View Full Version : A totally awesome 60's retrospective!
MuniAddict
2008-02-21, 09:25 PM
My sister sent this to me and it captures the 60's like nothing I've seen in a looooong time! It was a great era to grow up in!:cool:
http://cruzintheavenue.com/TakeMeBackToTheSixties.htm
maestro8
2008-02-21, 09:36 PM
If you remember the 60's, were you really part of the 60's?
I call shenanigans.
MuniAddict
2008-02-21, 09:41 PM
If you remember the 60's, were you really part of the 60's?
I call shenanigans.:confused: Not sure I get the question. I was born in 1956, so yes, I remember the '60's well. One everlasting memory is watching the Beatles LIVE in 1964 on the Sullivan show! :cool: I also remember being in Yosemite with my family in 1961, and seeing a huge military chopper flying overhead...with JFK aboard!
harper
2008-02-21, 09:41 PM
And like "awesome" was not like uttered like every third word in like a sentence.
MuniAddict
2008-02-21, 09:46 PM
And like "awesome" was not like uttered like every third word in like a sentence.It was groovy time in space man!:cool:
Harley
2008-02-21, 09:49 PM
If you remember the 60's, were you really part of the 60's?
I call shenanigans.
You didn't have to be stoned to be part of the 60's. At least not in the first 1/2.
Yeah it was a great era to grow up in Terry. Thanks for sharing.
MuniAddict
2008-02-21, 09:52 PM
You didn't have to be stoned to be part of the 60's. At least not in the first 1/2.
Yeah it was a great era to grow up in Terry. Thanks for sharing.Haha *now* i get maestro's post!:p No, that was the 70's for me! (the era of the "dime bag", cigarettes at 55 cents a pack, and of course gasoline rationing!) :cool::cool::cool::cool:
Harley
2008-02-21, 09:57 PM
Haha *now* i get maestro's post!:p No, that was the 70's for me! (the era of the "dime bag", cigarettes at 55 cents a pack, and of course gasoline rationing!) :cool::cool::cool::cool:
Dime bag?
I guess inflation was hitting the US pretty hard in those days. We were still good for a nickel bag north of the boarder.
kington99
2008-02-21, 11:06 PM
The thing I can't help but think when seeing videos promoting a seemingly golden age, is that the people who are the products of that age are those that have created the current age. People who were kids in the 60s are now the TV executives and lawyers, they are the ones making violent TV programs and encouraging others to sue over petty disputes.
James_Potter
2008-02-21, 11:13 PM
I wish I could've grown up in the 60s....
wickedbob
2008-02-21, 11:14 PM
Guess they were not so innocent... I can't understand why everybody make the sixties seem so great, even people who were not alive during the time, like some kids at my school. I think some just need to move on.
Bondo
2008-02-21, 11:15 PM
That was far-out, Man!
Dime-bags and four fingers to a lid!
Free maps and oil checks from the service guy who filled up your car for you.
Paisley.
Corduroy jeans! Flourescent black-lite posters.
Major Matt Mason.
Great time to be alive!
MuniAddict
2008-02-22, 01:10 AM
.....the people who are the products of that age are those that have created the current age. People who were kids in the 60s are now the TV executives and lawyers, they are the ones making violent TV programs and encouraging others to sue over petty disputes.Well they also created their OWN age. If anything, it's the hippies from the 60's and radical leftists who are trying to destroy what made this country great!:cool: Btw, who's making all the ultra-violent VIDEO games that glorify murder and cop killing? 50 year olds? Haha no way! It's the 20 and 30 somethings doing that.
idiorythmic
2008-02-22, 01:20 AM
Btw, who's making all the ultra-violent VIDEO games that glorify murder and cop killing? 50 year olds? Haha no way! It's the 20 and 30 somethings doing that.
Right on!
Every age has its violence hatred and fear which can be attributed to the citizens of the previous generation. Pick your decade, you'll find atrocities brought about by people who were kids three or four decades before. What is the significance?
I'll bet the majority of the peace/love kids of the 60s are still advocating peace and love today.
MuniAddict
2008-02-22, 01:32 AM
Right on!
I'll bet the majority of the peace/love kids of the 60s are still advocating peace and love today.Haha maybe we can get them to go "advocate peace and love" in, say, Red China, Iran, South Korea, Venezuela and Cuba for starters?:rolleyes: Oh no wait...they'll be murdered by those governments. Better if they just do what they usually do and go on foreign soil to trash America.
idiorythmic
2008-02-22, 01:42 AM
Haha maybe we can get them to go "advocate peace and love" in, say, Red China, Iran, South Korea, Venezuela and Cuba for starters?:rolleyes: Oh no wait...they'll be murdered...
No doubt! And let's not forget that some advocates for peace were assassinated right here, in the sixties, presumably by people who were born in the 40s or 30s. (what that means I fail to fathom)
But I'm distracted by something else in that video: the image of the Princess Phone. I remember the big boxy dial phones everyone had. I really miss them.
I WANT MINE BACK!
MuniAddict
2008-02-22, 01:45 AM
No doubt! And let's not forget that some advocates for peace were assassinated right here, in the sixties, presumably by people who were born in the 40s or 30s. (what that means I fail to fathom)
But I'm distracted by something else in that video: the image of the Princess Phone. I remember the big boxy dial phones everyone had. I really miss them.
