Airplanes and smaller flying devices as seen in movie fly away home have gone down in price so could possibly buy a used airplane for a few thousand or a smaller flying device that has single seat new for that price. Can see other videos about prices of these, of course prices subject to change based on supply and demand.
I am probably the only person that cries in these 1960's and 1970's commercials. I was a kid in the 60's and a teen in the 70's and looking back I'd love to go visit my parents in that time. The things we took for granted back then. Just to go back to visit. No cellphones or tech bs just a lovely world at least from a kid point of view. I knew about Vietnam and it was horrible to watch on TV but this is all now nostalgia and it hurts now cause I just want to not be old and go back to a time when life was ok. Thanks for putting up with my melodrama.
TheF8ofman In the 80s I served in the United States Air Force Rammstein airbase Germany we had one TV station American forces network there was no TV commercials they had been deleted came home andI really enjoyed the commercials on TV, Like “where is the beef!”
TheF8ofman Yes,but let’s remember when you watched TV in the ‘60’s & ‘70’s the commercials only interrupted the shows for 60 seconds. Now commercials interrupt TV shows on an average of 4 minutes. Therefore,for example Big Bang Theory is actually 16minutes 47seconds. I’ve timed it 10 times; from opening dialogue to the end. Well, the actors DO make $1 million per episode.
Hey, I was 17, these commercials didn’t bother me , I was busy getting pussy ... I just come here to see to see these commercials, Because I don’t get pussy anymore 😂 (Did he say the “P”w0rD❓)
..and Im sure back in 1972 a great many of these products were produced in factories on American soil and providing American workers with a paycheck that allowed them to support their family.
Yep I was the remote control, door answerer, phone answerer, snack getter, rabbit ears antenna adjuster, thermostat adjuster, and oh yes,....light switch operator. LOL
Glad I'm not the only GenX'r suffering with nostalgia. Imagine how GenZ feels growing up in this dumpster fire. We all deserve better. Thanks for the memories 💌
@@elmobolan4274 I'm 53 and graduated high school in 1987. A funny thing I heard a while back about Generation X: We are the final generation to grow into adulthood without the internet. And boy am I thankful for that!
I am what you would considered ___. Not a baby boomer, because they changed they criteria. Not a gen Z or whatever. Love the commercials. The Marlboro Man! I am gonna have a cig
im from the 90s and its still sad watching older commercials like this, because nothing will ever be built this good again, We gained cellphones but lost all standards of quality
I was 11 in 1972 and remember those days quite well. It was, for a child, a really cool time because toys were so cool and the color TVs were coming of age. We had a Curtis Mathes in 1969 and bought another in 1974. Talk about a TV set. Since I'm going back in time, I want a new Chevrolet, a Zenith TV and K-tel record selector.
I was 10 in 1972. And I remember the time quite well. And for a kid the summer time was the best because my mom and dad and I would travel. I loved that year. I did so much more than the year before.
In '72, we had a circa-1960 Zenith black-and-white. I forget how many radios we had (including the car radio), but I DO know that they were AM only. But back then, you could get anything you wanted on AM, be it your favorite music, news, or talk shows. Damned sight better then than now. I was 9 in '72 myself.
One year older than me. I would have been 10 in 1972. And yes this year I will be 60. I remember when the first color TV sets came out. My mom and dad got 3 color TVs and there was one in the dining room and one in the living room and one upstairs. I grew up in a 3 bedroom two bathroom condo in Yoba Linda down in Southern California.
I'm 64 and I remember many of these commercials but not all of them but I miss them man if we could go back to them days they sure were better in many ways
So glad that I lived in a far better time. People were friendlier, life was less chaotic and tv was cleaner. People kept their sexuality pretty much to themselves and didn’t try shoving their opinions down other people’s throats. Back then you really could “agree to disagree” and that was fine. I blame the government and the one sided media for constantly putting on group of people against the other. Even smoking pot was back then was a laughing good time. I pity this generation if they don’t wake up to the hypocrisy and constant hatred that they are being exposed to by evil forces who’s only goal is to control them. GOD help this planet 🌎. 🙏🙏🙏
Those were the days when you actually enjoyed the commercials. And the coco puffs commercial-- I can remember getting toys and 'prizes' from boxes of childrens' cereals. I used to empty the whole box just to get them. The '70s were a great time to grow up!
Actually I kind of freaking hated the commercials. I am a baby boomer and I told my daughters who were born in the 90s that we are at the “jingle Generation”. Stupid jingles clear back from the 60s are still stuck in my head.
I Turned 14 Years old on November 7th 1972. Lived Out in The Country in Northern Wi. Only had 2 Channels To Choose from and that's what got me into Radio!
I'm skeptical. Certainly, the cereal manufacturers didn't care at all about the kids. But, even with regard to the ads that were heavy on the engineering, I mean, we all know the Pinto was just awful, right? It's great to see all these ads that I also remember. But one really needs to be skeptical as we look back...
Horrid! And I lived thru it all. AND I became a commercial designer! Producing Packaging, point-of-sale merchandising, magazine advertising. Television advertising. What a life! Thanks for the trip down memory lane, FredFlix.
Crazy how looking at commercials during a time I wasn't even alive in makes me emotional. Seems like a better time to be alive vs now. Get me out of the year 2022 or the last decade to be honest.
Things were sweet, pure and cheesy. Wish you were there, many TV shows and movies warned us about 2020-2030. Don't believe me? Watch Soylent Green and Network.
I grew up in the 60's and 70's and believe me,I wouldn't mind being back there right now.Things were so much easier and more relaxed than they are today,or maybe it seemed that way because I was a kid,I don't know.
Bad food, tacky decore, too much cigarette smoke, terrible hygiene, crappy t.v. image quality, even when compared to the 60's. No thanks. Fantastic music though.
I had a 1974 Chevy Impala back in the mid 1980's. ..An old man and his wife owned it. .Body and interior where mint condition too ..The old man wanted to buy his wife a smaller car for her to drive ..He put the Chevy up for sale ..A girl with a 1970 Chevy nova stopped in to look at the car ...She only wanted the engine out of the impala to put in her nova .." 350 engine " so the old man sold her just the engine out of it ..My cousin came to me and said " Ron wants to know if you want the body of that old impala ,Said all its missing is the engine ...We towed it to my house ..At the time I was driving a 1972 Oldsmobile 9 passenger station wagon with a 455 4 barrel ..My Dad and I yanked the engine and 400 turbo transmission out of the Olds and dropped it into the impala ...455 4 barrel 400 turbo Trans 3:73 rear end ..That was the fastest Car I ever owned ....I miss that car these days
@@willoughby1888 Remember Olds 98s? And Toronados? Oldsmobile ceased production many years ago. My brother bought a '76 Omega new. Olds Toronado was the 1st front-wheel drive car, if I'm not mistaken.
