A Design for Modern Living - ca. 1935

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  • Опубликовано: 27 фев 2012
  • A series of short commercials for various General Electric appliances. Dishwasher. Monitor top refrigerator. Electric range with Calrod units. Electric kitchen. Appliances for small kitchens. GE electric range. Flat-top refrigerator. Compact kitchen for small home or apartment. Likely would have been shown individually as shorts before movie features.
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Комментарии • 688

  • @jisthename7163
    @jisthename7163 4 года назад +208

    This stuff seems more “modern” than our modern stuff.

    • @nathangardner2796
      @nathangardner2796 3 года назад +9

      FACTS

    • @Goldarr1900
      @Goldarr1900 3 года назад +8

      That’s what I was thinking..lol

    • @conservative_cook6406
      @conservative_cook6406 3 года назад +8

      I LOVE the old things 😍

    • @Debbie742
      @Debbie742 3 года назад +11

      First thing I said was why don't my refrigerator shelves slide out? Lol

    • @clarevette459
      @clarevette459 3 года назад +16

      I bet they would still work better than what we have now. Things were built to last instead of just throwing them away.

  • @donaldwycoff4154
    @donaldwycoff4154 5 лет назад +8

    That opening jingle would make a heck of a ringtone for Presidential Alerts.

  • @theodorenovak3363
    @theodorenovak3363 4 года назад +27

    I have that monotor top refrigerator and when your hands are full dayy holding an ice cube tray filled with water that pedal to open the door is a dream. No reaching in the back either. The shelves really do slide forward and solidly. No wiggle wobble glide in and out smoothly. Hope my monitor top runs till I'm gone from this world .

  • @6ixConfessions
    @6ixConfessions 6 лет назад +135

    Growing up in the 70s we had a fridge that had a butter conditioner in it preventing the butter from being too hard or too soft. We also had a wall oven that had a warming drawer perfect for keeping food warm while the oven finished off a roast or some other thing. I miss those little conveniences. And why designers of appliances no longer include them in modern appliances is beyond me, they made so much sense.

    • @6ixConfessions
      @6ixConfessions 6 лет назад +23

      Moon Pie. The butter conditioner was a small compartment inside the fridge that stayed at the temperature that you selected. It ensured that the butter was always spreadable no matter if it was winter or summer or how cold or warm the fridge was and the brand of fridge wasn't super expensive either. It's a feature that isn't available anymore due to the introduction of margarine and butter with olive oil etc. It was a really cool feature though.

    • @JoeKaye-hn5dt
      @JoeKaye-hn5dt 5 лет назад +1

      I miss the built in electric ovens with a rotisserie in it. That was really useful. Why they ever discontinued that I'll never know.

    • @xyz-bz1fc
      @xyz-bz1fc 3 года назад +6

      I remember that butter conditioner compartment too!!

    • @jimm6386
      @jimm6386 2 года назад +4

      The butter warmer thing - GE had in it’s 1940 Delux model - door had a thermometer in it - two aluminum well sealed veggie drawers with thick plate glass tops - in the middle of them was a carbon filter to keep the inside air fresh. It also had stainless steel racks - nice feature compared to the older nickel plated or sink plated shelving. As well as the butter warmer/softener. It was also heavy as all get out though - had to remove the door to get it out of the basement it was in when I bought it (for an extra fridge in the basement was the idea.). But it was still working when I moved from MPLS and donated it to a fraternity on the U of M campus.

    • @6ixConfessions
      @6ixConfessions 2 года назад +3

      @@jimm6386 Manafactured in a time when white goods were designed to last for almost a lifetime. I understand that modern appliances are design to be lighter, more efficient & cheaper but I often wonder why some of those really nifty & logical features have been discarded with more modern appliances. I miss the warming drawer that we had with our Frigidaire oven growing up; modern ovens are less inclined to include one, it seems.

  • @rach1530
    @rach1530 Год назад +7

    How exciting all that new technology must have been for them 😊

    • @msatxgault560
      @msatxgault560 Год назад

      Yep, lol, probably cost more than the house

  • @KMF3
    @KMF3 6 лет назад +188

    Sliding shelves in the refrigerator??? Oh I would love that.

    • @cornjobb
      @cornjobb 5 лет назад +18

      that is still a thing that's offered on refrigerators

    • @paimannamazi3064
      @paimannamazi3064 5 лет назад +11

      Sounds like a good deal, where do I sign up? I haven't seen savings like this in a very long time!

    • @redeemedandreadytofly1423
      @redeemedandreadytofly1423 4 года назад +5

      KMF I’ve got a GE fridge that I bought 6 years ago and it still has sliding shelves

    • @KMF3
      @KMF3 4 года назад +1

      @@redeemedandreadytofly1423 really? Cool

    • @RicardoRamosRetrocomputacao
      @RicardoRamosRetrocomputacao 4 года назад +5

      It's not very common because the shelves couldn't take the weight of a lot of food, so when you pulled it out, it fell.

  • @eckankar7756
    @eckankar7756 2 года назад +6

    I was raised on a small farm. We had an electric range and also had a 100 year old wood burning stove in the kitchen as electricity went out frequently. We had no indoor plumbing so an outhouse out the back door across the yard and down a hill to go to the restroom. Washing clothes took 7 trips from the well to fill up the washer on the front porch, then 7 more trips for rinse water. I am grateful every single day for indoor convinces.

  • @trilbywilby7826
    @trilbywilby7826 6 лет назад +204

    I want the strong pull-out shelves in the fridge like those in the video not the flimsy, cheap plastic ones of today that break so soon.

