@@pinknotthebarbie I saw the high street series. I was was only recommended this channel about a week ago and I'm really enjoying seeing what life was like (I'm 43 so I was born in 1978). It is so different to hearing about these times and some parts have been hard to see, namely how the Hawkes family had to see the signs 'no coloureds' in the sixties. In some ways we haven't learnt anything from the past and how people treated each other. We need programs like this so that we can change. I'm not English however my ancestors were descendants and my sister lives in England with her family. I live in New Zealand where we grew up.
All the way through this series Saskia has been the most impressive. She has shouldered hardships and changes with fortitude, maturity and good nature. I'm sure she has gone far
I loved the power cuts as a child because it meant the candles would come out which to me made everything cosy & magical, I still love candles to this day because of this at the age of 58.
I think he was living his best life before this series he got involved in.. He has a close and loving relationship with his wife and children and they with him. THATS the BEST life!
It makes me a bit sad to hear that these kids aren’t allowed to go out and play. I grew up going out and playing all day long and not even seeing my parents until the street lights came on was pretty normal. It gave us a sense of confidence and independence. What’s going to happen to these kids when they grow up?
Exactly! I would do the same back in the 1970s. Meet friends outside and bike around the neighborhood, play games, etc., all day long, and as long as I was back home for dinner time, then all was fine.
I loved the '70's. My mother was not so keen with the power-cuts, bread and sugar shortages etc. but I didn't care back then. We did not have a T.V., (my Grandparents did) and so playing out all day was normal. I remember my Grandad complaining about all the strikes - they seemed to be on the news about it on a daily basis, plus stuff about the Lebanon, Beirut, bombings, the I.R.A., Henry Kissinger, Idi Amin (who scared me to death as a kid). Gosh. Memories.
@@lexiburrows8127 I grew up in the US, and we didn't have power or water cuts or sugar or bread shortages. But we did have gasoline shortages around 1973. I remember seeing on the news cars lined up for hours waiting to get as much gasoline as they could, but I was only 11, so it didn't really matter to me.
I grew up in the 90's and early 2000's in a rural area in Ontario my siblings and I were always outside playing even in the forest and all that with the other neighborhood kids. In the summer we were outside from after breakfast until dinner accept for a quick lunch break.
It had a kind of magic didn't it? We would spend ages with tinfoil and mirrors, trying to get maximum light, then play cards and draughts or do shadow nonsense! People seem to have lost the art of inventiveness/resourcefulness. Which is a bit worrying as they are going to need them again soon
I couldn't 100% enjoy them as our road was rostered for the power cut on Thursdays when Top of the Pops was on. The kids at school who weren't cut off used to rub it in saying Slade/T Rex were brilliant last night or simply asking "Did you watch TOTP last night" knowing we couldn't, Arrogant swine's, but I'd have done the same :D
I was a young Mother in 1972, and had to prepare every bottle for my daughter each day, working out around the powercuts .I had moved south to a city, and our young family were in a multi-storey flat, which meant that the lifts did not work when rhe electric supply was off. You had to make sure that your shopping was done when the lifts were working, as managing a pram and a couple of bags of shopping could not be done, if you had to bring it up 9 flooors of stairs! Happy days!
This was a wonderful series and I really enjoyed it. The children were SO well spoken, and were very good at verbalizing their feelings and insights on the era's. I know it's not possible, but I would be interested to see what everyone is up to now that almost 10 years has passed since the experiment.
Please bring this show back. I am so sad to not see these families anymore as each and every family unit was so lovely and interesting. I wish them all nothing but happiness.
"Every household had a glass fish" - I still have one of these glass fishes in my living room XD. I've recognized so many items from my childhood but I've never seen someone having furry walls!
LOL we had a glass fish too, and a bowl of wooden fruit. I too recognized a lot of the decorative items. I enjoyed being a child in the 70's. Loved my bike with the banana seat, called her Lucy lol.
We never had a glass fish! my mother thought they were 'common!' My aunt, on the other hand, collected them, and those creepy glass clowns. Remember the handkerchief point vases/bowls? I won one of those on a tombola at the school fete and was so proud to take it home to mom. She kept it for years. Looking back she probably hated it, but I had won it for her, so it was special! It got broken by my dad, along with other stuff when he did something stupid and fell into the wall unit He wasn't drunk, (his idea of a night out was half a pint of mild) I think he fell off a stepladder or something, doing some DIY, which he was singularly unsuited for and my mom had asked him not to do. So he was out of favour for some time! Lol
@@hogwashmcturnip8930 Hahah, thank you for reminding me about those glass clowns! Yes, they were creepy. I had completely forgotten about them and laughed out loud when I read your comment. Always liked those glass fish though. There was something endearing about them, probably because they were so common. 😄🤡🐠
I was a seventies kid I remember the power cuts and the strikes and three day week the water shortage and getting water from a stand pipe with the hot summer we were given a jam sandwich and a bottle of orange juice and told be in when the street lights come on or else this brings back a lot of memories
Britain was a bit different from the US in the '70s. No water shortage, no power outages unless there was a storm or somebody ran into a pole. Hot summers meant staying inside where there was air conditioning, I hated the heat, still do. "Washing up" was putting the dishes in the dishwasher. And of course at the end of the '70s we got a computer. Oh, and yes of course I learned to shoot a gun as a kid. I was probably 7 or 8 the first time I fired a rifle. Wasn't really my thing, I got my first soldering iron in the '70s, took a lot of things apart.
I m not yet a british citizen, but i love this episode. It s soo different from my childhood back in the '80 in Romania. I ve always wonder myself how it would be to live in such a beautiful and free country. Watched nearly every single episode from Ansolute History and sometimes i even cried watching the workhouses stories.
These turn back series have been absolutely great! (Both this family series as well as the high street one). I could easily watch the same set up with new set of families. I would love to see how things were even further back from the Victorian era as well. I thank the families who participate. They selected fantastic families for the documentary/experience.
British television is so good! I don't even watch it here in America anymore. I'm so glad to have found your channel, I've subscribed and am discovering all of this television treasure you've uploaded. Thank you!
Great series filmed in my hometown, Morecambe. As a teenager, bride and mother in the 1970's the film sets, cars and fashions were very accurately portrayed and I realise a lot had to be packed into the one episode covering the whole decade. But I have to add the first plastic carrier bag made its appearance in 1975 sold by the co-op (where I worked on Saturdays) alongside the change to supermarket shopping in place of the corner shops where you got served by the shopkeeper! By 1976 I was married and pregnant and it was horrble as it was the hottest summer ever and having to go and get water from a standpipe!! (1973-had all David Bowie's L.P.'s and saw him 'live' in May, great memories!).
