1964: The KID who WOULDN’T CONFORM | The Long Journey | Voice of the People | BBC Archive

Ойын-сауық

In this mid-sixties documentary, two teenagers confront some of the existential crises facing those coming of age in this era. They mull over how they want to live, how society is ordered and whether you can truly be free.
No presenter, no voice-over, no words but their own.
Whatever your approach to existentialism, BBC Archive does not recommend hitchhiking as a means of travel along this (or any) road.
Clip taken from The Long Journey, originally broadcast on BBC One, Tuesday 7 April, 1964.
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Пікірлер: 368

  • @sratus
    @sratusАй бұрын

    It all feels like a song by The Smiths.

  • @donnasmyth45

    @donnasmyth45

    Ай бұрын

    And looks like one of their album covers.

  • @ChrisWarsop

    @ChrisWarsop

    Ай бұрын

    If you watch til the end you find out what the song would be called: 'Threescore and Ten'

  • @1966wilky

    @1966wilky

    Ай бұрын

    @@algrant5293I’m genuinely sad to hear that. I hope she had a good life 🤔

  • @1966wilky

    @1966wilky

    Ай бұрын

    @@judeballard Yes, I know it. It’s more appropriate than my suggestion 😂

  • @ChrisWarsop

    @ChrisWarsop

    Ай бұрын

    @@algrant5293 YES! (three score and) ten points!

  • @turboslag
    @turboslagАй бұрын

    Life for most is pretty mundane, which is why alcohol and drugs are so prevalent. Break it down into the fundamentals and most work their life away from 16 to around 70, earning just enough to survive, if they're lucky. Then a gradual decline into the "care" system, where they're stripped of dignity and any money and assets they managed to scrape together to pay for the state to suffer their last years of existence. It's life Jim, but not as it could be.

  • @jaywalker3087

    @jaywalker3087

    Ай бұрын

    Yep..... I never did fit in either....

  • @porcelain_doll2321

    @porcelain_doll2321

    28 күн бұрын

    Well said

  • @hayleyanna2625

    @hayleyanna2625

    26 күн бұрын

    Perfectly put.

  • @davidmcmartin6194

    @davidmcmartin6194

    26 күн бұрын

    Ouch😣!!!!

  • @chrismachin2166

    @chrismachin2166

    23 күн бұрын

    What about their eternal life? The hopeless worldview of “there is no life after death “ is the problem.Everybody knows there is a Creator ,revealed by what has been made by his divine nature and eternal power. Rejection of the “Good News” message only leads to chaos and misery.

  • @morganmbartram
    @morganmbartram18 күн бұрын

    I wouldn't conform, and broke away when I was as old as 27. I was doing everything for everyone, and had enough and sick of listening to parents arguing and family demands, but it didn't go down very well when I left and caused arguments. I've always been told off since for doing it all wrong including never having a proper job. I've never actually been without a job, but one example, wouldn't be dictated to in an office on peanuts like my mother was. Whatever I did, was never approved. Only my stepfather was proud of me.

  • @user-ul8ut6gt1r
    @user-ul8ut6gt1r19 күн бұрын

    This is England Shefield in the 60s. Grey skys smokey foggy factories life in North West England was miserable i felt like this kid at 16 too i wanted to run away to London wher it was exciting 😢 im 44 now and still want to run away and escape adult life of the 9 til 5 grind.

  • @user-un9go4qe5i
    @user-un9go4qe5iАй бұрын

    I wonder what happened to those two? They'd be about 76 now. I wonder what they did with their lives? I wonder if they're still alive...???

  • @1966wilky

    @1966wilky

    Ай бұрын

    Yes, I’ve just asked the same question. They were quite philosophical so it did make me curious to know how life had treated them...

  • @louisesomers5560

    @louisesomers5560

    Ай бұрын

    She’s my Mother

  • @dukedepommefrite1467

    @dukedepommefrite1467

    Ай бұрын

    @@louisesomers5560She conformed eventually then….?

  • @user-un9go4qe5i

    @user-un9go4qe5i

    Ай бұрын

    @@louisesomers5560 We need a follow-up programme... 60 years later.

  • @DeeTeaDee

    @DeeTeaDee

    Ай бұрын

    She’s probably in insurance now

  • @debrarufini6906
    @debrarufini6906Ай бұрын

    These two could pass as Creature Comforts characters.

  • @elainefell7943

    @elainefell7943

    Ай бұрын

    😂

  • @p5rsona
    @p5rsonaАй бұрын

    makes me almost wish i lived in england in 60s....the way people talk its so enchanting

  • @pablozewoppa
    @pablozewoppaАй бұрын

    Semi-detached houses with their gardens, 'almost an apology to nature.' I like that. I grew up on just such a street in the 1970s. You should see it now: the front gardens have been paved and turned into drives for 2 cars. Every house with its uniform white UPVC window frames and doors. At least gardens brought a bit of nature: hedgehogs, birds, bees, spiders, bats. Young families have transformed their back gardens into cluttered and largely unused playgrounds for their children. Older couples have built 'pubs' in their sheds. Those youngsters in the clip are articulate. Today's youngsters are too; only they're connected through social media. In general, people seem very different now. They don't even smoke real cigarettes!