@@TheBrooklynbodine I had a 69 Delta 88, a 69 98 luxury coupe, a 73 Toronado, a 72 Cutlass, a 78 Delta 88, an 83 Delta 88, and a 79 Custom Cruiser that i still own and drive today. So yea, I remember the Oldsmobile's. I remember in the late 1980s they had the ad campaign "it's not your fathers Oldsmobile", I remember thinking that is why their sales are off, because if they'd build my fathers Oldsmobile, I'd buy one them. ;)
@@willoughby1888 I can't remember for sure, but I believe the "Super Rocket 425" was the ultra high compression version. If it is, you would really wish that you still had that one. They are worth thousands these days. The ultra high compression 394, your 425, and the 69 and 70 high output (high compression) 455 are very valuable engines these days. I threw away a 69 HO 455 years ago. Today, you'd be hard pressed to find a good one for 5 thousand dollars. Hard to believe isn't it?
I remember the "Not your Father's Oldsmobile" spots. One had a 74-year-old man with a new Oldsmobile with the young ladies chasing him, and his 100-year-old dad tsk-tsking. If I remember right, Harry Belafonte, Ringo Starr, and :Leonard Nimoy did their own spots, too. That campaign was from the late 80s. Congratulations on still driving your '79. here's hoping for many more years and thousands of miles.
I was 7 when these came out and I remember many of them. Life is funny, you can't wait to grow up and then you do...now that you have you love to look back. This was great!
I remember my friend had an Action Jackson figure with a parachute. I think we also had Hot Wheels. I felt bad since I didn't want to be like the spoiled kids wanting all those toys. We also had my father's Lionel train layout downstairs. We used to run it around every friday after school. I wish I could remember more things a lot clearer, seems as if it went by way too fast.
The last age I wanted to turn, was 16, 1986. I told my friends they were fools for wanting to be any older! They finally understand! They admit I was beyond right. In the 70s, I never really wanted to be an adult. The adults I knew argued all the time.
K-TEL RECORD SELECTOR (3:39) This was a big hit. Everybody bought one. "Space-age design"? ! I love that! The Apollo missions were ongoing when this commercial aired. Remember? (Gimme a thumbs-up if you remember.)
I thought that looked pretty advanced. When I was at work in the late 70's, the whole company still had those god-awful green screens that would burn your retinas. It wasn't until the 80's that they upgraded to 4 color CGA screens.
The sad thing is it was merely a pie-in-the-sky concept in 1972. Any office worker enthused about the notion of e-mail, mice and calendars with automatic reminders would have had to wait to just about retirement to get a taste of that life. And, just like the tractor, better tech just means everyone's expected to react quicker.
I was born in 1953 and remember these commercials. Some days I forget what I ate for breakfast but I still remember the ad jingles. I grew up before the cell phone and the personal computer. I was not part of the computer surveillance state and I am glad. I didn't have to live where the dumb things I said or did was recorded for eternity. It was a great time to grow up.
My dad drove a Ford Galaxy for 25 years! That thing was like a tank with a sofa in it. My brother was playing Dukes of Hazard, and jumped it off an embankment. It didn't have a scratch and ran like it was brand new!
Zenith télévision were the best! Excellent quality and their life span were amazing. «Their quality goes in before their name goes on.» a logo well deserved!
Ours had wheels and we could put it anywhere. But damn those rabbit ears to try to get the best reception. Plus in my childhood we had supersonic booms around the same time frame and I would jump 2 feet in the air every time it happened till they finnaly said no to that.
Ooo, the year I would turn 10 and for a kid the early 1970' s were so cool. I could play outside with my friends until sundown then it was time to go home. I loved the summers the best because I could stay up until 10:00 in the evening. And the drive ins, such fun.
my parents had a '71 Galaxy 500...what a great car. I got it when I turned 17 and drove it until the transmission went out...about the time I went to college. I wish I had had enough money to have it fixed...I might still have it today!
Life was really much more simple and rewarding up through about 2000. Something changed in our country after that. I was born in 1967, so many of these commercials bring back memories that really make me wish one could turn back the clocks.
I was turning 11 in 72. Life was simple until the mid 70's. Before that, Dad would work, Mom would help with the kids and house work. Many families had 2 or more kids, and only 1 car. Dad was able to work and pay for the house, bills, food and even save for his kids College fund. Later around 78, mom began to get out and start a career, eventually working to pay for after school child care, because she had to work. Unattended kids with cool games began to change. They grew up and had kids that grew up and had kids. NOW we have parents that do not know how to be a parent. Responsibility, discipline, consideration for others? Who cares...
Well, what was Xerox thinking, showing this stuff on TV years before they had a readily marketable product? The average person in 1972 saw this commercial and didn't even get that the guy was sitting in front of a computer. In 1972, a computer was a great big room sized thing with blinking lights on it that a person in a lab coat operated. When we saw this commercial in '72 (I vaguely remember it) we thought he was looking at a portable TV turned sideways and wondered why anyone would want their mail put on TV. It was about 3 or 4 years later when some company (and I think it was WANG) put out a commercial that introduced the idea of Word Processing - typing at a screen and being able to fix any mistakes before any ink was put to paper, that made us 70s people go "Oh Wow!" Obviously the guy with the system in that commercial had word processing available to him as an application, but it was not obvious in '72 when we still looked at the IBM Selectric as a modern marvel
Actually, Xerox GAVE Steve Jobs and co. the technology that they had developed for the "paperless office" because Xerox didn't want to reduce paper usage in the workplace. Of course, IBM beat Apple to market because of Bill Gates/Microsoft and the MS-DOS program he had bought for $15,000 and then turned around and licensed to IBM.
Very interesting. I wasn't born in the 1970s (my mother and father were in elementary school and college, respectively), but as a history major, I can appreciate how these commercials reflect the times. It's also interesting to think about how "finger-tip control of music" can mean one thing (moving LPs forward in an organizer), then fifty years later it means something else (using your phone's touch screen to access/play a song).
Actually, every home had a remote control unit for their TV sets. It was called a child. Also, I remember using Clairol Herbal Essence Shampoo when they first came out with it. It really had an fresh herbal scent.
Nice to see some diversity in the commercials, finally, instead of the lily-white ones from the 50s and 60s. Brown and black people bought these same products, too, and the manufacturers were finally realizing it! Onward and upward.
I turned 13 that year and it was a great time to be growing up. Back when advertising was just that, pure product adverts presented in a pleasant and easy way.
*You aren't kidding ....* *"a pleasant and easy way" is the key.* *Now, commercials use deliberately unnatural camera angles, etc., etc.* *And God forbid a commercial now actually, you know, ADVERTISES A PRODUCT.* *Now commercials are just 30-second bursts of: "Hey, look at the stupid White guy!!" propaganda ....* 😥
@@CaryMGVR Exactly. When in years past, commercials were just a minor annoyance trying to watch T.V. but now they are offensive - especially when they hire "stars" as their spokespeople with huge multi million dollar contracts to hawk their products. I heard that Sara Jessica Parker's Garnier shampoo contract was worth like twenty million and I believe it. They demand huge money for doing nothing and the sponsors always cave in. SJP makes me want to hurl anyway.
