*And to think Ford made several other V8s that were not in that line up~Like the 427 SOHC (Cammer)~The 427 side oiler~429 Super Cobra Jet~The Boss 429 are some that they made at that time that come to mind*
The commercials look the same? Your draft dodging president was made very popular in Hollywood. Now you worship the draft dodger. That’s better marketing then ANY produced in the 60’s or 70’s.
@@slipjones2 Idiots dancing make p most commercials today. Are they paid to produce garbage? Every prominent Republican from that era was a Draft Dodger and every prominent Democrat? Trick question, there are no prominent democrats.
Yes! My Dad had a black with white stripes 1969 Ford Torino GT with a 428 Super CJ Ram-Air engine! I love that car! I was Three years old at the time. He had an accident in it in 1971 and total the car! I crying for a week when they told me what happened! That car reminds me of my family going to Daytona Beach Florida in the late 60’s and early 70’s! I miss my Dad, Mother and that car they are all gone now. I will love them forever! It still hurts. Leonard Walton Jr. 😢🙏
I love the blatant rip-off of the Graduate @ 2:01. Ford tells you, "not only do you get the pretty girl, but you also get the steal her from someone else". So much testosterone. Love it.
Well, yeah, that's the whole point. But as a life-long Alfa owner, and Mike Nichols fan, I'm incensed that they would dare compare this long-forgotten lump of Detroit iron to the revolutionary Alfa Duetto. And in the film, Ben and Elaine left on a bus.
Brought back lots of memories...both the CARS, & seeing ARTE JOHNSON in the Maverick bits, in the role that made him FAMOUS for a bit on Rowan & Martin's Laugh-In!! ❤🎉🤣
I was 5 years old when all this was going on. All these commercials were in black and white for my family, lol. I have always loved the Torino/ Ltds from this time period but my favorite cars are the Mercury's from this era, I still remember the Mercury commercials " only at the sign of the cat." Beautiful Cougar laying on the Mercury sign. I have owned many Cougars and Cyclones Comets Montegos LTDs and Torinos. Those were good days and a great time to grow up in, could even buy a popsicle off the ice cream truck for a couple of pennies. We have lost so much..........
@@carriewatkins313 yes they are a bit heavy but stay tight on the road and for a muscle car they ride nice. The 351 Cleveland is a stout motor, I had a 1970 Montego brougham with hideaway headlights the triple taillights bucket seats and a 351 Cleveland 4bbl polished and ported small cam and bigger valves. They guy before me took the automatic out and put in a 3 speed stick on the floor but it was burnt out and I put a big C-6 automatic back in it, that car could haul the mail. Its funny/strange but I own a 1987 4x4 Ford and it has its original 351 Cleveland HO 4bbl with a C-6 automatic and the old style hand locking hubs, I looked up the build plate and the guy ordered it that way from the factory in Kansas city. She has 218 thousand miles and still runs like a champ and doesn't burn any oil. I have owned 6 Cleveland motors and liked every one of them. Wish I could have seen your friends Cyclone.
@@kevinwilson9589 my 3rd car was a 1968 Cougar XR 7 with sequential taillights black leather interior wood steering wheel all factory gauges and a 351 Windsor. I still miss that car all these years later.
@@randallbates9020 That's both happy, because you had one and sad because of your loss. To me, the most beautiful car ever made. I heard the sequential taillights would malfunction over time, but a new electronic replacement was made to mimic the original circuitry. So many great body styles made that year, but to me the Cougar was the best.
1968fordman Lacey Wow, my Dad used to own a 1968 Fairlane two door sedan style white paint, blue vinyl/cloth seats, with a six he bought brand new from Future Ford in Wilmington Delaware!. I think it was a base model, but it was still a really nice car and drove very well too! It was an automatic though, he needed to buy that so my Mom could drive it, she wasn't driving a manual car. Could you get that base model with a manual trans?
@@watershed44 awesome. My mom bought mine brand new in Denver in May 1968. It was her first new car and is a base model too. It's lime gold with white vinyl top and interior and has the 289 with auto trans. I'm sure you could get one with a manual. The 6 cyl probably got the 3 speed manual.
I miss the days when car companies were competitive, and the designs changed each year. Today most cars look alike, and yearly changes are light refreshes of grill changes, or new infotainment systems. Loved the commercials - some of the best ad men & women of that day were at work. Sure some were cheesy, but it was fun.
Drastic model changes each year and not focusing on improving engine technology on cheaper cars is what led America to be blindsided by import cars post 1973
@@ShaiyanHossain You're forgetting the impact of OPEC & the gas shortage in driving american car buyers to smaller, cheaper cars. Some import cars did change regularly, look at Toyota & Nissan.
Rose colored glasses... many muscle cars were just the same car slightly rebadged. Cars today are boring because America got fat and now only buys trucks with cupholders.
@@truantray ....Not trying to be a dick here but I was trying to think of let's say 70's muscles cars that looked the same except for minor changes and of course the badge. What models would you consider the same?
@@kathiec1333 First car that I bought with my own money (~$500! IIRC) was a '71 Maverick. When it was stolen from my house, I bought a '73 Maverick. That car got me all the way from Chicago to Palo Alto, CA with just a single bolt holding the carburetor on (I didn't know that the others were missing, LOL)! Tough, dependable cars.
@@mklcolvin My neighbor had a 70 Maverick, she drove it for at least seven years, multiple trips to North Carolina and the paint gradually faded but it still ran well when she traded it in.
This is a great flash back.. This video also happens to have dropped on 4/30/21. which is the 52nd birthday to our 1969 428 Super Cobra Jet.. My father bought it new and we still have it.. Love seeing the old commercial for it! Thanks for posting!
My friend still has a 1968 Mustang that his mother in law bought new. Not as nice as the 1969, but cool. It looked rough when I first saw it, but you should see it now!
@@kevinmontgomery1383 love to hear it! My father made sure my first car was a Mustang.. 1967 Coupe. He restored it with me.. Unfortunately it was totaled years later.. Ours was so bad when we got it...
@@richsackett3423 Men can compete in Women"s sports, people need "safe places" , everybody is a 'victim" most men can't even change a tire.... it's pretty $hity my friend. And...I'm not old.
@@benjaminharold5154 You should check out some of the recent Loser-in-Chief's Safe Space Loserpalooza deranged ramblings for his perpetually-frightened perceptually-aggrieved cult members. Have you watched Tucker today to tell you what to be afraid of? I can change a tire, rebuild a transmission AND know spelling and grammar. OMG you are so old. No young person would consider you young. Who are you kidding. Only old people fall for all that Faux News culture war BS.