  • @soundseeker63
    @soundseeker63Ай бұрын

    That little chat on the hilltop between those two girls was delightful, made me smile. I wonder how many 16 years olds today, 60 years on, spend really deep and intimate moments with their friends like that, musing at complexity and apparent chaos of the world. Probably too glued to a screen or sucked in by social media to bother with that now. What a shame. Youth is very brief, and the only time we get to entertain the idea that we have any true freedom or autonomy before the tedious monotony of life and demands of "the system" grind you down and bleed it out of you. In the end I expect she probably did "conform" and get a job, marry, and have kids in a little semi-detached house. But at least she was free in her own mind, if only briefly.

  • @Bleech606

    @Bleech606

    Ай бұрын

    Yeah, she probably did, she seems at an early stage of figuring herself and the world out here. I felt much the same as her in my late teens/early 20s. Part of my problem was undiagnosed inattentive ADHD. It wouldn't surprise me in the slightest if she was the same. Eventually I found my own ways to cope, through reactions against boredom and stress, and jobs I didn't find as insufferable as sitting in an office, completing abstract but repetitive tasks. I see a lot of people like this end up in jobs working with people - teachers/support workers etc because people are constantly surprising and interesting and easier to motivate yourself for. Creative jobs are quite common also.

  • @biegebythesea6775

    @biegebythesea6775

    26 күн бұрын

    lots of 16 year olds do that. being on social media doesn't change it at all.

  • @soundseeker63

    @soundseeker63

    25 күн бұрын

    @@biegebythesea6775 "being on social media doesn't change it at all." You must be on a different planet to the rest of us then. Not only has it visibly and profoundly changed the way ALL age groups interact with each other (you only have to look around you on a busy train/bus/tram to notice everyone glued to the phone completely detached and isolated from one another, same on college and uni campuses) but research has proven multiple times across the globe that mental health, overall happiness and quality of inter-personal relationships has all declined in recent years, and positively correlates with amount of time spent on social media. Read up about it. You might learn something!

  • @mrnobodyz

    @mrnobodyz

    20 күн бұрын

    Ffs snap out of it!😂

  • @iangbland
    @iangblandАй бұрын

    ‘Nature never made shoes.’ Fair point.

  • @shamrockgerry

    @shamrockgerry

    Ай бұрын

    Yeah. But nature. Gave. Us the tools ⚒️ 🔥 to Survive and grow. & Clothes ourselves from the season weather

  • @positivelynegative9149

    @positivelynegative9149

    Ай бұрын

    Nature never handed you a plate of food either. Does that mean we should not eat?

  • @moominmay

    @moominmay

    Ай бұрын

    @@positivelynegative9149except she did lol. A variety of vegetation and free range animals yum!

  • @iangbland

    @iangbland

    Ай бұрын

    @@positivelynegative9149 it was kind of tongue in cheek, but thanks for clarifying.

  • @LLS710

    @LLS710

    Ай бұрын

    nature is the thorns. it doesn't want you to wear shoes.

  • @philippamcqueen5430
    @philippamcqueen5430Ай бұрын

    This is lovily..but teens run away from home for so many different reasons also,I felt like I was just a let down to my family..so I ran away ..its so important to let your kids know how proud of them you are ..and give them your time x

  • @TruthAndFreedom.

    @TruthAndFreedom.

    Ай бұрын

    It's pure pro pa gan da mate ..... How can't you see this ?

  • @krashd

    @krashd

    15 күн бұрын

    @@TruthAndFreedom. Probably because, unlike you, they aren't a crackpot?

  • @lectorintellegat
    @lectorintellegatАй бұрын

    It’s like seeing the modern world come into view. An entire institutional paradigm characterised by one girl.

  • @TruthAndFreedom.

    @TruthAndFreedom.

    Ай бұрын

    Yeah mate it's called pro pa gan da........... It's how you create reality.......... Get with it man

  • @biegebythesea6775

    @biegebythesea6775

    26 күн бұрын

    @@TruthAndFreedom. wtf is wrong with you?

  • @MarkStevens8899
    @MarkStevens8899Ай бұрын

    I think you still feel the same when your older, just that life knocks the stuffing out of you really. What a fabulous upload cheers BBC archive, i hope Morrissey sees it.❤

  • @user-lh9ei6he1h
    @user-lh9ei6he1hАй бұрын

    Some of the cynical comments made about these young people are precisely the attitudes they wanted to avoid.

  • @timmytrimble4069

    @timmytrimble4069

    Ай бұрын

    Yep, exactly.

  • @mikeheath8589
    @mikeheath8589Ай бұрын

    Chumbawamba used some edited dialogue from this on their track 'One Way Or The Other' from the album 'Readymades' 2002 … although having now looked into this, there's actually a bit more to it. I'm pretty sure that Chumbawamba's source was actually 'On The Edge': a Radio Ballad by Ewan MacColl, Peggy Seeger and Charles Parker which included spoken thoughts by young people and was broadcast on BBC Home Service Basic in 1963, predating this documentary by one year. The documentarist Philip Donnellan seems to have used some extracts from 'On The Edge' for this documentary; as did Chumbawamba for their track. (Philip Donnellan did frequently work with Ewan MacColl, Peggy Seeger and Charles Parker). Anyway, I never knew any of that until I watched this amazing clip. I'd love to be able to see the whole documentary one day!

  • @mybookfacetube

    @mybookfacetube

    Ай бұрын

    Thanks for that, I'll give it a listen.

