1967 - The Summer of Love | Free Documentary History

1967 - The Summer of Love | History Documentary
Watch '1968 - Year of War, Turmoil & Beyond' here: • 1968 - Year of War, Tu...
In 1967 an expressive, colourful musical force painted a backdrop of social change, fashion, love, turmoil and war. The world remembers the Summer of Love in 1967 as one of those moments when a unique and creative explosion of music and popular culture arrived in the UK and USA.
This documentary is driven by the soundtrack of the time, which kept the troops company in Vietnam, powered the Anti-War and Civil Rights movements, and opened the hearts and minds of baby boomers who had matured into teens. This special celebrates 1967 as a famous year full of music and change. “Stick a flower in your hair and remember that you are Us not Them.”
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Пікірлер: 241

  • @FreeDocumentaryHistory
    @FreeDocumentaryHistoryАй бұрын

    This documentary is driven by the soundtrack of the time, which kept the troops company in Vietnam, powered the Anti-War and Civil Rights movements, and opened the hearts and minds of baby boomers who had matured into teens. This special celebrates 1967 as a famous year full of music and change.

  • @jrussellcase

    @jrussellcase

    29 күн бұрын

    One thing about this time period: It was driven by the music.

  • @FreeDocumentaryHistory

    @FreeDocumentaryHistory

    29 күн бұрын

    @@jrussellcase quite amazing I must say. And such iconic songs. They’ve stood the test of time

  • @fayejacobs1043

    @fayejacobs1043

    26 күн бұрын

    @@jrussellcase perhaps the drugs too😏

  • @danielgiraud1118

    @danielgiraud1118

    19 күн бұрын

    Hey Chuck ! Ton documentaire est très mal fait. C'est brouillon, on ne voit rien, les images passent beaucoup trop vite, on ne peut pas apprécier. C'est raté. Je ne te félicite pas. Dommage... *** Hey Chuck ! Yer documentary is very poorly done. It's messy, ye cannie see anything, the images go by way too quickly, ye cannie appreciate it. Yewh blew it !. I'm nae a-congratulatin' thee. Too bad...

  • @pikespeak8669

    @pikespeak8669

    17 күн бұрын

    USA PULLED OUT OF VIETNAM 🇻🇳 THE NORTH COMMUNIST CAME SOUTH POOR PEOPLE STILL CONTROLLED BY NORTH. SO MANY MEN WOMEN DIED😭. The only time no soldier's been send to War with President Trump. Look bushes made war's.

  • @bold58
    @bold5818 күн бұрын

    I can remember my mother in the summer of 67 at the kitchen counter with sun shining through the window on her bleach blonde hair and her transistor radio on the counter next to her playing the songs of 67 . The Association , the Turtles, The Beatles etc. She seemed so happy then.

  • @FreeDocumentaryHistory

    @FreeDocumentaryHistory

    9 күн бұрын

    Love your anecdote. You transport the reader to that space. Thank you

  • @shootfirst2097

    @shootfirst2097

    8 күн бұрын

    I remember walking with my sister to school in '65 and hearing "Satisfaction" and "Get Off My Cloud" playing on her transistor radio. Also being at an outdoor teen dance at the city park's tennis courts and hearing "Ferry Cross the Mersey." I think it was even a live band.

  • @patriciamasci6172

    @patriciamasci6172

    8 күн бұрын

    Those were "happier" times then - Moms like yours & mine are harder to find today....sadly.

  • @mikenuyen4441
    @mikenuyen444116 күн бұрын

    i remember all this stuff. 10 years old in 67. I got the best time to be alive in America.

  • @lastofthev8interceptors411

    @lastofthev8interceptors411

    4 күн бұрын

    I was nine, living in an innocent South Pacific paradise, New Zealand.We were second tier boomers, the first gen had to fight our oldies in the sixties to gain their freedom, by the time the seventies rolled around parents had given up, leaving a stroppy bunch of long haired rebels to pretty much do as we pleased!

  • @blossom1643

    @blossom1643

    Күн бұрын

    Second tier Boomers! Love it ! Never heard it put like that ! We Did live in The Best Era for music! Nothin else comes Close!✌️🇺🇸

  • @TerryFlynn-sd1ho

    @TerryFlynn-sd1ho

    14 сағат бұрын

    I turned 10 in Nov 67 but already playing both guitar and drums, had 45s of Beatles, Stones, Yardbirds etc.lived in 'Littleton 'Denver at the time but made a living playing music for decades so I guess The Summer of 67 rubbed off on me .Peace ❤

  • @missrayelyn3045
    @missrayelyn304529 күн бұрын

    My uncle was drafted, and in Vietnam in '67. I was 10, and I remember watching the news trying to see if I could spot him. I remember being scared until he came home. I can't imagine how scared my grandparents must've been. That was a time when there was a dark cloud hanging around.

  • @ThomasCranmer1959

    @ThomasCranmer1959

    29 күн бұрын

    My uncle was drafted. He was never the same. Became an alcoholic and died of heart trouble in his 40s.

  • @missrayelyn3045

    @missrayelyn3045

    29 күн бұрын

    @ThomasCranmer1959 my uncle wasn't the same either. He is still alive, but that war took away a part of his personality that never came back. To this day, he's afraid of the dark.