The Coke jingle was sung by The Fortunes,who had a hit with,"Here comes that rainy day feelin" again".They also sang the previous Coke jingle,"Things go better with Coke". Great vid Fred!
One of my most cherished possessions is an autographed photo from Ann Blyth (Hostess ad at 26:45). Miss Blyth was a big star in the 1940s and 50s and is most famous for her Oscar-nominated role as Veda in 1945’s “Mildred Pierce” opposite Joan Crawford. She is still with us today at age 94.
Xerox developed a whole lot of things that Microsoft and Apple took and called their own. Windows operating system and the mouse point and click interface just to name a few. It was basically all open source material to be claimed stolen and used by others.
We actually do. Emails, messages from phone to phone. I can text anyone I want to and they get it within seconds. Unless they don't have reception or they don't check their email.
This also was a favorite year for me...21 - 22 years old...had a grand time in girl dating, friendships in church, following the Indy race cars as a fan. Lots of the TV commercials I forgot or never actually seen.
I was 5 years old at the time, living with my aunt in Macclenny florida. A little too young to remember any of these commercials. So it's really cool to watch them.
Yea because all the problems of today are new, if your friends suck you have bad judge of character but there are way worse things perpetually going on and none of them are new in fact some could say complacency from previous generations wanting to ignore the problems that caused them to build up and seem overwhelming no matter what time period you look at someone is suffering there have never been good times just willful ignorance while you are happy. If you pick any date I will find someone or something suffering, happiness is a choice suffering is inevitable
Yeah , I was there. Dad was able to afford a house because he was a vet. The music was great and stands the test of time. It cost $1.00 to $4.00 to see a movie. CBS , NBC and ABC were the big networks to watch before cable TV became affordable. Our local TV stations showed cartoons in the morning before school and after school. When cartoons were over we played outside until dinnertime. We rode bikes , rollerskated,and played baseball and football. Girls weren't sexualized,like they are now. Girls had "cooties" and we didn't think about playing "truth or dare "with them. We ate dinner at home. Going out to eat at a fast food place was reserved for special events.We were able to say "Merry Christmas", and "God bless you" without getting in trouble for offending someone. We read comic books and traded baseball and football cards. Everyone read "Mad" Magazine ". Since we were too young to go out we watched "Creature Features " and monster movies Saturday nights. Saturday mornings we watched cartoons on TV with a bowl of cereal and played outside for the rest of the day when cartoons were over. Sundays we went to church. Now in those days the only things on TV Sundays were religious programs or old movies. We played outside and Dad watched his cowboy movies. We watched Blondie and Dagwood, movies Abbott and Costello , monster movies (eg. The Brain from Planet Arous,Plan 9 From Outer Space , The Wolfman , The Black Cat,Frankenstein , The Mummy, etc.) We still watched Bob Hope ,Dean Martin , Jerry Lewis , Frank Sinatra TV specials at night with the family. We had a black and white TV. We didn't get a color TV until 1973. We were happy just to watch TV. Dad used to tell us , he didn't watch TV when he was our age. Dad said he had to listen to the radio. We shook our head in horror, can you imagine life without a TV? In 2019 my teen age son is shocked when I told him about my family owning one black and white TV. He laughs when I tell about having a flip phone when was born. He sneers in contempt when I tell him about computer technology in the 80s and 90s.
@@Hydrostream1972 per the "Inflation Calculator": $4 in 1972 is equivalent in purchasing power to about $28.35 today. I'd say you hit the nail right on the head!
Landover Mall was the major shopping attraction in Prince George's County, Maryland when it opened in 1972, but it had a relatively short heyday and began declining as early as the mid-'80s. In its prime, the mall had a number of quality stores, including four anchor stores. It also had one of the first sports shops where you could buy NFL licensed merchandise. My brother and I spent many hours there one summer while our mom took sewing classes in the Singer store. The class started before the mall opened for the day, so we wandered around and waited until the stores opened up. Our days always featured a trip to Orange Julius for a slice of pizza which, as I recall, was pretty good. In the '80s other competitors sprang up, and Landover Mall lost its luster. It also being located in a high-crime area, shoppers started avoiding it, especially at night. Likewise the stores experienced high volume of shrinkage due to theft. The death blow came as the anchors began closing: Hecht's, Garfinckel's, and Woodward & Lothrop either went out of business entirely or were absorbed into larger department store chains. By the '90s, Landover Mall was practically a ghost town, with just a handful of stores clinging to life and no shoppers to serve. It was finally torn down a few years ago, and while there have been a number of development plans for the land, the acreage remains barren and empty. It sits about a mile from FedEx Field, and I expect that when the Redskins finally abandon FedEx for the new stadium they are planning, the entire area will be up for grabs for redevelopment.
I lived a few blocks from Landover Mall before the eventual downfall. My first experience was in 1976 when my mother bought me a pair of Toughskins jeans from Sears. It was the place in the early to mid 1980's for teens until the crack wars in the town across the street (Glenarden) and then the general decline of the Landover area. Fun fact: The opening of Landover Mall was considered a threat to a then older mall Tyson's Corner Center. It was thought that a newer mall with four anchors (compared to three at Tyson's) and being on the eastern side of the Beltway would attract people from the District of Columbia and Montgomery County and reduce the market for Tyson's Corner Center which was then not as developed as it is now.
I spent a lot of hours during my teen years at Landover Mall as well. In the '70s and early '80s it was a very good mall, especially for our area. Before Landover Mall opened up, the big shopping center in the area was probably Prince George's Plaza, then an open-air mall (as opposed to a strip center). When Landover Mall started gaining traction, a roof was installed at P.G. Plaza and it became an indoor mall. Between Landover Mall, the closing in of P.G. Plaza, and the building of Columbia Mall in 1971, mall shopping came to the D.C.-Baltimore corridor in a big way. Forty-seven years on, malls all across America are dying, and the brick-and-mortar model nowadays is open-air Town Centers (or "Town Centres", depending on how pretentious the developer is). Glenarden and Landover haven't changed much since the crack war days, unfortunately, but P.G. County is one of the richest African-American-majority counties (as well as one of the highest-income counties) in the U.S., and since there is a lot of open land ripe for development in that area they will hopefully enjoy a renaissance over the next few years. Unfortunately, there are a lot of ideas for the area but no firm plans as yet.
And to think that after all of these years my Snoopy Toothbrush and almost every other single product appearing here has long since been landfilled, incinerated, composted, lost, forgotten, destroyed including the stores themselves, out of production, archived in some attic basement garage or still hidden in the seat cushions of the car or the front room furniture. Or maybe with any luck a few things were recycled or still in use and worth a lot more than what they cost in 1972.
Feed a family of four for under 4 dollars.........Amazing, today you are lucky to get a soft drink at McDonald's for under 4 dollars and you hit the jackpot if the person speaks English. Thank you.
I also thought about how I watch TV shows these days.....recording them on a DVR & speeding through the commercials with absolutely no interest in seeing them, & yet, truly enjoying seeing these old ads. Must be a nostalgia thing, I guess......