  • @TruthAndFreedom.

    @TruthAndFreedom.

    Ай бұрын

    Documentary? .. 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣👍🤡 It's literally actors making pop a Ganda dear ...... How don't you get how it all works yet ? 😂😂😂😂

  • @daniellamcgee4251

    @daniellamcgee4251

    24 күн бұрын

    ​@@TruthAndFreedom.It's sad that I can't tell if you are a troll, or have self-esteem issues and bolster your ego by being condescending, and believing you must have greater intelligence because you know the secret to the world i.e. simplistic conspiracy theories. Or maybe you are experiencing a hypermanic episode. Whatever is happening with you, your behaviour is antisocial, and I hope you find self worth in more productive ways. Take care.

  • @JJONNYREPP

    @JJONNYREPP

    23 күн бұрын

    1964: The KID who WOULDN’T CONFORM | The Long Journey | Voice of the People | BBC Archive 0840am 14.5.24 Chumbawamba? that band was crap after a while... still; it cant have been that bad - i had a few of their albums stolen from me... the smarmy never mind the ballots being the only thing that seems to last the test of time... but, as i say, northerners are just northern - that's the selling point. reet tedious.

  • @Flip5ide
    @Flip5ideАй бұрын

    I know exactly how she feels

  • @Gretny

    @Gretny

    Ай бұрын

    yeah, the same as every generation feels !

  • @timmytrimble4069
    @timmytrimble4069Ай бұрын

    Been there, done that. Best time of my life that made a great impression on me. I am very, very grateful for that time which improved my life and outlook.

  • @farhanatoerien3437
    @farhanatoerien3437Ай бұрын

    Her voice is lovely

  • @Gretny

    @Gretny

    Ай бұрын

    They don't make em like that no more !

  • @theeggtimertictic1136

    @theeggtimertictic1136

    Ай бұрын

    Perfect for ASMR ... born to early ...

  • @Aerojet01
    @Aerojet01Ай бұрын

    I can relate to this lady about social conformity. There are so many people in this world telling others what to do and how they should live their lives, when they should focus on themselves.

  • @Stevies_Precog_Gym_n_Spa420

    @Stevies_Precog_Gym_n_Spa420

    Ай бұрын

    Maybe calling bs on the stuff you see in the world is what comes from focusing on yourself. You realize how much you care, how important it is and how many people want you to shut up about it.

  • @morganmbartram

    @morganmbartram

    18 күн бұрын

    Totally agree.

  • @hilaryepstein6013
    @hilaryepstein6013Ай бұрын

    I really hate being cynical about an idealistic 16 year old but I'd like to know the real story behind this film. Was she genuinely running away from home to find a better life for herself or were her parents just nagging her to go to college or get a mundane job which she didn't want to do? How did the BBC find her? Was this a kind of docudrama and she wasn't running away at all and it was semi scripted? If not I'd like to know how her life turned out and did she find the world she was looking for or did she lose that idealism along the way. I hope not.

  • @rabbieburns2501

    @rabbieburns2501

    Ай бұрын

    Seems semi-scripted to me. Like early Ken Loach. Voice-over narration at beginning especially seems too poetic/ mature for a young girl in the early 60s imho

  • @andydixon2980

    @andydixon2980

    Ай бұрын

    She became a stand-up comedian.

  • @Dan23_7

    @Dan23_7

    Ай бұрын

    She led her life wallowing in self pity.

  • @AlexejSvirid

    @AlexejSvirid

    Ай бұрын

    Why don't you ask Santa about?... The problem is Devil runs the world. He is lier and murderer. This is the reason why deception and violence are everywhere. That's why we've got the Gospel about the God's kingdom. Jehovah would put everything in order. The dead will be resurected and we'll meet our beloved ones again! :-)

  • @glenndouglas8822

    @glenndouglas8822

    Ай бұрын

    She put on a mask and changed her name to ....Stephen Patrick Morrissey...😂🤣​@@andydixon2980

  • @twitchygiraffe4636
    @twitchygiraffe463629 күн бұрын

    Isn’t this an extra on a Morrissey dvd somewhere?!

  • @lindyashford7744
    @lindyashford7744Ай бұрын

    Contrast her with the artist Sheila Fell also from around the same time whose home was in Cumbria. She is older than this girl but has a lot more fulfilment in life and has been to Art school in London, but returns to be in nature, she escapes the things these girls are discussing.

  • @croiners4166
    @croiners4166Ай бұрын

    This was very good!❤

  • @CricketEngland
    @CricketEnglandАй бұрын

    Without money you can’t get a home and without a home you can’t get a job and without a job you can’t get any money and repeat…

  • @VioletBagpipeSack-xf3ke

    @VioletBagpipeSack-xf3ke

    Ай бұрын

    unless you're not one of us

  • @azillliasmith2734

    @azillliasmith2734

    Ай бұрын

    @@VioletBagpipeSack-xf3ke🧕🏽

  • @Sassquatted

    @Sassquatted

    Ай бұрын

    Simple as .....

  • @Strange-Viking

    @Strange-Viking

    Ай бұрын

    Yes you can get a job without having a house. How silly. And without a job you can get money as well.