    • @cornjobb
      @cornjobb 5 лет назад +7

      mine are sturdy tempered glass

    • @Sharon-pb7so
      @Sharon-pb7so 5 лет назад +4

      @@cornjobb So are mine. I have an almost 2 year old LG. It's fabulous.

    • @Kubulek17
      @Kubulek17 4 года назад +1

      Trilby Wilby don’t get a cheap fridge then

    • @Frank-mm2yp
      @Frank-mm2yp 4 года назад +8

      They were not made in China and were not made with so much plastic to make them cheaper to buy. Ditto with automobiles now vs then...

    • @xfhghe
      @xfhghe 3 года назад +6

      I'm sold! I want one of those GE Monitor refrigerator. Sealed in steel!

  • @MrPoupard
    @MrPoupard 5 лет назад +57

    It's nowhere as near as old as the appliances shown here but I have a still fully functioning electric clothes dryer made by Electrolux which my mother purchased from a catalogue in 1956.

  • @caspence56
    @caspence56 5 лет назад +29

    Very few people could afford these gadgets in the middle of the Depression. But this was really interesting; I wouldn't mind trading my "modern" appliances for some of these vintage beauties.

  • @TheRoseAlchemist
    @TheRoseAlchemist Год назад +4

    I like the dishwasher, it seems like it's more heavy duty while fitting into the counter space like more modern ones.

  • @debhayes2822
    @debhayes2822 5 лет назад +58

    I never knew that dishwashers were available in 1935.

    • @DeadAbeVigoda
      @DeadAbeVigoda 5 лет назад

      This was the year after John Dillinger was killed.

    • @58jharris
      @58jharris 5 лет назад +9

      Prior to this video I was under the impression they were invented in the early 50's. Not sure where I got that idea though.

    • @harmonypaige
      @harmonypaige 2 года назад +6

      Dishwashers were actually invented in 1850! It was a manual hand crank type. Josephine Cochran reinvented it to work automatically and in 1886 she was granted a U.S patent!

    • @bikerbabe4442
      @bikerbabe4442 2 года назад +3

      Only took 5 mins to wash . Today's dishwashers run for two hours. What a waste of electricity,water , time and money

    • @653j521
      @653j521 Год назад +1

      @@harmonypaige It would be easier to wash by hand.

  • @NickSoper
    @NickSoper 10 лет назад +258

    Where did the "with the touch of a toe" feature on fridges go? Seems so progressive.

    • @insanemustaine111
      @insanemustaine111 7 лет назад +35

      True. maybe because children/pets opened it accidentally? and get in trouble, I remember hese fridges were dangerous because children can get locked inside and die.

    • @seikibrian8641
      @seikibrian8641 6 лет назад +43

      The toe activated door was nicknamed "the knee buster" by many who owned them. If you didn't quickly move back after unlatching the door it would swing open and hit you.

    • @653j521
      @653j521 6 лет назад +10

      It had a locking mechanism that only worked from the outside as did many up to 1958 when the law required magnetic closing. The really dangerous refrigerators were those that were empty, not those with filled shelves. That's why the doors had to be taken off or tied shut or locks broken.

    • @julieankhan.2801
      @julieankhan.2801 6 лет назад +5

      Nick Soper - love the toe touch. Ingenious!

    • @julieankhan.2801
      @julieankhan.2801 6 лет назад +8

      mustaine65686 - I thought that was when people got rid of the old fridge, and they would put it outside until pickup. Kids would play in it. Now you must take off the door. I didn't know it happened in the house.

  • @thisisme2476
    @thisisme2476 5 лет назад +91

    Loved the recessed range for the stock pot.
    A real good safety feature I wish they had these days.

    • @emilletich
      @emilletich 5 лет назад +19

      They were actually discontinued because they were such an annoyance. They took up a cooking space, they constantly boiled over which became a b*tch to clean down inside the stove, and they were hard to lift and handle when hot.

    • @thisisme2476
      @thisisme2476 5 лет назад +5

      Good point

    • @jenniferggreer457
      @jenniferggreer457 5 лет назад +6

      Still, I think I'd love that,!

    • @YT4Me57
      @YT4Me57 4 года назад +13

      I view that feature as a precursor to the modern day crock pot.

  • @BEKYH83
    @BEKYH83 5 лет назад +32

    To be honest I would sure like a 1935 kitchen on my house, I just love vintage!!!

  • @CajunRose
    @CajunRose 5 лет назад +11

    Now, these are, in my opinion, dream kitchens. Ahh the days when things were built to last a lifetime and then some. Now, everything is built to be replaced or coast a fortune to fix.
    I would SOOO love to have some of the appliances in these kitchens. Especially a dishwasher that actually got hot enough to really do it's job and oh my goodness the stoves.

  • @TheAssyriyan
    @TheAssyriyan 4 года назад +17

    I would love a kitchen like that so big and comfertable with tons of counter space

  • @jimbearone
    @jimbearone 6 лет назад +65

    Those 'Monitor Top' Refrigerators were VERY durable even though they were discontinued MORE than 50 years ago, many hundreds of models are STILL in use and some sell for thousands of dollars - PROOF that they can make durable products but would rather sell you something new every few years for a bigger profit.

    • @luisalthaus7249
      @luisalthaus7249 6 лет назад +2

      50 years ago was 1971!

    • @jimbearone
      @jimbearone 6 лет назад +5

      I did say MORE than 50 years ago - about 1955.

    • @britishchick09
      @britishchick09 5 лет назад +2

      50 years ago was actually 1968. Only three years off!

    • @MichaelSHartman
      @MichaelSHartman 5 лет назад +10

      Planned obsolescence fills our dumps, drains our budgets, doesn't allow us to buy different things, and is actually harder on lesser incomes.