@@realmichaud I find that most of the commercials today are about suing some company for medical issues gone wrong, or wrecks on the road. I haven't seen any good, fun commercials in years, unless I go to RUclips and look for old TV commercials. Sad that the kids of today will never be able to experience the days of our youth.
1920: "We'll all be driving flying cars."
2019: Watching commercials from 1972.
👍
Lol 😂
Airplanes and smaller flying devices as seen in movie fly away home have gone down in price so could possibly buy a used airplane for a few thousand or a smaller flying device that has single seat new for that price. Can see other videos about prices of these, of course prices subject to change based on supply and demand.
Hey can I get 10-15 of those record selectors
2022: Still watching commercials from 1972
I am probably the only person that cries in these 1960's and 1970's commercials. I was a kid in the 60's and a teen in the 70's and looking back I'd love to go visit my parents in that time. The things we took for granted back then. Just to go back to visit. No cellphones or tech bs just a lovely world at least from a kid point of view. I knew about Vietnam and it was horrible to watch on TV but this is all now nostalgia and it hurts now cause I just want to not be old and go back to a time when life was ok. Thanks for putting up with my melodrama.
No you’re not alone
Same. I have fond and VIVID memories of my youth as far back as 4 years old. Blessed.
Thank you for sharing my same feelings. Born in 64, we had to have been the luckiest generation to have lived. Why did it have to change
Also born in 1964. I wouldn’t change my childhood for anything. We mid-60s kids have our own niche. God bless you.
Born in 1960; I agree. I look forward to revisiting that time.
The commercials then were more entertaining than television shows are today.
Exactly 🎉😂
Sammy Davis Jr. smoking a cigarette in a commercial for GE tape recorders? Just more proof that the 70s were the coolest years ever.
my parents: “smoking doesn’t make you look cool”
Me: “BULLs#¥+”!
Lol It may not be healthy, but it looks pretty cool!😂
I was gifted that tape recorder on a xmas and I loved that thing.
@@angeldesigns1385 I remember when they had cig commercials on TV.
😆😆
I was a 8 year old but Loved those days life is never the same ❤❤❤❤😂😂 now
"Sears opening soon" that's a statement you'll never hear again .
Never would have Dreamed that the major stores of our day would be gone 😢
who would of thought a bunch of commercials would make you feel like weeping.
OMG...thats exactly how I feel.
@@shemcphe I still have my happy meal in the freezer for aĺl these years.
I'm homesick for a place that no longer exists.
So true. Today is insane
K-TEL.
Just 46 short years ago we were complaining about the commercials on TV, now we come here to watch them,
Haahhaaa.. Funny how things change.
TheF8ofman
In the 80s I served in the United States Air Force Rammstein airbase Germany we had one TV station American forces network there was no TV commercials they had been deleted came home andI really enjoyed the commercials on TV,
Like “where is the beef!”
TheF8ofman Yes,but let’s remember when you watched TV in the ‘60’s & ‘70’s the commercials only interrupted the shows for 60 seconds. Now commercials interrupt TV shows on an average of 4 minutes. Therefore,for example Big Bang Theory is actually 16minutes 47seconds. I’ve timed it 10 times; from opening dialogue to the end. Well, the actors DO make $1 million per episode.
Hey, I was 17, these commercials didn’t bother me ,
I was busy getting pussy ...
I just come here to see to see these commercials,
Because I don’t get pussy anymore 😂
(Did he say the “P”w0rD❓)
Exactly!
@@mycitywasgone4216 Yup...that's what you get for getting old.... hahahahahahaha
70s and 80s let me come back home!! I thought the future would be better, I was wrong!! I'd even settle for the 90s!
I was born in 58. Some of these commercials drove me absolutely crazy in the day. Kind of comforting to see them now.
Right? I cannot believe I just sat here and watched the commercials that used to push me toward the kitchen or bathroom 😂😂😂😂😂😂
Born in 63 same deal
Me too. I was born in 1970 and some of these commercials put an earworm in my ear for years and here I am again. God help me...
The Arby's in Laurel MD still has their original 'big hat' sign and it works perfectly
..and Im sure back in 1972 a great many of these products were produced in factories on American soil and providing American workers with a paycheck that allowed them to support their family.
Commercials so good back then that nobody ever hit "skip ad"
Back in the day, parents had remote controls, they were called their Children! 🤣🤣🤣🤣
Don't forget they were also the fine tuning feature when they held the rabbit ears at a certain angle.
Hilarious and true! Lol!
More than once we had TV's that the tuner knob broke, so we used a screwdriver and/or pliers to change to one of the 3 stations we had.
Yep I was the remote control, door answerer, phone answerer, snack getter, rabbit ears antenna adjuster, thermostat adjuster, and oh yes,....light switch operator. LOL
@@stevenmeadows6917 Same, lol!
Glad I'm not the only GenX'r suffering with nostalgia. Imagine how GenZ feels growing up in this dumpster fire. We all deserve better. Thanks for the memories 💌
You're welcome, Steph.
Me too-Generation X-56 yrs old...
@@elmobolan4274 I'm 53 and graduated high school in 1987. A funny thing I heard a while back about Generation X: We are the final generation to grow into adulthood without the internet. And boy am I thankful for that!
@@crocodile1313 I know right-so glad I'm older!!!
I am what you would considered ___.
Not a baby boomer, because they changed they criteria.
Not a gen Z or whatever.
Love the commercials.
The Marlboro Man!
I am gonna have a cig
im from the 90s and its still sad watching older commercials like this, because nothing will ever be built this good again, We gained cellphones but lost all standards of quality
These commercials certainly bring back a boatload of memories.
I was 11 in 1972 and remember those days quite well. It was, for a child, a really cool time because toys were so cool and the color TVs were coming of age. We had a Curtis Mathes in 1969 and bought another in 1974. Talk about a TV set. Since I'm going back in time, I want a new Chevrolet, a Zenith TV and K-tel record selector.
I was 10 in 1972. And I remember the time quite well. And for a kid the summer time was the best because my mom and dad and I would travel. I loved that year. I did so much more than the year before.
In '72, we had a circa-1960 Zenith black-and-white. I forget how many radios we had (including the car radio), but I DO know that they were AM only. But back then, you could get anything you wanted on AM, be it your favorite music, news, or talk shows. Damned sight better then than now. I was 9 in '72 myself.
I was 11 in 1972 as well & I totally agree it was a super time to be a kid.😁
One year older than me. I would have been 10 in 1972. And yes this year I will be 60. I remember when the first color TV sets came out. My mom and dad got 3 color TVs and there was one in the dining room and one in the living room and one upstairs. I grew up in a 3 bedroom two bathroom condo in Yoba Linda down in Southern California.
Yeah, that record selector - with space age technology. Amazing!
I remember the papa, mama, and baby burgers at A&W
I'm 61, and I remember all of these commercials! Haven't thought about them in awhile!
even landover mall?
I'm 64 and I remember many of these commercials but not all of them but I miss them man if we could go back to them days they sure were better in many ways
@@barneyporter6138 Yep, the world has changed, definitely not for the better.