  • @CricketEngland

    @CricketEngland

    Ай бұрын

    @@Strange-Vikingok sell your house quit your current job, give away all your money and go and live on the streets and then try and get another job and benefits and tell me how you get on

  • @attictv281
    @attictv281Ай бұрын

    ...to all the other runaways, who couldn't wait to find a bigger, brighter world.

  • @76ToneCrome
    @76ToneCromeАй бұрын

    I wouldn't be surprised if one became a barrister and the other, a secretary for the local Conservative party.

  • @Comfortzone99

    @Comfortzone99

    Ай бұрын

    Ha ha yes - but in a way hope it is true as it would be better than some of the roads they could have chosen.

  • @fabricejarfi

    @fabricejarfi

    Ай бұрын

    I'd swear the girl came knocking on my door last week just to slag off Sadiq Khan and tell me how her priority was to scrap ULEZ😂

  • @MarkStevens8899

    @MarkStevens8899

    Ай бұрын

    No need to wish that fate on anyone surely?

  • @tonys1636

    @tonys1636

    Ай бұрын

    Easily done then with free Universities with the right 'A' Levels and a grant for living and ancillary expenses if one qualified.

  • @heatherlinnette189

    @heatherlinnette189

    Ай бұрын

    @@tonys1636 Now the government is asking a student take on a debt of £60,000 at the age of 18. There’s no more maintenance grant, just a maintenance loan University cost £9225 per year accommodation costs. If you have food included at a university is over £10,000 a year. My daughter is going to university this year to do physics. There’s a great shortage for physicists, so anyone studying the subject would be very beneficial to the country, but these degrees are on average M A, so it takes four years so she already knows she’s going to be £80,000 in debt, which at the moment has a 7% interest rate charge. It’s a very shortsighted proposal, not helping young people to get qualifications that were sorely lacking in this country, it will cause a brain drain.

  • @wizardaka
    @wizardakaАй бұрын

    This would be good for an Adam Curtis documentary

  • @TruthAndFreedom.

    @TruthAndFreedom.

    Ай бұрын

    Love the way everyone thinks this 'documentary' is real ........ 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣👍🤡

  • @biegebythesea6775

    @biegebythesea6775

    26 күн бұрын

    @@TruthAndFreedom. please shut the hell up

  • @krashd

    @krashd

    15 күн бұрын

    @@TruthAndFreedom. Keep taking your meds, despite what the voices tell you.

  • @redbeki
    @redbekiАй бұрын

    Absolutely amazing young women. So brave and intelligent

  • @biegebythesea6775

    @biegebythesea6775

    26 күн бұрын

    women?? children.

  • @VMM34

    @VMM34

    26 күн бұрын

    Beige: They were working full-time jobs at 14. Sixteen has never been classed as a child until lately. In fact you can't even get full adult minimum wage until you're 25 now. No wonder young people are regressing. Treat them like babies and they'll become dependent on you, perhaps forever

  • @Black.Sabbath

    @Black.Sabbath

    23 күн бұрын

    @@VMM34 21 actually

  • @VMM34

    @VMM34

    23 күн бұрын

    @@Black.Sabbath That's great. It used to be 25. Just looked it up and you're right, it's changed. It's about time. It was 25 for years but as of 2021 they treat over 21s as full human beings now. Edited to say it's been a long 25 years on that demeaning policy. It began in 1998 where under 25s weren't paid full wage

  • @Dekoherence-ii8pw

    @Dekoherence-ii8pw

    19 күн бұрын

    @@biegebythesea6775 16 wasn't considered a child at the time. You probably didn't call yourself a child when you were 16 either.

  • @fidelcatsro6948
    @fidelcatsro6948Ай бұрын

    This kid is 76yrs old today if still alive

  • @sallybutton6237

    @sallybutton6237

    Ай бұрын

    I was thinking the same, I would like to see a follow up if she’s still alive & let her tell her tale, her life story now that it is almost over & coming to a close..🤔

  • @fidelcatsro6948

    @fidelcatsro6948

    Ай бұрын

    @@sallybutton6237 👍

  • @michelles2299

    @michelles2299

    20 күн бұрын

    @@sallybutton6237 watch 7 up

  • @carolconner9216
    @carolconner9216Ай бұрын

    I wonder where the hillside graveyard was filmed? Such a dismal place with the smoke eternally belching out of the factories. I'd plan my escape too!

  • @davidharwood9552
    @davidharwood9552Ай бұрын

    I was born 1954. I would have been 10 years old. The streets cars buildings people look familiar memories. There was little outside influences. We had to work things out ourselves not influenced by a mobile 📱 phone.

  • @Gaming-Shed

    @Gaming-Shed

    Ай бұрын

    Why does every single British clip from the old days have comments like this? I'm 52 and would rather live today than at any time before. "We had to work things out for ourselves" wtf does that even mean? We have every piece of knowledge at our fingertips in an instant. As these images show, it was miserable up to the late 90s. The tech boom put colour into the world. Bloody whining boomers.

  • @davidharwood9552

    @davidharwood9552

    Ай бұрын

    @@Gaming-Shed well gamingshed I’m pleased you got knowledge at your fingertips. Sadly that’s why your brain no longer has to function. Also I’m sad you didn’t have a happy memorable childhood

  • @csr7080

    @csr7080

    Ай бұрын

    @@Gaming-Shed Tell me about it. At least this one is not tacking on a comment about how "back when the UK was full of British people"... It's people stuck in the past, rose-tinted goggles, mixed with actual problems that we have today, ironically mostly caused by politics also espoused by those same people.