    • @echodelta9
      @echodelta9 5 лет назад +4

      I fixed one up found in the dump found a different control box that fit on the back right corner. It ran for a couple of years, the theater dept of Purdue wanted it for a prop. Then one day my house mate said something smells funny in the kitchen. Coming down the back stairs past the fridge I yelled at him to call the FD and tell them Sulfur Dioxide leaking from the fridge, I will see you outside. They bear hugged it with respirators on and took it outside. The refrigerant is toxic but natural (volcanoes) and does not screw with the air as much as Freon.

  • @chitterville7599
    @chitterville7599 4 года назад +4

    My new home back east this is mine !! Thank you General Electric. Oh and so are those lovely outfits and hair do’s!! lol❤️🌹🐞

  • @user-uf4qr7os4s
    @user-uf4qr7os4s 5 лет назад +266

    how do those products seem so much better than the generic crap we get today?

    • @lantastic1
      @lantastic1 4 года назад +19

      Planned obsolescence.

    • @YT4Me57
      @YT4Me57 4 года назад +30

      They weren't. I remember having the chore of defrosting the freezer in the old style refrigerators. A chore it was, like visiting the Antarctic!!!

    • @elleofhearts8471
      @elleofhearts8471 4 года назад +17

      its possible that making them safer, efficient, simple, culturally universal and disability friendly sacrifices the style/aesthetic. and I'd sacrificed that if I got something safer, efficient with universal usability. A lot of vintage appliances were comically deadly like having direct currents, lead paint, lead piping, no fail safe, and little saftey features.

    • @cjandpalsbydanielmcintosh7281
      @cjandpalsbydanielmcintosh7281 4 года назад +7

      Because things were made better. And companies actually cared about Their products... Now I want a ge lift top refrigerator. Get is still moderately good today.. I think

    • @gatamadriz
      @gatamadriz 4 года назад +9

      Not so much that but there are certain features that have been lost. My mother had a Chambers stove from the 1930s which had a stock pot built in on the top, a bread rising part and warmer and a griddle over a broiler that was superb.
      On the other hand, it was clunky and very few repair persons were around who knew how to repair it.

  • @keira-the-elk
    @keira-the-elk Год назад +3

    Bro, these gadgets were more modern then kitchen appliances today 😭

  • @nurmaybooba
    @nurmaybooba 3 года назад +6

    these appliances are more thoughtful than the ones we get today!

  • @evanchapmanfanman
    @evanchapmanfanman 4 года назад +21

    “Good for a lifetime” was actually true in those days, many of those monitor top fridges are still working today.

    • @majordendrocopos
      @majordendrocopos 3 года назад +1

      Really? Eighty five years later? I find that hard to believe.

    • @krisryan9181
      @krisryan9181 3 года назад +2

      Confirmation bias. The majority of appliances back then were unreliable and some were outright dangerous. You're only seeing the few rare one's that have survived.

    • @billchambersmarquez1964
      @billchambersmarquez1964 Год назад +2

      Very true! My friend has 2 of them one in the kitchen and the other one in the garage

  • @chevydude658
    @chevydude658 6 лет назад +60

    I would LOVE to have one of these fridges! The "touch of the toe" is such a cool idea! ( I loved it on my 1965 Chevy Impala too.) These are some good ideas for appliances. My Mom's best friend had one of those deep well stoves when I was a child. It was already 30-40 years old in the 70's and it was the coolest stove. She used that deep well to make soups and to stew cheap cuts of meat. It was awesome. These are some pretty cool kitchens.

  • @bsteven885
    @bsteven885 5 лет назад +16

    I wish we had modern sliding shelves in OUR refrigerators today!

  • @MerleOberon
    @MerleOberon 9 лет назад +230

    The dishwasher only took 5 minutes? mine needs an hour...

    • @sharid76
      @sharid76 8 лет назад +36

      You'll notice too that there was no mention of any soap product used for the washing. Seems the whole process depended on extremely hot water, likely straight out of the hot water heater without cold water added, and the force of the spray to clean the dishes. There were no "non-sudsing" dishwasher soap products made back then.

    • @bexgolden
      @bexgolden 8 лет назад +27

      +Shari Davenport A lot of laundry powders were designed for cleaning dishes too, instructions were often on the board box and the option was mentioned in cinema and radio advertising.

    • @PaulHojda
      @PaulHojda 6 лет назад +2

      not quite. some are indeed better than others

    • @johnscanlan6337
      @johnscanlan6337 5 лет назад +18

      I bought my G.E. dishwasher in 2017 and the full cycle takes almost three hours, depending on the size of the load. Of course that includes a full dry cycle that the one in this ad doesn't.

    • @JustinSmith-oi9vd
      @JustinSmith-oi9vd 5 лет назад +8

      Many commercial dishwashers made today only take 30 seconds.

  • @emilletich
    @emilletich 5 лет назад +20

    These commercials were awesome. We take for granted how ground breaking most of this was back then. I want a toe-opening fridge and a five minute dishwasher.
    My father grew up poor in this era and had a bathtub in his kitchen and a toilet in the tenement building hallway.

    • @Zuxiasunicorn
      @Zuxiasunicorn Год назад +2

      I could do without that tootling coronet at the beginning of every segment. Otherwise very cool and simple.

    • @taragiles6101
      @taragiles6101 Месяц назад

      The male chauvinism is on point though.

  • @msatxgault560
    @msatxgault560 Год назад +2

    Wow. Mother looks so young & vibrant compared to the 50s & 60s moms

  • @cadavher
    @cadavher 4 года назад +8

    What the heck! Why did they get rid of sliding shelves in refrigerators?!?! That's genius!

