'64-65 NY World's Fair FUTURAMA Ride Video

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  • Опубликовано: 25 мар 2008
  • General Motors promotional film follows a young boy as he rides the Futurama 2 ride at the 1964- 65 New York World's Fair.

Комментарии • 450

  • @jacksparks3983
    @jacksparks3983 4 года назад +24

    I was that boy, not literally, but I was about that age when we attended the 64 World's Fair. It had a lasting, lifelong affect on that young boy, on me.

    • @GoodStarfish
      @GoodStarfish 10 месяцев назад

      I'm sure as a kid you must have been in awe and full of pride, but are your feelings more nuanced these days? Did you feel like you had been manipulated the more you grew?

    • @GoodStarfish
      @GoodStarfish 10 месяцев назад

      ruclips.net/video/FTRKG_ovjsA/видео.html

  • @AnimationArea
    @AnimationArea 9 лет назад +90

    My left ear enjoyed this very much.

  • @RicardoBanffy
    @RicardoBanffy 10 лет назад +20

    We were so confident...

  • @simonsuescun
    @simonsuescun 8 лет назад +70

    WOW. The 50's and 60's. When progress meant highways, concrete, cars and malls. Today, people shop online just to avoid highways, concrete, cars and malls.

    • @lukehauser1182
      @lukehauser1182 5 лет назад +6

      Check that - they shop online to avoid other people

    • @vernateneallen3311
      @vernateneallen3311 5 лет назад +4

      That is so true. Its like we're going backward.

    • @TooCooFoYou
      @TooCooFoYou 5 лет назад +3

      Vernatene Banks
      You know the concept of ordering your product to be delivered by your door has been around, since, even the dawn of department stores, right? We even had this nifty concept called "mail delivery" before that.

    • @freds7988
      @freds7988 5 лет назад

      uh! Goods are self generating and coming by their own to your house ???

    • @famousbowl9926
      @famousbowl9926 3 года назад

      You forgot polio, Vietnam war , homophobia and all the other backwards thinking..

  • @monakayk
    @monakayk 7 лет назад +35

    THANKS for this video ... I soooooo remember this ride when my parents took me to the World's Fair. I was 10 years old. I also had a hat with the feather ....what great memories I have of that extraordinary experience !

    • @sgnmath1234
      @sgnmath1234 4 года назад +1

      Yes..the hat.. I had it as well.

    • @Emergenttheory
      @Emergenttheory 3 года назад

      Me too

    • @lachlankhalid4886
      @lachlankhalid4886 2 года назад

      i dont mean to be offtopic but does anyone know of a method to get back into an instagram account?
      I was stupid forgot my login password. I would appreciate any help you can give me.

    • @damianisrael3373
      @damianisrael3373 2 года назад +1

      @Lachlan Khalid instablaster ;)

    • @lachlankhalid4886
      @lachlankhalid4886 2 года назад

      @Damian Israel I really appreciate your reply. I found the site on google and Im in the hacking process atm.
      Takes a while so I will reply here later when my account password hopefully is recovered.

  • @moosefactory133
    @moosefactory133 10 лет назад +25

    I love watching retro future videos like this. It is kind of funny, some of the predictions have come to pass but not exactly as portrayed.

    • @GoodStarfish
      @GoodStarfish 10 месяцев назад

      It's haunting to me. This was never possible under the the systems of capitalism. Made for investors and grant money dressing up as a proud, superhuman vision of society for kids and using their impressions to advance the private venture's of unaccountable industry. Haunting

    • @user-hy9it2lm9k
      @user-hy9it2lm9k 10 месяцев назад +2

      @@GoodStarfish How well has communism fared, then?

    • @GoodStarfish
      @GoodStarfish 10 месяцев назад

      @user-hy9it2lm9k Cuba created 4 vaccines and wanted to distribute them to the world for free. No homeless there. Vietnam and China are ascendant. Africa is shuffling off the cuffs placement them by France and the US. I'd encourage you and others to look deeper. The West is a lecherous dominator full of opportunists and inheritors of vast fortune, who distribute arms and orders against any country willing to offer a better alternative. Read The Ending of Hereditary American Fortunes and get back to me

  • @freddylubin
    @freddylubin 10 лет назад +16

    I was on this. Still remember the awe and wonder of being able to look into the FUTURE.

    • @Thoralmir
      @Thoralmir 9 лет назад +3

      Freddy Lubin Makes the world of today look like a big disappointment, huh?