  • @hurdygurdyguy1

    @hurdygurdyguy1

    15 күн бұрын

    My wife's brother was a Marine and spent a good amount of time at the Demilitarized Zone in Vietnam. Her sister's boyfriend served on an aircraft carrier. She remembers the worry they all went through. She has a cousin who was a Green Beret and had grim experiences in Vietnam...

  • @tundrawomansays694

    @tundrawomansays694

    14 күн бұрын

    I don’t know why we still think we can send people to war and have them return unchanged as a result of their experiences. That’s not realistic at all.

  • @cherylmarcuri5506

    @cherylmarcuri5506

    9 күн бұрын

    My uncle also served in Nam that year. I wonder if your dad knew my uncle?

  • @timcross2510
    @timcross251012 күн бұрын

    My world war two era uncles were upset that summer because young boys were dead in Nam and the newspapers put golf tournaments, show biz and "anything but dead in the jungle" on the front pages and nightly news. I was 8. Never forgot that.

  • @ThomasCranmer1959
    @ThomasCranmer195929 күн бұрын

    Rock music of the 60s was incredible. The Hammond organ has a unique sound.

  • @robertshapiro3733

    @robertshapiro3733

    26 күн бұрын

    And according to Al Kooper, Dylan’s organist on the album “Highway 61 Revisited”, a most difficult instrument to play. He was unable to even find its power button. But as the songs themselves attest, it brought, for example, the song “Like a Rolling Stone” to immeasurable heights.

  • @danielgiraud1118

    @danielgiraud1118

    19 күн бұрын

    @@robertshapiro3733 : Stevie Winwood, Jimmy Smith, Mahalia Jackson, Booker T. Jones jouaient aussi sur des orgues Hammond.

  • @timanctil8225

    @timanctil8225

    15 күн бұрын

    I sold a first series Hammond at a garage sale in the eighties for $40...oops! My memory got a little clearer, it wasn't a Hammond, it was a Moog... but either way, oops!

  • @mikewithers299
    @mikewithers29929 күн бұрын

    What a time to be alive and witness history changing. I was 5 years old then. The music of that time will never fade away for me.

  • @yaraviera4444

    @yaraviera4444

    22 күн бұрын

    I was born in 1982..an before it was a little dispute about presidential election I believe in Dominican 🇩🇴 republic. Then I came to USA 🇺🇸 by 9 years of age..an started learning about the history of USA in high school..but this a history they don't teach in high school..or college unless you don't read about it

  • @pikespeak8669

    @pikespeak8669

    17 күн бұрын

    @yaraviera4444 50 yr's ado teacher's don't teach real history. America bad sociolist great (wrong). We thought or son's The real history.

  • @kimdurig1322
    @kimdurig132218 күн бұрын

    I turned thirteen that year what an amazing time to live

  • @jamesmiller510

    @jamesmiller510

    17 күн бұрын

    I was 14

  • @alexiasherman3358
    @alexiasherman335814 күн бұрын

    I graduated HS in '67. Both fabulous and sad times with the best music ever. Would not want to be any other age than I was then and am now.

  • @jimmyflanagan5938

    @jimmyflanagan5938

    14 күн бұрын

    Graduated HS 1967 west high Torrance California. What a time to me a teenager in L A

  • @ClassicMoments-bg1bb

    @ClassicMoments-bg1bb

    13 күн бұрын

    You describe ’67 very accurately. Great music during a sad era.

  • @stevenr8606

    @stevenr8606

    10 күн бұрын

    👍🏻 HS GRAD '74 🎉😊

  • @shootfirst2097

    @shootfirst2097

    8 күн бұрын

    I could rather stay in my late teens and early 20s. Best times of MY life.

  • @CraigPrice-zq5wz
    @CraigPrice-zq5wz8 күн бұрын

    Still best music of our times. Great 😊 and keep on trucking.

  • @sarasarah1810
    @sarasarah181018 күн бұрын

    throughout all the turmoil going on through the 60s worldwide, all the good and all the bad, one thing stands out more to me than anything. that decade gave the world the best music we have ever heard.

  • @JollyRoger1969
    @JollyRoger196929 күн бұрын

    Really enjoyed the soundtrack of this documentary, I'm a 90s kid but always felt a spiritual connection to this time. Can appreciate how people wanted change, thinking and do things differently.

  • @giselematthews7949
    @giselematthews794929 күн бұрын

    I was only 13 in 67. But i remember it well.

  • @elizabethmcleod246

    @elizabethmcleod246

    15 күн бұрын

    I was 10 years old. What a time to be alive.

  • @shootfirst2097

    @shootfirst2097

    8 күн бұрын

    @@elizabethmcleod246 Yes, I was ten, too. And my older sisters were music fanatics, so I was DRILLED with this great music constantly. We also had a AM disc jockey down the street who gave my sisters free promo albums and singles.

  • @elizabethmcleod246

    @elizabethmcleod246

    8 күн бұрын

    @@shootfirst2097 Nice! It was my hip Mom who bought me albums from various artists. Oh course, I listened to the radio all the time to.