My parents loved their Maverick. We also had a Galaxie 500 and an LTD. The Galaxie was a really neat car. It wasn't fast off the line like cars now, but once you got to 70 it started to breath and I remember sitting in that cavernous back seat while my Dad "gave it the beans". Fun times.
Better to see 'hilarious' commercials than being bombarded by ominous threatening health insurance, funeral and deadly prescription commercials of today.
@@objectivereality5613 Nonsense. There's usually one of each demographic to appeal to the most potential customers. Adverts are purely about making money.
@@objectivereality5613 LOL. If only you realised what your actual post did to your post... Following nonsense with gibberish cements your stupidity, never mind your ironical moniker 😅
Being a mechanic and growing up in those days working on those cars back then we’re great and seeing the tv ads masked me long for those days again. Good times until the gas shortage in the 70s
There was never a gasoline shortage. We are still consuming billions of gallons of gasoline 50 years later. Our government was fukn the American people.
@@22kpar1xcyberdyne9 Was? We've seen nothing yet, 100 days into the Jotato Xi Buy'd in administration and they're openly destroying our once great nation...
Yep...nobody b!tched about American cars until the Fake Gas shortage, then Fake News steered everyone to buy all the Japanese cars that were conveniently being dumped on American shores at the same exact time. What they did not tell you was all the insider trading and investments that were being done and they were making hand over fists in cash on the selling of foreign cars as they tried to literally put Detroit out of business.
@@matrox Yep, and then a govt' based organization (EPA) ever so conveniently slapped design constraints on the V8 because they knew there was nothing in the drawing board able to overcome that big of an obstacle so quickly. The Malaysian manufacturers didn't steal the American automotive market, they were handed it on a silver platter.
You've got to love those old cars! We've got nothing but crap nowadays.I own a 01 f 150 supercrew built in Minnesota and it's in mint condition.thank you Henry!
Yeah have to agree mate ,modern cars suck. Everything is cheap junk and a nightmare to work on. They seem to have a competition who can build the ugliest little shitbox these days to.
Cant do jack with these new vehicles plastic bottles driving down the road and nothing but covers and computer modules under the hood. Trucks are just SUVs with beds nowadays its ridiculous
I had a 67' Ford F100 Stepside 6'bed from 1976 to about 1987. 352 V8, C6 Trans and a 4:11 rear, dual side exhaust exiting the under running boards in front of the rear tires. Also had a 69' 383 Road Runner at the same time. wish I had both of them still. Currently drive a 17' SS camaro 6 speed. Talk about a Bad ass modern day car!!
-and that's why my 68 Torino GT came with 4 wheel non boosted drums. By the 90's I had to install boosted front disks: it was getting mighty tense at stoplights!
The issue is not that 326 million people live in America today. It is the fact that regulations have meant that nothing new gets built. There have been no new cities developed nor has manufacturing and innovation been allowed to continue to develop the economy. So it has meant that people have been flocking to the same cities and towns that existed in 1969 and those areas have not been developed to deal with the population increases.
RockandRoll Indeed they really seem fresh even today with that catchy music. Not many other car ads from the time hold up as well. But I really like the upbeat positive angle in them, back when the USA believed it could accomplish anything.
I was 5 years old when Ford’s ‘69 fastback models hit the market. I remember seeing one for the first time in a parking lot as my older brother talked to the owner whom he knew. I don’t know the specific model, but as they talked about the car, I looked it over inside and out and loved it.
@@thisisyourcaptainspeaking2259 Didn't know about that but that's absolutely terrible!.. I prefer to have as little trim as possible on a car cause it's a place moisture could get trapped under. Especially around a vinyl roof! I don't like fender skirts either cause they help trap a cloud of moisture in the wheel well.
1969.. Vietnam War was in full swing. I was 10 years old. Asked my dad if the war is still going when I get to be 18 would I have to go? He said.. Yes!
Great memories….my da worked as a salesman at a Ford dealership from ‘67-‘70…got to ride in all the hot rods they were producing…the Boss 429 ‘69 Mustang was a badass machine
@@amjrpain919 My brother owns an '86 Spyder and that car, with only 20,000 miles on it was, and is, a piece of junk. I used it for a month in the early 90s and had a u-joint break, followed by the muffler hanger breaking. Mechanic at the Alfa dealer said we should stock up on u-joints as they were (are?) notorious for breaking. All that said, my brother still has it, just sitting (with a cracked exhaust manifold) wasting away with less than 30,000 miles. It must hold some sentimental value for him 🤷♂️
A very exciting time to be a car nut. I remember it as a kid. But I also like the current line-up of American muscle. The new Mustang's, Camaro's, Challenger and Charger, are all surpassing the performance benchmark's set by these cars. I love classic cars, and nothing is as cool as driving one to a cruise event. I have owned and worked on a lot of these cars thru my teen years. It is amazing to me how many powertrain combo's were available back then. Rarely were their 2 cars exactly alike. No anti-lock brakes, usually no power brakes(!), sometimes no power steering, no traction, just raw, loud and lopey sounds. Hahaha. I feel fortunate to have witnessed the muscle car era from the 60's thru now. No better time to be alive!
I bet the same guy that wrote the song for ON ANY SUNDAY movie with Steve McQueen wrote these commercial tunes. They got that feel-good vibe you know man it's like groovy. Hey I'm 61 I still say boss and gnarly!
Mike Such Spot on friend! "feel-good vibe"! You just do NOT see this kind of thing in modern advertising, and if you see anything approximating it, it's very forced and heavy handed too.
@@agm6095 "Five hundred dollars down" For a kid fresh out of high school??? .....in 1969 ????? What planet are we talking about? You're joking, right? You must be very young. ....or very rich.
@@agm6095 "Rich? I had been saving money for a few years, I was 17 when I bought it." I think you are the exception, not the rule. I never knew of any high school senior who bought a brand new car. Then or now. In my town I knew of some parents who bought their little precious a VW or a Datsun to go off to college in. But I never new anyone who bought a brand new car straight out of high school. Good for you if you were able to do that. Congratulations. Sincerely. In any case I enjoy the topic of the old cars. I love them too. Most of them. Not the foreign cars.
The maverick commercial was shot at Vasquez Rocks, location for a Star Trek episode, lots of commercials and westerns. There used to be a fort wall there, used as the set for a short ived forgotten 1960s tv show. I climbed to the top of the big rock that sticks out, hiked and camped there.