    • @freddylubin
      @freddylubin 9 лет назад +2

      Thoralmir Same with Jerry Seinfeld, who, in one episode, complained about not having the flying cars we were promised.

    • @MsDisneylandlover
      @MsDisneylandlover 4 года назад

      so kool did u do the magical skyway

  • @termen111
    @termen111 7 лет назад +73

    You Promised Me Mars Colonies. Instead, I Got Facebook

    • @planner812
      @planner812 6 лет назад +4

      Don't forget Jet Packs

    • @planner812
      @planner812 5 лет назад +1

      Bello I mean everyone having them
      Like to go to the store and get bread
      The jet packs your referring to can only fly for about 4 minutes
      I mean the kind George Jetson had

    • @GeographRick
      @GeographRick 5 лет назад +2

      Also, the flying car, and a robot to cook and clean,

    • @scott6504
      @scott6504 5 лет назад +1

      Not a fair compromise

    • @ericdavid8214
      @ericdavid8214 4 года назад

      I think it was less a promise that the previous generation would provide it to us... and more that we the future generations would build it for ourselves. Perhaps they should be upset with us and not the other way around. That said... we're almost to mars.. just a slight delay.

  • @MerleOberon
    @MerleOberon 15 лет назад +7

    I remember waiting like an hour and a half to go in this exhibit...I wanted to live in those cantilevered apartments, everything was so modern in the 60s, this was probably the peak of technological optimism....

  • @jmm1000
    @jmm1000 9 лет назад +29

    progress and profitability...by paving over the rainforest?? wow.

    • @ericdavid8214
      @ericdavid8214 4 года назад +8

      We did it. We won the war against trees.

    • @earthwormscrawl
      @earthwormscrawl 2 года назад

      The South Park episode on the rain forrest nailed the reality fo the place.

    • @earthwormscrawl
      @earthwormscrawl 2 года назад +1

      @Michael Dunetz The majority of our oxygen actually comes from cyanobacteria in the top few feet of the ocean.

  • @Tsubahi
    @Tsubahi 13 лет назад +6

    This must be a great inspiration for Epcot Center almost 20 years later!:)

  • @mitchdakelman4470
    @mitchdakelman4470 8 лет назад +18

    The complete film ran 26 minutes, and my recording of the soundtrack is on a reel to reel tape, so it would have to be downloaded to a digital format. The film basically focused on a 12 year old running around the NY World's Fair -- you see him as a blonde kid on the GM ride. Yes, I did see Futurama II in 1965, the ride itself was about 15 minutes. That was 50 years ago and I was 12, as well. Besides the film from GM there were other films like TO THE FAIR, and one by US Steel called HIGHLIGHTS OF THE NEW YORK WORLD'S FAIR, which was the most informative of all the 1964-1965 NY Fair films made--I have that film --given to me my US Steel back in 1970.

    • @michaelkloor9438
      @michaelkloor9438 2 года назад

      You should post that film you mention at the end of your comment.

    • @davidstuckey9289
      @davidstuckey9289 Год назад

      There was one good thing about the BP Gulf oil spill though - It stopped the draining of the coastal wetlands along the Gulf shoreline, which were up until then being lost at the rate of 15 acres an hour. This has resumed unfortunately, but in a much more limited rate, given that people believe the pace is now a radioactive, poisoned and toxic wasteland and coastal property is less desirable.

  • @mark747100
    @mark747100 8 лет назад +11

    This was one of my favorite rides at the fair.

  • @bradbarefoot2986
    @bradbarefoot2986 8 лет назад +33

    Reminds me of the "Horizons" ride that used to be at Disney's EPCOT Center. Mission Space now sits where Horizons used to be. Would rather have Horizons back.

    • @andrewcantrell139
      @andrewcantrell139 5 лет назад

      ruclips.net/video/Rfh7A0lH1ac/видео.html

    • @scott6504
      @scott6504 5 лет назад +2

      That was my favorite ride at Epcot. It was visionary and inspiring unlike the cheap thrills they toss at you these days.

    • @PaulAdler11
      @PaulAdler11 3 года назад +1

      Horizons truly was the greatest ride ever built in human history and this video depicts a wonderful precursor. Totally agreed.

    • @earthwormscrawl
      @earthwormscrawl 2 года назад +2

      I was born in 1960 and grew up during the space race. I was going to live in a city under the ocean (think Sealab 2020) and travel regularly to my job on the moon. Now I'm and electrical engineer and work out of my home office in Pennsylvania. Could be worse. Could be better.