    • @Zuxiasunicorn
      @Zuxiasunicorn Год назад

      All hail the wire rack. It takes me an hour and a half to clean my refrigerator taking apart all the shelving, Etc.

  • @donnamarsh3474
    @donnamarsh3474 4 года назад +5

    Amazing that this is 1935! Still coming out of the depression, really. America is an amazing place of ingenuity.

  • @thevintagekitty
    @thevintagekitty 6 лет назад +36

    Loved the kitchens and all the women's fashions look gorgeous!

    • @emilletich
      @emilletich 5 лет назад +2

      But not for roasting meats.

    • @YT4Me57
      @YT4Me57 4 года назад +4

      Don't fall for the hype women wore such outfits while cooking and cleaning house. Fur trimmed sleeves and high heels? That was only for the show of the commercial, in order to make housework more glamorous than it was.

    • @kendralynn897
      @kendralynn897 3 года назад +3

      Yeah but they definitely weren’t wearing dirty yoga pants....

  • @kataisa3
    @kataisa3 3 месяца назад +1

    My grandfather was a GE fan. All of our appliances were GE, USA made. Never had anything go wrong with them for 30+ years. This was in the 70s.

  • @kirksjunque
    @kirksjunque 5 лет назад +29

    What a fun series of GE adverts! I have a 1934-35 Monitor top fridge, just defrosted it today. Yep---that toe treadle is mighty handy, as are the slide out shelves. When you make ice cubes, we use the old metal ice cube trays that need to "freeze in" on the freezer compartment. Not to worry---GE supplied a little bakelite tool with a wire handle that you slide under the lip of the tray to free it up. Works like a charm. Ours came with the original instruction card, cook book, etc etc, even rubber ice cube trays (which we do NOT use). I dread the day our fridge dies, it has been a delight for the past 20+ years..

    • @maggieleroy3184
      @maggieleroy3184 5 лет назад +2

      Kirk Palmatier I'm jealous, just plain jealous!!!! 😂 I wish I had a fridge like that! I hope you will enjoy yours for a long long time!

    • @larryfischer2972
      @larryfischer2972 5 лет назад

      As long as that baby doesn't spring a leak one night, come morning, you'll still be breathing .

    • @MichaelSHartman
      @MichaelSHartman 5 лет назад

      Would love to see it.

    • @lamewarrior
      @lamewarrior 5 лет назад

      About the only thing that goes wrong with them is the cold control and they're still available. I just replaced mine a couple of months ago.

    • @kirksjunque
      @kirksjunque 3 года назад +1

      @@maggieleroy3184 Sad to say, we sold ours to an antique appliance collector a year ago when we had to sell the house. The GE is now an object in a collection and no longer being used and enjoyed. I'm sure it would still start right up if he plugs it in.

  • @rebeccamiller3248
    @rebeccamiller3248 5 лет назад +13

    I like the toe touch opening and the slide out shelves on the fridge. The only thing I don't miss about old fridges is having to defrost them lol. I will be 54 next month n some of them old appliances lasted into the 70s. I loved the built in crock pot on the stove. Wish they would bring it back n add a built in griddle. My great great aunt had a fancy GE kitchen n a wood stove when the electric went out. But then again she lived in a house on an West Virginia mountain top. Lol she had the built in dish washer but she dumped it cause the pipes froze in the winter making a big mess. We found it stored in the storm cellar when she passed in the 1980s. They spent a mint on upgrading that kitchen in the late 30's a whole $700. She up graded once when she bought a new fridge with the built in freezer n added a washer n dryer n she cusde the whole time cause she spent $700 on 3 new appliances when her whole kitchen cost that much. Lol she still cooked bacon n pancakes on the wood stove cause it had the griddle n she kept water boiling in it until dinner she used it to wash dishes. You needed 2 pairs of rules beer gloves to wash dishes if you didn't want burns. So no worries about viruses in her kitchen. Lol she used bleach n boiling water to clean surfaces.

    • @jenniferggreer457
      @jenniferggreer457 5 лет назад +1

      Happy birthday month. We're same age, and just turned 54 two weeks ago

    • @toddsmith1617
      @toddsmith1617 4 года назад +1

      She must have been rich. My mother is 90 and she told me back then was the depression and my grandmother and everyone else had a coal stove.

    • @rebeccamiller3248
      @rebeccamiller3248 4 года назад

      @@toddsmith1617 no they were not rich it was up graded in 1939. Were coming out of the depression and they sold some livestock as well as there vegetables. At the time we were gearing up for ww2. They had big wood stove too. They just switched to the range. Trust me if they were rich that kitchen would have had more than one upgrade in 30 years.

  • @smolpeaches2634
    @smolpeaches2634 3 года назад +3

    The horn is very bothersome but awesome video this is amazing!

  • @drammarah95
    @drammarah95 4 месяца назад +1

    That touch of a toe open door needs to be a thing for fridges nowadays too

  • @Emily_CiK
    @Emily_CiK 4 года назад +1

    It's 2020 and I'm still scrubbing dishes by hand!

  • @rosalindkincannon1078
    @rosalindkincannon1078 5 лет назад +3

    My family has purchased GE appliances for th past 70 years. You could't get rid of them because they never broke down. We have a 70 yr old frig in storage that would still start up if plugged in. Now, not so much barely can get use of them after warranty expires. I want that foot opener ob my new frig 😁

  • @Rayo_Rob_No.17
    @Rayo_Rob_No.17 11 лет назад +33

    These clips in particular are from 1935. The Monitor Top featured in the picture is a 1935 CK type. Not to mention the fashion is mid 30s as well. '37 was the final year the Monitor Top was manufactured, however GE continued to make replacement tops for their Monitor Tops. Great clip, love this! I own a '35 GE Monitor Top!