  • @nanabutner
    @nanabutner28 күн бұрын

    I remember the “SUMMER OF LOVE” very well! We had the whole world at our feet and yes--we could do anything! I took part in “PROTEST MARCHES” and so many other things. “WE ALSO LOST SO MANY GOOD THINGS AS WELL”!

  • @kckazcoll1
    @kckazcoll18 күн бұрын

    thanks for this perspective, very enjoyable! Love all the music used in this doco, too

  • @dianeruiz0721
    @dianeruiz072119 күн бұрын

    I was 7 in 67 but remember it well. The music on the radio was great!! I remember seeing the Vietnam War coverage on the news. My immediate family didn’t have any one out there fighting. My Dad fought in the Korean War. Everything was great but then only I was too young to realize it

  • @anitakephart3851
    @anitakephart3851Күн бұрын

    My baby sis was born in '67. She is already gone. I still can't believe it. I can't quite get over it. Wish she was here. I used to sing all these songs to her in my 65 Ford Falcon and it still is one of my favorite memories of back then . I was 10 yrs older and felt like I was supposed to look after here. It was a time that is hard to get younger people of today to get to understand. I guess you just had to be there. What a time, what a time, what a time...

  • @robynmasters335
    @robynmasters3353 күн бұрын

    My mom was 18 and in the process of conceiving me in '67. I was the result of Flower Power.

  • @tommyasprion4394
    @tommyasprion439414 күн бұрын

    I am also proud of our troops that served during Vietnam War- they were standing against evil regime, just as ww2 vets and Korea. Now darkness has descended on our once great nation.

  • @sharyllee7094

    @sharyllee7094

    2 күн бұрын

    I'm proud of them, too. AND, a lot of the evilness of that time, lived in our own Government...

  • @ruthhaywood3473
    @ruthhaywood347311 күн бұрын

    This is a great documentary. Will watch again. Thanks 4 the memories

  • @gordlawton
    @gordlawton26 күн бұрын

    I turned 17 in 1967. So many things were happening at the time. I wouldn't pick a different time to grow up.

  • @humboldthammer

    @humboldthammer

    6 сағат бұрын

    Consider this . . . never before RIGHT NOW -- not in the entire history of men and women on Earth -- have so many educated people lived so freely and so abundantly. And for just 18 years, since Google bought KZread and TV went digital in 2006, we have been connected to a shared, worldwide experience with near-instant communication. It is GUARANTEED to wake "THIS" generation up.

  • @fayejacobs1043
    @fayejacobs104326 күн бұрын

    Excellent Doc, this was definetly my mom's era. I just sent her this Doc to watch. My mom graduated high school in '67, i will have to talk to her about her version of "Summer of Love"Man what a time to have been alive!!!

  • @danielgiraud1118

    @danielgiraud1118

    19 күн бұрын

    Hey Chuck ! Yer documentary is very poorly done. It's messy, ye cannie see anything, the images go by way too quickly, ye cannie appreciate it. Yewh blew it !. I'm nae a-congratulatin' thee. Too bad...

  • @marymacdonald2379

    @marymacdonald2379

    3 күн бұрын

    I am your Mom's age. I spent the summer of 1967 in L.A. marijuana from Mexico (not so strong as weed today) was everywhere. Concerts were affordable even for an 18year old with a summer job. Way lower crime and teenagers could get jobs easily.

  • @danielgiraud1118

    @danielgiraud1118

    Күн бұрын

    @@marymacdonald2379 : Sae, the same age we art.

  • @lelandkelley2199
    @lelandkelley219913 күн бұрын

    I was four years old and remember the music and cars and fashion. In highschool I had a 67 mustang

  • @user-zl7uo3qf4d

    @user-zl7uo3qf4d

    13 күн бұрын

    Bs

  • @lelandkelley2199

    @lelandkelley2199

    9 күн бұрын

    I didn’t, confused with someone else

  • @ronaldzent6321
    @ronaldzent632129 күн бұрын

    So sad about both Tammy Terrell and Marvin Gaye. Marvin was never the same after she died so young.

  • @cathybassett6432
    @cathybassett6432Күн бұрын

    Thank you for this fabulous video! I was 15 turned16 in 1967. What a fabulous time to be alive. The most EXCELLENT music. Lucky me lucky us.

  • @jrussellcase
    @jrussellcase29 күн бұрын

    Tammi Terrell's passing was a huge loss. I was born a year and a half after she passed. She had a helluva voice, and was easy on the eyes.

  • @fabrikk60

    @fabrikk60

    24 күн бұрын

    Whenever I see Tammi I feel a little emotional, about how sad her early passing was. She seemed like a sweet and beautiful person.

  • @ginaferracini9375
    @ginaferracini937525 күн бұрын

    I was born in 1967 I remember my mums and sisters dresses amazing loved the music too ..60s 🎶 🌼🧡

  • @stevenhanson6057

    @stevenhanson6057

    7 күн бұрын

    Now we’re wearing them!

  • @yassir1776
    @yassir177624 күн бұрын

    Looks like we're headed for another summer of love

  • @eddenoy321

    @eddenoy321

    2 күн бұрын

    we need it

  • @MrFroglips69
    @MrFroglips6925 күн бұрын

    Groovy baby, totally trippy.

  • @ronaldzent6321
    @ronaldzent632129 күн бұрын

    Twiggy, the first Supermodel. Those eyes!