  • @kluckitblog
    @kluckitblog 10 лет назад +11

    Anyone else kinda freaked out about the pure ambition of this video? We're getting a glimpse into a grim future:
    "These forest highways now are bringing to the most depths of the tropic world the goods and materials of progress and prosperity..."

    • @Thoralmir
      @Thoralmir 9 лет назад +4

      kluckitblog See, it's cynics like you being given a free voice is the reason we don't have jetpacks, and why we haven't gone to the moon since the 70's. Disgusting cynics sucking the joy and wonder out of every dream, browbeating everybody until nobody has the ambition to do anything beyond maintaining the status quo. Nobody has hope for a better tomorrow thanks to the cynicism of people like you.
      Unless you have a good solution to a problem, you should keep your opinions to yourself.
      I'm sick of hearing about the plight of the rainforests; at this point I'd rather see them slashed, burned, and paved over rather than listen to whiny, tree-hugging liberals preach about them for the rest of my life.

    • @kluckitblog
      @kluckitblog 9 лет назад +7

      Thoralmir Lol you need me sir. You need me and people like me more than you will ever realize.
      We haven't gone to the moon since the 70s because we now spend 0.5% of our budget on NASA as compared to 4.41% in the 60s. Those spending cuts do not come from "tree-hugging liberals". Private sector is taking over space exploration which is fine for now because the industry is led by people like Elon Musk (SpaceX), who believe in finding more efficient ways of using clean energy (Tesla).
      You see, while you sit here and scream into your computer about the past, people who question the status quo (like me) end up coming up with better ways to move forward, creating the future rather than talking about it. This video shows fantastic vision for its time, but if you are still stuck on this vision then you have been left far behind my friend.

    • @atom-o-tronic3505
      @atom-o-tronic3505 9 лет назад +3

      kluckitblog There's nothing wrong with being stuck in the past. The late 50s to mid 60s vision of the future is not as outdated and overemphasized as you may think, people still dream of a future brimming with flying cars, automated service robots and space age cities. In fact, look up The Venus Project, you'll be surprised how much it's designs are directly influenced by things found in this video and it is the only project I know trying to literally build a city of tomorrow. The past is our muse for the future.

    • @zimzob
      @zimzob 8 лет назад +2

      +The RetroGrade Why were automated service robots so important in this vision? Who was doing most of the service jobs at the time? A walkable city can be accessed without paying money, a city only accessible with cars costs money just to get around in, while eight and twelve lane highways can be used to remove certain neighborhoods, and separate some from others - to a carless person, a superhighway is the same as a wall.

  • @coloradostrong
    @coloradostrong 2 года назад +13

    I was an attendant at that ride. When they recorded this, the 12 year old shown (Brian McClaine) was given motion sickness pills and a shot of bourbon to keep him calm. He was hyper active and somewhat "slow", but he was the kid of a higher-up at GM. Later on, he stole a car and got in a wreck, but the story was kept quiet.

    • @longwindingroad
      @longwindingroad 2 года назад

      You traveled with the world fair or they hired people for the shows in the town they were in ?

    • @brianarbenz1329
      @brianarbenz1329 Год назад +3

      @@longwindingroad The NY World's Fair was not a traveling exhibit. It was entirely done in Flushing Meadows in NY City.

    • @brianarbenz1329
      @brianarbenz1329 Год назад +1

      @Colorado Strong , are you serious that they gave a 12-year-old a shot of bourbon? If so, they should hardly be surprised he got into crime!

    • @da4127
      @da4127 4 месяца назад +1

      @@brianarbenz1329I don’t think a shot of bourbon at 12 years old means you’ll be a criminal, and giving kids hard liquor to help them sleep or for sore throats was a common thing back then, so wouldn’t even blame the parents all that much

    • @brianarbenz1329
      @brianarbenz1329 4 месяца назад

      I was just half serious about the bourbon causing him to get into crime.

  • @MrUnidyne
    @MrUnidyne 6 лет назад +6

    "The future ain't what it used to be." - Yogi Berra

  • @karenstrycharz1499
    @karenstrycharz1499 3 года назад +6

    How fantastic this video is taking us on this ride! Best fair & I remember it still with awe & love, these many yrs later !

  • @RobertPlattBell
    @RobertPlattBell 9 лет назад +3

    I remember going on this ride. I was 5 years old at the time. Thanks for the trip down memory lane!

  • @autoad
    @autoad 5 лет назад +6

    The narrator of this exhibit was Alexander Scourby who became a familiar voice on the National Geographic specials. But in this exhibit, he got too excited too often. I saw this in-person when I was 9 years old and don't remember him this hyper. Gee whizz Alex...dial it back!!