No the first plastic carrier bags were before 75, my Dad fed up working in the mines got a job at a local factory making carrier bags, and one of their big customers were Mark's and Spencer's a thick white plastic bag with the dark green logo on it, my Dad brought a massive roll home with him one time, people thought we were posh and shopped at M& S all our neighbours had them as well, this was about 1970/ 71.
In first grade, in 1972, I was 6. The teacher was allowed to to grab a naughty kid and spank them in front of the class. But even us kids knew it was an old fashioned move and I never saw it done but once.
I was really surprised by Sandra....she was so shocked by the place they lived in in the 60's, and than she became a land lady, renting out same dirty and horrible rooms she was living in and (rightfully so) complaining about.
Really good programme. I was coming into my teens in the seventies'. My dad had taken on his first mortgage and was plunged into a lengthy strike only months later. My mother was a pub cleaner, but had to go for longer hours working in a children's home. I remember having to do my homework by candlelight. God, what the older generation left us with. My dad went back to work eventually, but the damage was done and the factory closed down a few years later. He never worked again. Exciting times in many ways. Great music and toys etc, but hard to establish yourself. The jackboot of the unions rang hard.
Very glad this episode didn't go the "oh, back in the day kids played OUTSIDE with each OTHER and weren't GLUED TO SCREENS" route without mentioning the fact that 21st century kids often aren't *allowed* that kind of outdoor freedom.
The one flaw with this concept is that when going back to a past era, you are constantly aware of what is missing from your present day life. I was a teenager and young adult at this time leaving school in 1974 and I don't remember being unhappy or discontent, we just got on with life and accepted it. May be I was lucky but I remember the 70s as being the happiest decade of my life. As a new young adult, everything was very exciting. My first job, passing my driving test, getting a car (Ford Cortina of course), my first legal visit to a pub, voting for the first time (1979) starting my carreer in the Police, I wish I could relive it all!
And the gas shortages. I remember as a teen in the 70s I would sit on the hood of the car in the summer and tan. We would wait for hours in gas lines. I remember when they issued certain days to get gas too.
I was born in 1970. My dad had just returned from Vietnam a year before I was born and was scheduled to get out of the Army. He was afraid he did not have the job skills to support my mom and me so he rejoined the Army as a Private First Class (E2) a very low rank. More secure than his only hob skill as a farmer of hops which do not grow in Indiana where we were. My mom always worked part time as a store clerk or office typist. The first 5 years of my life were lean with uncles or aunts living with us to share money. I shared a bedroom with my uncle Mike from 4 to 7 years old. My dad made rank pretty quick and my mom got lucky with some well paying office manager jobs for electrical, plumbing repair and pest control companies. During my teen years my mom was a civilian employee of the military as a Colonel's public liaison as a GS-10 Step 3 (A pretty high civilian pay rank) while my dad had made E-9 1st Seargeant (a very high enlisted rank) We lived an upper middle class life most of the time from age 8 on getting better as I turned 13 years old.
Growing up in the 70s & 80s were great times mostly. Playing out until tea time and could be trusted to be on my own till my parents came home from work after sch. I remember the power cuts and usually on the weekend😩.
Wait, you mean kids "these days" just play with their ipads all day? I was LITERALLY born in 2006, and everyone in the neighbourhood would just get together right after school to cycle and play on the streets until around 2015
well it depends on A the country B the type of person and C the neighbourhood, i was born 2005 and we did go out and play however i was never too social, my father was very introverted so i guess i inherated that, i would go out from time to time and play whit the little friends i had, of course when technology came i guess i got carried by it, however my parents weren't able to afford a lot of stuff, such as laptops, computers or a ps2, but one my uncles who lived in the US who you know had some money bought me a ps3 and hell i had fun whit that, i don't think staying in home is all that bad, but definitevely a balance between both is very important and i guess being a city dweller also has an effect on you, since i live in a city as population dense as london
Omg exactly!! I think that the people remember the "good old days" when they were kids. They didn't have all the problems the adults were having. They just nostalgic about their childhood without realizing all the hard things from it.
@@rebeccavarkevisser8830 I think you have a valid point. But I also think you overlook the fact that kids have eyes and ears. Maybe they just chose not to use them. I used mine, and my ears, when my grandparents talked. I will admit that I didn't realise how hard it must have been for my parents until I was married myself. They always made sure I had food, clothes, even holidays. I wonder now what they deprived themselves of to do that. But I think that gave them something too. We had no car and never went anywhere much, and if we did it was like some big excursion. Holidays were like the Grand Tour. My mother would store up tinned food and other things and send them by train, along with our clothes and bedlinen. We were only going to a caravan in Devon! But because we had no car, we had to walk miles from the train station. It made perfect sense to send food and clothes on, as we would be in a remote place. We couldn't have carried it. We would catch a bus that dropped us at a crossroads and then we walked. this was in the 60s, not the Middle Ages! But it was so special Turning a certain bend in the road and seeing the sea ... At the risk of sounding boring, most kids are deprived of that kind of experience now, which is why they are obnoxious! Lol
@@hogwashmcturnip8930 Kids do not understand adult problems. If you tell them that an economic situation is bad, they would look at you as if you were mad because they do not understand. It is not until they reach adolescence that they realise how bad a situation is.
Loved each episode of the show! Do you by chance have What's for dinner? Which is also a look through the decades of how eating habits and availability has changed... it would be so great to watch it. Thank you for all your programming @Absolute History
I recognised so much from my childhood, but kids today have no idea how hard it was. My grandma still had an outside loo, there was blackouts & the drought of 76 & jubilee year 77
Bravo! This has been such a fun and emotional experiment to watch. It is one thing to read about history but to see/watch it play out adds so much more insight.
mid 70;s my mum got herself a "little part time job"..dad didnt speak to her for quite a while, and never lifted a finger in the house. she felt guilty so done everything at home too. with my help.
I remember the power cuts, we lived in an all electric house and had to cook on camping stoves for four people! I was a teenager and thought it was a giggle at the time!
Shag carpeted walls that matched the floors were so cool in the 1970's. They were usually in the basement rec room or as we called it the 'rumpus room'.
@@vylbird8014 yeah, in the US there was a debate that lasted into the late 1970's as to whether or not it was better to make children's pajamas and stuffed animals out of synthetic fabric that could burst into flames or fabric that was flame-retardant but caused cancer. Good times.
I grew up in the 7os and I Never knew of anyone having furry walls! Some of this was like parallel universe for me. I was like 'Which planet 70s was this?' I don't remember that!'
VHS didn’t actually become available in shops until early 1980’s. And most families were still using blankets. And everything came in a brown paper bag and cellophane was new.
