In 1967 This Hippie Show Ran On TV. It Looks Nuts Now.
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Top Comments (10)
As a Vietnam vet I hated the culture in the beginning. when I became a vet against the war I met these people and found they were really cool and I like their outlook on life. You look at all the hate in the world today, you realize these kids were right. They were the best times we ever had and back then we didn't know it.
With all of the events that are going on today.... I'm not sure anything from back then looks all too nuts anymore.
I was born in 1959. The first album I bought was the Beatles. JFK was assassinated when I was 4 years old. The Vietnam War ended in 1975, two years before I graduated from high school. My 3rd grade teacher taught us “This Land is Your Land” by Woody Guthrie. I sang and played guitar. I learned to play, “Where have all the flowers gone.” I was there. I saw it through the eyes of a young person. I was not part of the protests, but I heard them, I saw them, and I agreed with them. All of this molded my thinking. When I graduated from college with a mechanical design degree, I had the opportunity to become a designer in the defense industry. I turned it down and chose to become a corporate instructor. Growing up in the 60s gave me an ethic which followed me into my adult life. I eventually earned my graduate degree in education, developed online learning, and taught Web and Interactive Media Design. I had a choice. I took the gentle road. The 60s showed me I had a choice.
Criticize hippies all you want but you can’t deny great, fun, thoughtful creative music came out of that period.
I'm 74 and I'd say some of this is the basis of my life. The music is something altogether (I have played all my life), but it mirrors the current politics to a great extent. In 1967 I wasn't so much infatuated by long hair, drugs or whatever (which one did to say, "I am with you") - it was that there was an alternative to the hatred and violence that was so prominent in America. Going to Woodstock showed me that I was not alone and that there were others like me. I have always made the same choice and I will always continue to do so. I recently went on a trip to Scandinavia and was amazed by the people and their love and respect for each other as well as for the environment. It IS totally possible.
“But I don’t know if she would kiss you.” Laughing my ass off!!!😂
I love the flower girl ribbons in her hair flowers everywhere...😅
4:25 "People have to know each other." That girl boiled it down in one passing statement.
I'm gen z, and the vibes at these festivals remind me of music festivals today. The 60s generation have made up (and many still do) many of the vendors and organizers to current-day events, so most, if not, all of our music festivals today are standing on the shoulders of giants. So incredible to see this and almost feel a bit of the energy in the air/get a feel for what it was like. Thank you for sharing. I always really appreciate and learn from your videos. You've got some awesome finds, you always give credit, and are likely serving to immortalize many works that might have otherwise gotten lost over time. Thanks for all the hard work you put into the craft, it's inspiring.
👍👍👍, this is like a buried time capsule being unearthed!! I’m 74, in 10th grade in 1967! The humor, sarcasm, stupidity! Like WOW, man! 👍👍😂😂
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Top Comments (10)
As a Vietnam vet I hated the culture in the beginning. when I became a vet against the war I met these people and found they were really cool and I like their outlook on life. You look at all the hate in the world today, you realize these kids were right. They were the best times we ever had and back then we didn't know it.
With all of the events that are going on today.... I'm not sure anything from back then looks all too nuts anymore.
I was born in 1959. The first album I bought was the Beatles. JFK was assassinated when I was 4 years old. The Vietnam War ended in 1975, two years before I graduated from high school. My 3rd grade teacher taught us “This Land is Your Land” by Woody Guthrie. I sang and played guitar. I learned to play, “Where have all the flowers gone.” I was there. I saw it through the eyes of a young person. I was not part of the protests, but I heard them, I saw them, and I agreed with them. All of this molded my thinking. When I graduated from college with a mechanical design degree, I had the opportunity to become a designer in the defense industry. I turned it down and chose to become a corporate instructor. Growing up in the 60s gave me an ethic which followed me into my adult life. I eventually earned my graduate degree in education, developed online learning, and taught Web and Interactive Media Design. I had a choice. I took the gentle road. The 60s showed me I had a choice.
Criticize hippies all you want but you can’t deny great, fun, thoughtful creative music came out of that period.
I'm 74 and I'd say some of this is the basis of my life. The music is something altogether (I have played all my life), but it mirrors the current politics to a great extent. In 1967 I wasn't so much infatuated by long hair, drugs or whatever (which one did to say, "I am with you") - it was that there was an alternative to the hatred and violence that was so prominent in America. Going to Woodstock showed me that I was not alone and that there were others like me. I have always made the same choice and I will always continue to do so. I recently went on a trip to Scandinavia and was amazed by the people and their love and respect for each other as well as for the environment. It IS totally possible.
“But I don’t know if she would kiss you.” Laughing my ass off!!!😂
I love the flower girl ribbons in her hair flowers everywhere...😅
4:25 "People have to know each other." That girl boiled it down in one passing statement.
I'm gen z, and the vibes at these festivals remind me of music festivals today. The 60s generation have made up (and many still do) many of the vendors and organizers to current-day events, so most, if not, all of our music festivals today are standing on the shoulders of giants. So incredible to see this and almost feel a bit of the energy in the air/get a feel for what it was like. Thank you for sharing. I always really appreciate and learn from your videos. You've got some awesome finds, you always give credit, and are likely serving to immortalize many works that might have otherwise gotten lost over time. Thanks for all the hard work you put into the craft, it's inspiring.
👍👍👍, this is like a buried time capsule being unearthed!! I’m 74, in 10th grade in 1967! The humor, sarcasm, stupidity! Like WOW, man! 👍👍😂😂