  • @lindabrown7374
    @lindabrown7374 10 лет назад +89

    I have the same refrigerator! Didn't know what the pedal was for. Now I do, and yes it works.

    • @mottbone
      @mottbone 6 лет назад +10

      Linda Brown, Great! Now, you can actually open it! lol

    • @dickJohnsonpeter
      @dickJohnsonpeter 4 года назад +10

      If it works how could you have possibly not known what the peddle was for? It opened the door when you stepped on it so you did know.

    • @YT4Me57
      @YT4Me57 4 года назад +6

      I would presume that the operating manual for this 1935 refrigerator was lost say 4 decades ago.

    • @JamesQMurphy
      @JamesQMurphy 4 года назад +4

      "Just a touch of the toe!"

    • @califdad4
      @califdad4 4 года назад +3

      @@mottbone it also has a handle

  • @thebuddha4208
    @thebuddha4208 4 года назад +3

    With the kitchen from the 30 is better than my kitchen nowadays

  • @mommyandmatthew6447
    @mommyandmatthew6447 6 лет назад +11

    love the pullout shelves in the fridge

  • @fromthesidelines
    @fromthesidelines 6 лет назад +22

    These "commercials" were originally shown in movie theaters; the "tag" (as seen at 2:07) featured the name- and address- of the local G.E. dealer.

  • @Pro1er
    @Pro1er 4 года назад +4

    A dishwasher that cleans in 5 minutes and uses 1¢ of electricity. I'll take one! About four years ago my mother moved, so she got rid of her second refrigerator that was from the war, and it still worked. Some refrigerators today don't last a year without breaking and they can cost as much as a *_house_* did back when my mother bought her fridge - and that's not an exaggeration!

  • @canuckrcp
    @canuckrcp 7 лет назад +8

    Awesome look back in time, when I actually watched this on the HD screen on my refrigerator door while cooking dinner.
    The things we take for granted today, that were true innovations in their time, makes one wonder how more difficult and inconvenient every day life was, even 80 years ago, as in this video.

    • @mikepeterson764
      @mikepeterson764 7 лет назад +2

      an HD screen on a refrigerator?

    • @musicom67
      @musicom67 5 лет назад +2

      @canuckrcp You REALLY needed that screen on the fridge, eh? What'll crap out first? the compressor or the android version that can't update?

    • @swashbucklemchrue2323
      @swashbucklemchrue2323 4 года назад

      Lol yeah, I didn’t know you had to oil fridges back then. Must’ve made the food smell/taste terrible.

    • @danielthoman7324
      @danielthoman7324 Год назад +1

      I have heard of refrigerators that have computer screens on the doors. that is one of the stupidest GD things I have ever heard of. only a sap would buy something like that.

    • @mpmarvin999
      @mpmarvin999 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@danielthoman7324Nothing stupid about it. I also have one and it gets used at least twice daily. The way our kitchen is setup it’s the perfect solution for us.
      It’s perfect when the wife is sitting down prepping (cutting food to prep for cooking, or mixing something)
      It’s right across from the breakfast nook I built.
      When we first bought it I questioned how much we’d really use it, now I can’t see being without it.

  • @KMF3
    @KMF3 6 лет назад +29

    5 minutes? My modern dishwasher takes 2 hours!!!!

    • @bsteven885
      @bsteven885 5 лет назад +3

      I think this was what is called nowadays a dish "sanitizer" -- which I saw a while back in a little rinky-dink diner. (The diner staff used it to quickly and easily wash coffee cups as they were needed.)

    • @cornjobb
      @cornjobb 5 лет назад +4

      something used in a bar to clean glasses now.

    • @echodelta9
      @echodelta9 5 лет назад +2

      I remember my mom saying they had them in her day "30's" but all they did is spray hot water not clean with soap and rinse cycles. Today one of those could harbor Legionnaires. Def not sanitary. If steam OK but now more safety problems, assuming it was hooked up to the steam plant.

    • @lincolnpaul1814
      @lincolnpaul1814 5 лет назад +1

      KMF they mean 5 minutes of your time not the machine time.

    • @swashbucklemchrue2323
      @swashbucklemchrue2323 4 года назад

      Might be embellishment.

  • @WebDeva7
    @WebDeva7 6 лет назад +6

    I need that fridge with the toe opener!

  • @shybunny2759
    @shybunny2759 7 лет назад +44

    after watching these old commercials, I realize why jello salads were so popular. it was the first time women had the technology to create a dish so unique

    • @roadmaster720
      @roadmaster720 6 лет назад +3

      fooling your stomach with jello. Gelatine for jello comes from ground up cow and horse's hooves. think about that. those hooves walked thru cow and horse piss and shit. no jello for me.

    • @scarlettradams
      @scarlettradams 6 лет назад +19

      I'm sure they wash them 😂😂😂

    • @roadmaster720
      @roadmaster720 6 лет назад +3

      no jello for this boy. my mother loved the stuff and it was always in the fridge when i was growing up. i quit eating it in my teen years when i found out where it came from. i guess this is where the squeal goes to as well.

    • @653j521
      @653j521 6 лет назад +9

      Most countries use all the parts of the animals they eat. The US is rich enough to squander our resources but I'm glad Jello utilizes what it can.

    • @roadmaster720
      @roadmaster720 6 лет назад +4

      you can have my share of jello

  • @cindyr3720
    @cindyr3720 4 года назад +2

    Love those early years' Appliances.

  • @seanbryant2848
    @seanbryant2848 8 лет назад +63

    These films are not 1943, as WWII was in progress and the U.S. was heavily involved. The films are clearly from the 1930s; look at the clothing styles, the hairstyles, etc. I would say these are from the mid 1930s. They are a marvelous piece of history.