No, F-Troop was a log stockade, this had solid walls. It was built for "Tales of the 77th Bengal Lancers", a one year show in 1857 - scvhistory.com/scvhistory/lw3620.htm Star Trek, Blazing Saddles, Flintstones, filmed there, and many tv shows used the "fort". It was made of 2x4s, chicken wire, and plaster and they wouldn't let us climb on it. It had only the front wall, no back, the wall just ended on either side of the gate. Not a cavalry fort, looked Arabian/middle eastern. Lived at Edwards in the early 60s, so the first part of "The Right Stuff" looked exactly like my childhood, also the film "X-15" (Charles Bronson and Mary Tyler Moore, no joke) (saw X-15 several times, knew kids whose dads flew it, my sister had class with Chuck Yeager's son). Used to watch them film CHiPs from my office in Culver City, transferred to 444 S. Flower, which was used for exterior shots on "LA Law". Living right at Edwards and then the coast of LA from 1960-1985 and the use of local sites for tv and movie accidentally documented my youth. Now it is mostly in cheap locations or computer generated.
Back when we had a country that was real. This rathole of a nation is not America anymore. But we had the best auto industry the world has ever seen. And it was awesome. Thanks for the flashbacks.
1970 My dad ran a restaurant and my mom was a nurse. They owned a home in L.A. and had a brand new Mustang Mach 1 (dad) and Maverick Grabber (mom) in the garage. These were average salary earners and we lived a wonderful life, all three kids able to go to college. This life is no longer available for the average person in America.
We were a Torino family back then, cousin had a '69 , another cousin had a '70 429, my brother had a '72 Sport and my mom drove us around in a '74 Torino sedan. Those were great times
The singing, dancing "Bright Young Americans" group in those commercials seem to have no history apart from those commercials, as I tried searching for them with no success.
I was 7 in 1969 I remember seeing all the cool fords. We had a Ford dealership close to my folks house. The best AM cars were built before 1973 or so. Wish I had a time machine.
AL M I made a comment two weeks ago saying, in my opinion 1972 was the last great year for cars. It was a video about life in the 70s. All the cars and people looked awesome!
I was 15 in 1972 pumping gas at Sunoco Station. Oil embargo and people dumping muscle cars. For $850 i bought a 69 428 scj 4 speed mach 1. Still got it 52 years later. The car and I grew up together. Candy red and white interior shaker car. Only 68k miles. Put a lot on quarter mile at a time and street racing.
Now this is when Americans weren't cowards and this is when Ford made some really awesome muscle cars and hotrods, the girls looked beautiful, Democrats weren't progressives nor socialists, and when people truly loved America.
Well, look at it this way: Chrysler (okay, FCA/Stellantis/What*ever*) got a bit of payback introducing their RAM TRX, complete with an image of a T-Rex (TRX…get it?) devouring a Raptor. 'Nuff said.
My Dad bought a new 1969 LTD. Black with a black vinyl top and black vinyl interior . 390-2 barrel. Automatic, PS, PB, and *no air conditioning!* Talk about a hot car in the Southern summer sun! He always said LTD meant Lincoln Trimmed Down.
I love background músic, it is happynes. Ford cars since 1967 to 2007 were very American shapes. Now they look as Japanese or Korean designes, same for Chevrolet. I read that Ford will make SUVs only, not more cars never as before. They are locos! Greetings from Santiago, Chile SouthAmerica.
@Amplass 333 It's hard to generalize. Ford is discontinuing car offerings for the USA -- except the mustang. European Fords are not sold in the USA any longer, and the Australian Fords seem to be entirely different as well.
@Amplass 333 I had a friend who was importing the Ford 351 heads from Australia in 1990s-- I always wanted an Australian Falcon because they had 4 doors and looked like a normal car. Ford in the States got boring after 1970 or so.
@Amplass 333- all the new cars look like wind-tunnel-tested jelly beans. Asian cars don't have 'more plastic' or 'shit' as you put it. their assembly lines and tooling were developed for them by us when we occupied japan- their assembly and fit and finish compare favorably to other products from other countries- including europe and australia. their methods are just like our methods, only more modern and efficient because we set them up with state-of-the-art infrastructure. any acura or lexus is screwed together better than anything we've seen from other countries including US, germany, and sweden. toyota, scion, and daihatsu (they still make cars under toyota) are better cars than anything from other countries. number one in asia, by far and, depending on who you ask, number one in the world- including volkswagen. and don't forget honda of japan. reminds me of the bicycle industry....
@@jamestokyo877 Of course not everyone but if for some reason you’re trying to say how poor and helpless you think black people where than just say so, but I know at least in my city, quite a few friends who’s family members worked hard at jobs that are not longer there, that allowed them to be strongly middle class, own homes, go on vacation, and pass something on and send there kids to college. The middle class is dead for everyone, regardless of what you have been told progressivism hasn't always been positive, if anything race relations are At a 20 year low at least.
@@jamestokyo877 I'm so sick and tired of wumao sowing dissent and division. America is the greatest country on the planet lifting more of every race color and creed out of abject poverty in human history. Tell your dear leader Winnie Xi Jinpooh, you're a failure and a disgrace.
Had a 1970 Torino Cobra 428 with 335 hp in qBritish Racing Green. Slip into passing gear at 70 and Lay a 50 foot rubber strip. And what a sound that engine made!
➡ My List of Classic Car Gifts For Men! - amzn.to/3YYzQTi
"Choose from *SIX* V8s!!!?? What a time that was to be alive!
You could blow the doors off another family and leave them in the dust on the highway!
It sure WAS a great time!
*And to think Ford made several other V8s that were not in that line up~Like the 427 SOHC (Cammer)~The 427 side oiler~429 Super Cobra Jet~The Boss 429 are some that they made at that time that come to mind*
@@wildbutterflytiedye ,
There were cars that were never advertised because of the horsepower, yes, it was the good ole days.
big block & small block v8s were available untill about 1979 in Ford vehicles!!
Glass headlights that would never fog up.
1960s commercials are better than anything Hollywood can produce today.
ScottW
That's because it was mostly white European Americans creating the content.
@@watershed44 That wasn't true even back then, racist incel.
And others. Stealing these cars. From. Malls
The commercials look the same? Your draft dodging president was made very popular in Hollywood. Now you worship the draft dodger. That’s better marketing then ANY produced in the 60’s or 70’s.
@@slipjones2 Idiots dancing make p most commercials today. Are they paid to produce garbage? Every prominent Republican from that era was a Draft Dodger and every prominent Democrat? Trick question, there are no prominent democrats.