  • @tonys1636

    @tonys1636

    Ай бұрын

    @@Gaming-Shed We may have information and knowledge at our fingertips but the accuracy can be dubious often. We may have had to wait for a news broadcast or the morning newspapers, some could be trusted then, The Times or Daily Telegraph, some, Daily Herald (became The Sun) or the Daily Mirror less so. We could find detailed specialist information in the reference section of the local Public Library, they also had that day's newspapers and an archive of them. Oh, I'm a Boomer.

  • @mid-walesrover681

    @mid-walesrover681

    Ай бұрын

    It was better because we had more thinking time to work things out. We used to go to libraries and knew when to ask for advice. ​@@Gaming-Shed

  • @Me-ji2pn
    @Me-ji2pn25 күн бұрын

    BBC should find where they are now

  • @mikeyratcliff3400
    @mikeyratcliff3400Ай бұрын

    Wednesday morning at 5 o'clock as the day begins.. my sister did the same when Sgt pepper came out in 1967- i wonder now how much this influenced her...

  • @darganx

    @darganx

    Ай бұрын

    She's Leaving Home...

  • @Dekoherence-ii8pw

    @Dekoherence-ii8pw

    19 күн бұрын

    "Wednesday morning at 5 o'clock as the day begins.. " Oh my god, I was going to write that.

  • @eddyk2016
    @eddyk201626 күн бұрын

    I feel the same, but being working class it isn’t much fun “running away” with your last £5 in your pocket, out in the pis.sing rain, cold. You’d soon return to mummy’s cooking and comfortable suburban semi detached house playing computer games = REALITY

  • @guilhermecarvalhodarosa
    @guilhermecarvalhodarosaАй бұрын

    Amazing

  • @ekurisona663
    @ekurisona663Ай бұрын

    incredible poignancy - generations of people, entire cities...

  • @BeesWaxMinder
    @BeesWaxMinderАй бұрын

    Where are these folks now?

  • @Chris-xx2dg
    @Chris-xx2dgАй бұрын

    The houses were factories. The factories were monstrous. The value of relationships was so different then. I guess these girls hated the idea of being a cog. They probably experienced difficulty getting reciprocation from their relationships when technologies were taking over peoples lives. I guess now we are trying to find that industrial age meaning in relationships again at post capatilism consumerism.

  • @orbsofsteel
    @orbsofsteelАй бұрын

    Teens were more mature & yet more innocent at the same time in days past, back when you were still taught to think for yourself

  • @JP-ve7or

    @JP-ve7or

    26 күн бұрын

    "taught to think for yourself" ROFL

  • @Satscape
    @SatscapeАй бұрын

    1964, and still very relavant in 2024. People have way more ways to escape from 'reality' nowadays though.

  • @summersnowflake70

    @summersnowflake70

    17 күн бұрын

    I disagree a little. Modern reality is that technology and cameras are everywhere, there is no escape from it. I would love to be away from my phone, tv,laptop but modern life has made that almost impossible. My escape would be a small simple home and way of living.

  • @bardo0007
    @bardo0007Ай бұрын

    They would try to runaway for 2 weeks at most, without money you can't do much with your life.

  • @mumfnah
    @mumfnahАй бұрын

    Interesting listen

  • @DavidHembrow
    @DavidHembrowАй бұрын

    Empty roads. Most people did not rely on cars to get around. It's incredibly sad what has happened since then. The UK's roads are now stuffed with ten times as many cars, and all the people driving everywhere all the time insist that their use of the car is essential.

  • @heythisisminenotyours

    @heythisisminenotyours

    Ай бұрын

    Go out to rural locations like that and they still are empty

  • @biegebythesea6775

    @biegebythesea6775

    26 күн бұрын

    yep hate it

  • @biegebythesea6775

    @biegebythesea6775

    26 күн бұрын

    @@heythisisminenotyours no, let's have this back in london again.

  • @jamesvickers5998

    @jamesvickers5998

    24 күн бұрын

    Predominantly because people couldn’t afford cars

  • @davidcarrol110
    @davidcarrol110Ай бұрын

    It seems kind of scripted somehow. The monologue at the two-minute mark is a 1960s version of "Choose Life".

  • @biegebythesea6775

    @biegebythesea6775

    26 күн бұрын

    she was probably asked to write something then speak like it's narration that's why.

  • @grahamtranter3616

    @grahamtranter3616

    19 күн бұрын

    .., almost like the programme makers knew exactly the sort of person they sought and exactly the sort of aspirations they wanted the programme to promote. Imagine if they still did that now days. ., it would be awful! Every news programme the producers might move twenty miles out of their office find some conventionaly affluent middle of the road person to question. Right on cue these fodder might bleat out their hardships and how the awful government could make their life better. Makes one shudder to think!

  • @newmankidman5763
    @newmankidman5763Ай бұрын

    This kid is now 76

  • @Gretny

    @Gretny

    Ай бұрын

    Mad, eh ? Time is a crazy thing !

  • @ef1265

    @ef1265

    Ай бұрын

    there are two "kids" in it, if you have eyes

  • @mfd70

    @mfd70

    Ай бұрын

    Or dead

  • @newmankidman5763

    @newmankidman5763

    Ай бұрын

    @@ef1265, this documentary is about the first kid to appear on screen, the other kid is just featuring

  • @newmankidman5763

    @newmankidman5763

    Ай бұрын

    @@Gretny, mad indeed.