    • @yaelrar.4460
      @yaelrar.4460 5 лет назад +1

      Scourby did a recording of the entire Bible that was incredibly inspiring.

    • @HalOBrien
      @HalOBrien Год назад

      Almost certainly there was a Director who told him to read that way.

    • @brianarbenz1329
      @brianarbenz1329 Год назад +1

      It sounds like Alexander is about to have an o!

    • @autoad
      @autoad Год назад +1

      @@HalOBrien You are likely spot-on correct!

  • @thisguythatguy8353
    @thisguythatguy8353 10 лет назад +7

    This is more like 100s of years into the future.

  • @greutera
    @greutera 5 лет назад +3

    I remember going to NY Worlds fair, I was 5. It was quite an impression on my young mind.

  • @garypen
    @garypen 9 лет назад +20

    Lots of highways in the future. Oddly, no high-speed rail in General Motors' vision.

    • @dk50b
      @dk50b 9 лет назад +5

      Oddly enough, GM's future city at the end does include provision for making "public transportation more convenient" with huge multilevel terminals. Naturally there's also plenty of parking at those terminals.
      At 6:08, you'll see a futuristic train traveling the expressway median. I was really surprised to even hear public transit mentioned, never mind see that train. Then again, GM profited handsomely by replacing streetcars with its buses, and probably saw the chance to build the transit equipment.
      Although Chicago pioneered placing rapid transit in expressway medians in the late fifties, the fairs' organizer Robert Moses did all he could to starve NYC's critical subway system and prevent it's expansion. He ignored pleas to include mass transit lines in expressway medians and construct bridges to allow future addition of commuter rail.
      Public policy has as much, if not a greater role in the sorry state of our rail transit. Together with LaGuardia's shutdown of NYC's extensive streetcar system, Moses did more to doom the NY region to traffic strangulation than only other individual.

  • @Thoralmir
    @Thoralmir 9 лет назад +34

    1:15
    "Oh Yeah? Well, I'm gonna go build my own theme park! With blackjack! And hookers! In fact, forget the park!"

    • @freddylubin
      @freddylubin 9 лет назад

      Thoralmir I want robot sex slaves.

    • @Thoralmir
      @Thoralmir 9 лет назад

      Freddy Lubin Don't we all.

    • @mrsuns10
      @mrsuns10 8 лет назад +2

      Ah screw the whole thing

  • @zelphx
    @zelphx 8 лет назад +4

    The "City of Tomorrow" is right where we left it... in 1964.

    • @ericdavid8214
      @ericdavid8214 4 года назад +1

      Internet, advanced robotics, moon landings, constant advances in food science, space exploration, deep sea exploration, industrial improvements, all-in-one agriculture mega-machines, international antarctic exploration labs, near-future-plans of interplanetary manned missions... I can't wait for all of those things to be invented!
      Don't fear optimism and hope my friend! "Man must chart his own course into tomorrow. A course that frees the mind and spirit as it improves the well-being of mankind"

  • @RedOcktober
    @RedOcktober 12 лет назад +2

    i remember this quite well... one of my favorite "rides" at "The Fair"...
    definitely this was the stuff of what dreams are made of...
    that why the world we live in today is so pale and hopeless... there's no NY Worlds Fairs anymore...
    to those who've missed it... to those of you who dismiss it... i really feel sorry for you... you'll never know what it was like... for a brief span of time, there was magic in the city...
    thx for the memories Larry...
    --Mike

  • @jeffrobodine7054
    @jeffrobodine7054 Год назад

    I saw this as a kid. My Dad worked for General Motors back then and we went to the NY Worlds Fair. Dad made sure we went to the GM pavilion to see Futurama. Seeing this film brings back memories. Thanks for sharing.

  • @thomasalton1220
    @thomasalton1220 16 лет назад +1

    I made a bad typo on this video; I meant to give it a 5 STAR rating. This film is a vivid reminder of my trip to the NY World's Fair as a young child. I went to GM as a 6 year old and this was one of the great thrills of my visits ( I also visited the Fair in 1965). Thank you for sharing this memory!

  • @RoseSupreme
    @RoseSupreme 7 лет назад +6

    Sometimes I wonder what it would've been like living in a past era's interpretation of the future. Sci-Fi goodness.

  • @RavenswoodProductions
    @RavenswoodProductions 13 лет назад +2

    I was 5 years old, but I remember this ride.