The flat Lisa has looks better than the one we had when we moved with our single mom to London in the 1970’s. I remember that it was challenging getting anything at all and we stayed at a hotel for at least a month. We finally got a 1 bedroom, cold water flat in Alberts Buildings. There was a tin tub in the kitchen and a little wooden closet containing a toilet and that wax-paper toilet paper that was popular in England at the time for some reason completely unfathomable to us. The flat was always cold and we could hear rats scratching in the garbage chute. The living conditions were a far cry from our 3 bedroom ranch-style home in the CT suburbs. I still remember our Albert’s Building neighbors though; they were wonderful, welcoming, down-to-earth people. ❤
To be fair that wax toilet paper was unfathomable to most people in those days. It actually repelled moisture! Awful stuff but ever-present in schools at the time. 😄
@@musicloverlondon6070 I really feel someone should get to the bottom of that mystery. I imagine the inventor was a sadist who kept soft, absorbent TP at his own house.
Excellent series. Truly enjoyed all of the families, and watching how they adapted and worked together through their history. Highly recommend watching. Sad it has come to an end.
This took me back to the days when I was out on my bike with friends all day, only coming home for lunch & back out again & home only when the street lights came on for dinner. On school days we would rush home after school, get changed & out with friends. Kids were far more social in those days & more independent. Everyone looked out for each other & neighbours were all friendly. I knew everyone by name in my street. I bet it’s not like that now?
My father worked construction in the 70's, I remember the strikes , one lock out was 6 months. You couldn't scab, what ever your politics . You'd never get rehired . Once the site you were on was over no foreman would hire a scab because it would cause trouble. Welfare and social services wouldn't help as they'd tell the wife and mother, "your man has a job to go to .it's his choice that's causing your problem".
A brilliant series. We enjoyed it so much - don’t know how we missed it first time as we like this sort of thing, but it was completely new to us. Lovely seeing all the families really throw themselves into it without all the usual tantrums and moaning and trying to change things. They were brilliant. Really tried to live each era authentically, both the good and the bad. Sometime, please somebody repeat this, but actually have the families spending six months in each era, so that they can get a real feel for how it was to live that life day after day, week after week, month after month - a week per era is really too short, especially given how much work went into all the house interiors. There must be people who’d do it. Give these families awards, they were real troopers. 👍
I remember the power cuts it was like a cool adventure, we had a coal fire so wasn't an issue , toasted cheese bread off the fire nothing like it, life was more simple then 😔😔😔
That yellow daisy wallpaper whisked me back in time so fast I got whiplash. My mother had it on the kitchen wall. As for the strikes, power cuts & no water, living in Australia, we had (& still sometimes have) water use restrictions enforced by heavy fines in drought years & I remember builders' union boss Jack Mundy being interviewed on the roof of a nice old building during the green strikes in the mid or late seventies, protesting the demolition of lovely, perfectly serviceable Federation (1890-1915) terraces etc. The unions were strong back then.
Using “The Family” as a guide, which was first aired in 1974 - this is pretty accurate. I’m American, so our 70s was a little different. I was 14 in 1974. Love this series!
I was born in the 70s and raised my kids similarly. They did have a limit on how far they could go but they had HOURS of unsupervised play in the neighborhood. They will tell you themselves that they are glad for it. When I was young, we rode our bikes across town to swim and soccer practice. I hate that many children have so little freedom to just play outside anymore.
My mum and dad grew up in the 70's and I was born in 1988 and grew up in the 90's and they were the same with me, I was outside all day long unsupervised riding my bike or playing with the local kids. I do let mine go out on their own but they're teens now, wouldn't have while they were really little.
I remember the power cuts in South East London, the electric would go off for about a minute, then come back on, you then had 2 minutes to get candles & if you had them, they were a luxury item torches ready, then you were plunged into darkness until the following day. We were fortunate to have gas central heating & a gas cooker, so, we could still cook or boil water in a saucepan for washing up or making tea & coffee, but of course there were those who had electric cookers which made the country help those who were less fortunate.
They had only just become available around this time, and would have been out of reach for the vast majority of families. I doubt the family portrayed here would have been able to afford one.
I was 15 in 1970 so grew up in the 60s. As kids we spent all our time outside playing games and playing in tree houses or wandering the fields. Those poor modern day kids don't know what to do with themselves without today's technology.
My kids still go out all day with their mates, not all kids are glued to a screen. While my kids do have games consoles and phones, they do like to kick a ball about and ride their bikes.
My Mom had one of those fish, and my Dad had a green Cortina. I was 16 and working in a shoe shop during the power cuts. I thought it was great, because when the power went off the boss used to close the shop and send us all home, lol! 😀
I had a Saturday job from the age of 13 on a wallpaper stall on the local market. I prided myself on being able to unroll the samples with a flourish and show them where the join was. By god's we had some freaky stuff. Ancient Egyptian (ta, the obsession with King Tut) and sepia fairies I had that in my first 'front room'. They weren't obvious, and it was hilarious watching stoned friends going 'Wow, do you know you have fairies crawling up your walls? Err YES! That was 78, not 72, but they have not got anywhere near that with this. Where is punk? And I never knew any man, apart from my father whot did this 'New Man' stuff in the early 70s. But back to wallpaper I got my wartime parents to put black wallpaper on their chimney breast! I still think it was cool! The tupperware thing is crap too. I got dragged to a couple. You had tea and rich tea biscuits and some woman trying to tell you how great their plastic salt and pepper pots were!
I can relate with Lisa Rhodes. I'm a single mom of two very technology obsessed teenage boys. My youngest does lawn mowing to help with their entertainment expenses. However I'm not a a successful businesswoman. I work 34 hours a week at a gas station.
Wow, the 70s were rough in the UK. I was born in 75 in the US, I don’t think they had things so rough here in regards to power outages and utilities. I do remember issues with gasoline shortages, but I don’t think it had a severe effect on my family personally.
I remember the meat shortage too. Dad got us a few steers for our small pasture. Until they got loose and ended up down by the river. I named them Ritchie, Potsie, Ralph, and Fonzie. No more happy days for those steers after that.
It could be quite grim. We hired our tv from a rental shop. Every so often the tv would bust(sometimes actually making wierd banging and crackling noises) and be sent back,and no tv for 3 weeks! But we could safely play outdoors all day,or read books,or draw. I dont remember ever being bored. And the power cuts were quite fun. Most people only had a bath or washed their hair once a week. Handed down clothes and shoes. Talc and bubblebath for Christmas presents. No jewellery. No heating upstairs!!! I got chilblains every winter.
The water shortage, and loss of power and garbage clean up was nothing my grand parents, and parents had to go through here in North America, in the 70's, but they did have to go through a gas crisis where it was hard to get ⛽petrol, and they had to wait for hours in line.
I remember those power cuts vividly. Sitting with the light of candles several nights a week. At least we had gas so we could eat and make hot drinks. I remember playing board and card games with my Dad until it was time to go to bed.