  • @YesYesYessYes
    @YesYesYessYes20 күн бұрын

    Free spirits. Inspiring

  • @SrmNosnibor
    @SrmNosniborАй бұрын

    Like Billy Liar's Liz.

  • @LLS710
    @LLS710Ай бұрын

    She was a hippy 3 years before flower power came along. Surely she was a hippy chick when it arrived.

  • @edwardfletcher7790

    @edwardfletcher7790

    Ай бұрын

    A Hippy ?? She's sociopathic !! Hippies were kind and happy, easy going and positive....

  • @DavidBailey-ch4cl

    @DavidBailey-ch4cl

    Ай бұрын

    She's more of a Beatnik, who'd been around since the late fifties.

  • @ramadamming8498

    @ramadamming8498

    Ай бұрын

    @@edwardfletcher7790 A lot of "postiive" people, like in the new age now, cover up their abusive, sociopathic side with "being positive" and talking about "the universe" while exploiting others. There are thousands and thousands of cases. Each way, regardless hippy, or beatnik or punk, they all were interested in living "outside the norm" and that in itself could be thought of as all sociopathic or part of mental instability maybe, which maybe is what is also being expressed, under the dressing of an identity or are just more interested in the horizon and exploring, maybe thinking a bit more about why we do what we do, than maybe others of that time, late 50s early 60s. Also, mental health was not at all what it is now. Some people like this, were sent to mental asylums and doped up or had electro shock therapy.

  • @Dekoherence-ii8pw

    @Dekoherence-ii8pw

    19 күн бұрын

    @@edwardfletcher7790 She's not sociopathic, what the hell are you talking about?

  • @jamierobinson9097
    @jamierobinson9097Ай бұрын

    I’ve tried my best to not confirm…..as and when I can

  • @angusmcclelland4846
    @angusmcclelland4846Ай бұрын

    Where is that girl now and what was her life like. Thats what I would like to see.

  • @kevphillips02
    @kevphillips02Ай бұрын

    Just hitched a lift and had the cheek to ask for money .

  • @workinprogresssince1974
    @workinprogresssince197420 күн бұрын

    Conformity and toeing the line have always been a societal thing and have always been around. I spent so much of my younger life wanting to break free, but it's not as simple as abandoning your former life. That said education and money can give you the freedom to breakout and have a more meaningful life without becoming vulnerable. I would love to know what happened to these two girls.

  • @AlexMitchell-sj4sb
    @AlexMitchell-sj4sbАй бұрын

    I wonder what happened to them? Either got a job the next year or went and joined a hippy commune in Europe somewhere in the late 60s. Maybe.

  • @Notmehimorthem
    @Notmehimorthem22 күн бұрын

    Here generation were almost all like her. It was called "alternative ideas", led to "the underground culture".

  • @user-lh9ei6he1h
    @user-lh9ei6he1hАй бұрын

    The genius of youth

  • @West-rn-showvn-ist-chick

    @West-rn-showvn-ist-chick

    22 күн бұрын

    Yes.. this generation of youth.. they had time to think deeply about everything.. their minds aren’t assaulted by social media and the mass brainwashing

  • @justinklenk
    @justinklenkАй бұрын

    Despite her narcissistic impoliteness, she's deeper, more educated, more well-spoken, and more centered than the vast majority of people I've met under 60 years of age or so.

  • @leejohnson3209
    @leejohnson3209Ай бұрын

    I think the increased cost of living and housing will drive the young of today away from careers, jobs and formal education, and towards alternative lifestyles such as van life. Practical skills such as mechanics, cooking and growing food will become important again, as people become digital nomads and self sufficient small holders. The factory, the office, the supermarket and the shop is unnatural, and it's always felt alien to me.

  • @user-ub1dz8js7s
    @user-ub1dz8js7sАй бұрын

    Anyone know where she was being driven around in by the taxi / lift ? that countryside looks familiar ? Lancashire perhaps ? I couldn't read the sign posts. Also which city did she end up in ? was it Manchester / Leeds / Sheffield ?

  • @leedsinshetland

    @leedsinshetland

    Ай бұрын

    I'd say it'd be around or near Sheffield

  • @Mr.Skeptic-kp3jq

    @Mr.Skeptic-kp3jq

    Ай бұрын

    I seen 'Fidler Bros' on the side of a building and it comes up as Mansfield Rd, Sheffield. I think the pub on the left was called 'The Tadcaster', but i couldn't find it after a quick look on Google.

  • @noplace82

    @noplace82

    Ай бұрын

    Not where it was filmed though. ​@adoreendure5377

  • @noplace82

    @noplace82

    Ай бұрын

    That's the peak district, west of Sheffield.

  • @heinzer69

    @heinzer69

    Ай бұрын

    Buses in the video correspond to Google pics of Sheffield buses circa 1964. An industrial hilly city in northern England.... yes I would go with Sheffield.

  • @elainemargaretmacpherson716
    @elainemargaretmacpherson716Ай бұрын

    Lovely xxx

  • @louisesomers5560
    @louisesomers5560Ай бұрын

    She said she’s moved on 😂😂

  • @CBTCFT
    @CBTCFT18 күн бұрын

    I wonder where this is filmed?