    • @luisalthaus7249
      @luisalthaus7249 6 лет назад +2

      nothing but good quality

    • @TheJlomba112
      @TheJlomba112 6 лет назад +1

      I agree as, well

    • @lindabrown7374
      @lindabrown7374 6 лет назад +14

      The description says 1935.

    • @lincolnpaul1814
      @lincolnpaul1814 5 лет назад +1

      Sean Bryant you are correct, clothing, hair, progress all says mid thirties

    • @suze816
      @suze816 5 лет назад +2

      The video title indicates 1935.

  • @iheartscaryclowns
    @iheartscaryclowns 6 лет назад +24

    This is awesome. I moved into a 1930s home and I want to give the kitchen the vintage look with antique restored appluances.
    Thanks!

    • @AbyssGP
      @AbyssGP 5 лет назад +3

      iheartscaryclowns GE monitor tops are still easy to find and they were built to last. I got one for $50 from the mid 30s that still works. Only thing that goes is the door seals and the electrical cords. Everything else will work forever.

    • @robertfencl4401
      @robertfencl4401 5 лет назад +1

      WHY OH WHY?????

    • @AbyssGP
      @AbyssGP 5 лет назад +1

      Robert Fencl why not?

  • @sheryldougherty282
    @sheryldougherty282 Год назад +1

    I know they made things to last. I love the stove with the pot built in.

  • @bcburnettcom
    @bcburnettcom 5 лет назад +29

    Its 2018 and my rental kitchen isn't that modern. Newer appliances maybe but where did the function go?

  • @medwardb1976
    @medwardb1976 6 лет назад +10

    My grandmother had a dishwasher in the 1930's. She said the way it worked was that the water just ran and ran and ran. (She said she didn't particularly like the machine at the time.)

    • @lincolnpaul1814
      @lincolnpaul1814 5 лет назад +1

      medwardb1976 that’s not the way GE dishwashers worked. The water power dishwashers were inexpensive didn’t work well and they had them as late as 1970

  • @sharonwalker3594
    @sharonwalker3594 7 лет назад +21

    "all ready to serve for the price of a two cent stamp"
    Postage stamps went to 3 cents in July of 1932.
    This must pre-date that.

    • @seikibrian8641
      @seikibrian8641 6 лет назад +12

      I believe it is from 1935, but timeworn aphorisms persist after the basis for then is gone. Consider how long after payphones went to 25 cents the sayings "It's your nickel" and "I'll drop a dime on you" persisted.

    • @lincolnpaul1814
      @lincolnpaul1814 5 лет назад +1

      Sharon Walker no it was in the mid thirties

    • @ChristopherCerta
      @ChristopherCerta 5 лет назад +2

      When we look at these short films, we think of them in terms of “Commercials,” as we see on TV. But these were shown before, and between feature films, and serials in movie theaters. Think about that for a while.

  • @jeffreyhepner2467
    @jeffreyhepner2467 3 года назад +3

    I WISH THEY WOULD REPRODUCE THESE APPLIANCES !!! THE REFRIGERATORS ARE BEAUTIFUL!!!

  • @jimm6386
    @jimm6386 2 года назад +1

    When I was in college in the late 60’s, the apartment I lived in had a 1932 GE Monitor top fridge - the coils were more open than what is seen here. Very small narrow (one ice cube tray’s width) freezing unit - but it worked and was very Deco looking. It also had the foot pedal for opening the door. It did not however, have slide out shelves. Nor did it have a vegetable crisper drawer. I’d love to have it now.

  • @theoldar
    @theoldar 6 лет назад +3

    "Electric cooking seals in the vitamins and minerals." I love it.

  • @hebneh
    @hebneh 7 лет назад +15

    I had never heard of or seen a General Electric Lift-Top refrigerator till just now. It is conveniently compact, but is definitely not convenient to load or unload. All this stuff may look quaint, but except for microwaves, these are all the same appliances we still use.

    • @emilletich
      @emilletich 5 лет назад +4

      Yeah, but they were groundbreaking then. Must have seemed amazing.

    • @swashbucklemchrue2323
      @swashbucklemchrue2323 4 года назад +2

      Yeah, the lift top fridge was an absolutely terrible design. If you wanted a stick of butter that you left at the bottom you’d basically have to empty the fridge just to get to it.

    • @653j521
      @653j521 Год назад

      @@swashbucklemchrue2323 It wasn't for stupid people. But those who were in no position to have the ice man lug a chunk up five stories would love it.

    • @danielthoman7324
      @danielthoman7324 Год назад +1

      @@swashbucklemchrue2323 you said exactly what I was going to say. why would anyone want one of those lift top fridges? got to dig everything out to get to the stuff on the bottom. what a pain in the ass that would be.

  • @peggyt1243
    @peggyt1243 3 года назад +1

    Wow the "little wife" must have been thrilled to get a stove for her birthday.

  • @pitsnipe5559
    @pitsnipe5559 4 года назад +1

    We had one of those monitor top refrigerators when I was a very young lad.

  • @helenel4126
    @helenel4126 3 года назад +2

    "Your dishes washed in five minutes!" We've obviously gone backwards. Even the "express" choice on my 2015 dishwasher is a half hour.

    • @jb6712
      @jb6712 3 года назад

      But those 1935 dishwashers were very inefficient in that they kept the water at an extremely high temp (costing whatever for the fuel needed to do that), but just splashed it around on the dishes....no detergent or soap, just scalding hot water.

    • @lenovovo
      @lenovovo 3 года назад

      @@jb6712 You are wrong Joyce, detergents were used with those dishwashers back then. Dishes were as clean then as they are today using the dishwasher

  • @clarefinelli2251
    @clarefinelli2251 2 года назад +1

    I still can hear my dad yelling "Close the refrigerator door!".