  • @tiffanyroseangeles34

    @tiffanyroseangeles34

    28 күн бұрын

    That was a cool look! I wish I’d been around to see it all Loved Mary Quants designs as well….I wasn’t born until 1961 … like many here. I loved the kohl eyeliner …..

  • @MaureenDeVries-wd9mh

    @MaureenDeVries-wd9mh

    25 күн бұрын

    Jean Shrimpton?

  • @n9oqu

    @n9oqu

    11 күн бұрын

    she had eyes but mothing else!

  • @robertcombs55
    @robertcombs5516 күн бұрын

    in 1968...I arrived in Vietnam....or Hell as we called it...

  • @jeffbreezee
    @jeffbreezee20 күн бұрын

    I was a one year old in 67, but I heard plenty of stories from that year. My dad was Korean War vet, so he was a regular working stiff. He had two younger brothers who served in Vietnam in 67. One in the Air Force and one in the Marines.

  • @robertmanley2687
    @robertmanley268719 күн бұрын

    I had a Jimi Hendrix poster with a black light and Hey Joe written in day-glo paint on my bedroom wall in 1967.

  • @juliejackman2649
    @juliejackman2649Ай бұрын

    My Dad fought in the Vietnam war and I'm very proud of him and all the rest for fighting for freedom. 🇺🇸

  • @caroleminke6116

    @caroleminke6116

    29 күн бұрын

    Was he drafted? ❤️‍🩹

  • @kcollinsgallhollcom

    @kcollinsgallhollcom

    29 күн бұрын

    It was a foolish war escalated by LBJ to line his pockets and the pockets of his friends. However the troops are not to blame, were heroes and were treated terribly by our government. Vets shouldn’t be treated that way

  • @sharolynwells

    @sharolynwells

    29 күн бұрын

    My late husband served in Cambodia during the Vietnam War -- Jan. 1970 to Dec. 1971. I'm fighting for him mow because he was exposed to Agent Orange over there. He died from a dead liver a year ago.i miss him so much.

  • @johndoe-od6ge

    @johndoe-od6ge

    29 күн бұрын

    @@sharolynwells I'm sorry for your loss !!!

  • @ThomasCranmer1959

    @ThomasCranmer1959

    29 күн бұрын

    ​@@kcollinsgallhollcomIt was a foolish war started by.... drum roll..... PROGRESSIVE DEMOCRATS. JFK.

  • @danielpollak6075
    @danielpollak607519 күн бұрын

    👏👏excellent documentation of the summer of love👏👏well done👍~ty

  • @user-qs7gx7rp7m
    @user-qs7gx7rp7m29 күн бұрын

    As a Canadian '67 was a defining moment for an 18 year old. The Nam war was a blessing. By 70 as as a would be 'hippie' inan age when feminis declared peace in the war between the sexes, bras were burned and birth control pills were everywhere, the CND was at par with the US $ and Europe not yet recovered from WWII was dirt cheap. I got to visit France, Spain twice, Morocco (extraordinary adventures everywhere in near pre-tourist Europe) and lasty old England. Cost $850 for 6 months of truly remarkable adventure (Can pay for a moron was $80 per week). Few Americans males - so no competition, but no shortage of Yankee Gal college grads, lots & lots of Aussis and many interesting Brits. In 75 years of life I can truly honestly say God was more than good to me for all of that time. It still makes me smile and the special loves experienced along the way leave me happily-sad for having lived it. Not afraid of dying any time. Fate allowed me the very best even if a poor man then and now.

  • @fabrikk60

    @fabrikk60

    24 күн бұрын

    "The Nam war was a blessing". WTF??

  • @zenlandzipline

    @zenlandzipline

    8 күн бұрын

    @@fabrikk60maybe he got a lot of poon because all the men went to Vietnam to fight. A lot of lonely girls here. Just guessing, because I can’t think of any reason why war would be a blessing.

  • @Shanehutcheson841
    @Shanehutcheson84112 күн бұрын

    Great Video!!

  • @trevorwakefiel870
    @trevorwakefiel87029 күн бұрын

    Im British born but my family emigrated to Australia on BOAC in 1969.. Australian Soldiers & NZ soldiers also fought in Vietnam even as a young child and seeing fhe conflict daily on black & white TV. Australians where rallying also in capitals cities to end the Vietnam war and young men called up for 2 years national service ... Alot of young men came back mentally medically ill ruined alot men forever and not to mention deformed children being born due to Vietnam vets in the field sprayed from above with agent orange and caused alot of cancers to some ex Vietnam vet's.

  • @lorigoshert6667
    @lorigoshert66674 күн бұрын

    Thanks for this. I've seen a lot of documentaries about this era, but none that have presented the British perspective (aside from a few band-specific docs). I'd never heard of Radio Caroline, for example, and it was interesting to hear the different ways the older generation responded to youth culture. The audio seems to be messed up around the time Janis Joplin is singing, though.

  • @FreeDocumentaryHistory

    @FreeDocumentaryHistory

    4 күн бұрын

    Glad you liked it and we’ll check out the audio - thanks!

  • @robertlear2712
    @robertlear271227 күн бұрын

    I was in college in 1967 and I was in a band. I just wanted to do music. I only stayed in college because I didn’t want to be drafted, which I barely escaped.