Although very rare in 2021, I love a power cut....The feeling of helplessness, the light from candles, a sense of everyone being in the same boat, to making tea on a little gas camping stove...I love it
apart from "everything in this show that I remember growing up in the 70s" I just saw the combination green bowl and slicer/grater lid from my mother *that I still use today* . Actually, I just noticed a few more 70s Tupperware items that are still going strong in my kitchen draw! My mother bought here chest freezer from Macross in Cardiff in '71. the payment card was in £sd & £pp. It only failed in 2011, so I think she had her money's worth!
wow so many memories from the 70's, not a good decade for me as my mum died in 76 leaving my dad to bring up 2 little girls and work at the same time. Not something he had ever contemplated. I remember the power cuts and dustman strikes. Rubbish all piled up in the streets and the rats. Some things you never forget.
Mums die in all decades… Rubbish temporarily in the streets due to dispute is preferable to the permanent rubbish in the disgusting streets of repulsive ‘modern’ Britain…
I was six when the blackouts were on and i remember my dad charging various car batteries for the portable tv we had for the caravan so we still watched tv when the electric went off. I used to go into infant school the next day and tell my mates what they missed on tv. We always had a lot of people children and adults in our front room on blackout days!
Little did we kids know that some television presenters and some of our pop stars were child predators. All that Glitters is not gold. And don't ever let him fix it for you, and keep an I on those two little boys with two little toys, they could be in danger.
I’ve watched every episode of the family life series through the documentary and it was eye opening to watch the changes they experienced. This series was very enjoyable. Thanks.
Yeah I agree not a lot of car ownership it can be goggled more people didn’t have cars than did where as now it’s the over way round now and lots of the cars were a bit rust buckety (in the uk anyway) and I’m talking about the north east. I also think when watching things like this that there is a lot of artistic license and misinformation. I can’t remember the power cuts or food shortages but the power went off a lot more in those days normally anyway so it was kind of a thing and not that alarming. The paper and media were scaremongering a lot then too.
You are so right. We had a car, but many of my friend's familes did not. Towards the end of the 70s it was more common. We only had 1 car and my mum didn't even ,earn to drive till 1980.
I remember the three day week. It ruined our school play - there was no power for the evening performances. And in London in 1976/7 I remember the very odd sight of looking out of the window of the hostel where I was living, and seeing just candles on the other side of the road, which was in a different area. The traffic jams were terrible. All the traffic lights were out on the crossroads, so the cars and lorries had to fight it out between them as to who was going to move and who was going to wait. Imagine London with no traffic controls.....
Does anyone appreciate how much work goes into these series? Getting together the clothing, fixing up the apartments- it was TONS of preparation
Sounds more like fun than work to me, but yes, there was a lot of thought put into this series.
I do I do!!!!!!
it's just such perfect job
Yes that's exactly why I joined!! I'm obsessed with this channel and this show!
I do. Great job.
I’m sad this series has come to an end, and I hope Absolute History releases another living back in history series soon
On. Kp
The BBC does back in time series. Try and find back and further back in time for tea. They also did a corner shop version and highstreet version
@@pinknotthebarbie Do you know what the BBC series is called
@@dxsty_ look up bbc back in time in u
Your search engine ul find it
@@pinknotthebarbie I saw the high street series. I was was only recommended this channel about a week ago and I'm really enjoying seeing what life was like (I'm 43 so I was born in 1978). It is so different to hearing about these times and some parts have been hard to see, namely how the Hawkes family had to see the signs 'no coloureds' in the sixties. In some ways we haven't learnt anything from the past and how people treated each other. We need programs like this so that we can change. I'm not English however my ancestors were descendants and my sister lives in England with her family. I live in New Zealand where we grew up.
All the way through this series Saskia has been the most impressive. She has shouldered hardships and changes with fortitude, maturity and good nature. I'm sure she has gone far
her sister however...
I loved the power cuts as a child because it meant the candles would come out which to me made everything cosy & magical, I still love candles to this day because of this at the age of 58.
thats only a 70s thing? im 16 and that happened in my home all the time when i was little
When the Dad was singing. He was living his best life 😆
I think he was living his best life before this series he got involved in.. He has a close and loving relationship with his wife and children and they with him. THATS the BEST life!
His singing voice was giving me a headache.
He could be a movie star, if he could get out of that place...
@@Aaron-kq7rd - if it's the last thing he ever does.
Oh my yes he was. Couldn't tell what song that was but all the same
It makes me a bit sad to hear that these kids aren’t allowed to go out and play. I grew up going out and playing all day long and not even seeing my parents until the street lights came on was pretty normal. It gave us a sense of confidence and independence. What’s going to happen to these kids when they grow up?
Exactly! I would do the same back in the 1970s. Meet friends outside and bike around the neighborhood, play games, etc., all day long, and as long as I was back home for dinner time, then all was fine.
I loved the '70's. My mother was not so keen with the power-cuts, bread and sugar shortages etc. but I didn't care back then. We did not have a T.V., (my Grandparents did) and so playing out all day was normal. I remember my Grandad complaining about all the strikes - they seemed to be on the news about it on a daily basis, plus stuff about the Lebanon, Beirut, bombings, the I.R.A., Henry Kissinger, Idi Amin (who scared me to death as a kid). Gosh. Memories.
@@lexiburrows8127 I grew up in the US, and we didn't have power or water cuts or sugar or bread shortages. But we did have gasoline shortages around 1973. I remember seeing on the news cars lined up for hours waiting to get as much gasoline as they could, but I was only 11, so it didn't really matter to me.
I grew up in the 90's and early 2000's in a rural area in Ontario my siblings and I were always outside playing even in the forest and all that with the other neighborhood kids. In the summer we were outside from after breakfast until dinner accept for a quick lunch break.
State imposed serfdom
17:00 " As night falls single mother Lisa reflects on her first day on the street" Priceless
Haha I didn't even notice that bit
I was a teenager in the 70s and loved the black outs. Really fire, candles and radio Luxembourg
It had a kind of magic didn't it? We would spend ages with tinfoil and mirrors, trying to get maximum light, then play cards and draughts or do shadow nonsense! People seem to have lost the art of inventiveness/resourcefulness. Which is a bit worrying as they are going to need them again soon
I couldn't 100% enjoy them as our road was rostered for the power cut on Thursdays when Top of the Pops was on. The kids at school who weren't cut off used to rub it in saying Slade/T Rex were brilliant last night or simply asking "Did you watch TOTP last night" knowing we couldn't, Arrogant swine's, but I'd have done the same :D
Yes remember it well. I was 16. It was quite exciting. We knew it wouldn’t last so we just enjoyed the moment.
I like how they tell about their real feelings in the moment and it isn't all acting I mean children tell the truth
Our government have done a terrible job educating the generations since...