It was a really great time to be alive !!! So glad i grew up in that era !!! Thank God !!!!!!!!!🙏🙏✌✌✌
Yes! My Dad had a black with white stripes 1969 Ford Torino GT with a 428 Super CJ Ram-Air engine! I love that car! I was Three years old at the time. He had an accident in it in 1971 and total the car! I crying for a week when they told me what happened! That car reminds me of my family going to Daytona Beach Florida in the late 60’s and early 70’s! I miss my Dad, Mother and that car they are all gone now. I will love them forever! It still hurts. Leonard Walton Jr. 😢🙏
With five kids my dad opted for the station wagon 😎 I also miss them both 😔
With five kids my dad opted for the station wagon with the sporty woodgrain 😎
I also miss them both 😔Jim Allen RIP 🙏
LMMFAO at the 1st one!!!
Coyote couldn't get the Roadrunner but the Cobra DID!!! 😂👍
I didn't catch that! The Cobra was pretty nice. The choices we have (and can barely
afford) today are mainly boring, compared to 60s cars☹️
I'd put the 69 hemi roadrunner up against it. But hey that's CJ was a badass motor
Remember America back then? Great times 🇺🇸
I wasn't around yet. But those cars still were when I was growing up. Gen X had the best childhoods.
Give me a time machine. I would return to those years any day..
2023 Sucks!
2024 just got a whole lot better !! 🇺🇸MAGA!
A time machine & a youth serum
Both Would be nice. Either would be awesome.
As long as you don’t get called up in the draft, you’re golden.
Love “The Graduate” spoof they did there and it even looks like the same church used in the movie!
I wouldn’t be surprised if it was the same church, but the spoof is a little campy (but funny) for them to sell a car from.
Weird looking church, in both cases.
That was no fun to watch without an Alfa Romeo as the getaway car
First time to see Arty Johnson in Ages! He was one of the original cast members on "Laugh-In". Funny guy.
Yeah, and the one that borrowed the laugh-in format, popping in n out of those cubby holes
Very interesting
Arte
Loved the "The Graduate" throwback commercial.
Yep...& I COMPLETELY MISSED how often they hit the "Laugh-In" theme, & only used Arte Johnson's "signature line" from that show ONCE!
I didn't get that! The Cobra was a cool looking car. Now the cars we buy (and can barely afford) are fairly boring☹️
plastics
I’d love to see current car commercials filmed like this. It just seemed like they were trying to sell cars back then, not politics. Great times.
No "Don't do this at home." disclaimers
Groovy man in a far out way!!
I love the blatant rip-off of the Graduate @ 2:01. Ford tells you, "not only do you get the pretty girl, but you also get the steal her from someone else". So much testosterone. Love it.
Today they would be sued stupid and regulators would be claiming the ad was sexist and the media would claim it was toxic.
Again, that was the "Good old days'. lol
The music is even purposefully similar to "Mrs. Robinson".
Well, yeah, that's the whole point. But as a life-long Alfa owner, and Mike Nichols fan, I'm incensed that they would dare compare this long-forgotten lump of Detroit iron to the revolutionary Alfa Duetto. And in the film, Ben and Elaine left on a bus.
And I thinks it's the actual church used in the movie...
Brought back lots of memories...both the CARS, & seeing ARTE JOHNSON in the Maverick bits, in the role that made him FAMOUS for a bit on Rowan & Martin's Laugh-In!! ❤🎉🤣
But "Love At First Bite" was still the best thing he ever did. (as Renfield)
I was 5 years old when all this was going on. All these commercials were in black and white for my family, lol. I have always loved the Torino/ Ltds from this time period but my favorite cars are the Mercury's from this era, I still remember the Mercury commercials " only at the sign of the cat." Beautiful Cougar laying on the Mercury sign. I have owned many Cougars and Cyclones Comets Montegos LTDs and Torinos. Those were good days and a great time to grow up in, could even buy a popsicle off the ice cream truck for a couple of pennies. We have lost so much..........
I do think my friends 71 Cyclone GT was one bad set of wheels. 351 C fast but heavy. I wonder who owns one now. They don’t build them like that today.
@@carriewatkins313 yes they are a bit heavy but stay tight on the road and for a muscle car they ride nice. The 351 Cleveland is a stout motor, I had a 1970 Montego brougham with hideaway headlights the triple taillights bucket seats and a 351 Cleveland 4bbl polished and ported small cam and bigger valves. They guy before me took the automatic out and put in a 3 speed stick on the floor but it was burnt out and I put a big C-6 automatic back in it, that car could haul the mail. Its funny/strange but I own a 1987 4x4 Ford and it has its original 351 Cleveland HO 4bbl with a C-6 automatic and the old style hand locking hubs, I looked up the build plate and the guy ordered it that way from the factory in Kansas city. She has 218 thousand miles and still runs like a champ and doesn't burn any oil. I have owned 6 Cleveland motors and liked every one of them. Wish I could have seen your friends Cyclone.
If I were rich, and had my choice of ANYTHING to drive, it would be a first gen.('67, '68) Mercury Cougar.
@@kevinwilson9589 my 3rd car was a 1968 Cougar XR 7 with sequential taillights black leather interior wood steering wheel all factory gauges and a 351 Windsor. I still miss that car all these years later.
@@randallbates9020 That's both happy, because you had one and sad because of your loss. To me, the most beautiful car ever made. I heard the sequential taillights would malfunction over time, but a new electronic replacement was made to mimic the original circuitry. So many great body styles made that year, but to me the Cougar was the best.
Love seeing these commercials! I'm a proud owner of a 68 Fairlane.
1968fordman Lacey
Wow, my Dad used to own a 1968 Fairlane two door sedan style white paint, blue vinyl/cloth seats, with a six he bought brand new from Future Ford in Wilmington Delaware!. I think it was a base model, but it was still a really nice car and drove very well too! It was an automatic though, he needed to buy that so my Mom could drive it, she wasn't driving a manual car. Could you get that base model with a manual trans?
@@watershed44 awesome. My mom bought mine brand new in Denver in May 1968. It was her first new car and is a base model too. It's lime gold with white vinyl top and interior and has the 289 with auto trans. I'm sure you could get one with a manual. The 6 cyl probably got the 3 speed manual.
@@watershed44Yep
I have a 68 Fairlane 4 door sedan with 302 and factory air that still blows cold 9
@@davidlesieur5471
That's awesome! They just don't make anything like they used to!
I miss the days when car companies were competitive, and the designs changed each year. Today most cars look alike, and yearly changes are light refreshes of grill changes, or new infotainment systems. Loved the commercials - some of the best ad men & women of that day were at work. Sure some were cheesy, but it was fun.