  • @jimspy1001
    @jimspy1001 14 лет назад +7

    "...extracting the vast oil riches of the continental shelves..." Amazing to watch and see how absolutely ignorant we were of the dangers our own technology posed to us. No blame, no finger-pointing...we were all enthralled with the future and technology back then. But when he spoke that line...I felt my heart sink. A moment of silence, please, for the Gulf of Mexico...

  • @snarkus63
    @snarkus63 10 лет назад +40

    So where's Fry and Leela?

    • @dk50b
      @dk50b 9 лет назад +3

      Wrong Futurama! The show's named for the 1939 version, as noted in the title caption of "The Inhuman Torch" from Season 7.

    • @snarkus63
      @snarkus63 9 лет назад +4

      David Koenig (you mean to tell me you REALLY couldn't tell that was a joke?)

    • @dk50b
      @dk50b 9 лет назад +4

      Actually I thought your question was hilarious, but couldn't resist the chance to be a know-it-all. Must be the Hermes in me.

    • @snarkus63
      @snarkus63 9 лет назад +2

      David Koenig "Hermes"...now THAT's a good one!

  • @Trainy2
    @Trainy2 10 лет назад +9

    Where the hell are the Seacopters? I want one now, dammit!

  • @perry1559
    @perry1559 2 года назад

    I was 5 then. We lived one subway stop away from this. I had to go through this ride every time I dragged Mom to the Fair, both of them on weekends. I probably went at least 2 dozen times. Likely more.

  • @pbatommy
    @pbatommy 10 лет назад +6

    Narrated by the great Alexander Scourby

  • @michaelandrew4488
    @michaelandrew4488 7 лет назад +1

    I want one of those fancy feather hats .. so futuristic!!

  • @robertbernardin8315
    @robertbernardin8315 11 лет назад +1

    Wow. This is the first time I've seen this since I was 8 years old and I remember every scene and detail like it was yesterday

  • @michaelbowie3269
    @michaelbowie3269 9 лет назад +3

    Oh boy, I can't wait.

  • @paulmurphy42
    @paulmurphy42 10 лет назад +1

    Great reply, thanks! It makes me wish even more that I had been there...you and this film are making me feel 8 again!

  • @rod1148
    @rod1148 15 лет назад

    I was there will my family for a full day in summer of 1964 and again in 65. 16-17 yrs old at the time. Thanks for the memories! Will have to dig out the slides my dad made...

  • @jimm3370
    @jimm3370 7 лет назад

    Thank you so much for putting this up. I was six when I took that ride and seeing it again... wow.

  • @Cristinact
    @Cristinact 2 года назад +2

    Just great!! Thanks so much for sharing! One of the best things for me was the two generations (the boy and the old man) witnessing this concept of the future. What would they both be thinking? Certainly both look amazed.

  • @momzy3
    @momzy3 13 лет назад

    Thanks for posting this!

  • @heru-deshet359
    @heru-deshet359 6 лет назад

    I relived my childhood. Thanks!

  • @donovandelaney3171
    @donovandelaney3171 2 года назад +1

    They need to bring back the Futurama 2 World Fair ride.

  • @johnrobinsoniii4028
    @johnrobinsoniii4028 Год назад

    I remember that exhibit. The line was super long but the “Futurama Ride” was worth it. And I also remember the commercial on the radio that began with, “When you see The Fair, see The Future first…” and seeing the ad on a billboard, “If you’ve only seen it once, you haven’t seen it all.”

  • @EonityLuna
    @EonityLuna 15 лет назад +1

    I have a "Disney's Wonderful World of Knowledge" encyclopedia that contains photographs of the models shown in that video; remember being awed and inspired by them as a child, and they still do inspire me.
    It's quite great to be able to see some of those models in motion and from another visual perspective here.

  • @gregglevin5612
    @gregglevin5612 7 лет назад

    I went to this Exhibit at the World's Fair of 64 -65 and remenber it well. I lived a bike ride away from Parson and Northern Blvd. in Flushing, Queens, NY, USA.. I must laugh as my brother rode me to World's Fair on his bike's handle bars. I was seven years old .. times have changed. lol. .

  • @VitricArt
    @VitricArt 8 лет назад +11

    Many here asking, "what happened to the future?" Oh, it arrived... but our snaky cynicism killed our glowing optimism. Brutal reality dictated the rest.

  • @johncarter1956
    @johncarter1956 10 лет назад +6

    My left ear enjoyed this, the wonderful world of mono.