“And Sears, opening soon.”
There’s something you don’t hear anymore.
now its sears, closing soon :(
Happily watching these commercials over the TV shows they put on air these days.
So glad that I lived in a far better time. People were friendlier, life was less chaotic and tv was cleaner. People kept their sexuality pretty much to themselves and didn’t try shoving their opinions down other people’s throats. Back then you really could “agree to disagree” and that was fine. I blame the government and the one sided media for constantly putting on group of people against the other. Even smoking pot was back then was a laughing good time. I pity this generation if they don’t wake up to the hypocrisy and constant hatred that they are being exposed to by evil forces who’s only goal is to control them. GOD help this planet 🌎. 🙏🙏🙏
Amen!🙏🏽🙏🏽🙏🏽💕❤️💕
@@Blugraffiti5 Amen! to your "Amen"!
Those were the days when you actually enjoyed the commercials. And the coco puffs commercial-- I can remember getting toys and 'prizes' from boxes of childrens' cereals. I used to empty the whole box just to get them. The '70s were a great time to grow up!
Actually I kind of freaking hated the commercials. I am a baby boomer and I told my daughters who were born in the 90s that we are at the “jingle Generation”. Stupid jingles clear back from the 60s are still stuck in my head.
So did I. To think some of those kids are grandparents now.
I Turned 14 Years old on November 7th 1972. Lived Out in The Country in Northern Wi. Only had 2 Channels To Choose from and that's what got me into Radio!
It's actually amazing to see how much integrity many of these companies had about their products...
And they were MADE IN THE USA.
If they still do today, that would be brilliant.
@@jamesrogers9185 It can still happen.
Gawd what a mark. Don Draper sure had his way with you.
I'm skeptical. Certainly, the cereal manufacturers didn't care at all about the kids. But, even with regard to the ads that were heavy on the engineering, I mean, we all know the Pinto was just awful, right?
It's great to see all these ads that I also remember. But one really needs to be skeptical as we look back...
Horrid! And I lived thru it all. AND I became a commercial designer! Producing Packaging, point-of-sale merchandising, magazine advertising. Television advertising. What a life! Thanks for the trip down memory lane, FredFlix.
You're welcome, Moreno.
I waz born in 1967 , I remember these like yesterday, I wish I could go back and get a do over , for real!!!
Crazy how looking at commercials during a time I wasn't even alive in makes me emotional. Seems like a better time to be alive vs now. Get me out of the year 2022 or the last decade to be honest.
Get me out of here and put me anywhere between 50's to 80's.
Things were sweet, pure and cheesy. Wish you were there, many TV shows and movies warned us about 2020-2030. Don't believe me? Watch Soylent Green and Network.
I grew up in the 60's and 70's and believe me,I wouldn't mind being back there right now.Things were so much easier and more relaxed than they are today,or maybe it seemed that way because I was a kid,I don't know.
@@BillyBatsonMarvel Yup. Exactly.
Bad food, tacky decore, too much cigarette smoke, terrible hygiene, crappy t.v. image quality, even when compared to the 60's. No thanks. Fantastic music though.
I passed an elderly man and lady in a Chevy Impala yesterday. Those things were as big as tanks. The couple probably bought it new.
I had a 1974 Chevy Impala back in the mid 1980's. ..An old man and his wife owned it. .Body and interior where mint condition too ..The old man wanted to buy his wife a smaller car for her to drive ..He put the Chevy up for sale ..A girl with a 1970 Chevy nova stopped in to look at the car ...She only wanted the engine out of the impala to put in her nova .." 350 engine " so the old man sold her just the engine out of it ..My cousin came to me and said " Ron wants to know if you want the body of that old impala ,Said all its missing is the engine ...We towed it to my house ..At the time I was driving a 1972 Oldsmobile 9 passenger station wagon with a 455 4 barrel ..My Dad and I yanked the engine and 400 turbo transmission out of the Olds and dropped it into the impala ...455 4 barrel 400 turbo Trans 3:73 rear end ..That was the fastest Car I ever owned ....I miss that car these days
@@willoughby1888 Remember Olds 98s? And Toronados? Oldsmobile ceased production many years ago. My brother bought a '76 Omega new. Olds Toronado was the 1st front-wheel drive car, if I'm not mistaken.
@@TheBrooklynbodine I had a 69 Delta 88, a 69 98 luxury coupe, a 73 Toronado, a 72 Cutlass, a 78 Delta 88, an 83 Delta 88, and a 79 Custom Cruiser that i still own and drive today. So yea, I remember the Oldsmobile's. I remember in the late 1980s they had the ad campaign "it's not your fathers Oldsmobile", I remember thinking that is why their sales are off, because if they'd build my fathers Oldsmobile, I'd buy one them. ;)
@@willoughby1888 I can't remember for sure, but I believe the "Super Rocket 425" was the ultra high compression version. If it is, you would really wish that you still had that one. They are worth thousands these days. The ultra high compression 394, your 425, and the 69 and 70 high output (high compression) 455 are very valuable engines these days. I threw away a 69 HO 455 years ago. Today, you'd be hard pressed to find a good one for 5 thousand dollars. Hard to believe isn't it?
I remember the "Not your Father's Oldsmobile" spots. One had a 74-year-old man with a new Oldsmobile with the young ladies chasing him, and his 100-year-old dad tsk-tsking. If I remember right, Harry Belafonte, Ringo Starr, and :Leonard Nimoy did their own spots, too. That campaign was from the late 80s. Congratulations on still driving your '79. here's hoping for many more years and thousands of miles.
I was 7 when these came out and I remember many of them. Life is funny, you can't wait to grow up and then you do...now that you have you love to look back. This was great!
I remember my friend had an Action Jackson figure with a parachute. I think we also had Hot Wheels. I felt bad since I didn't want to be like the spoiled kids wanting all those toys. We also had my father's Lionel train layout downstairs. We used to run it around every friday after school. I wish I could remember more things a lot clearer, seems as if it went by way too fast.
The last age I wanted to turn, was 16, 1986. I told my friends they were fools for wanting to be any older! They finally understand! They admit I was beyond right. In the 70s, I never really wanted to be an adult. The adults I knew argued all the time.
I was born in 1971 but remember that clarol herbal essence shampoo commercial.... loved it as a kid
The good ole days when “girls were girls and men were men”
That K-tel record selector looked cool.
I seem to remember the same announcer did all K-tel TV ads.
K-TEL RECORD SELECTOR (3:39) This was a big hit. Everybody bought one. "Space-age design"? ! I love that!
The Apollo missions were ongoing when this commercial aired. Remember? (Gimme a thumbs-up if you remember.)
Apollo was winding down at that time, ending in December of 1972.
Those selectors didnt work at all..
Gotta love Xerox!! Father of both Microsoft & Apple.
My generation.i was born 58 . It seams we all no now what a special time we lived in
Love the Commericals and yes Rachel Welch doing commercials ❤❤❤❤
Ah, 1972 when "midsize" cars were bigger than today's luxury models.
lard assed cars to be more exact.