Some cars are pretty much exactly the same except for the taillights, headlights and badge.
Drastic model changes each year and not focusing on improving engine technology on cheaper cars is what led America to be blindsided by import cars post 1973
@@ShaiyanHossain You're forgetting the impact of OPEC & the gas shortage in driving american car buyers to smaller, cheaper cars. Some import cars did change regularly, look at Toyota & Nissan.
Rose colored glasses... many muscle cars were just the same car slightly rebadged. Cars today are boring because America got fat and now only buys trucks with cupholders.
@@truantray ....Not trying to be a dick here but I was trying to think of let's say 70's muscles cars that looked the same except for minor changes and of course the badge. What models would you consider the same?
Pre-Social Media! Pre Cell phones! Miss those days!
and pre-google pre-microsoft pre-dell pre-political correctness pre-fake news.....wow those WERE the good ol days!
I was 15 and learning to drive then, exciting times with all the muscle car choices in all the car brands.
We had a couple of 73 Torinos in my driver ed class.
@@kathiec1333 First car that I bought with my own money (~$500! IIRC) was a '71 Maverick. When it was stolen from my house, I bought a '73 Maverick. That car got me all the way from Chicago to Palo Alto, CA with just a single bolt holding the carburetor on (I didn't know that the others were missing, LOL)! Tough, dependable cars.
@@mklcolvin My neighbor had a 70 Maverick, she drove it for at least seven years, multiple trips to North Carolina and the paint gradually faded but it still ran well when she traded it in.
This is a great flash back.. This video also happens to have dropped on 4/30/21. which is the 52nd birthday to our 1969 428 Super Cobra Jet.. My father bought it new and we still have it.. Love seeing the old commercial for it! Thanks for posting!
@Tom Dee sad day indeed
My friend still has a 1968 Mustang that his mother in law bought new. Not as nice as the 1969, but cool. It looked rough when I first saw it, but you should see it now!
@@kevinmontgomery1383 love to hear it! My father made sure my first car was a Mustang.. 1967 Coupe. He restored it with me.. Unfortunately it was totaled years later.. Ours was so bad when we got it...
@@johnv9854 That is so awesome, that you got to restore it with your father!
@Daniel Rodriguez not planning on it. Maybe if the value gets to be like the Shelbys I’d consider it.. but that’s not gonna happen anytime soon..
Ahhhh, so refreshing. A time before we became a cesspool.
Truth
@Steve Acho DIEversity is the thing in America today and it rots.
It would be refreshing if old people could enjoy the past without feeling the need to $hlt on the present.
@@richsackett3423 Men can compete in Women"s sports, people need "safe places" , everybody is a 'victim" most men can't even change a tire.... it's pretty $hity my friend. And...I'm not old.
@@benjaminharold5154 You should check out some of the recent Loser-in-Chief's Safe Space Loserpalooza deranged ramblings for his perpetually-frightened perceptually-aggrieved cult members. Have you watched Tucker today to tell you what to be afraid of?
I can change a tire, rebuild a transmission AND know spelling and grammar. OMG you are so old. No young person would consider you young. Who are you kidding. Only old people fall for all that Faux News culture war BS.
Superb commercials! And the last of the swinging/groove 60s bygone era! A fan and admire of muscle cars from Pakistan!!
Good to hear from you brother ✌
Hello to Pakistan from a brother car admirer in Florida, USA!
It's cool to know that American cars are loved around the world
@@travisjohns744 Very true! And mainly because each has its own charm and personality to it!
I never knew Pakistan made muscle cars.
My parents loved their Maverick. We also had a Galaxie 500 and an LTD. The Galaxie was a really neat car. It wasn't fast off the line like cars now, but once you got to 70 it started to breath and I remember sitting in that cavernous back seat while my Dad "gave it the beans". Fun times.
I was 9 years old in '69, and my cousin bought a '69 Torino GT with a 351. Man, was that a cool car in my young eyes!
same here, born in 60. we had a 69' country squire wagon. it was b i g.
Still is
@@johntiffault6278 beat me too it
351 cleveland? thats a real motor- a real barking monster
@@tommurphy4307 The 351 Cleveland was not sold in cars until 1970....A "351" in 1969 was the Windsor...Which was a better engine anyway!
Better to see 'hilarious' commercials than being bombarded by ominous threatening health insurance, funeral and deadly prescription commercials of today.
Great comment! The commercials on most TV shows I watch are just as you describe them.
I like the fact commercials today have no pale people. Looking forward to 2024 when commercials won't contain any English-speaking people.
@@objectivereality5613 Nonsense. There's usually one of each demographic to appeal to the most potential customers.
Adverts are purely about making money.
@@peterpiper5064 LOL
If only you realized what your moniker did to your post.
@@objectivereality5613 LOL. If only you realised what your actual post did to your post...
Following nonsense with gibberish cements your stupidity, never mind your ironical moniker 😅
i remember a fellow dating one of my older sisters in 69 driving a gold 428 cobra ,, the sound that car made ..
I bet that sister made some lovely sounds in that car too
@@MrRiprip56 lmao
Early 90's i restored a 1971 Maverick Grabber with an EFI 302..... The Grabbers in 1971 and 1972 Were good looking cars.
Being a mechanic and growing up in those days working on those cars back then we’re great and seeing the tv ads masked me long for those days again. Good times until the gas shortage in the 70s
There was never a gasoline shortage. We are still consuming billions of gallons of gasoline 50 years later. Our government was fukn the American people.
@@22kpar1xcyberdyne9 Was? We've seen nothing yet, 100 days into the Jotato Xi Buy'd in administration and they're openly destroying our once great nation...
Yep...nobody b!tched about American cars until the Fake Gas shortage, then Fake News steered everyone to buy all the Japanese cars that were conveniently being dumped on American shores at the same exact time. What they did not tell you was all the insider trading and investments that were being done and they were making hand over fists in cash on the selling of foreign cars as they tried to literally put Detroit out of business.
@@matrox Yep, and then a govt' based organization (EPA) ever so conveniently slapped design constraints on the V8 because they knew there was nothing in the drawing board able to overcome that big of an obstacle so quickly. The Malaysian manufacturers didn't steal the American automotive market, they were handed it on a silver platter.
@@SirEpifire Exactly!
You've got to love those old cars! We've got nothing but crap nowadays.I own a 01 f 150 supercrew built in Minnesota and it's in mint condition.thank you Henry!
Yeah have to agree mate ,modern cars suck. Everything is cheap junk and a nightmare to work on. They seem to have a competition who can build the ugliest little shitbox these days to.
