This is what Toronto in the 1970s looked like

The 1970s was a decade that saw significant change in Toronto. The city experienced a major building boom during this time, most notably the downtown that added the Eaton Centre, office towers and of course the CN Tower to its skyline. This is what Toronto looked like 50 years ago.

Пікірлер: 285

  • @mysterion
    @mysterion2 ай бұрын

    Better time. Better people and affordable.

  • @walterbrunswick

    @walterbrunswick

    Ай бұрын

    Better people? 70's was the epitome of serial killings

  • @BrianBaileyedtech
    @BrianBaileyedtech Жыл бұрын

    The Toronto of my youth! It was AWESOME!! There was palpable optimism in the air. All sorts of shit was getting built. Every year the banks had a competition to see who could build a taller head office. The 401 was widened to12 lanes. The CN Tower was built. Harbourfront was started. Yonge Street was seedy and exciting! I LOVED it!! Bright Lights, Big City!!

  • @bobbbxxx

    @bobbbxxx

    Жыл бұрын

    It still is awesome and still has bright lights/ big city, but now it is for a younger generation to marvel at! 😊

  • @trainrover

    @trainrover

    Жыл бұрын

    Corporateria's blunder all by design though...of all the suburbias to amble through, Ton-o-rot's the one where your gaze thereabouts best be locked onto the pavement right before your toes because of its disgustingly revolting appearance coupled to its STUNNING absence of vibe...its endless plummet into hick banality is what's so tellingly queer about its stature

  • @trainrover

    @trainrover

    Жыл бұрын

    although this attribute of its is spawned throughout the province it lords over, its Edwardian stock is indeed creepily eerie, e.g., their narrow windows conjure imagery of nosey pædo-obsessed family members lurking behind unnecessarily-heavy drapery cloaking sheer mirkiness :brrrRrr: and of all the jaunts this dear continent dishes up, there's NO shaking _that one_ fouling strolls to be paced thereabouts..even lakeside, imagine!

  • @karldonutz7770

    @karldonutz7770

    4 ай бұрын

    @@bobbbxxx Shit hole now with a negative vibe.

  • @vangoghsear8657

    @vangoghsear8657

    2 ай бұрын

    now eroded away by liberalism and immigration

  • @Ferda1964
    @Ferda19649 ай бұрын

    Those that remember those years will tell you those were "the good old days".

  • @chris_hawk

    @chris_hawk

    Ай бұрын

    When are we going back?

  • @saltpeter500

    @saltpeter500

    Ай бұрын

    No they weren't

  • @walterbrunswick

    @walterbrunswick

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@saltpeter500I've come to understand that nostalgia has blinded people to the reality

  • @saltpeter500

    @saltpeter500

    Ай бұрын

    @@walterbrunswick people inherently don't like change. It holds us all back sadly.

  • @contentdeleted4978

    @contentdeleted4978

    Ай бұрын

    M.C.G.A 2030

  • @johnpatterson4272
    @johnpatterson42729 ай бұрын

    The 3 million population mark included the entire Golden Horseshoe from Oshawa to Hamilton. The city of Metro-Toronto back then had approximately 1.5 million inhabitants. The property taxes in Toronto were actually cheaper than they were in Peterborough, Kingston or Guelph.

  • @KardiFan2000

    @KardiFan2000

    4 ай бұрын

    FYI...(Metro) Toronto had 2 million people in 1971.

  • @Incognitoghost00

    @Incognitoghost00

    Ай бұрын

    That makes sense, I remember as a kid seeing the highway signs on the 401 saying "Toronto - population 1.5 million" back in the late 70's early 80s.

  • @reallyrandomrides1296
    @reallyrandomrides12962 жыл бұрын

    Hard to believe this was roughly 50 years ago. I love watching old movies that were filmed in Toronto back then, gives us a glimpse of what the city used to look and be like, and will never be again.

  • @rhymeandreasoning

    @rhymeandreasoning

    2 ай бұрын

    Any recommendations? Would love to check them out. RE- " I love watching old movies that were filmed in Toronto back then, gives us a glimpse of what the city used to look and be like."

  • @davidreichert9392

    @davidreichert9392

    2 ай бұрын

    @@rhymeandreasoning Goin' Down the Road. The gold standard of Canadian film.

  • @rhymeandreasoning

    @rhymeandreasoning

    2 ай бұрын

    @@davidreichert9392 Thank you. I will look for it. Appreciated.

  • @richystar2001
    @richystar20013 ай бұрын

    An amazing Era and place... never again.

  • @jackietrujillo9612
    @jackietrujillo96123 жыл бұрын

    I remember those 70's days. The homes were old and some are still there. I came to Toronto when Eaton centre started to built it. Good old days.

  • @barrybebenek8691
    @barrybebenek86916 ай бұрын

    I was born the year of 1970 so this was my era as a kid, in Etobicoke. I remember it well. Young street as a young teen was AMAZING! 👍🏼

  • @jazlewis1770
    @jazlewis17702 ай бұрын

    Man i sure miss when we had a country.

  • @mariusfacktor3597

    @mariusfacktor3597

    Ай бұрын

    lol okay drama queen

  • @AverageCanadianStinky

    @AverageCanadianStinky

    Ай бұрын

    we still have a country it's just called india now

  • @jazlewis1770

    @jazlewis1770

    Ай бұрын

    Ha. Native born inter generation canadians starting to catch on to the globalist mass immigration scam. There are other global scams as well. Interest times coming. Elites best get to their bunkers i say. As if we cannot dig them out. Better get off planet.