    • @danielthoman7324
      @danielthoman7324 Год назад +2

      my mother used to yell to close the door on the fridge. I think that probably came from back when she was young they had an icebox. the more you would keep it open the faster the ice would melt and you'd have to buy some more. now I'm an old man and I am still in the habit of closing the door real fast. I guess I was brainwashed.

  • @doubtingthomas736
    @doubtingthomas736 3 года назад +1

    The poor guy on the bugle must be getting fed up!

  • @MemoGrafix
    @MemoGrafix 5 лет назад +3

    I was in Home Depot checking refrigerators recently I could not believe how much cheap-ass thin easy-break plastic was in those Brand Name $2400 refrigerators.

    • @MichaelSHartman
      @MichaelSHartman 5 лет назад +2

      Be prepared to replace it in 5-7 years. Open a freezer door in 5 years and find 22 cubic feet of ruined food then do it all over again. I know.

    • @MemoGrafix
      @MemoGrafix 5 лет назад +2

      *Michael Hartman -* Damn... fridges are dying like that now?? I will stick with what I have.
      I have 4 fridges, one in My kitchen 14 yrs, upstairs rental 20 yrs, basement 20 yrs & a compact one in My bedrm closet 33+ yrs. I'm not exactly sure how old that compact fridge is My Mother got it from someone used she had it for about 5 years before she gave it to Me.

    • @janicethomas3775
      @janicethomas3775 5 лет назад +2

      You are right on the money. Today the are made in China. I thought everything was to be cheaper for customers to buy when NAFTA was passed. Heck, the refrigerators are larger than ever but many are bare because we cannot afford both refrigerator and food. Some are near empty because no one will take time to cook a meal.

    • @pcno2832
      @pcno2832 5 лет назад

      I can't believe people shell out $2,400 for those things. All you get is one or 2 stupid drawer instead of a top or side freezer. They look like a total pain and half the space is taken up by the drawer guides. That design also makes the ice dispenser much harder to plumb and more complicated. There's a lot less to go wrong in a $600 fridge.

    • @danielthoman7324
      @danielthoman7324 Год назад +1

      @@janicethomas3775 my old landlord kept insisting that the GE refrigerator in my kitchen was made in USA. I told him I would bet him $100 that it wasn't. there was a little aluminum plate on the inside with serial numbers and it also said at the bottom made in China. he wouldn't bet with me because he knew I was probably right.

  • @mabel8179
    @mabel8179 2 месяца назад

    Amazing! I didn't even have kitchens like this in the 1980s here in the UK.

  • @mottbone
    @mottbone 6 лет назад +18

    9:12 "...And remember...
    Electric cookery seals in all the essential health-giving values of every volbolugh!"

  • @Zuxiasunicorn
    @Zuxiasunicorn Год назад +3

    Looks great, no confusing digital controls. I can't figure out how to use half the controls in my new car, or change the settings on my dishwasher. I'm old school.

  • @donovandelaney3171
    @donovandelaney3171 2 года назад +1

    A steel fridge? Sign me up! I want one of these old fridges!

  • @TPRQnet
    @TPRQnet 4 года назад +1

    That trumpet fanfare!

  • @diannefaith7866
    @diannefaith7866 3 года назад +1

    OMG! My mother who is going to be 90 years old in December was 5 years old when this video was taken!! 😱

  • @Thomas-px6ni
    @Thomas-px6ni Год назад +2

    Grandparents 1948 Norge refrigerator is still working in the garage where it's been since the early 60s.

  • @TheKing-cy1ef
    @TheKing-cy1ef Год назад +1

    The good old days!

  • @jcat_for_plants1216
    @jcat_for_plants1216 Год назад +1

    On the hunt for antique stoves!

  • @ddstar
    @ddstar 2 года назад

    "What's this? Well here comes the pride and joy of the house"

  • @vintageappliguy
    @vintageappliguy 12 лет назад +9

    Thanks for sharing these films but they were made between 1932 when GE first offered a dishwasher under its own name and 1938 when the GE Monitor Top was discontinued in 1938.

  • @ohheyfullmetal
    @ohheyfullmetal 5 лет назад +13

    _Wow, I wanna be a _*_modern_*_ housewife. So easy!_

  • @bparker2872
    @bparker2872 5 месяцев назад

    I want that 5 minute dishwasher and the fridge with the foot pedal opener!

  • @mommieragdollmaidjennifer5192
    @mommieragdollmaidjennifer5192 4 года назад +1

    Great piece of history from General Electric.🌚
    I love the old-school films.😀
    I wish and want to own some of the GE appliances, as well as to dress-up like some of the housewives and little daughters in the film!😍💖💋👗

  • @anniefannycharles9951
    @anniefannycharles9951 4 года назад +1

    My most favorite decade. Love the 30s. My grandparents time. Paid $3500 for their first home.

  • @dominican-familyvlog5131
    @dominican-familyvlog5131 6 лет назад +14

    I care for a lady she is 96 I love herrrrr she’s awesome

  • @reidb18
    @reidb18 8 лет назад +12

    GE stopped making monitor top refrigerators in 1937.

  • @MsGirlygurlz
    @MsGirlygurlz 5 лет назад +2

    Dishwasher cleans in 5 mins? MY NEW ONE TAKES A WHOLE FUCKING HOUR!!

  • @DrewTechner
    @DrewTechner 6 лет назад +31

    Looks great but I wouldn't want that annoying bugle blaring everytime.

    • @Mark-zu6oz
      @Mark-zu6oz 5 лет назад

      Now I am cracking up every time I hear it.

