
Yea they just didn’t expect the tv could be your phone too
Don’t forget 0:50 Alexa or amazon echo
My parents use blinking indicators while driving.
@@valutaatoaofunknownelement197 90% of people do, he must live in Florida
fruit juicers have been around way before the 50's
Ima go out on a limb here, and suggest that Tex Avery hated his mother in law
The door for the wife
I believe that's what we in the modern era would call a "dump truck", my friend.
All those gadgets and gizmos were so clever, we need them today.
These folks were on some HEAVY stuff.
3:05 I would have thought that wouldn't make it past the censors of that era. That is... a lot.
The Hays Code was still in effect but it was definitely showing it's loose knotholes in the 50s and 60s.
fridge dude has the coolest job
It's kinda scary if you think about all of those things that we actually invented must mean many scientists loved cartoons
They really hated there mother in law
How does this only have 2 comments now? This deserves more attention
Few of these actually ended up happening
i always loved the tex avery's cartoons
remember seeing some of these things on Cartoon Network my God how societies change
2:05 at least he got one predicted future correct.
This was awesome, I wasn't even born in the 1900s, but God damn this is hilarious! 5:29 is a personal favorite, but it's all good lol!
“Wasn’t even born in the 1900’s”
I hate your entire generation. 😂
You know, you’re not inaccurate when you call it the 1900s, but goddamn, it makes me feel old as the Dead Sea Scrolls.
@@ClaireDiVODer positively the oldest way to refer to the 20th century.
Tex: one of the best.
God, i remember my dad always laughed so hard with the Mother-in-law jokes X3
Fun fact the dark and surreal humour inspired the edginess of adult animated sitcoms such as Simpsons and Family Guy.
Someone in the studio really hated his mother in law
1:35 is that Phineas‘s is grandpa
Grandpa once removed.
5:30 Tex predicted the SUV lmao
When people dreamed of the future instead of fearing it . . .
It would be great if they did televisions sét like this in real life.
Can't believe the humour in cartoon in the 1950 still hit today.
Really good times
Some of those aged better than others.
I just now realized the doormat for the MIL says Scram! No wonder my Dad lost it everytime we watched it together.