I WANT MINE BACK!Swanson TV dinners! "Get Smart!" 1966 Stingray (Both bike & car!) Cowboy boots, Tie dye, Summer of love! BEatles!!!!!!!:D Oh, and saying "it's cool" when entering the school bathroom so they know you're not a "narc!"
Nimbusnut
2008-02-22, 02:27 AM
Peter Max for President! signed, The black light party
pkittle
2008-02-22, 07:12 AM
I was born in '63, so am more of a 70s than 60s generation kid ...
I liked some of this, but found the general "back then, we didn't have problems" tone absurd. I think if you interviewed some parents raising kids during the 60s (my dad, for instance) and asked them if they thought everything back then was fine, or if they worried about what tv shows and pop music were doing to society, they'd say things that echo what people say now. It's a loop; we look back at our own past as though it was idyllic, despite the many flaws that we recognized when we were actually living in that time period. In 40 years, today's kids will think of the innocent days of Halo 3, Dexter, and AVP movies, and decry whatever's currently popular as debased and the certain symbol of the end of civilization as we know it.
kington99
2008-02-22, 09:09 AM
Btw, who's making all the ultra-violent VIDEO games that glorify murder and cop killing? 50 year olds? Haha no way! It's the 20 and 30 somethings doing that.
well let's see, the MD of rockstar games, responsible for the GTA series, is 53. Presumably the people who run the banks that finance them, run the shops that sell them and the PR companies that advertise them are also of similar age.
mattsmith
2008-02-22, 01:19 PM
...
Free maps and oil checks from the service guy who filled up your car for you.
...
A couple of my local petrol stations did free oil checks and filled the tank for you until about 5 years ago. I was pretty upset when they both went out of business. It felt kinda classy to have the tank filled without leaving the car.
I think it's the kind of practice that should come back into fashion. If I have to pay £1+ per litre then I want some better service into the bargain.
Nimbusnut
2008-02-22, 02:43 PM
Ya, there are always problems with every decade because people are involved, and there will always be problems in every decade to come.... As long as people are involved. It's nice though to think of the good stuff whether it was the 50's, 60's, 70's or whatever. Heck, even the age of the hair bands had it's moments. The 60's though were really a fascinating time in a lot of ways. It is too easy to be cynical even if it's with good reason. If a person knew that we would destroy ourselves as a species in the next 20 years would that mean we should stop enjoying ourselves? Melt down all the unis, and sit around waiting?
wobbling bear
2008-02-22, 05:49 PM
Haha maybe we can get them to go "advocate peace and love" in, say, Red China, Iran, South Korea, Venezuela and Cuba for starters?:rolleyes: Oh no wait...they'll be murdered by those governments. Better if they just do what they usually do and go on foreign soil to trash America.
Oh oh ... why romanticize an epoch in either way (good or bad)? each generation had some excessive landmarks but though some "peace and love" people were romantic (even unrealistic in the way they lived it) it remains that many things that you and you and you and everyone of you can do .... you owe it to cultural trends that emerged at that time.
It amuses me to see that president Sarkozy of France demonizes "68" and is happy to profit from things that emerged then: equal opportunity, women lib (in its best acception), gay acceptance, planned parenthood ,and so on ....
in international politics some romantic view of red china for example were fakeries, but Martin Luther King or Nelson Mandela showed also that dreams can lead to important changes in the real world.
Even if you look closely at things such as acceptable attitudes in the army you can discover that they stem from problems that were discussed then!
note : I was 20 in 1968 and I fully accept the "68er" tag. I have evolved but do not think I have betrayed my ideals.
Mikefule
2008-02-22, 06:26 PM
Fantastic decade, the 1960s.:rolleyes:
In America, the Jim Crow Laws ended, and Americans in many states could for the first time choose to marry people from different races without fear of imprisonment. How progressive.
The Civil Rights Act of 1964 (in my life time) ended racial segregation in cinemas and restaurants - at least in law if not necessarily in practice.
1962, the Cuban missile crisis had the whole world gripped with terror at the thought of imminent nuclear holocaust.
A popular president of the USA was assassinated (JFK).
In 1961, the disastrous Bay of Pigs battle occurred. Lots of people were killed trying to oust Fidel Castro, who in fact survived unscathed until stepping down voluntarily, er... in 2008, a mere 47 years later.
Over here, Labour won power under Harold Wilson with a tiny majority and limped on for a couple of years before having to go back to the polls and securing a bigger majority. They were grim times.
Meanwhile, the Vietnam War raged for the entire decade. I don't think anyone thinks that was a good thing.
It was certainly not a better time than now. Same sh*t differnt day.
I remember terraced houses with damp outside toilets, damp inside walls, and tenants having few rights and no power to do anything about it.
On the other hand, there were the Rolling Stones, the Dave Clark Five, and mini skirts, so it wasn't all bad. I was too young to appreciate the mini skirts at the time.;)
Nimbusnut
2008-02-22, 06:41 PM
Yup, yup. Making a sweeping description is like saying everyone was the same, whether they were in the Hells Angles or a Barber Shop Quartet. Hey, didn't the H.A's have barber shop quartets? If you're a 1%er, please don't kill me.
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