  • @jessiem276

    @jessiem276

    9 күн бұрын

    So you figured someone else could go instead of you??

  • @arthurdalton517
    @arthurdalton51721 күн бұрын

    I am from Santa Cruz and I think that this documentary is great .I think that we in the S F bay and around it were at least 3 to mabey 5 years ahead of the rest of the Country . Monterey pops. Festival was great and According to Grace Slick it was the best one of the 3 it's been said that Janice Joplin was the Artist that everyone came to see.

  • @danielgiraud1118

    @danielgiraud1118

    19 күн бұрын

    Hey Chuck ! Yer documentary is very poorly done. It's messy, ye cannie see anything, the images go by way too quickly, ye cannie appreciate it. Yewh blew it !. I'm nae a-congratulatin' thee. Too bad...

  • @arthurdalton517

    @arthurdalton517

    19 күн бұрын

    @@danielgiraud1118 are you from there

  • @danielgiraud1118

    @danielgiraud1118

    19 күн бұрын

    @@arthurdalton517 : "Are ye from there" ? From where ? Can ye speak english properly, pliz ?

  • @arthurdalton517

    @arthurdalton517

    8 күн бұрын

    @@danielgiraud1118 are you from the San Francisco bay area or Monterey Bay. I am and I thought it was done very well

  • @danielgiraud1118

    @danielgiraud1118

    6 күн бұрын

    @@arthurdalton517 : Et alors Doolin'-Dalton ?

  • @ScarlettFire341
    @ScarlettFire3417 күн бұрын

    "First we overlook evil, Then we permit evil. Then we legalize evil. Then we promote evil. Then we celebrate evil. Then we persecute those who still call it evil." Fr. Dwight Longenecker “In the Last Days, Good will be called Evil and Evil will be called Good.” Are We There YET ?

  • @hollyringo8198

    @hollyringo8198

    Күн бұрын

    I think your on to something, a child of 1967, & what an explosive time of creativity, & makes me understand me better, I think the word evil in your analogy is bit harsh, but I can see your leaning but, I believe it’s more of the Ying/Yang thing, the dark took far too many but they weren’t evil, just curious & f’n talented. Make good choices kids.

  • @yaraviera4444
    @yaraviera444422 күн бұрын

    Thanks for sharing this. Lovely video about what was the 60s like I was born in the 80s.yet I know black community suffered a lot..

  • @jessiem276

    @jessiem276

    9 күн бұрын

    Lots of people suffered!

  • @Jayjay-qe6um
    @Jayjay-qe6um29 күн бұрын

    "The 1960s were about releasing ourselves from conventional society and freeing ourselves." -- Yoko Ono

  • @jamesstone9213

    @jamesstone9213

    29 күн бұрын

    😂😂

  • @jamesstone9213

    @jamesstone9213

    29 күн бұрын

    😂😂😂

  • @jamesstone9213

    @jamesstone9213

    29 күн бұрын

    😂😂😂😂

  • @suestephan3255
    @suestephan32557 күн бұрын

    It was a great time to be a young person, all about the music, transistor radios, record players, going to the near by 5 & 10 to buy the latest 45. I was born 10/50 so I was 17 that summer. I didn’t pay that much attention to the Viet Nam war. My Dad died in ‘57 and I didn’t really watch the news. I was working nights and out with friends walking when not working. I did due to my neighbor who gave me the address of the of the paper that had Marine’s names and I did write to them about 60 letters and they wrote back.

  • @suestephan3255

    @suestephan3255

    7 күн бұрын

    The magazine was Sea Tiger. Like I said I wrote to about 60 marines in 67-68

  • @hurdygurdyguy1
    @hurdygurdyguy115 күн бұрын

    I was only 12 in '67 and living in a small farm-based town got only a glimpse (aka what was allowed) of Hippies, the Counter Culture etc. By the time I was in high school all that had been commercialized and diluted, made "safe" but still with a whiff of forbidden fruit! The nearest mall (an hour's drive away) had The InStore where you could buy black light posters and all manners of Hippie stuff, all commercialized and heady stuff for a small town kid! I pretty much missed really experiencing the Summer of Love and all it represented by a good 5 years or so.... and it's just as well.. 🤣 And in the words of George Harrison, "All things must pass..." even the Summer of Love...

  • @michellebarry-devries1082
    @michellebarry-devries10829 күн бұрын

    I was born in 61 and loved how the hippie daughters dressed and let them make out in there room at only 14...

  • @MarcGoudreau
    @MarcGoudreau9 күн бұрын

    That age almost transformed America from a corporate "forever war" Govt to a more agreeable partner in efforts for global peace. The Kent State event really highlighted how American youth hated the hypocrisy of the Vietnam war.

  • @Farsider3955
    @Farsider395529 күн бұрын

    🤔….and the year after the “Summer of Love” Robert Kennedy and Martin Luther King Jr. were assassinated. Woodstock (‘69) brought some renewed hope for the Hippie generation, but the “free” concert at Altamont later that year ushered in the darkness that follows naivety. Then 1970, the U.S. Military shoots down students, killing 4 and injuring almost a dozen others at Kent State University. Back to this vid though….this “Free Documentary” was pretty good….not great, but not horrible either. Didn’t flow well….seemed unorganized. Interviews with the ‘flower children’ in S.F. mixed in would have added much needed richness - and a glimpse into the actual mindset of the youth of that era. Of lot of great music artists were mention, but for 1967 how could they have left out Procol Harum?