Cant do jack with these new vehicles plastic bottles driving down the road and nothing but covers and computer modules under the hood. Trucks are just SUVs with beds nowadays its ridiculous
@@petergoodwin2465 Yep you got it brother.
@@redmanrestorations8637 I couldn't agree more brother.
I had a 67' Ford F100 Stepside 6'bed from 1976 to about 1987. 352 V8, C6 Trans and a 4:11 rear, dual side exhaust exiting the under running boards in front of the rear tires. Also had a 69' 383 Road Runner at the same time. wish I had both of them still. Currently drive a 17' SS camaro 6 speed. Talk about a Bad ass modern day car!!
Such cool and funny commercials! Gotta love the 60's, if we could only go back and snatch up some of the cars and bring them back with us!!!!!
If U Were Alive & 13, & Car Crazy in 1969 .... Not Only Are These Commercials Not Hilarious. THEY'RE WONDERFUL.
You know whats a joke... Everything today.
Yup.
I was 13 in '69, I wish it was 1969 again.
I was born in 66 & also agree these commercials are def not hillarious .
Their Groovy !
And if you were 16 or older and car crazy in 1969, these were hokey as hell.
Only had what
165 million people in America then
The roads were virtually empty
Thanks for the memories
-and that's why my 68 Torino GT came with 4 wheel non boosted drums.
By the 90's I had to install boosted front disks: it was getting mighty tense at stoplights!
U.S. had 200 million people
@@ShinyRedGrapple
180 mega in 1969
We never kept our highways up.
The issue is not that 326 million people live in America today. It is the fact that regulations have meant that nothing new gets built.
There have been no new cities developed nor has manufacturing and innovation been allowed to continue to develop the economy.
So it has meant that people have been flocking to the same cities and towns that existed in 1969 and those areas have not been developed to deal with the population increases.
The '69's. What GORGEOUS models!
I remember these commercials. A simpler time.
Back when you would actually own your car before it needed a brake job.
And can work on it yourself. Now even the Maverick has gone up in collection car value.
Before wheel bearings go out at exactly 60,001 miles (Looking at you Jeep...)
I paid cash for a 67 Mustang.
and it would be a race between a brake job and the body turning to rust before your eyes
@@PrivateEyeYiYi
Median income in the late 1960s American was near to $10000 and a 1967 and a standard Mustang Coupe started at $2500.
I LOVED it! As always - Ford commercials are classy! LOVE YOU FORD!
RockandRoll
Indeed they really seem fresh even today with that catchy music. Not many other car ads from the time hold up as well. But I really like the upbeat positive angle in them, back when the USA believed it could accomplish anything.
When cars had style AND power. As a teen, my favorite was the Mercury Cyclone GT. A sexy beast!
That "German" at 6:53 was Arte Johnson playing one of his famous characters from the hit TV show Laugh In which aired in the late 60s.
I was 5 years old when Ford’s ‘69 fastback models hit the market. I remember seeing one for the first time in a parking lot as my older brother talked to the owner whom he knew. I don’t know the specific model, but as they talked about the car, I looked it over inside and out and loved it.
I had a 1973 Maverick .It was still going strong when I gave it away at 638,000 miles
Seriously? What year did you get rid of it?
Nope
Really? A Maverag, I mean seriously, the Mavewreck, did that??
@@bzbzob hush child, you know not what you speak... Maverick Grabber w/302 boss motor would make you pee your pants back then! Google it...
@@amjrpain919 just a 302-2v no Boss 302 in a Maverick
"This one eats birds for breakfast" hahaha I love it! It took a moment to get the reference though.
Today there would be protests accusing them of animal cruelty.
@@bighands69 those people would explode if they saw the commercial with the German soldier
Well it's settled! I'm gonna go buy a new Maverick right now with the 170 engine and 3 on the tree!
Don't get one with a vinyl roof cause it will rot right out! :)
I would love one of those today.
@Amplass 333 Was he referring to Australian builds? Most US models every make, the roof was left unpainted before the vinyl was applied.
@Amplass 333 Oh. Australia! We can't all be lucky enough to live in a place as dry as that...
@@thisisyourcaptainspeaking2259 Didn't know about that but that's absolutely terrible!.. I prefer to have as little trim as possible on a car cause it's a place moisture could get trapped under. Especially around a vinyl roof! I don't like fender skirts either cause they help trap a cloud of moisture in the wheel well.
1969.. Vietnam War was in full swing. I was 10 years old. Asked my dad if the war is still going when I get to be 18 would I have to go? He said.. Yes!
Thank the lord you didn't go...😇
I was 9 and since the war was going on my whole life, I was worried that I was going to go too.
@@jamesdellaneve9005 man what a horrible thing to have hanging over your head. Thank god it as all over by your late teens
Nice father you had. Mine said I go to bed with no suppa.
That war is the only part of the 60’s I don’t miss. The cars and the music haven’t been anywhere near as awesome since.
Great memories….my da worked as a salesman at a Ford dealership from ‘67-‘70…got to ride in all the hot rods they were producing…the Boss 429 ‘69 Mustang was a badass machine
not nearly as much power as the 351C 4-barrel. the 429 motor was a cheap shortcut
"Mrs. Robinson....I think you're trying to seduce me with this running Cobra Jet mill!"
Yeah, that was a nice spoof. Sure beats an Alfa Romeo 😏
It was a alfa Romeo spider, but I dig your enthusiasm!😎💯👍
@@amjrpain919 My brother owns an '86 Spyder and that car, with only 20,000 miles on it was, and is, a piece of junk. I used it for a month in the early 90s and had a u-joint break, followed by the muffler hanger breaking. Mechanic at the Alfa dealer said we should stock up on u-joints as they were (are?) notorious for breaking.
All that said, my brother still has it, just sitting (with a cracked exhaust manifold) wasting away with less than 30,000 miles. It must hold some sentimental value for him 🤷♂️
Lol
@@LeopoldoNotarianni-rk9vv "One word: Plastics."
... AND THE COBRA SAID TO THE ROADRUNNER..."BEEP BEEP YOUR ASS"🤫
A very exciting time to be a car nut. I remember it as a kid.
But I also like the current line-up of American muscle. The new Mustang's, Camaro's, Challenger and Charger, are all surpassing the performance benchmark's set by these cars. I love classic cars, and nothing is as cool as driving one to a cruise event. I have owned and worked on a lot of these cars thru my teen years. It is amazing to me how many powertrain combo's were available back then. Rarely were their 2 cars exactly alike. No anti-lock brakes, usually no power brakes(!), sometimes no power steering, no traction, just raw, loud and lopey sounds. Hahaha.