  • @ATINKERER
    @ATINKERER 3 года назад +1

    I went on that ride, I remember it too.

  • @crixxxxxxxxx
    @crixxxxxxxxx 14 лет назад +1

    Golly! The 80's are gonna be groovy!

  • @Markcava
    @Markcava Месяц назад

    Narrated by Alexander Scourby. I still remember well the smell and feel of those seats-with the headsets moulded into them.

  • @heru-deshet359
    @heru-deshet359 4 года назад

    I loved that ride so much I rode it ten times in one day.

  • @MsDisneylandlover
    @MsDisneylandlover 4 года назад

    i just loved old stuff

  • @alphabeets
    @alphabeets 4 года назад +2

    The concept of the smartphone and the internet never occurred to them. They got it completely wrong.

  • @QnOfWshfulThnkng
    @QnOfWshfulThnkng 16 лет назад

    WOW! I remember this outstanding exhibit vividly! This is what I recall the most about the '64-'65 World's Fair! Thanks to whomever put this up! I just time-traveled to my youth! I'm still POed that we didn't get these "Jetson's-like" predictions in our lifetime. This country needs new vision, new direction and most of all, optimism.

    • @coloradostrong
      @coloradostrong 2 года назад

      You were in Alaska in 1964, counting seals. Knock it off.

  • @deplorabledave1048
    @deplorabledave1048 2 месяца назад

    I was about the same age in 1964. Blonde, blue eyes. I could have been that kid. I was that kid.
    I VIVIDLY remember those lunar rovers moving back and forth on this incredible display. I wished the ride had moved slower so I could examine all the details of the exhibit more closely.
    I vaguely remember the rest of the ride. Just that moon base portion is still imbedded in my memory.
    I thought it was the coolest thing!!!

  • @katakisLives
    @katakisLives 10 лет назад +1

    it was a great vision for the future!

  • @AlexMcGillvrey
    @AlexMcGillvrey 10 лет назад +14

    The world really does need a Underwater hotel.

    • @AlexMcGillvrey
      @AlexMcGillvrey 10 лет назад +3

      Cindy Fox I like to check out the two underwater hotels that currently exist.

    • @masonsykes2240
      @masonsykes2240 7 лет назад +1

      And it should be decorated in Art Deco. And be called the "Rapture Hotel".

  • @marcparella
    @marcparella 3 года назад +1

    "And in the future there will be parking like man has never seen before."

  • @andrewgordon235
    @andrewgordon235 3 года назад

    Shades of the original Johnny Quest. Epic!!!!!
    I bet we could do most of this by now.

  • @louvarricchio780
    @louvarricchio780 3 года назад +1

    An imaginative future that still's to be. :-)

  • @donovandelaney3171
    @donovandelaney3171 2 года назад +1

    We're almost there.

  • @iscrapman
    @iscrapman 14 лет назад

    amazing !

  • @anibalbabilonia1867
    @anibalbabilonia1867 2 года назад +1

    Here we are in the future! And that still looks like the future! We haven’t reach that stage yet!😂

  • @JamesJLaRue
    @JamesJLaRue 6 лет назад

    Societal and environmental issues aside...I really do miss my childhood assumption, fueled by things like this, about how the structures and vehicles of the future would look. I am watching this on my hand-held, everything-doing computer video phone though, so thats cool. Just wish I lived in an outerspace bubble.

  • @andrewcripps6266
    @andrewcripps6266 7 лет назад +1

    The closed captioning of this video is hilarious.

  • @simonf8902
    @simonf8902 2 года назад +1

    So cut down the rainforest. Build lots of freeways. Consume more. Turn the ocean and Antarctica into factories. Yes. That’s pretty true these days. Thanks General Motors.

  • @Robert.K
    @Robert.K 8 лет назад

    Cool! I just found a brochure in the basement and had to google it. I found one identical brochure on eBay with an asking price of $99.96. Nice video that shows a, for me unknown, but interresting story.

  • @chrisphelan2419
    @chrisphelan2419 Год назад

    Interesting is the contrast between the young boy and the older man, a scene which is shown several times in the video. The older man symbolizing the past and the young boy the future. Those that rode the ride as a kid are now looking back as that older man. How time flies.

    • @RetroJack
      @RetroJack 10 месяцев назад

      These days, it would be called "grooming".