    • @anniefannycharles9951
      @anniefannycharles9951 4 года назад

      Haha- he was starting to poop out near the end!

    • @dancepiglover
      @dancepiglover 4 года назад

      Ikr, every time I step into the kitchen. 🙄

    • @hebneh
      @hebneh 4 года назад

      Each one of these originally was shown by itself in a movie theater in the midst of other short movies. No audience ever saw them all together at one time like this, so you only heard the fanfare once in real life.

  • @Lovelife-gz1rs
    @Lovelife-gz1rs 4 года назад +3

    I hand wash my dishes every day I don't have a dishwasher🤦

  • @amezrismommigower6839
    @amezrismommigower6839 Год назад +1

    This would be great as a shots game. Every time you hear the trumpet...take a shot. Everytime you hear GE...Take a shot.

  • @marysmith7765
    @marysmith7765 Год назад +1

    That “ lift top refrigerator “ must have been….awkward. I’d swoon to have one of those awesome stoves.

  • @danielthoman7324
    @danielthoman7324 Год назад +2

    I didn't know they had dishwashers back in 1935.

  • @geoben1810
    @geoben1810 4 года назад

    The confusion over the dates of these clips is because these were put together as a compilation of old movie theater ads. They're from different years. Just compiled to present here on RUclips.

  • @dawne5139
    @dawne5139 6 лет назад +22

    Enjoyed watching. I don't think too many people had dishwashers back then. If you were rich enough to have one you were rich enough to hire help. My mother got her first dishwasher in thr early seventies and they were still considered a status symbol at that time.

    • @medwardb1976
      @medwardb1976 6 лет назад +3

      Well my grandmother had one, but they weren't rich. But they did have rare security being public school teachers. But in 1932, the Calif. state government ran out of money and teachers didn't get paid for three months. That's when they literally had to eat oatmeal three times a day.

    • @medwardb1976
      @medwardb1976 6 лет назад +1

      P.S. After that first dishwasher, which she said she didn't like, she didn't have one again until she was in her seventies, too.

    • @jimbearone
      @jimbearone 6 лет назад +1

      None of my relatives nor I ever owned a Dishwasher until the last 15 years even though they've been around so long they were always considered to be too frivolous an expense - LEARN TO WASH A DISH AND QUIT BEING SO LAZY my parents always said. MANY appliances we have today are really OLD but most people until the last 30 years or so could not really afford them - we did not get a color T. V. until the mid 1970's when they had been around for nearly two decades.

    • @jimbearone
      @jimbearone 6 лет назад +3

      All three Networks started Filming all new programs or episodes of existing programs in COLOR in the fall of 1968 with ABC and its affiliates last - HOWEVER, many of the stations that broadcast the programs did not have color broadcasting equipment and many were still paying off their existing equipment so unless you lived in a large market like New York or Chicago you didn't get color broadcasts until years later and few consumers could afford to shell out money for a Color Set when their current one was still being paid for. Color Sets did not become the de-facto standard until well into the late 1970's with Black and White Sets STILL being sold until the late 1980's

    • @emilletich
      @emilletich 5 лет назад +2

      Considering these were filmed at the height of the Depression, I think it's safe to say they catered to a limited audience, yet because it was still the Depression hired help was probably still a luxury for only the real rich.

  • @domn415
    @domn415 4 года назад +1

    Things back them were built to last!! I have a 1935 GE Monitor Top refrigerator in my kitchen, It works like the day it was new! The foot opener, sliding shelves and everyother feature are great! I do not have the GR electric range, I have a 1927 Glenwood "OurWay" gas range. These appliances will outlast anything thats made today...

  • @iheartcryptoverse2857
    @iheartcryptoverse2857 5 лет назад +5

    Oh wow. A GE range for my birthday. Thank you, Darling. All I wanted was a bottle of vodka so I could not feel the hellish, giant rubber corset I wear.

  • @iithinkiluvu
    @iithinkiluvu 5 лет назад +26

    Umm I still use hands to open my fridge! Wth 😂

  • @MichaelSHartman
    @MichaelSHartman 5 лет назад +2

    What a wonderful video. We crow about microwave ovens, but these were miracles in their time. Haul, split, and carry wood to start and maintain a fire to can food in July, and you would be at the store the next day. Haul ice or use a cool water trough to keep your milk. I'm fairly sure that dishwasher was appreciated. Opening the door with your foot and sliding shelves may still be a good idea. "Built for a lifetime" wasn't an exaggeration. Can't say that today.

  • @litlnemo
    @litlnemo 8 лет назад +8

    I was all set to tell them the date was wrong but it looks like that has been well handled already. :) Since a museum posted this, I sincerely hope the date is correct in their records, at least. -- another Monitor Top owner

  • @jessicawilkerson2417
    @jessicawilkerson2417 2 года назад

    Aww..when kitchen appliances were built to last!

  • @jbelle6743
    @jbelle6743 2 года назад +1

    I make a lot of soups and would love the stove well. ❤

  • @lindaeasley5606
    @lindaeasley5606 2 года назад

    This was produced during the heart of the Great Depression With all this happy talk of modern kitchen appliances ,there were many people in 1935 who didn't even have a home of their own - migrant farm labor camps of California. My grandparents with 6 kids in tow,moved to Cali and stayed at 2 different labor camps

  • @tavaramirez668
    @tavaramirez668 4 года назад +1

    Interesting how these things were made so much better. And how far back you could have such wonderful things if you had enough money. Sad that our ability to have basic niceties is so difficult now.

  • @vickycamarena4697
    @vickycamarena4697 Год назад

    The freezer compartment was open to the fridge, rendering it useless. Glad they decided to improve upon this, keeping it separate.