As an early 70s teenager, I loved it. Played outside, the music, discos, fashion, TV., etc. It remains the best time of my life.
yeah summer holidays from school, never saw our mums from morning til evening
I'm going to miss these families. We just start to grow fond of them and they are snatched away 💣💨
LOVED IT!!!! ❤
I was a young Mother in 1972, and had to prepare every bottle for my daughter each day, working out around the powercuts .I had moved south to a city, and our young family were in a multi-storey flat, which meant that the lifts did not work when rhe electric supply was off. You had to make sure that your shopping was done when the lifts were working, as managing a pram and a couple of bags of shopping could not be done, if you had to bring it up 9 flooors of stairs! Happy days!
This was a wonderful series and I really enjoyed it. The children were SO well spoken, and were very good at verbalizing their feelings and insights on the era's. I know it's not possible, but I would be interested to see what everyone is up to now that almost 10 years has passed since the experiment.
Facebook search them. The Meadowses are still into polo.
Please bring this show back. I am so sad to not see these families anymore as each and every family unit was so lovely and interesting. I wish them all nothing but happiness.
That was brillaht, going through the decades like that. More of this type of films please.
Absolut history have so many awesome docs like these, been binchwatching here in my illness days 🙈😉
I'd love a "Where are they Now?" Follow up on these individuals and their perspectives.
Yes! I tried googling the show and "where are they now" but nothing.
I was wondering how someone could be so excited over a glass fish and then remembered that my Grandpa still has one on his window ledge.
"Every household had a glass fish" - I still have one of these glass fishes in my living room XD. I've recognized so many items from my childhood but I've never seen someone having furry walls!
LOL we had a glass fish too, and a bowl of wooden fruit. I too recognized a lot of the decorative items. I enjoyed being a child in the 70's. Loved my bike with the banana seat, called her Lucy lol.
@@trendywipp3715 my mother still has her glass fish in a cabinet. It was an expensive one for the time but i just can't take to it.
We never had a glass fish! my mother thought they were 'common!' My aunt, on the other hand, collected them, and those creepy glass clowns. Remember the handkerchief point vases/bowls? I won one of those on a tombola at the school fete and was so proud to take it home to mom. She kept it for years. Looking back she probably hated it, but I had won it for her, so it was special! It got broken by my dad, along with other stuff when he did something stupid and fell into the wall unit He wasn't drunk, (his idea of a night out was half a pint of mild) I think he fell off a stepladder or something, doing some DIY, which he was singularly unsuited for and my mom had asked him not to do. So he was out of favour for some time! Lol
@@hogwashmcturnip8930 Hahah, thank you for reminding me about those glass clowns! Yes, they were creepy. I had completely forgotten about them and laughed out loud when I read your comment. Always liked those glass fish though. There was something endearing about them, probably because they were so common. 😄🤡🐠
I was a seventies kid I remember the power cuts and the strikes and three day week the water shortage and getting water from a stand pipe with the hot summer we were given a jam sandwich and a bottle of orange juice and told be in when the street lights come on or else this brings back a lot of memories
Britain was a bit different from the US in the '70s. No water shortage, no power outages unless there was a storm or somebody ran into a pole. Hot summers meant staying inside where there was air conditioning, I hated the heat, still do. "Washing up" was putting the dishes in the dishwasher. And of course at the end of the '70s we got a computer.
Oh, and yes of course I learned to shoot a gun as a kid. I was probably 7 or 8 the first time I fired a rifle. Wasn't really my thing, I got my first soldering iron in the '70s, took a lot of things apart.
Loved the Meadows the most, they worked so hard in nearly every era, so it was nice to see that they started to finally get a leg up.
I m not yet a british citizen, but i love this episode. It s soo different from my childhood back in the '80 in Romania. I ve always wonder myself how it would be to live in such a beautiful and free country. Watched nearly every single episode from Ansolute History and sometimes i even cried watching the workhouses stories.
"Who is it???"
THAT IS DAVID FREAKING BOWIE!!!!!! 🤣
These turn back series have been absolutely great! (Both this family series as well as the high street one). I could easily watch the same set up with new set of families. I would love to see how things were even further back from the Victorian era as well.
I thank the families who participate. They selected fantastic families for the documentary/experience.
British television is so good! I don't even watch it here in America anymore. I'm so glad to have found your channel, I've subscribed and am discovering all of this television treasure you've uploaded. Thank you!
IKR? The brits know how to make an interesting show!
Im Filipino and dont watch philippine movies and shows...i just love British tv, documentaries etc.
British television is vile woke shit.
Great series filmed in my hometown, Morecambe. As a teenager, bride and mother in the 1970's the film sets, cars and fashions were very accurately portrayed and I realise a lot had to be packed into the one episode covering the whole decade. But I have to add the first plastic carrier bag made its appearance in 1975 sold by the co-op (where I worked on Saturdays) alongside the change to supermarket shopping in place of the corner shops where you got served by the shopkeeper! By 1976 I was married and pregnant and it was horrble as it was the hottest summer ever and having to go and get water from a standpipe!! (1973-had all David Bowie's L.P.'s and saw him 'live' in May, great memories!).
No the first plastic carrier bags were before 75, my Dad fed up working in the mines got a job at a local factory making carrier bags, and one of their big customers were Mark's and Spencer's a thick white plastic bag with the dark green logo on it, my Dad brought a massive roll home with him one time, people thought we were posh and shopped at M& S all our neighbours had them as well, this was about 1970/ 71.
I remember my Grandad saying why should he carry a plastic bag with advertising all over it. He didn’t like the plastic bags for that reason!
@@alisonsmith4801 You're right that it was well before 75' because it was actually the 60's with the idea for them arising in the 50's !
In first grade, in 1972, I was 6.
The teacher was allowed to to grab a naughty kid and spank them in front of the class.
But even us kids knew it was an old fashioned move and I never saw it done but once.
I was really surprised by Sandra....she was so shocked by the place they lived in in the 60's, and than she became a land lady, renting out same dirty and horrible rooms she was living in and (rightfully so) complaining about.
@12:45 She called the dirty dish rack "mingin" and my heart smiled. :)
Really good programme. I was coming into my teens in the seventies'. My dad had taken on his first mortgage and was plunged into a lengthy strike only months later. My mother was a pub cleaner, but had to go for longer hours working in a children's home. I remember having to do my homework by candlelight. God, what the older generation left us with. My dad went back to work eventually, but the damage was done and the factory closed down a few years later. He never worked again. Exciting times in many ways. Great music and toys etc, but hard to establish yourself. The jackboot of the unions rang hard.
This was a wonderfully educational series I really enjoyed watching all of them ! Thank you
My Mum used to do Tupperware parties when I was young. It was about 45 years ago and we still have some of her collection to this day.
Very glad this episode didn't go the "oh, back in the day kids played OUTSIDE with each OTHER and weren't GLUED TO SCREENS" route without mentioning the fact that 21st century kids often aren't *allowed* that kind of outdoor freedom.
I love this series. 80’s and 90’s PLEASE!