  • @professor_kenneth
    @professor_kenneth14 күн бұрын

    Happy Mondays video or The Smiths😅👍🏻

  • @W5nmwh50
    @W5nmwh50Ай бұрын

    Still grim up north.

  • @RedArtistx

    @RedArtistx

    Ай бұрын

    When I lived in Manchester, so much of the art in galleries was mostly tacky, garish portraits of celebrities, or variations of 1960s red brick lanes with factory chimneys and plumes of smoke. I know they were catering to nostalgia, but I found it depressing. Just loads & loads of those grey & polluted urban scenes.

  • @rachelharding751

    @rachelharding751

    13 күн бұрын

    Yeah yeah - say that again in the next heat wave 😎

  • @anthonymcnamee6297
    @anthonymcnamee6297Ай бұрын

    Seven up

  • @celestialteapot309
    @celestialteapot30914 күн бұрын

    In the midst of life we are in death

  • @ericjenkins2737
    @ericjenkins2737Ай бұрын

    This has all the signs of a having a psychedelic experience a little too early in life.

  • @of-qo9nv

    @of-qo9nv

    Ай бұрын

    Having worked with a lot of very damaged people over the years my "best guess" is she has been through some kind of Trauma as opposed to drugs, and sadly the two are often not mutually exclusive. She strikes me as being a troubled Soul.

  • @ericjenkins2737

    @ericjenkins2737

    Ай бұрын

    @@of-qo9nv These are some of the same thoughts I had after having my first experience but with a few more years under my belt. Having an eye-opening experience is not "bad" IMO but can be overwhelming to someone 16yo. It seems as though she thought she had it all figured out but maybe not mature enough to know how the world really works.

  • @rogersinclair2772

    @rogersinclair2772

    Ай бұрын

    @@ericjenkins2737 Do you know how the world works? Amazing? With advancing years the only thing I know is how little I really do know. Your perception is just that. Your perception, not a universal truth.

  • @Dekoherence-ii8pw

    @Dekoherence-ii8pw

    19 күн бұрын

    This was 1964. LSD didn't come onto the scene for another year or so.

  • @michelles2299
    @michelles229920 күн бұрын

    She will be 76 years old now 🌹

  • @krashd

    @krashd

    15 күн бұрын

    Or pushing up the proverbial daisies.

  • @w1lf1ewoo
    @w1lf1ewooАй бұрын

    I really enjoy the sentiments of this too , but i am curious about how it was put-together.,,, obviously she got to record a narration - were they her own words ? The camera is already in the vehicle when she’s hitchhiking and a few other things point to a collision of a production with the crew . Which leaves me conflicted as to what im really seeing. Was she a budding drama student or a straight up girl ready to runaway to London…, it was great to see but im glad this style of documentary/drama was abandoned by tv

  • @andrewjohnmoore84
    @andrewjohnmoore8415 күн бұрын

    Where are they now?

  • @verribarry
    @verribarryАй бұрын

    "Perfectly free"...to beg from people that conformed...they want to escape...but they're trapped...in their own depressed minds.

  • @justmadeit2
    @justmadeit2Ай бұрын

    At the 5 minute mark it looks grim

  • @pootle5096
    @pootle5096Ай бұрын

    Wow. She sounded SO grateful to have been given "a couple of bob" by the driver. (That's sarcasm by the way)

  • @blightedgrounds

    @blightedgrounds

    Ай бұрын

    The cab driver even sounded disappointed by how unappreciative & even demanding she was. I lost interest in the documentary after that

  • @DeeTeaDee
    @DeeTeaDeeАй бұрын

    There’s no great world out there. Just more of the same Tv and internet sells you a fantasy world

  • @Markinlondon
    @Markinlondon23 күн бұрын

    Where is she now

  • @tonyclifton265
    @tonyclifton265Ай бұрын

    what's her accent? greater manchester? Leicester?

  • @apathyintheuk265

    @apathyintheuk265

    Ай бұрын

    Middle class Lancastrian I'd say.

  • @azillliasmith2734

    @azillliasmith2734

    Ай бұрын

    @@apathyintheuk265yes not a typical Woking class accent...

  • @apathyintheuk265

    @apathyintheuk265

    Ай бұрын

    @@azillliasmith2734 A Woking class accent would be Paul Weller.

  • @Dreyno

    @Dreyno

    24 күн бұрын

    @@apathyintheuk265😂 Very good.

  • @deadsteve2180
    @deadsteve2180Ай бұрын

    They're escaping abuse or neglect at home. When she compared herself to some old clothes being thrown out back home.

  • @Gaming-Shed

    @Gaming-Shed

    Ай бұрын

    No indication of abuse in the video at all.

  • @casskop

    @casskop

    Ай бұрын

    How you've come to that conclusion l just dont know

  • @of-qo9nv

    @of-qo9nv

    Ай бұрын

    Having worked with a lot of very damaged and traumatised people over the years my "best guess" would be that "something" has happened to her in the past, or something has happened to someone close to her. Hope she "escaped" from whatever she was running from and found the peace, purpose, and safety she was seeking. May God bless her and those like her.