  • @Moneygetjealous
    @Moneygetjealous 7 лет назад +1

    I'm so glad our future ain't like that. All that future talk and they had no clue that computers will change everything. During that time, one computer takes up an entire room and it still can't do shit. I remember back in the early 90s where I was stuck in a car for hours on the way home as a kid, completely bored trying to entertain myself with a plastic car. I would sit there thinking how awesome it would be to watch tv on those long car rides. We came a long way

  • @jkryanspark
    @jkryanspark 21 день назад

    The future that was promised was not the future we were given.

  • @superluminal89
    @superluminal89 8 лет назад +2

    At :18 the brotha walking past in the line looks like Malcolm X

  • @louismarcus
    @louismarcus 3 года назад

    I took this ride as a kid and remember being in awe at the time. At the time we couldn't see it for what was, like most of the fair offerings, nothing more than extravagant corporate propaganda.

  • @Laura151The
    @Laura151The 7 лет назад

    I remember going to the '64-'65 New York World's Fair when I was a kid.

    • @Laura151The
      @Laura151The 7 лет назад

      A lot of what they showed at the GM Futurama exhibit never quite came to pass.

  • @srita764
    @srita764 13 лет назад

    This is a pretty nice ride

  • @Zamboro
    @Zamboro 12 лет назад

    @Zamboro
    That's not to mention the undersea resorts being built in Fiji and the Phillipines, undersea mining in Papau New Guinea, undersea spa in the Maldives, undersea visitor observatories in Israel and China, the Atlantica civilian undersea colony in the works, Virgin Galactic's consumer space tourism, Space Adventures offering trips around the moon, the two inflatable Bigelow space habitats orbiting Earth (unmanned) as we speak, and the X-Prize 'Race to Inner Space".

  • @57medve
    @57medve 12 лет назад

    My mother was worlking at the Guinean pavillion and I was at the fair everyday, without mummy and daddy, and I am not the little boy. I still have a T-shirt with the Unisphere on, I was 10 !

  • @echodelta9
    @echodelta9 2 года назад

    I remember seeing this short on TV at the time and being the same age as the kid in the film I was impressed, but when it got to the "jungle highway paver" scene I had my first awareness that all this future is good is not all good. Hoof and mouth disease has has had a say on building the Pan American Highway thru the Darien gap. The first freaks dosed on LSD and went on a road trip to the fair crossing the US and also thought some of the Futurerama stuff was a joke or worse. 1939 was before my time but 1964-5 was not. Needless to say Futurerama is a great animated series.

  • @AnthonyBoccaccio
    @AnthonyBoccaccio 11 лет назад

    I saw this in 1964, sitting on that moving seat, and thought that one day I'd go to the jungle to see the road, paved and with a yellow line down the middle. The rest is history.

  • @Wig4
    @Wig4 11 лет назад +3

    This is a great example, how World Fair exhibitions in the past, excelled in telling total fairy tales, in order to raise sympathy for a brand, and sell more.
    This changed a lot. Most of the recent World Fairs, concentrate on the tremendous problems there are in the world right now, and the limited chances to solve them.

  • @jkryanspark
    @jkryanspark 21 день назад

    Bell Telephone (or was it AT&T?) had a similar ride. The music that played was Aaron Copeland's Fanfare for the Common Man. I went on it more frequently than the other rides because the lines were less long. Everybody wanted to go on the ride at the Ford exhibit because you got to ride in real Ford convertibles.

  • @richardg1426
    @richardg1426 2 года назад

    I like the part using the oceans to feed the world ! We have fished them out in many places and polluted our Rivers. So much for the Future.

  • @AdventureJim1969
    @AdventureJim1969 10 лет назад

    I was only 8 years old at the time. But I remeber that even though the lines were long at the Fair, they moved rather fast. There was no extra admission to enter Futurama once we were in the Fairgrounds.

  • @sinz52
    @sinz52 11 лет назад

    I saw it too, as a young child. I was so small that I had to squat on the chair in order for my head to reach the headphones, which were fixed in one position.
    The message was that travel would liberate us. Then it showed beautiful gleaming cities. It didn't occur to me (or to most other visitors) that the ability to live anywhere would result in flight from the cities and urban decay. It didn't occur to GM what would happen to Detroit.

  • @Mixedupcrazy1
    @Mixedupcrazy1 8 лет назад +2

    Venture Industries: The Future is WOW.

  • @ATINKERER
    @ATINKERER 3 года назад

    I think that part of the optimism was because of the very rapid developments in the space program. Things were progressing so fast that people were sure there would be cities on the moon, flying cars, etc, very soon. When you realize that we went from putting a chimp in a rocket for a quick sub-orbital flight (up and down fast like an elevator), to landing on the moon in less than ten years you can understand the optimism.