@@roadmaster720Kramer-mobiles
They made regular cars smaller, so now everyone just drives an SUV that's twice as big and twice as ugly.
You could run into an oak tree head on with no seatbelt and get out and walk away with only a few bruises and scratches. Dems were da days.
I loved this herbal essence commercial.
Watching these (now) classic commercials only underscores how unimaginative and ingratiating commercials have gotten 50 years on.....sad.
I was 12 that year and remember many of these commercials. Life was simpler 50 years ago.
Born in '60. Twelve year olds are very impressioned by the media, I guess it shaped who we are.
About the same time we were trading Blue Chip or S&H Green Stamps we got from the supermarket for various items.
That action Jackson theme still runs through my head after all these years and I'm 62 now. Thanks.
We hated commercials back then but now we watch them. How times have changed?
Lol I said the same thing! Growing up, we would have done anything to avoid these commercials but today, we view them for entertainment purposes😀
@@angeldesigns1385 and to reflect on “the good ole days”. 😒
@@BillyBatsonMarvel i second that
Wow, that mail on your computer terminal technology really seemed neat. I wonder if it ever caught on.
I thought that looked pretty advanced. When I was at work in the late 70's, the whole company still had those god-awful green screens that would burn your retinas. It wasn't until the 80's that they upgraded to 4 color CGA screens.
Darrell Ludlow I don't know, let me google that on my phone. Xerox was the inventor of the mouse too.
Darrell Ludlow It never caught on.
The sad thing is it was merely a pie-in-the-sky concept in 1972. Any office worker enthused about the notion of e-mail, mice and calendars with automatic reminders would have had to wait to just about retirement to get a taste of that life. And, just like the tractor, better tech just means everyone's expected to react quicker.
it didn't catch on. until they added porn. lol
I was born in 1953 and remember these commercials. Some days I forget what I ate for breakfast but I still remember the ad jingles. I grew up before the cell phone and the personal computer. I was not part of the computer surveillance state and I am glad. I didn't have to live where the dumb things I said or did was recorded for eternity. It was a great time to grow up.
My dad drove a Ford Galaxy for 25 years! That thing was like a tank with a sofa in it. My brother was playing Dukes of Hazard, and jumped it off an embankment. It didn't have a scratch and ran like it was brand new!
haha Tank with a sofa.
@@johnsmith-ug5tp That line made me laugh, too! Great line! 👍
Zenith télévision were the best! Excellent quality and their life span were amazing. «Their quality goes in before their name goes on.» a logo well deserved!
We had one too,it lasted forever!
Curtis Mathis with their 10 year warranty
My dad would buy nothing but Zenith.
OMG remembering how I constantly fiddled with the antenna ears to get a good reception as a kid.
Ours had wheels and we could put it anywhere. But damn those rabbit ears to try to get the best reception. Plus in my childhood we had supersonic booms around the same time frame and I would jump 2 feet in the air every time it happened till they finnaly said no to that.
Ooo, the year I would turn 10 and for a kid the early 1970' s were so cool. I could play outside with my friends until sundown then it was time to go home. I loved the summers the best because I could stay up until 10:00 in the evening. And the drive ins, such fun.
I still love the nostalgia of Drive Inns. The ones I visit when I can are in Atlanta, GA and Lake Cumberland (Somerset, KY). Wow those days.
I remember trying to tape songs off the tv on my recorder, I would get almost through the song and my brother would start talking.😂
I was a newborn in January of 72. Awesome commercials.
me too!! march '72, you're old lol
Matthew Norman , I was born Jan 67. I remember a few of the commercials ! Peace.
My grandfather had a '72 Ford Galaxie 500. Really nice car for it's time.
I drove a green coupe in the 1990s and it was pretty reliable. Nice and big.
My dad had one also, a real nice burgundy colour
my parents had a '71 Galaxy 500...what a great car. I got it when I turned 17 and drove it until the transmission went out...about the time I went to college. I wish I had had enough money to have it fixed...I might still have it today!
Life was really much more simple and rewarding up through about 2000. Something changed in our country after that. I was born in 1967, so many of these commercials bring back memories that really make me wish one could turn back the clocks.
I was turning 11 in 72. Life was simple until the mid 70's. Before that, Dad would work, Mom would help with the kids and house work. Many families had 2 or more kids, and only 1 car. Dad was able to work and pay for the house, bills, food and even save for his kids College fund. Later around 78, mom began to get out and start a career, eventually working to pay for after school child care, because she had to work. Unattended kids with cool games began to change. They grew up and had kids that grew up and had kids. NOW we have parents that do not know how to be a parent. Responsibility, discipline, consideration for others? Who cares...
I completely agree! It’s depressing times now…
Delta is ready when you are!!! Always remembered that jingle.
I was 12 in 72, really enjoyed that, thanks. The leggy doll, how bizarre.
You're welcome, KR.
That xerox computer is what Steve Jobs swiped and turned into Apple Computer a couple years later!
Well, what was Xerox thinking, showing this stuff on TV years before they had a readily marketable product? The average person in 1972 saw this commercial and didn't even get that the guy was sitting in front of a computer. In 1972, a computer was a great big room sized thing with blinking lights on it that a person in a lab coat operated. When we saw this commercial in '72 (I vaguely remember it) we thought he was looking at a portable TV turned sideways and wondered why anyone would want their mail put on TV. It was about 3 or 4 years later when some company (and I think it was WANG) put out a commercial that introduced the idea of Word Processing - typing at a screen and being able to fix any mistakes before any ink was put to paper, that made us 70s people go "Oh Wow!" Obviously the guy with the system in that commercial had word processing available to him as an application, but it was not obvious in '72 when we still looked at the IBM Selectric as a modern marvel
Actually, Xerox GAVE Steve Jobs and co. the technology that they had developed for the "paperless office" because Xerox didn't want to reduce paper usage in the workplace. Of course, IBM beat Apple to market because of Bill Gates/Microsoft and the MS-DOS program he had bought for $15,000 and then turned around and licensed to IBM.
Eeeyup.
Francisco d’Anconia if only we knew then what we know now. I would have rushed to invest in Apple and never purchased a Ford Pinto lol
Very interesting. I wasn't born in the 1970s (my mother and father were in elementary school and college, respectively), but as a history major, I can appreciate how these commercials reflect the times. It's also interesting to think about how "finger-tip control of music" can mean one thing (moving LPs forward in an organizer), then fifty years later it means something else (using your phone's touch screen to access/play a song).
I recall seeing many of these commercials back in the day.... Only on a RUclips channel would I be watching them again.
Actually, every home had a remote control unit for their TV sets. It was called a child. Also, I remember using Clairol Herbal Essence Shampoo when they first came out with it. It really had an fresh herbal scent.
Laura Daly I miss ClairolHerbalEssenseShampoo
Anna Paulikonis the stuff had a problem...bees were attracted to the scent....some people even got stung.