  • @Nick-fi1mc
    @Nick-fi1mc29 күн бұрын

    It is criminal what happens when the who went on stage at the Monterey Pop festival.... Where is their music???

  • @suep3806
    @suep38063 күн бұрын

    At 15.20 in the large felt hat the incomparable June Child, destined to became Mrs Marc Feld the only wife of T Rex’s Marc Bolan. A true English beauty.

  • @anitakephart3851
    @anitakephart3851Күн бұрын

    Jackie Wilson was every bit a great dancer as James Brown without all the drama and controversary

  • @bobwhite2
    @bobwhite220 күн бұрын

    They hurt nobody.

  • @justinkauffman731
    @justinkauffman731Ай бұрын

    And then came Tet

  • @danhurst9048
    @danhurst90488 күн бұрын

    This was the beginning of the end

  • @antonius_006
    @antonius_0062 сағат бұрын

    People didn`t learn Meditation, they learned lack of self love.

  • @gr8witenorth61
    @gr8witenorth6110 күн бұрын

    alot of this was being fed by the beatles and the rolling stones, and that group from '67- 72, then you got into jefferson starship and 'white rabbit', i was a kid at this time living in a restaurant in middle ontario, it truely was the best of time and the worst of times, for me....................

  • @johnshields6852
    @johnshields685229 күн бұрын

    Ah, the summer of love, I was 7, figures, my timing sucks.

  • @fabrikk60

    @fabrikk60

    24 күн бұрын

    I'm the same age. At least I had a much older sister who brought home all the cool music for me to grow up to. Steppenwolf, Airplane, Hendrix, Cream, Love, Zappa, Traffic, Mayall, Blues Project...I was way into that stuff at age 7 so the late 60s has always felt like a familiar time to me.

  • @charlietwotimes
    @charlietwotimes12 күн бұрын

    Feed your head. Yep. 😎

  • @QuaaludeCharlie
    @QuaaludeCharlie8 күн бұрын

    Ahh the Year I was born :) QC

  • @patricialong5767
    @patricialong576714 күн бұрын

    The summer of self indulgence and absolute excess, did you say?? LOL

  • @davidcockrill7115
    @davidcockrill711528 күн бұрын

    I was in Haight-Ashbury in 1967. A summer of weekend hippies. I was in Vietnam in 1969 fighting the Communist North Vietnamese who were sneaking into South Vietnam to attack the American armed forces who could not pursue them in Cambodia, Laos, abd North Vietnam.

  • @Jatadhari1000
    @Jatadhari100024 күн бұрын

    excellent documentary, i was a kid then, but i lived through those times

  • @danielgiraud1118

    @danielgiraud1118

    19 күн бұрын

    Hey Chuck ! Yer documentary is very poorly done. It's messy, ye cannie see anything, the images go by way too quickly, ye cannie appreciate it. Yewh blew it !. I'm nae a-congratulatin' thee. Too bad...

  • @Sabotage_Labs
    @Sabotage_LabsКүн бұрын

    12:40 Motown changed America and possibly the world! Motown was one of the best things for race relations in America. Black performed like the Supremes were chic. The music had a positive and relatable message. One that transcended race. My god...the talent!!! National treasures like Stevie Wonder and Marvin Gaye. The song writers!!! Just so much talent. It helped to teach America that our differences stop at skin and hair. That there were very little differences and the ones their were....were cultural just like the cultural differences between European countries and ethics groups. Sadly...we apparently have forgotten all of this and are sliding backwards into a very dangerous time. A time that is being repeated when our politicians, especially one political party and movement, uses race as a means to gain political power. We've seen what happens when this tactic is used. It burned down the European continent last century!!! We are walking down a very similar path with blinders on! Its terrifying!

  • @AmericanWoman1964
    @AmericanWoman196415 күн бұрын

    The Association was huge in '67.

  • @stevenr8606
    @stevenr860610 күн бұрын

    Hendrix at the Waikiki Shell was a blast 💥 Even thou the amps died, 1969 😊 😡 my brother got out of the Vietnam War cuz he was flat footed. I never forgave him & to this day don't talk to him❗️ WHIMP 🤬 MY dad was there in the Air Force

  • @jessiem276

    @jessiem276

    9 күн бұрын

    My uncle was flat-footed but fought in World War II. He received the Purple Heart.

  • @humboldthammer

    @humboldthammer

    6 сағат бұрын

    Wanna know how I dodged the draft? My lottery number was 296.

  • @barkeyes8592
    @barkeyes859220 күн бұрын

    I was born September 12th 1967

  • @danielgiraud1118

    @danielgiraud1118

    19 күн бұрын

    Et alors ? Qu'est-ce que l'on a foutre que tu sois né en 1967 ?