They did that on another channel here ! bbc 2 I think ! 🏴🌹
The one flaw with this concept is that when going back to a past era, you are constantly aware of what is missing from your present day life. I was a teenager and young adult at this time leaving school in 1974 and I don't remember being unhappy or discontent, we just got on with life and accepted it. May be I was lucky but I remember the 70s as being the happiest decade of my life. As a new young adult, everything was very exciting. My first job, passing my driving test, getting a car (Ford Cortina of course), my first legal visit to a pub, voting for the first time (1979) starting my carreer in the Police, I wish I could relive it all!
True. We can't miss what hasn't been invented yet.
I was a teenager, in the mid to late 70s.
I remember the power cuts.
The same age but in the US. What we had was gas rationing, sitting for hours in your car in line at the pump.
In Canada in '74 I remember the sugar shortage and the cost of all things rising. $5 for a bag of sugar, unreal.
And the gas shortages. I remember as a teen in the 70s I would sit on the hood of the car in the summer and tan. We would wait for hours in gas lines. I remember when they issued certain days to get gas too.
I was born in 1970. My dad had just returned from Vietnam a year before I was born and was scheduled to get out of the Army. He was afraid he did not have the job skills to support my mom and me so he rejoined the Army as a Private First Class (E2) a very low rank. More secure than his only hob skill as a farmer of hops which do not grow in Indiana where we were. My mom always worked part time as a store clerk or office typist. The first 5 years of my life were lean with uncles or aunts living with us to share money. I shared a bedroom with my uncle Mike from 4 to 7 years old. My dad made rank pretty quick and my mom got lucky with some well paying office manager jobs for electrical, plumbing repair and pest control companies. During my teen years my mom was a civilian employee of the military as a Colonel's public liaison as a GS-10 Step 3 (A pretty high civilian pay rank) while my dad had made E-9 1st Seargeant (a very high enlisted rank) We lived an upper middle class life most of the time from age 8 on getting better as I turned 13 years old.
I read your whole story, thanks
💗
Growing up in the 70s & 80s were great times mostly. Playing out until tea time and could be trusted to be on my own till my parents came home from work after sch. I remember the power cuts and usually on the weekend😩.
Wait, you mean kids "these days" just play with their ipads all day? I was LITERALLY born in 2006, and everyone in the neighbourhood would just get together right after school to cycle and play on the streets until around 2015
Exactly!!
well it depends on A the country B the type of person and C the neighbourhood, i was born 2005 and we did go out and play however i was never too social, my father was very introverted so i guess i inherated that, i would go out from time to time and play whit the little friends i had, of course when technology came i guess i got carried by it, however my parents weren't able to afford a lot of stuff, such as laptops, computers or a ps2, but one my uncles who lived in the US who you know had some money bought me a ps3 and hell i had fun whit that, i don't think staying in home is all that bad, but definitevely a balance between both is very important and i guess being a city dweller also has an effect on you, since i live in a city as population dense as london
LITERALLY 😂
@The Blue Max 713 They were probably trying to add emphasis. Yes the grammar is incorrect, but these are RUclips comments, not an English essay.
Tbh im struggling with the idea that someone born in 2006 is allowed to use the Internet without parental controls right now lmao
As my mother would say when people talked about "the good old days"...NOW are the good old days. People forget how rough life could be.
Omg exactly!! I think that the people remember the "good old days" when they were kids. They didn't have all the problems the adults were having. They just nostalgic about their childhood without realizing all the hard things from it.
The past sucked.
@@rebeccavarkevisser8830 I think you have a valid point. But I also think you overlook the fact that kids have eyes and ears. Maybe they just chose not to use them. I used mine, and my ears, when my grandparents talked. I will admit that I didn't realise how hard it must have been for my parents until I was married myself. They always made sure I had food, clothes, even holidays. I wonder now what they deprived themselves of to do that. But I think that gave them something too. We had no car and never went anywhere much, and if we did it was like some big excursion. Holidays were like the Grand Tour. My mother would store up tinned food and other things and send them by train, along with our clothes and bedlinen. We were only going to a caravan in Devon! But because we had no car, we had to walk miles from the train station. It made perfect sense to send food and clothes on, as we would be in a remote place. We couldn't have carried it. We would catch a bus that dropped us at a crossroads and then we walked. this was in the 60s, not the Middle Ages! But it was so special Turning a certain bend in the road and seeing the sea ... At the risk of sounding boring, most kids are deprived of that kind of experience now, which is why they are obnoxious! Lol
@@hogwashmcturnip8930 I agree with you. Life was hard, and we had very little, but we made the best of the little we had.
@@hogwashmcturnip8930 Kids do not understand adult problems. If you tell them that an economic situation is bad, they would look at you as if you were mad because they do not understand. It is not until they reach adolescence that they realise how bad a situation is.
The production of these series is to notch. I hope the team won awards. Beautifully done!!!
The good old days, power cuts, 3 day week, standing in queues for bread, just as well we had good music ❤😊
Loved each episode of the show! Do you by chance have What's for dinner? Which is also a look through the decades of how eating habits and availability has changed... it would be so great to watch it. Thank you for all your programming @Absolute History
“I’m more worried about hearing mum and dads stories of the 70s” dude one day you’ll wish you listened to all their stories
Yes. I wish I had asked my parents more questions about the past. Now they're gone.
That was my EXACT thought hearing that, so sad 😢
When they are gone, the stories have gone with them 😭
Through it all, the families bonded so beautifully. I LOVE this channel and series!! Eager for more, please and thank you.
I remember the power cuts and 3 day week. Mum let everyone come and cook in our kitchen as we had a gas cooker
I recognised so much from my childhood, but kids today have no idea how hard it was. My grandma still had an outside loo, there was blackouts & the drought of 76 & jubilee year 77
Bravo! This has been such a fun and emotional experiment to watch. It is one thing to read about history but to see/watch it play out adds so much more insight.
Moree seriess like thisss please! soo in love of this turn back time and the farm series change my life forever!!! thank you
mid 70;s my mum got herself a "little part time job"..dad didnt speak to her for quite a while, and never lifted a finger in the house. she felt guilty so done everything at home too. with my help.
A lot of men acted that way and they didn't really even know their kids very well .
I remember the power cuts, we lived in an all electric house and had to cook on camping stoves for four people! I was a teenager and thought it was a giggle at the time!
I had the yellow and orange flower wallpaper in my bedroom when I was seven, I chose it myself.
Did it give you epilepsy.
I like that wallpaper. Wish I had, had some in my bedroom as a kid. I just had painted walls.
I hate vacuuming. Would never sign up for furry walls 😂
Shag carpeted walls that matched the floors were so cool in the 1970's. They were usually in the basement rec room or as we called it the 'rumpus room'.
I have a pollen and dust allergy and just the thought of those makes me itch on my whole body.
