It's like when I was in the 90s and thinking how old everything looked when watching vids of the 70s. The 90s seem like yesterday!
Ahhh yeeees back when we ignore each other with paper instead of a glass screen
I miss those Cadbury vending machines on the platform. The Chocolates were always cold .
I remember seeing everyone read books or the papers as a little child. Refreshing to see some nostalgia 💯💯
A fair number of people still read papers and books on the Tube even today, whereas in other countries they probably don't.
Good old days I want em back!!
So many Cadbury vending machines... I remember them, even used them a few times. The good old days.
That's actually so cool to see, especially how different the stations look, Bank for example
The art of turning newspaper pages in a confined space :-)
can’t believe this is how it used to look like
hard to believe 1992 stock was made in 1992..it still looks fresh as heck
@@forza223bowe5 Considering it's the only rolling stock covered in duct tape, I wouldn't say they've aged well at all, sadly. Fault prone too.
The year I was born! ❤
1995 the year i was born. crazy to see bank station a place I go every day in a footage when I was probably not born or a few months old. and the station layout looks the same.
Most of the underground stations haven't changed since Victorian times, if they were already in existence at that time.
No chocolate machines now
Lovely, Janet Mayo!
omg it's absolutely same as my visiting london in 2019
Thanks for Uploading.
Newspaper 📰, book 📖 and if you can afford it Walkman ERA. Don’t for get proper conversations too
Apart from the newspapers, it looks pretty much like now.
The Metro and the Evening Standard are still read by a lot of people on the Tube. I was there about a week ago so my information is up-to-date.
I loved the 90s .I was 31 in 1995.Now im 60
1: ITS SO CLEAN
2: the doors are fully functioning very good
Ahh the Central Line , sweat boxes in the summer
I wonder why fashion, particularly work attire, hasn’t changed that much in the last 30-40 years. Prior to the 80s, each decade had a really distinct look. If you wore 60s or 70s fashions in the 80s, you would really stand out. Fabrics, cut, style, pattern, colour were all very distinct and intense. But if I wore the same clothes now as I wore in 1995, I think no one would notice the difference. Maybe a slight retro vibe, but not much.
I know what you mean tbf with the youth tho there’s a lot of change. Especially with the whole tracksuits everywhere and more skinnier clothes now
@@edzz7204 I agree that fashion in youth culture is still dynamic. But work clothes in particular, and that “jeans and tee shirt” look that many people wear is much the same.
no way, Jose...the past several years has had London shed its ways with thread; astonishingly chilling how starkly empty the contrast now seems there all the way from Isle o' Dr-Seuss here
I used to have a theory that 1995 was actually the real Year 2000/end of the century in terms of culture, music, art, film, fashion, hair. Nothing really new happened after it, just recycled trends.
I know what you mean about wearing 70s clothes in the 80s, it was punished severely. In Ireland we'd say 'flare play to ya' if your trousers were anything more than drainpipes with the ankles taken in.
Most newspapers were broadsheets in those days which made it more difficult to turn the pages in a crowded place like the Tube.
they were even larger during the 70s...imagine R or CO/CP stock with their ample & gorgeous windows *a l l* blotted out by newsprint AM peaks; those *stupid* spreads n e v e r failed at making me giggle
Liverpool street hasn't changed for 25 years
It was so much less overcrowded at peak times in those days. If only we could stop it getting worse and worse :-(
0:26 WHAT THE HELL HOW IS IT SO CLEAN AND SHINY
It had recently underwent a much needed refurbishment. A few years earlier it was completely filthy and on the edge of falling apart: ua-cam.com/video/LWpuEfCMEB8/v-deo.html
@@TrainBusFan06Wow, I see what you mean. Those walls looked to be on the verge of collapse!
When the central line had arm rests. They never should have gotten rid of them.
@@ajs41 I think all the lines still have them except the Central line. Even the Waterloo & City line does, which shares the same rolling stock
@@beardedbaldie2698 I'm pretty sure most of the tube carriages today don't have arm rests.
@@ajs41 I use the Tube every week and the Central is the only line without armrests. Was starting to doubt it myself so I just googled them lol!
I remember picking up used copies of the Metro or the Standard on the tube back then, if I didn’t have anything else to read. I wouldn’t do it now 😷
The black guy wearing glasses at the beginning looks exactly like the black guy wearing glasses at the beginning.
Bethnal Green ,Liverpool Street still look the same ,bank and Tottenham Court Road has certainly changed drastically 😂
I remembered seeing rubber barriers between the coaches. In this vid, it’s not attached or visible. Why is this?
Ahhhh the Central Line who can forget, sweat boxes in summer, freezers in winter and the noise in the tunnels especially near Stratford
When slide doors began to encroach the slammers.
1:36 Theres arm rests like the ones on the waterloo and city line
Cool
Only if gen z girls wasn’t always on their phone, they are beautiful
That time people don’t even know what is Facebook, what is Instagram,Tiktok !!
Life without Mobile phones looks amazing
Still looks similar!
1995 year
1990s decade
20th Century
2nd Millennium
Bethnal Green ain't changed one bit
News papers no smartphones📱
@@kmyzsquad4253not everyone did. Now days it’s a necessity to have a mobile phone but it wasn’t in those days
People hiding behind news papers back then 🙈
I was born in this year
I swear to God the lady who wears glasses (the one not reading anything) at the beginning of video, appears to have that kind of hairstyle which haunts me terribly bad. Maybe I’m just still not getting used to it 😅
Still everyone miserable. So nothing has changed
The outfits back then was........ colourful 😂😂😂
Wearing colourful clothes was the fashionable thing to do in the late 80s and 90s. I preferred it. I remember visiting London for the first time in ages in about 2004 and being shocked by the way everyone was wearing black or grey clothes, and that's still mostly true today.
Not sure if it’s 1995
It's definitely around 1995 if not precisely 1995. I was 16 at the time and remember it like it was yesterday. Got lots of video footage of our own from that time, although not London sadly.
It is its just that the exceptional video quality makes it feel more recent...
There was no such thing as a phone
Mobile phones were invented in 1985 and a lot of people in the City of London had them. But they wouldn't get them out on the Underground.
Less tourists
this train doesn’t age at all lol
Back when there was a nice balance of all ethnicities. Good luck! To all Londoners who have now left 🙏 due to our crappy government.
Imagine getting on an whipping out your IPhone
@@H965 I’m not saying it would. Just imagine people’s faces if you had an iPhone in hand.
Before what Tony Blair done to London with open boarders
When there were more English in the country
Notice, hardly no Islam. I only saw 1 lady at the end. When it was peaceful and people were pleasant.
Holy crap they're clean.
Yeah, once upon a time they weren’t the gaffa tape express!
The Central line was still bright, sparkly and new back then. Watching this video makes me realise how run down and dingy it’s become.
@@beardedbaldie2698 all a result of poor maintenance
@@bb-3653 Also the first tube stock to have a modern design. The external hanging doors, bonded windows I think that’s what it’s called. It was an experimental train design for the time it was built.
@@PeteS_1994 yeah i think they did a variety of different prototypes . It's pretty cool. It's also a train that feels like an AC tractioned train with DC traction system. The motors sound so smooth whereas other DC motors like the 73 stock sound more deep (which I like) , but I always thought the 92 stocks were a bit advanced for a DC tractioned unit. Pretty good engineering if you ask me (or whatever the right word would be)
92s I don't think had bonded windows but rather the 95/96 stocks