  • @generoush3823
    @generoush3823Күн бұрын

    So ,any good memories, what I have of them anyway

  • @jimmyrodasmolestina979
    @jimmyrodasmolestina9799 күн бұрын

    Born in 1967

  • @FreeDocumentaryHistory

    @FreeDocumentaryHistory

    9 күн бұрын

    obviously a memorable year :)

  • @ericsahagun5344
    @ericsahagun534410 күн бұрын

    Bonnie in minute 34 of this 43-minute video you talk about the Ed Sullivan Show and the doors with pissed me off so bad about that Is Jim wasn't allowed to say the word higher and so he went and said it and Mr Sullivan said you'll never come back and of course Jim said that's okay we've already done it! And if I'm not mistaken by the following year Sly in the family stones came on singing the song WANNA TAKE YOU HIGHER and suddenly the word higher to Mr Sullivan was not a problem ... Ironic isn't it 🤔🥴😆

  • @timcross2510
    @timcross251012 күн бұрын

    11,000 young Americans died in Viet Nam that year. More than Dday ,911 ,and Pearl Harbor combined.

  • @marymacdonald2379

    @marymacdonald2379

    3 күн бұрын

    In 1967, at18 I was having the time of my life living with my friends in Hollywood. The only dark cloud was my 19 year old brother was in Vietnam. I wrote to him and mailed him the newest albums (he was at the air base outside Saigon).

  • @humboldthammer

    @humboldthammer

    6 сағат бұрын

    @@marymacdonald2379 I know a story of two brothers having the time of their lives on the Hollywood Strip. Then, the older brother over-dosed and died.

  • @somystery
    @somystery25 күн бұрын

    I wanted to be a hippie when l was 5 years old 😂

  • @Birdyblue12

    @Birdyblue12

    22 күн бұрын

    😂

  • @cathylindeboo.9598

    @cathylindeboo.9598

    20 күн бұрын

    Me too!! I was 6 in '67.

  • @evarouse

    @evarouse

    13 күн бұрын

    Me too

  • @humboldthammer

    @humboldthammer

    6 сағат бұрын

    heh-heh. I probably dated you when you were twenty. Hey! I was just 28 when you were twenty, and singing lead in a band. You were irresistible. "I Love the Flower Girl."

  • @cyan1616
    @cyan161616 күн бұрын

    1967 was the year my dad committed suicide. I was 5. Horrible year.

  • @FreeDocumentaryHistory

    @FreeDocumentaryHistory

    16 күн бұрын

    I’m so sorry. It’s a terrible way to lose a parent.

  • @shootfirst2097
    @shootfirst20978 күн бұрын

    3:34 The Club Scene-- so much more organic and open, the last time people could go out and have fun at places that weren't overly licensed and not be surveilled, regulated. No violence from blks and the hard drug scene

  • @docdurdin
    @docdurdin6 күн бұрын

    London was the new center of the universe in 67, WHAT THE HELL HAPPENED? It's LONDONSTAN now. If you took every culture, every belief, all the love, and all the hate and put it in a blender on high; That was the year that was truly Everthing, Everywhere, All at once.

  • @anitakephart3851
    @anitakephart3851Күн бұрын

    What is with the silencing of Janis? Also. she didn't come from Austin Texas. She came from Port Charles Texas.

  • @humboldthammer
    @humboldthammer8 сағат бұрын

    I was 14 for the first half of 1967 -- 15 for the 2nd half. I was behind the Redwood Curtain (yes, once there really was a Redwood Curtain.) We received "the Latest" a bit later. Wanna know how I dodged the Draft? My lottery number in 1971, was 296. When I hear today's Conservatives calling Liberals, communists, queers, and pedophiles, I am reminded of the Inquisition. Freedom of Speech is a Liberal Ideal. The Inquisition is a Conservative Ideal. So MANY so Horribly taught.

  • @6ixConfessions
    @6ixConfessions6 күн бұрын

    Seems to me that every generation, as it grows older finds an imagined reason to freak out over the younger generations.

  • @humboldthammer

    @humboldthammer

    8 сағат бұрын

    ALL the Pentecostal Rapture Prophets of the New Apostolic Reformation (NAR), proclaimed Trump CHOSEN by God to rebuild the Temple in Jerusalem. 100's of millions deceived by false prophets. Matthew 24: 24. Never before RIGHT NOW have so many educated people lived so freely and so abundantly. And for just 18 years, we have been connected to a Shared, Worldwide Experience with near-instant communication. It is GUARANTEED to wake "THIS" generation up.

  • @yochevedbrachasimon4979
    @yochevedbrachasimon497914 күн бұрын

    Great music! failed culture- still cleaning up the mess. From my point of view this is what started the drug culture that has destroyed large swaths of civilization and the mental health crisis our young people experience today.

  • @marymacdonald2379

    @marymacdonald2379

    3 күн бұрын

    We all have different perspectives about that time. I lived it, did you? My friends and I in L.A. were older teens in 1967 and we used psychedelics only. Most of us a little later pursued careers and became solid working adults. It was an inspirational time I wouldn't have missed. We chose not to get into harder drugs; they were available then.

  • @yochevedbrachasimon4979

    @yochevedbrachasimon4979

    3 күн бұрын

    @@marymacdonald2379 I was in the next bunch from1970's .For me it drug culture had beome normal so I have a resentment. Experimentation with drugs was usual and acceptable, a precedent set by hippies IMHO. Friends died, I suffered.