The music,movies and commercials back then are better than the garbage of today.
My big sister used Herbal Essence shampoo. I tried it, and yes, I remember the nice herbal scent. 🙂
The Herbal Essances was made with good ingredients and smelled wonderful. Also the shampoo Yuca Dew made with yuca plant made hair feel wonderful .
Nice to see some diversity in the commercials, finally, instead of the lily-white ones from the 50s and 60s. Brown and black people bought these same products, too, and the manufacturers were finally realizing it! Onward and upward.
I turned 13 that year and it was a great time to be growing up. Back when advertising was just that, pure product adverts presented in a pleasant and easy way.
*You aren't kidding ....*
*"a pleasant and easy way" is the key.*
*Now, commercials use deliberately unnatural camera angles, etc., etc.*
*And God forbid a commercial now actually, you know, ADVERTISES A PRODUCT.*
*Now commercials are just 30-second bursts of: "Hey, look at the stupid White guy!!" propaganda ....*
😥
@@CaryMGVR Exactly. When in years past, commercials were just a minor annoyance trying to watch T.V. but now they are offensive - especially when they hire "stars" as their spokespeople with huge multi million dollar contracts to hawk their products. I heard that Sara Jessica Parker's Garnier shampoo contract was worth like twenty million and I believe it. They demand huge money for doing nothing and the sponsors always cave in. SJP makes me want to hurl anyway.
I like the K-tel record selector. With the comeback of LPs, we could use that again today.
The Coke jingle was sung by The Fortunes,who had a hit with,"Here comes that rainy day feelin" again".They also sang the previous Coke jingle,"Things go better with Coke". Great vid Fred!
Didn't know that about The Fortunes, Jan.
It sounded like Nancy Sinatra singing the Cougar XR-7 commercial.
Bob Barker began to host The New Price is Right!
Rainy day feeling again...that's a catchy tune!!
That's what I thought.
Raquel Welch, man, what a delicious looking dish she was back in the day. A definite dime if ever there was.
I sure miss Pontiac and Plymouth.
I love that I'm watching a commercial for the ODYSSEY on an XBox One! Thanks man. I appreciate the amount of work these must take.
It's a labor of love, Christopher
@@FredFlix There was life before Atari after all.
@@michaelodonnell9756 You betcha!
1972 back when life was so simple.
One of my most cherished possessions is an autographed photo from Ann Blyth (Hostess ad at 26:45). Miss Blyth was a big star in the 1940s and 50s and is most famous for her Oscar-nominated role as Veda in 1945’s “Mildred Pierce” opposite Joan Crawford. She is still with us today at age 94.
That electronic message sending gadget was a fad that never really caught on...
I find it fascinating to see how Xerox PARC was piloting the concept of email in 1972.
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
Xerox developed a whole lot of things that Microsoft and Apple took and called their own. Windows operating system and the mouse point and click interface just to name a few. It was basically all open source material to be claimed stolen and used by others.
We actually do. Emails, messages from phone to phone. I can text anyone I want to and they get it within seconds. Unless they don't have reception or they don't check their email.
@@jefferyoetter6884 that was a joke. You're an engineer aren't you?
I had a 19 inch zenith... good television
if you from the 70;s i love you remmeber the good days
i love u 2 and yes i do remember the good days and wish i could go back to them. :)
The Walgreens ad said that Walgreens fills 25 million prescriptions a year. I would think that they easily fill 25 million prescriptions a day now
This also was a favorite year for me...21 - 22 years old...had a grand time in girl dating, friendships in church, following the Indy race cars as a fan.
Lots of the TV commercials I forgot or never actually seen.
Tom Foster Terrible year for me. Started 1st grade and 12 years of hell. Hated school from day 1. But the 70's were great, esp 1976.
Lou G. Same thing for me, only I started school about a year later.
What year did you lose your virginity?
Born in '72, best year ever, for me anyway...
same here :)
The year I was born.👶 1972 this is great thanks. ✌
You're welcome, Leo.
yep me too. :D
I knew the words to every commercial. I’m getting old.
I was 5 years old at the time, living with my aunt in Macclenny florida. A little too young to remember any of these commercials. So it's really cool to watch them.
My first car. A 72 red impala custom. 350 v8. Ran great and I paid 150 bucks for it. Met its demise when a skum in a Corvette nailed the driver's side
I just learned why we don't see Esso anymore, LOL!
I don't know. I guesss it has had it's turn and died out.
@@matthewjahnke588 The became Exxon.
I turned 46 just 6 days ago....these were the commercials my mom watched as she waited.....
Im sorry
Nice effort, enjoyed a lot ! ... Country Club Malt Liquor ad... "A lot to drink without drinking a lot" Sign me up !
i missed the 70;s it was best time of my life had good friends then true friends not like today this world has lost there minds
This lousy world is shit...
Yea because all the problems of today are new, if your friends suck you have bad judge of character but there are way worse things perpetually going on and none of them are new in fact some could say complacency from previous generations wanting to ignore the problems that caused them to build up and seem overwhelming no matter what time period you look at someone is suffering there have never been good times just willful ignorance while you are happy. If you pick any date I will find someone or something suffering, happiness is a choice suffering is inevitable
@@ALostScientist HERE HERE! Notice u didn't get any responses, because the TRUTH HURTS! NEGELECT! has reared it's head & now people r complaining.
These commercials take me back.
This channel is earning almost 122,000 subscribers and 55,200,000 worldwide views!!!!!!!!!!!!!
These old commercials make me hallucinate. It’s awesome
Anyone here from 1972 watching in 2019? AKA, time travelers. 😂
We've come a long way bb. But not 1 DAMN WAR .
Yeah , I was there. Dad was able to afford a house because he was a vet. The music was great and stands the test of time. It cost $1.00 to $4.00 to see a movie. CBS , NBC and ABC were the big networks to watch before cable TV became affordable. Our local TV stations showed cartoons in the morning before school and after school. When cartoons were over we played outside until dinnertime. We rode bikes , rollerskated,and played baseball and football. Girls weren't sexualized,like they are now. Girls had "cooties" and we didn't think about playing "truth or dare "with them. We ate dinner at home. Going out to eat at a fast food place was reserved for special events.We were able to say "Merry Christmas", and "God bless you" without getting in trouble for offending someone. We read comic books and traded baseball and football cards. Everyone read "Mad" Magazine ". Since we were too young to go out we watched "Creature Features " and monster movies Saturday nights. Saturday mornings we watched cartoons on TV with a bowl of cereal and played outside for the rest of the day when cartoons were over. Sundays we went to church. Now in those days the only things on TV Sundays were religious programs or old movies. We played outside and Dad watched his cowboy movies. We watched Blondie and Dagwood, movies Abbott and Costello , monster movies (eg. The Brain from Planet Arous,Plan 9 From Outer Space , The Wolfman , The Black Cat,Frankenstein , The Mummy, etc.) We still watched Bob Hope ,Dean Martin , Jerry Lewis , Frank Sinatra TV specials at night with the family. We had a black and white TV. We didn't get a color TV until 1973. We were happy just to watch TV. Dad used to tell us , he didn't watch TV when he was our age. Dad said he had to listen to the radio. We shook our head in horror, can you imagine life without a TV? In 2019 my teen age son is shocked when I told him about my family owning one black and white TV. He laughs when I tell about having a flip phone when was born. He sneers in contempt when I tell him about computer technology in the 80s and 90s.
i wish i could go back in time :)
watching in 2022 Sept 28
These are awesome! I was 7 in ‘72 and remember quite a few of them. Feed a family of 4 for under $4 at McDonald’s... 😂
I remember a Big Mac cost 65 cents in 1972!