I feel fortunate to have witnessed the muscle car era from the 60's thru now. No better time to be alive!
I bet the same guy that wrote the song for ON ANY SUNDAY movie with Steve McQueen wrote these commercial tunes. They got that feel-good vibe you know man it's like groovy. Hey I'm 61 I still say boss and gnarly!
Mike Such
Spot on friend! "feel-good vibe"! You just do NOT see this kind of thing in modern advertising, and if you see anything approximating it, it's very forced and heavy handed too.
Ahh, 1969, I was a senior in high school and I bought a new 1969 red Mustang. I wish I still had that Mustang.
Bought a brand new car when still in high school? Must be nice. I had to resurrect an old junker and make do with that while I saved my pennies.
@@rael5469 Five hundred dollars down and $78.00 per month for 36 months. It was affordable.
@@agm6095 "Five hundred dollars down"
For a kid fresh out of high school??? .....in 1969 ????? What planet are we talking about? You're joking, right? You must be very young. ....or very rich.
@@rael5469 Rich? I had been saving money for a few years, I was 17 when I bought it.
@@agm6095 "Rich? I had been saving money for a few years, I was 17 when I bought it."
I think you are the exception, not the rule. I never knew of any high school senior who bought a brand new car. Then or now. In my town I knew of some parents who bought their little precious a VW or a Datsun to go off to college in. But I never new anyone who bought a brand new car straight out of high school. Good for you if you were able to do that. Congratulations. Sincerely. In any case I enjoy the topic of the old cars. I love them too. Most of them. Not the foreign cars.
Excellent commercial lineup! I remember them well. Thanks!
Mavericks were great for 10 second runs in the Quarter Mile. One of the best bracket racing rides ever.
I had a 1969 428 Cobrajet Mach1, still have dreams of it and i'm 70 yrs old
You have good taste in cars my friend!
I just looked this car up, very nice!
This was a great year to be alive! I turned 13 that year. The Apollo 11 landing. And we got a new 69 Mustang in red!
*428* !!!
All you need to say right there.
(BTW, the "Bird" in case you didn't know, is the Plymouth Road Runner)
Remember every one of these cars when they came out.
The maverick commercial was shot at Vasquez Rocks, location for a Star Trek episode, lots of commercials and westerns. There used to be a fort wall there, used as the set for a short ived forgotten 1960s tv show. I climbed to the top of the big rock that sticks out, hiked and camped there.
F Troop?
No, F-Troop was a log stockade, this had solid walls. It was built for "Tales of the 77th Bengal Lancers", a one year show in 1857 - scvhistory.com/scvhistory/lw3620.htm
Star Trek, Blazing Saddles, Flintstones, filmed there, and many tv shows used the "fort". It was made of 2x4s, chicken wire, and plaster and they wouldn't let us climb on it. It had only the front wall, no back, the wall just ended on either side of the gate. Not a cavalry fort, looked Arabian/middle eastern.
Lived at Edwards in the early 60s, so the first part of "The Right Stuff" looked exactly like my childhood, also the film "X-15" (Charles Bronson and Mary Tyler Moore, no joke) (saw X-15 several times, knew kids whose dads flew it, my sister had class with Chuck Yeager's son). Used to watch them film CHiPs from my office in Culver City, transferred to 444 S. Flower, which was used for exterior shots on "LA Law".
Living right at Edwards and then the coast of LA from 1960-1985 and the use of local sites for tv and movie accidentally documented my youth. Now it is mostly in cheap locations or computer generated.
Yeah, half the time when they beamed down, they would end up at Vasquez Rocks lol
@@jt95124 Wow! Thanks for the history. I was just joking around
I'm proud that was borm in 1969. Such a transformative year. No wonder I love Muscle Cars.
I was born in 67
A fabulous vintage. Dad had the 69 Fairlane sports roof 428CJ with top loader. Beast.
Back when we had a country that was real. This rathole of a nation is not America anymore. But we had the best auto industry the world has ever seen. And it was awesome. Thanks for the flashbacks.
The only car Canada made was the Bricklin.
@@mckessa17 Canada was making products for Ford, GM, and Chrysler even back in the 1960s!
@@watershed44 I realize that but it's not what I meant.
thanks for a trip down memory lane--better days to me back then
Great! A snapshot of the late 1960s.
I graduated high school in 1969 when cars were at the forefront of my interests. Dad didn't help when he bought a new 1968 GTO HO. ;-)
Ever let you borrow it??
@@painkillerjones6232 Drove it high school a couple of times. We had to replace the right rear axle twice because it somehow got twisted (bent). :-)
My first car was a 1968 GTO. 400 V8, turbo-hydramatic trans, Hidden headlights, hood tach, Verdero green.
1970 My dad ran a restaurant and my mom was a nurse. They owned a home in L.A. and had a brand new Mustang Mach 1 (dad) and Maverick Grabber (mom) in the garage. These were average salary earners and we lived a wonderful life, all three kids able to go to college. This life is no longer available for the average person in America.
I agree with you. The Republicans only worry about the rich now.
@@johnmitchell5264 and the democraps only worry about welfare leeches, the middle class is toast!
Great commercial music of the time. Really groovy and now yet Madison Avenue-ready.
When cars were works of art. The station wagon was very practical for hauling DIY items and luggage. Now? Forget it!
1:20 Guy - "The power anchors are caliper discs."
Girl - "For the last time Larry, I'm not f*cking you."
"It's bad for my mill if we don't"
The wedding segment is a direct steal from The Graduate!
Yeah, with totally the WRONG car ... sucks
What happened to, Ford? How cool were they!? Every car they made in the 60s was a classic!
That could be said of any of the big 3
Today’s Mustang is worthy. So was the Focus, which unfortunately is no more.
SUV ‘culture’ has swallowed up nearly all of American auto production.
Having come from a two Maverick family I'm not sure I agree.
Thank OPEC AND RALPH NADER...🤬
@@amjrpain919 actually yeah. You do realize, don’t you, that the ‘constraints’ of the 1970s ultimately resulted in cars with far better performance.
Love the reference to the movie “The Graduate” in the Torino commercial. :)
Looks like a groovy California rake job!!
Indeed!!
& now we have terms like snowflake, Karen , homophobic, & so on.
We were a Torino family back then, cousin had a '69 , another cousin had a '70 429, my brother had a '72 Sport and my mom drove us around in a '74 Torino sedan. Those were great times
I owned a 70 Tornino 302 for 6yrs. Sweet dependable ride.So easy to work on.
You got to love the 302!