  • @FableWolfe
    @FableWolfe 4 года назад +1

    I feel robbed of this kind of a future. There's just something so saddening about knowing this kind of a world will never be.

  • @kenzokenzo8940
    @kenzokenzo8940 3 месяца назад

    It's been 60 years. I was in that pav maybe 13 times. After you saw it a few times I looked for something else. I was the go-to guy. Whenever we had company I was the leader that showed them everything. Everything but the Schaffer pav, I was too young. There was a small pav for women and makeup, I went in there and sat down in a booth and the mirror told me what kind of makeup was for me, THe women looked at me, but it was a big goof to me

  • @markosparko7873
    @markosparko7873 7 лет назад +1

    Wow an America that looked forward with hope, whose driving force was to make the peoples lives better not just the rich richer. An America that felt it could do anything and that did not see everything in terms of who you could screw over or hate next.

  • @RedOcktober
    @RedOcktober 10 лет назад

    yes... where did it go... what happened... i remember the Futurama ride like it was yesterday... my eyes opened as wide as the kid in the film...
    --Mike

  • @stephencook1063
    @stephencook1063 11 лет назад

    I was there, same age as the boy in the film. Too bad we missed the mark on all of that prediction, but it was fun to think about.

  • @zagaroooo
    @zagaroooo 10 лет назад

    wow amen---I remember this ride when I was just a wee 7 year old....the franternity of world fair goers from new York...we are family..and with jesus and god and moses and muhammed...together as family --now we have the faith to cure all illness..to make the children smile...with our faith in our ONE GOD..and his gentle flowerlike beauty love and supernova power(quite a paradoxical contrast--yet able to)
    love rob....lets see where he wants us to go

  • @lukehauser1182
    @lukehauser1182 5 лет назад

    Pre-Star Wars animation - a reminder how amazing SW visuals were at the time 0:55

  • @alabamabregan
    @alabamabregan 12 лет назад

    The coolest thing is the tabs on the kid's shirt collar.

  • @brianarbenz1329
    @brianarbenz1329 5 лет назад +3

    A virtually hyperventilating announcer (Alexander Scourby, I believe) is putting a positive spin on what we now know as Rainforest Depletion.

    • @mwayne9109
      @mwayne9109 5 лет назад +1

      People wanted cars. Houses. Toys and shiny stuff. And more and more stuff. (and they still do). They cared little back then because the Earth still felt endless. But we have DOUBLED the population since I was born. That terrifies me.

    • @HalOBrien
      @HalOBrien Год назад

      The Writer is. And then the Director told the Narrator to read it the way he does. This was a group effort.

    • @brianarbenz1329
      @brianarbenz1329 Год назад

      @@mwayne9109 Hi. I just discovered your post. I agree, but in the 3 years since you noted the population having doubled, would you believe, the consensus now is that it is starting to shrink, pretty much everywhere. They're talking about it dropping to maybe 3 billion in 40 years (which could be a good thing).
      Of course, dominant paradigms shift, and the big population decline may be discredited in a few years. Three years ago, we certainly didn't see it becoming a thing.

    • @mwayne9109
      @mwayne9109 Год назад +1

      @@brianarbenz1329Good points. I agree it would be a good thing-in the long run- and it may happen, one way or another. The last time I looked at the World Population Clock however, it looks the same to me as it has for years.
      (A net growth of between 100 and 150 thousand new mouths per day). That just seems so unsustainable. I wish I had an answer.

  • @deeblite
    @deeblite 12 лет назад

    Horizons had the benefit of another 20 years and the prior existence of this.

  • @GrayBlood1331
    @GrayBlood1331 15 лет назад

    I couldn't help but hear Mike and the bots while watching this :D

  • @SailorBarsoom
    @SailorBarsoom 10 лет назад +13

    For the jungle highway I've got a better idea: tunnel 40 metres below the forest and leave the plants and animals alone. Then, put mini-cameras in the forest and project real-time video on the walls of the tunnel in HDTV. Everybody wins.
    I did really like the cars guided with electronic precision, remarkably safe. That's the Google car, folks.

    • @teddyrocker
      @teddyrocker 6 лет назад

      The problem is that under the rain forest is the aquifer that collects and recycles all the rainwater. That is what is really important in rain forests. Making a tunnel below the aquifers implies an infrastructure comparable to the Channel Tunnel for each road that crosses a rain forest. No company will assume such a cost, because it knows in advance that it would lose money.