I'm mixed between great memories and sadness too.
Now it's like 30bucks. To feed 4 people at fast food place.
And as a kid, McDonald's was good too. Not today though
@@Hydrostream1972 per the "Inflation Calculator":
$4 in 1972 is equivalent in purchasing power to about $28.35 today.
I'd say you hit the nail right on the head!
Landover Mall was the major shopping attraction in Prince George's County, Maryland when it opened in 1972, but it had a relatively short heyday and began declining as early as the mid-'80s. In its prime, the mall had a number of quality stores, including four anchor stores. It also had one of the first sports shops where you could buy NFL licensed merchandise. My brother and I spent many hours there one summer while our mom took sewing classes in the Singer store. The class started before the mall opened for the day, so we wandered around and waited until the stores opened up. Our days always featured a trip to Orange Julius for a slice of pizza which, as I recall, was pretty good. In the '80s other competitors sprang up, and Landover Mall lost its luster. It also being located in a high-crime area, shoppers started avoiding it, especially at night. Likewise the stores experienced high volume of shrinkage due to theft. The death blow came as the anchors began closing: Hecht's, Garfinckel's, and Woodward & Lothrop either went out of business entirely or were absorbed into larger department store chains. By the '90s, Landover Mall was practically a ghost town, with just a handful of stores clinging to life and no shoppers to serve. It was finally torn down a few years ago, and while there have been a number of development plans for the land, the acreage remains barren and empty. It sits about a mile from FedEx Field, and I expect that when the Redskins finally abandon FedEx for the new stadium they are planning, the entire area will be up for grabs for redevelopment.
Cowboy 1959
Cowboy 1959
Jim rosson what is the purpose of posting a poster's name and nothing else?
I lived a few blocks from Landover Mall before the eventual downfall. My first experience was in 1976 when my mother bought me a pair of Toughskins jeans from Sears. It was the place in the early to mid 1980's for teens until the crack wars in the town across the street (Glenarden) and then the general decline of the Landover area.
Fun fact: The opening of Landover Mall was considered a threat to a then older mall Tyson's Corner Center. It was thought that a newer mall with four anchors (compared to three at Tyson's) and being on the eastern side of the Beltway would attract people from the District of Columbia and Montgomery County and reduce the market for Tyson's Corner Center which was then not as developed as it is now.
I spent a lot of hours during my teen years at Landover Mall as well. In the '70s and early '80s it was a very good mall, especially for our area.
Before Landover Mall opened up, the big shopping center in the area was probably Prince George's Plaza, then an open-air mall (as opposed to a strip center). When Landover Mall started gaining traction, a roof was installed at P.G. Plaza and it became an indoor mall. Between Landover Mall, the closing in of P.G. Plaza, and the building of Columbia Mall in 1971, mall shopping came to the D.C.-Baltimore corridor in a big way. Forty-seven years on, malls all across America are dying, and the brick-and-mortar model nowadays is open-air Town Centers (or "Town Centres", depending on how pretentious the developer is).
Glenarden and Landover haven't changed much since the crack war days, unfortunately, but P.G. County is one of the richest African-American-majority counties (as well as one of the highest-income counties) in the U.S., and since there is a lot of open land ripe for development in that area they will hopefully enjoy a renaissance over the next few years. Unfortunately, there are a lot of ideas for the area but no firm plans as yet.
The Pinto was a death trap. We had a powder blue one. Just learned it was a Found on the Road company
And to think that after all of these years my Snoopy Toothbrush and almost every other single product appearing here has long since been landfilled, incinerated, composted, lost, forgotten, destroyed including the stores themselves, out of production, archived in some attic basement garage or still hidden in the seat cushions of the car or the front room furniture.
Or maybe with any luck a few things were recycled or still in use and worth a lot more than what they cost in 1972.
The K-Tel Record Selector really worked. we had one
This is when commercials were cute & funny.
Prell shampoo don’t you dare get that in your eye it burned !
Honey our budgets a disaster but your hair looks like a million bucks! what a line!
@Tamara Bossler-I know, right? My mom washed my hair with it and it burned my eyes like hell!
Still burns if you get it near your eyes. But you can't beat that lather and scent. I use it as a body wash.
Out of the dozens of these types of vids I've watched, this is one of the best collections.
I appreciate that, Big Fun.
Feed a family of four for under 4 dollars.........Amazing, today you are lucky to get a soft drink at McDonald's for under 4 dollars and you hit the jackpot if the person speaks English. Thank you.
If someone in a store does not speak English I go elsewhere ...
@@Robin-oo5il Good riddance.
Ktel the Dollar store of the 70's
Now it's 40 bucks. ha
Yea true but it's actually easy. Cook food and don't buy it from McDonald's. Wouldn't hurt you to have a garden too.
When coke tasted good in those glass bottles, now at mc Donald you pay a arm and leg for a meal , miss the old days
Glass bottles out of an immersion tank cooler near freezing, so cold on a hot summer day it almost burned going down. Never tasted better!
These commercials from the 70s were so hypnotic, wow!!
I also thought about how I watch TV shows these days.....recording them on a DVR & speeding through the commercials with absolutely no interest in seeing them, & yet, truly enjoying seeing these old ads. Must be a nostalgia thing, I guess......
I think the reason is todays commercials are mostly pure propaganda, LGBTQIA SJW NPC propaganda.
@@realmichaud I find that most of the commercials today are about suing some company for medical issues gone wrong, or wrecks on the road. I haven't seen any good, fun commercials in years, unless I go to RUclips and look for old TV commercials. Sad that the kids of today will never be able to experience the days of our youth.
Same...
Wow...life was sooo much BETTER back than I wish I was back in 1972 again, the world changed after 9/11/2001....: (
The world changed beginning with JFK's assassination. Much changed after that
The SSP cars were great toys.
rangers199487 Wirrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr..................
One of my favorite toys growing up!
I loved the sound of those. :)
yeah.....my third grade teacher had a desk drawer filled with confiscated SSP and Matchbox cars!!!!
Those pull cords tore up my hand between my thumb and index finger but I didn't care lol
Gordon Jump from "WKRP " played the father in the Eggo waffles commercial.
Also was the lonely Maytag repairman.
And wasn't he the pedophile character on that "very special" episode of Diff'rent Strokes back in the day?
Are you sure? I thought it looked like Jonathan Winters
30:15 yeah, that's definitely (a young) Gordon Jump.