Looks like they predate the concept of fire safety too.
@@vylbird8014 yeah, in the US there was a debate that lasted into the late 1970's as to whether or not it was better to make children's pajamas and stuffed animals out of synthetic fabric that could burst into flames or fabric that was flame-retardant but caused cancer. Good times.
I grew up in the 7os and I Never knew of anyone having furry walls! Some of this was like parallel universe for me. I was like 'Which planet 70s was this?' I don't remember that!'
So good to see the kids playing outside as children should 🍀
15:04 Don't let the suuuuuuuuuun go down on meeeeeeeeee ♫
Brilliant! Good giggle
So glad I stumbled upon this series! I’d love more 🦋
VHS didn’t actually become available in shops until early 1980’s. And most families were still using blankets. And everything came in a brown paper bag and cellophane was new.
Yes I noticed that too, Soda Stream and roller skates were also big around 1981
Correct ,although our school in Angus had a Philips v2000 video recorder in 75/76
The flat Lisa has looks better than the one we had when we moved with our single mom to London in the 1970’s. I remember that it was challenging getting anything at all and we stayed at a hotel for at least a month. We finally got a 1 bedroom, cold water flat in Alberts Buildings. There was a tin tub in the kitchen and a little wooden closet containing a toilet and that wax-paper toilet paper that was popular in England at the time for some reason completely unfathomable to us. The flat was always cold and we could hear rats scratching in the garbage chute. The living conditions were a far cry from our 3 bedroom ranch-style home in the CT suburbs. I still remember our Albert’s Building neighbors though; they were wonderful, welcoming, down-to-earth people. ❤
To be fair that wax toilet paper was unfathomable to most people in those days. It actually repelled moisture! Awful stuff but ever-present in schools at the time. 😄
@@musicloverlondon6070 I really feel someone should get to the bottom of that mystery. I imagine the inventor was a sadist who kept soft, absorbent TP at his own house.
Excellent series. Truly enjoyed all of the families, and watching how they adapted and worked together through their history. Highly recommend watching. Sad it has come to an end.
This took me back to the days when I was out on my bike with friends all day, only coming home for lunch & back out again & home only when the street lights came on for dinner. On school days we would rush home after school, get changed & out with friends. Kids were far more social in those days & more independent. Everyone looked out for each other & neighbours were all friendly. I knew everyone by name in my street. I bet it’s not like that now?
My father worked construction in the 70's, I remember the strikes , one lock out was 6 months. You couldn't scab, what ever your politics . You'd never get rehired . Once the site you were on was over no foreman would hire a scab because it would cause trouble. Welfare and social services wouldn't help as they'd tell the wife and mother, "your man has a job to go to .it's his choice that's causing your problem".
I love this!!!! Keep them coming!!¡!
I love the back in time videos y'all have been making!! They are spectacular! Make more!!!
A brilliant series. We enjoyed it so much - don’t know how we missed it first time as we like this sort of thing, but it was completely new to us.
Lovely seeing all the families really throw themselves into it without all the usual tantrums and moaning and trying to change things. They were brilliant. Really tried to live each era authentically, both the good and the bad.
Sometime, please somebody repeat this, but actually have the families spending six months in each era, so that they can get a real feel for how it was to live that life day after day, week after week, month after month - a week per era is really too short, especially given how much work went into all the house interiors. There must be people who’d do it.
Give these families awards, they were real troopers. 👍
I remember the power cuts it was like a cool adventure, we had a coal fire so wasn't an issue , toasted cheese bread off the fire nothing like it, life was more simple then 😔😔😔
That yellow daisy wallpaper whisked me back in time so fast I got whiplash. My mother had it on the kitchen wall.
As for the strikes, power cuts & no water, living in Australia, we had (& still sometimes have) water use restrictions enforced by heavy fines in drought years & I remember builders' union boss Jack Mundy being interviewed on the roof of a nice old building during the green strikes in the mid or late seventies, protesting the demolition of lovely, perfectly serviceable Federation (1890-1915) terraces etc. The unions were strong back then.
I loved the 70’s , great music , crazy wallpaper , Advocat & lemonade , £1 notes and lava lamps 👍🏻👍🏻
Using “The Family” as a guide, which was first aired in 1974 - this is pretty accurate. I’m American, so our 70s was a little different. I was 14 in 1974. Love this series!
I was born in the 70s and raised my kids similarly. They did have a limit on how far they could go but they had HOURS of unsupervised play in the neighborhood. They will tell you themselves that they are glad for it. When I was young, we rode our bikes across town to swim and soccer practice. I hate that many children have so little freedom to just play outside anymore.
My mum and dad grew up in the 70's and I was born in 1988 and grew up in the 90's and they were the same with me, I was outside all day long unsupervised riding my bike or playing with the local kids. I do let mine go out on their own but they're teens now, wouldn't have while they were really little.
I remember the power cuts in South East London, the electric would go off for about a minute, then come back on, you then had 2 minutes to get candles & if you had them, they were a luxury item torches ready, then you were plunged into darkness until the following day. We were fortunate to have gas central heating & a gas cooker, so, we could still cook or boil water in a saucepan for washing up or making tea & coffee, but of course there were those who had electric cookers which made the country help those who were less fortunate.
The fact this was made 10 years ago. I would love to see new families from todays world
Yeahhhhhh 10 years ago totally wasn't made in 2021
I was a kid in the 70s and a teen in the early 80s. I'm pretty sure VHS players were an 80s thing?
I don't remember them before about 1983
Depends on how well off you were.
They had only just become available around this time, and would have been out of reach for the vast majority of families. I doubt the family portrayed here would have been able to afford one.
They were expensive and huge.
We had one at school in my last year 75/76 my dad bought a Betamax in 1980 !
“If it’s yellow, let it mellow. If it’s brown, flush it down”
I remember that saying.
I was 15 in 1970 so grew up in the 60s. As kids we spent all our time outside playing games and playing in tree houses or wandering the fields. Those poor modern day kids don't know what to do with themselves without today's technology.
But they're brought up by the parents who were brought up by people who lived in the 1970s so it's just how things evolve
Okay but kids were being kidnapped back then because they weren't told not to talk to strangers 🙄
@@mewesquirrel6720 That just didn't happen in Ireland then.
Nowadays, children are being told how dangerous the outside world is.
My kids still go out all day with their mates, not all kids are glued to a screen. While my kids do have games consoles and phones, they do like to kick a ball about and ride their bikes.
My Mom had one of those fish, and my Dad had a green Cortina. I was 16 and working in a shoe shop during the power cuts. I thought it was great, because when the power went off the boss used to close the shop and send us all home, lol! 😀
Wow, I’d love to take part in a project like this. What an awesome experience
What a great series! I thoroughly enjoyed every single episode, and they were all very informative & eye-opening 👍
O my gosh I had that same wallpaper in my bedroom as on this show with the Orange flowers. I had a tweety bird poster on top of it.