  • @lindyashford7744

    @lindyashford7744

    Ай бұрын

    Most peoples lives were like that. Children and grownups not very close for the most part. Even if you worked from 14 you were still regarded as a child till you were 21. Parents probably working all hours to make ends meet and kids only seeing work and slog ahead for a little box to live in and this girl clearly wants to travel and enjoy nature and the world. Dreaming back then was not really approved of, even if your parents cared about you.

  • @Black.Sabbath

    @Black.Sabbath

    23 күн бұрын

    🩰🩰🩰🩰

  • @global001
    @global00119 күн бұрын

    Lol. Back when 16 looked like mid 30’s. But the need for teens to explore & find their own meaning in life never changes. Nobody’s really free if they depend on money from others to eat, sleep, enjoy life though. In youth we can get away with it but not as adults.

  • @MrLetmein2011
    @MrLetmein2011Ай бұрын

    They were Goths before Goth was invented 🫤

  • @hughtierneytierney3585

    @hughtierneytierney3585

    Ай бұрын

    Beatniks they were called.

  • @azillliasmith2734

    @azillliasmith2734

    Ай бұрын

    @@hughtierneytierney3585.....oh! I was just going to post this😊 there is a very post beatnik vibe to this documentary slightly artificial too but it is bbc....

  • @crosseyedone7960
    @crosseyedone796019 күн бұрын

    What a sad outlook on life they had.

  • @Black.Sabbath
    @Black.Sabbath23 күн бұрын

    5:40 6:18 6:39 8:37 😢

  • @Me-ji2pn
    @Me-ji2pn25 күн бұрын

    Second one seems to have a Manchester accent first one more Lancashire

  • @michelles2299

    @michelles2299

    20 күн бұрын

    Not Lancashire

  • @bakedbean37
    @bakedbean37Ай бұрын

    So it's not just me then ...!

  • @TheRosycruxian
    @TheRosycruxianАй бұрын

    Ahhh, barefoot can be so uplifting:liberating 🌞

  • @mid-walesrover681

    @mid-walesrover681

    Ай бұрын

    Not sure what your point is but my dad could remember the unedifying sight of barefoot children in the 1930s.

  • @MikeL-7
    @MikeL-725 күн бұрын

    She’s leaving home.

  • @Dekoherence-ii8pw

    @Dekoherence-ii8pw

    19 күн бұрын

    Bye bye.

  • @Tiz604
    @Tiz60419 күн бұрын

    A depressed Kid .. who grows up and knows a few things ! .

  • @liketheroman
    @liketheroman19 күн бұрын

    This is so morrisseyesque

  • @data1656
    @data165623 күн бұрын

    FREEDOM

  • @anniebee4003
    @anniebee4003Ай бұрын

    This world isn't for everyone.

  • @user-mi4wd8rg9t
    @user-mi4wd8rg9t19 күн бұрын

    I dont regret not conforming.

  • @martin-mi3cg
    @martin-mi3cgАй бұрын

    1960s Sheffield... Neepsend power station 😜

  • @azillliasmith2734

    @azillliasmith2734

    Ай бұрын

    Thank you I was wondering about the location....

  • @krashd

    @krashd

    15 күн бұрын

    Neepsend? In eastern Scots that translates as Turnipsend as we call turnips "neeps", haha.

  • @MichaelCook84
    @MichaelCook8421 күн бұрын

    The big difference between a woman and a man back then is that a woman can just marry a man that does all that for her so she doesnt have to live that life. One wage was ok for a family.

  • @krashd

    @krashd

    15 күн бұрын

    She would still be conforming everyday. A woman in 1964 who walked around barefoot with greasy hair and going to the pub whenever she liked would probably be committed to an asylum, even as a housewife there are a thousand societal norms she would have to adopt to become like the rest of the automatons in her community.

  • @user-un9go4qe5i
    @user-un9go4qe5iАй бұрын

    She sounds like a barrel of laughs! LOL I'd like to have gone camping with her friend though.

  • @karen4you
    @karen4youАй бұрын

    She asked for money when she got out at her stop. Free but needs to eat somehow.

  • @user-dz1rc4wk2t
    @user-dz1rc4wk2tАй бұрын

    Conforming to productive , self improvement, community , career ect. I will have more than decent clothes ect, you must have freedom!

  • @VioletBagpipeSack-xf3ke
    @VioletBagpipeSack-xf3keАй бұрын

    The freedoms that we've lost.

  • @JH-ly9qg
    @JH-ly9qg10 күн бұрын

    Light is breaking forth in my life and in the life of my brothers and sisters who have been suffering in the darkness in Jesus’ name Amen. Send forth your beautiful power spirit and let’s us champions of your Word and use us to win so many souls in love and boldness 🙏🙏🙏

  • @michelles2299
    @michelles229920 күн бұрын

    Similar accents to Dame Vivienne Westwood

  • @claymor8241
    @claymor8241Ай бұрын

    That would be very dangerous now, in fact it was pretty silly then. Hitching and begging, jeez it was bad enough in the 80s when I hitched, and I’m male. Good job they’ve organised a camera crew in the lorry cabs before they get in.

  • @tonimarx6405
    @tonimarx6405Ай бұрын

    Then you grow older and wonder why you're broke, don't have a decent place to live, a nice garden to enjoy and finacial security. It's because you were too busy thinking you were way to important and profound. Then you look towards the government for a hand out paid for through taxes that hard working people handed over.

  • @Techadopter
    @Techadopter18 күн бұрын

    Hitchhikes and taps the driver for money

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