@@kevinmontgomery1383 True true...2 barrel carb and 22 miles per gal
@@kurtporter1323 Now we get that with our full size pick up, on the highway. The V8 is a little smaller than a 350.
That cat was on "Rowan and Martin's Laugh -in"!
When cars was built to last and built strong.and easy to work on.
Yup my Cyclone has never broke down in 9 years I’ve owned it!
@CCC. AWESOME VIDEOS. Thanks for posting and sharing Tim
Great commercial collection.
[ last of the swingin’ music].
📻🙂
The singing, dancing "Bright Young Americans" group in those commercials seem to have no history apart from those commercials, as I tried searching for them with no success.
Makes me want to go back in time, oh wait I do when driving my Ford Mach 1
I was 7 in 1969 I remember seeing all the cool fords. We had a Ford dealership close to my folks house. The best AM cars were built before 1973 or so. Wish I had a time machine.
AL M I made a comment two weeks ago saying, in my opinion 1972 was the last great year for cars. It was a video about life in the 70s. All the cars and people looked awesome!
I was 15 in 1972 pumping gas at Sunoco Station. Oil embargo and people dumping muscle cars. For $850 i bought a 69 428 scj 4 speed mach 1. Still got it 52 years later. The car and I grew up together. Candy red and white interior shaker car. Only 68k miles. Put a lot on quarter mile at a time and street racing.
Now this is when Americans weren't cowards and this is when Ford made some really awesome muscle cars and hotrods, the girls looked beautiful, Democrats weren't progressives nor socialists, and when people truly loved America.
Back when people knew which bathroom to use...
@@davervatx8814 Exactly mate.
Democrats have always been about power, 🖕🏻 them!
@@sherwoodbaker2714 Yep you got it brother.
No cowards in '69? What about draft riots, asylum in Canada for draft dodgers? Things change. Trump couldn't save your soul. It was dead anyway.
Girlfriend in high school had a Maverick with a stock 302 V8. You just couldnt keep it down to the speed limit.
Rats birds for breakfast!!!! Hey as a Road Runner guy since 74 I take umbrage!! Lol great commercial
😂😂
Well, look at it this way: Chrysler (okay, FCA/Stellantis/What*ever*) got a bit of payback introducing their RAM TRX, complete with an image of a T-Rex (TRX…get it?) devouring a Raptor. 'Nuff said.
@@barrettwbenton just don't park it in your garage- especially an attached garage.
I love that black Ford LTD. I'll have to paint a model kit like that.
Even the commercials were better ! It shows you how popular "Laugh In" was ! Very interesting !😊
I really loved those '69 Ford commercials and I miss our '69 LTD.
My Dad bought a new 1969 LTD. Black with a black vinyl top and black vinyl interior . 390-2 barrel. Automatic, PS, PB, and *no air conditioning!* Talk about a hot car in the Southern summer sun! He always said LTD meant Lincoln Trimmed Down.
Love these old commercials by Ford, heck I love all those old car commercials. Today cars are nothing but a computer with 4 wheels
I love background músic, it is happynes. Ford cars since 1967 to 2007 were very American shapes. Now they look as Japanese or Korean designes, same for Chevrolet. I read that Ford will make SUVs only, not more cars never as before. They are locos!
Greetings from Santiago, Chile SouthAmerica.
@Amplass 333 It's hard to generalize. Ford is discontinuing car offerings for the USA -- except the mustang. European Fords are not sold in the USA any longer, and the Australian Fords seem to be entirely different as well.
@Amplass 333 I had a friend who was importing the Ford 351 heads from Australia in 1990s-- I always wanted an Australian Falcon because they had 4 doors and looked like a normal car. Ford in the States got boring after 1970 or so.
@Amplass 333
Modern cars in America look like cheap Asian cars there is not getting around that fact.
@Amplass 333- all the new cars look like wind-tunnel-tested jelly beans. Asian cars don't have 'more plastic' or 'shit' as you put it. their assembly lines and tooling were developed for them by us when we occupied japan- their assembly and fit and finish compare favorably to other products from other countries- including europe and australia. their methods are just like our methods, only more modern and efficient because we set them up with state-of-the-art infrastructure. any acura or lexus is screwed together better than anything we've seen from other countries including US, germany, and sweden. toyota, scion, and daihatsu (they still make cars under toyota) are better cars than anything from other countries. number one in asia, by far and, depending on who you ask, number one in the world- including volkswagen. and don't forget honda of japan. reminds me of the bicycle industry....
A 1969 Torino with a 428? Oh yeah!
WHEN CARS WERE CARS! AMERICAN BUILT MUSCLE!👍
Wish those days would come back
We have all the parts and entire shells for the Mustangs now. Those days partly have come back! :)
The 1969 Ford Cobra sold for $3000 brand new, today they sell for over $30,000 to $50,000.
But the average salary was around 20k or less. $3k was "expensive". As a kid, I remember the ads where the car was $1800 brand new 😎
I know. You could literally buy any luxury car for 3,500 or less. With all options. Man what a time.
These commercials were good
Love the "Laugh In " tie in
Very interesting!
But stupid.
They should have used Frank Gorshin the Riddler in some of these commercials. Classic 😂
Back when you could move and travel anywhere you wanted with a little hard work
@Amplass 333 thank you,I’m surprised someone else understood what I was trying to say
Back when Ford still made cars.
So by “You” you mean “Some”. Because in 1969, not “everyone” could move and travel where they wanted, freely. Let’s not re-write history.
@@jamestokyo877 Of course not everyone but if for some reason you’re trying to say how poor and helpless you think black people where than just say so, but I know at least in my city, quite a few friends who’s family members worked hard at jobs that are not longer there, that allowed them to be strongly middle class, own homes, go on vacation, and pass something on and send there kids to college. The middle class is dead for everyone, regardless of what you have been told progressivism hasn't always been positive, if anything race relations are At a 20 year low at least.
@@jamestokyo877 I'm so sick and tired of wumao sowing dissent and division.
America is the greatest country on the planet lifting more of every race color and creed out of abject poverty in human history.
Tell your dear leader Winnie Xi Jinpooh, you're a failure and a disgrace.
Had a 1970 Torino Cobra 428 with 335 hp in qBritish Racing Green. Slip into passing gear at 70 and Lay a 50 foot rubber strip. And what a sound that engine made!
To "get" some of those commercials (blue jackets, opening 'windows'), you would have to have seen Rowan and Martin's Laugh-in. 1967-1972.
Very interesting... They also have no idea about Arte Johnson's German soldier bit.
My dad bought the very first Torino ever....1968. Loved that car!