I had a Saturday job from the age of 13 on a wallpaper stall on the local market. I prided myself on being able to unroll the samples with a flourish and show them where the join was. By god's we had some freaky stuff. Ancient Egyptian (ta, the obsession with King Tut) and sepia fairies I had that in my first 'front room'. They weren't obvious, and it was hilarious watching stoned friends going 'Wow, do you know you have fairies crawling up your walls? Err YES! That was 78, not 72, but they have not got anywhere near that with this. Where is punk? And I never knew any man, apart from my father whot did this 'New Man' stuff in the early 70s. But back to wallpaper I got my wartime parents to put black wallpaper on their chimney breast! I still think it was cool! The tupperware thing is crap too. I got dragged to a couple. You had tea and rich tea biscuits and some woman trying to tell you how great their plastic salt and pepper pots were!
This series was amazing! Binge watched it all. Hoping for something similar in the future.
I agree! It takes a lot of work to do a series like this!!! I am so amazed at how they pulled this off!!! It’s amazing!!!
Saskia:...I'm not really good with young children...
also Saskia: *gets along with Alice and Lily swimmingly*
I love the cute names they give crossing guards. Lollipop lady. Adorable
awww i really missed the other family who left in the previous episodes. all the cast are lovable ❤
I love the way these ppl talk they sound so elegant and respectful
It’s a northern English accent ! 🏴🌹
I love that Sandra made her know how bad it was
I can relate with Lisa Rhodes. I'm a single mom of two very technology obsessed teenage boys. My youngest does lawn mowing to help with their entertainment expenses. However I'm not a a successful businesswoman. I work 34 hours a week at a gas station.
Wow, the 70s were rough in the UK. I was born in 75 in the US, I don’t think they had things so rough here in regards to power outages and utilities. I do remember issues with gasoline shortages, but I don’t think it had a severe effect on my family personally.
Yes it was quite austere in the 1970s. I remember it!
I remember the meat shortage too. Dad got us a few steers for our small pasture. Until they got loose and ended up down by the river. I named them Ritchie, Potsie, Ralph, and Fonzie. No more happy days for those steers after that.
It wasn't rough atall. This program is condensed. I loved the 70s.
The 1970s was a grim decade as I remember it. Definitely wouldn't want to go back. 😐
It could be quite grim. We hired our tv from a rental shop. Every so often the tv would bust(sometimes actually making wierd banging and crackling noises) and be sent back,and no tv for 3 weeks! But we could safely play outdoors all day,or read books,or draw. I dont remember ever being bored. And the power cuts were quite fun. Most people only had a bath or washed their hair once a week. Handed down clothes and shoes. Talc and bubblebath for Christmas presents. No jewellery. No heating upstairs!!! I got chilblains every winter.
The water shortage, and loss of power and garbage clean up was nothing my grand parents, and parents had to go through here in North America, in the 70's, but they did have to go through a gas crisis where it was hard to get ⛽petrol, and they had to wait for hours in line.
I remember those power cuts vividly. Sitting with the light of candles several nights a week. At least we had gas so we could eat and make hot drinks. I remember playing board and card games with my Dad until it was time to go to bed.
You're lucky, my father died at the beginning of 1974
Again very, very interesting, vivid history, I am delighted!
Although very rare in 2021, I love a power cut....The feeling of helplessness, the light from candles, a sense of everyone being in the same boat, to making tea on a little gas camping stove...I love it
If your washing was in the washing machine, Gaggy and a power cut and suddenly came and stopped it mid-cycle, you would not like it.
apart from "everything in this show that I remember growing up in the 70s" I just saw the combination green bowl and slicer/grater lid from my mother *that I still use today* . Actually, I just noticed a few more 70s Tupperware items that are still going strong in my kitchen draw!
My mother bought here chest freezer from Macross in Cardiff in '71. the payment card was in £sd & £pp. It only failed in 2011, so I think she had her money's worth!
😊🤣🙌
I was watching reruns of Bless This House before Xmas and they were using plates we've still got in our kitchen.
wow so many memories from the 70's, not a good decade for me as my mum died in 76 leaving my dad to bring up 2 little girls and work at the same time. Not something he had ever contemplated. I remember the power cuts and dustman strikes. Rubbish all piled up in the streets and the rats. Some things you never forget.
Mums die in all decades… Rubbish temporarily in the streets due to dispute is preferable to the permanent rubbish in the disgusting streets of repulsive ‘modern’ Britain…
I put real salted butter & some half & half in my instant mash & it's almost passable haha!
A bag of spuds was cheaper
Yes to the butter & salt, also I use MILK in place of water. I like to add a dash of garlic powder in mine as well, the kids love it!
I was six when the blackouts were on and i remember my dad charging various car batteries for the portable tv we had for the caravan so we still watched tv when the electric went off. I used to go into infant school the next day and tell my mates what they missed on tv. We always had a lot of people children and adults in our front room on blackout days!
I could watch these all day, thanks!
Little did we kids know that some television presenters and some of our pop stars were child predators. All that Glitters is not gold. And don't ever let him fix it for you, and keep an I on those two little boys with two little toys, they could be in danger.
I’ve watched every episode of the family life series through the documentary and it was eye opening to watch the changes they experienced. This series was very enjoyable. Thanks.
My mom just opened up boxes and cans to make dinner, everything was well done. Had to teach myself how to cook
WOT no Silver Jubilee?
Yes I can remember all of this. Not sure it was realistic that everyone had cars - we certainly didn't
Really? Everyone in my little street did!
There was two or three cars in my whole street,my dad and friends dads rode bikes to the dockyard
Yeah I agree not a lot of car ownership it can be goggled more people didn’t have cars than did where as now it’s the over way round now and lots of the cars were a bit rust buckety (in the uk anyway) and I’m talking about the north east.
I also think when watching things like this that there is a lot of artistic license and misinformation.
I can’t remember the power cuts or food shortages but the power went off a lot more in those days normally anyway so it was kind of a thing and not that alarming.
The paper and media were scaremongering a lot then too.
@@tommytit1618 my did too we had a car but he didn’t want it getting “spoilt” at the docks (Smiths Docks) 🙂.
You are so right. We had a car, but many of my friend's familes did not. Towards the end of the 70s it was more common. We only had 1 car and my mum didn't even ,earn to drive till 1980.
I remember the three day week. It ruined our school play - there was no power for the evening performances. And in London in 1976/7 I remember the very odd sight of looking out of the window of the hostel where I was living, and seeing just candles on the other side of the road, which was in a different area. The traffic jams were terrible. All the traffic lights were out on the crossroads, so the cars and lorries had to fight it out between them as to who was going to move and who was going to wait. Imagine London with no traffic controls.....
Cool series. I learned something about life in the past even though I don’t live in the UK