  • @claudiolira3767
    @claudiolira3767Күн бұрын

    ✌✌✌✌✌✌✌

  • @robbyakes8736
    @robbyakes87363 күн бұрын

    WAR IS EVIL

  • @Ancientlunatic
    @Ancientlunatic7 күн бұрын

    Sorry but Jimi Hendrix doesn't belong to Britain , he's an American!! He was one of us !!😂😂😂

  • @muzic4lyfe2005
    @muzic4lyfe200529 күн бұрын

    Meh Documentary seems all over the place, and they kept interviewing the same 3 people with their viewpoints

  • @angryhermit4291
    @angryhermit4291Ай бұрын

    Ohhhh Not 2020.

  • @heidibee501
    @heidibee5017 күн бұрын

    The Vietnam war was a warmongers dream. People died so the rich could get richer. Sadly nothing has changed. The name may be different but the game is always the same.

  • @spudwas
    @spudwas27 күн бұрын

    The show dotes too much on Bonnie Greer and the Black experience. This should have been at least 3 hours long.

  • @fabrikk60

    @fabrikk60

    24 күн бұрын

    Bonnie Greer has a list of accomplishments that totally dwarfs all the other guests. Read her wikipedia page, if you have the integrity to do that. One of her many books is about the music she grew up with, so that's why she's interviewed here. I'd be happy to hear her narrate an entire doc, that would be excellent. For some people, any portrayal at all of the Black experience is too much. You need to ask yourself why that is.

  • @spudwas

    @spudwas

    24 күн бұрын

    @@fabrikk60 Like I said...the show should have been 3 hours long. Right now it looks like a show that was allowed only one hour, so the producers chose to center more on the Black experience. It's too bad, the 60's was more of a multi-racial multi-cultural thing. You need to ask yourself why do you automatically think it's a prejudice comment.

  • @k_DAN
    @k_DAN28 күн бұрын

    2020 - The Summer of Love

  • @RlsIII-uz1kl

    @RlsIII-uz1kl

    25 күн бұрын

    We've done a 180 the dens cooped the klan with a tan/the blm organization.

  • @TechnoViking__
    @TechnoViking__Ай бұрын

    1st 🥇

  • @robertwebb2646
    @robertwebb26464 күн бұрын

    Phuc it, it don't mean nothing.

  • @pikespeak8669
    @pikespeak866929 күн бұрын

    That's time usa started to change for the worst😢😢😢

  • @ThomasCranmer1959

    @ThomasCranmer1959

    29 күн бұрын

    Yah. Now, all the ex-hippies are Marxists in positions of power.

  • @PeaceIsYeshua

    @PeaceIsYeshua

    29 күн бұрын

    @PikesPeak, I agree 😢 We lost our way, turned our backs on God, and it’s been down hill ever since. God has been gracious to us for sooo many years, but I’m afraid that period of grace is soon to run out…

  • @chrisjohnston4400

    @chrisjohnston4400

    25 күн бұрын

    ⁠negative, I was 7. This time has always fascinated me. I think if you were white middle class Christian maybe. Would the previous 50s generation bin better if you were Black or gay or a woman. The classic 50s wasp lifestyle was not some utopian society. I would rather lose my way.

  • @fabrikk60

    @fabrikk60

    24 күн бұрын

    @@chrisjohnston4400 Depends what kind of Christian you're talking about. Liberal Christians shone in the late 60s. Many of the Freedom Riders were white liberal Christians. As Liberal Christianity has faded away, America has gotten worse and worse.

  • @furthereast6775

    @furthereast6775

    23 күн бұрын

    @@chrisjohnston4400blacks were better off in the 50’s than now by every social and economic measure. They have lost ground since the ‘great society’ established a culture of broken families and irresponsibility.

  • @rosemarymccarron3887
    @rosemarymccarron38873 күн бұрын

    The summer of disaster...

  • @ThomasCranmer1959
    @ThomasCranmer195929 күн бұрын

    43:52 But I thought LBJ was a hero of the Civil Rights movement? Didn't he sign the Civil Rights Act and give away lots of money for the welfare Great Society? Oh, wait! You can't buy off agitators.

  • @fabrikk60

    @fabrikk60

    24 күн бұрын

    LBJ was complicated. Part bad, part good.

  • @sophiewallace8662
    @sophiewallace866227 күн бұрын

    Should call it summer of depravity and end times. People never recovered from the drug addiction.

  • @effdonahue6595

    @effdonahue6595

    24 күн бұрын

    Depravity and no gravity 🤡🚀

  • @effdonahue6595

    @effdonahue6595

    24 күн бұрын

    Depravity and no gravity 🤡🚀

  • @marymacdonald2379

    @marymacdonald2379

    3 күн бұрын

    Gross generalization. Many of us, maybe the majority, who smoked weed and took LSD, did not get addicted to anything, grew up, developed careers and became hard working citizens.

  • @sophiewallace8662

    @sophiewallace8662

    3 күн бұрын

    @@marymacdonald2379 depraved to do what you did.

  • @leojanuszewski1019

    @leojanuszewski1019

    Күн бұрын

    ​@@marymacdonald2379But the overall society never recovered from the scourge of drugs.

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