  • @leeluvslife

    @leeluvslife

    Ай бұрын

    Me too. It was a great country while it lasted.

  • @timothythomson719

    @timothythomson719

    Ай бұрын

    Ditto. Canada is not a country anymore, it's a giant group of angry bitter little colonies bowing down to Quebec with transfer payments and an absolutely scandalous incompetent prime minister that Only the GTA keeps voting in to bankrupt the nation.

  • @brettfavreify
    @brettfavreify2 ай бұрын

    I miss that city.

  • @lekevire
    @lekevireАй бұрын

    Back when Canada was Canadian and not Punjabi.

  • @stevenl5049
    @stevenl50493 жыл бұрын

    Bring back the pedestrian mall

  • @dirkverhey6367

    @dirkverhey6367

    3 жыл бұрын

    Bring back the groovy-ass soundtrack too :)

  • @uhfnutbar1
    @uhfnutbar12 жыл бұрын

    I remember the water slide at Ontario Place. It was made with cement and if you lost your ride mat you where screwed , you get road rash all way down :)

  • @Wheeler590

    @Wheeler590

    2 ай бұрын

    Thought the same thing!

  • @MatrixDiscovery
    @MatrixDiscovery Жыл бұрын

    Looked way better back then !

  • @AbstractEntityJ

    @AbstractEntityJ

    2 ай бұрын

    The ridiculous amount of parking lots did not look better.

  • @bobdevreeze4741
    @bobdevreeze4741Ай бұрын

    I was born in Brampton in 1958 but lived in Rexdale . I remember the TD centre being built.. Ontario Place ... The CN tower.. I watched the Sky Crane top it off from my bedroom window.... The Sky Dome... We were there for the " Dome Opener" and we got wet. In 1976, we moved to Muskoka. I never looked back.

  • @jayus2033

    @jayus2033

    Ай бұрын

    Brampton is even better now 😂🎉

  • @bobdevreeze4741

    @bobdevreeze4741

    Ай бұрын

    @@jayus2033 It's all a zoo ..I still live in Muskoka and avoid Toronto as much as possible.

  • @JKTProductionzIncNCo

    @JKTProductionzIncNCo

    Ай бұрын

    Good for you. Hopefully Canada one day recovers from the Trudeau family's nightmare that began with Pierre.

  • @r.pres.4121
    @r.pres.4121 Жыл бұрын

    Toronto was a very immaculate city back in the 70s. There was very little filth or soot. I used to visit Toronto quite a bit in the 70s when the city was just right with both the CN Tower and the 74 story First Canadian Place dominating the city skyline. Toronto was a fun and more affordable city to visit in those days.

  • @paultoronto42

    @paultoronto42

    4 ай бұрын

    The streets were clean but there was soot on a lot of the buildings, like The Royal York Hotel, Union Station and College Park. All those buildings have been cleaned since.

  • @Vlad65WFPReviews

    @Vlad65WFPReviews

    Ай бұрын

    I'm from the West Coast but I recall when it was hard for Hollywood to have Toronto "double" as a US city for movies because it was "too clean"

  • @markinnes4264
    @markinnes42642 жыл бұрын

    Looks like 45 years ago.. 1976. I don't remember it being dirty or soot covered. The metro area then would have been something like 2.8 million... the city pop hasn't changed much, still under a million in 2022... but the metro area is pushing 5 million Nice footage, sub par fact checking.

  • @gregoryian123

    @gregoryian123

    2 жыл бұрын

    The soot comment was over the top.

  • @BrianBaileyedtech

    @BrianBaileyedtech

    Жыл бұрын

    Toronto now has a population of around 3 million. Metro is around 7 million and the GTA is around 10 million.

  • @erics9754

    @erics9754

    Жыл бұрын

    @@gregoryian123 Probably someone who hates the fact it was mostly white back then until Trudeau who hated Canadians wanted to punish us and make us a minority in the country our ancestors built.

  • @bobbbxxx

    @bobbbxxx

    Жыл бұрын

    The City of Toronto population in 2018 was around 3,000,000, which was the population of the entire Metropolitan area back then so it has grown a lot. We can tell this by how much more built up the actually city has become. The GTA population today is around 6.700,000

  • @user-wy7ml3sd2m
    @user-wy7ml3sd2mАй бұрын

    I lived in downtown Toronto at that time and walked around at all times of day and night without fear.

  • @peterjeffery8495
    @peterjeffery84955 ай бұрын

    I worked at Toronto Iron Works at Pape & Eastern Ave., during the 70's and 80's and soot and dirt was easy to find south of Queen Street....north of Queen Street was another story. T.I.W. was located at 629 Eastern Ave & our factory was just west of Canada Metal a lead smelter..yes a LEAD smelter. Speaking of "smelt" on the west side of Canada Metal was a Clarkes Tannery. What saved us was the Colgate Palmolive plant on Carlaw that produced Lilac soap. As one of our old Foreman used to lament.."when the wind blows from the east it smells like a shithouse, when it blows from the northwest it smells like a whorehouse". The entire area is now populated with movie studios, sound stages and pre & post film production companies. All the old TIW buildings are still standing.

  • @_tor
    @_tor5 ай бұрын

    What a bunch of lies. Having lived in the 70’s it wasn’t filled with soot and filth.

  • @leeluvslife

    @leeluvslife

    Ай бұрын

    Eventually, those who remember the truth of the past will be gone, and they'll be able to convince the newer generations that "now" is better, and the past was evil and awful.

  • @ianstuart5660

    @ianstuart5660

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@leeluvslife Yes, great points!

  • @rommelangus
    @rommelangus2 жыл бұрын

    We need to bring back pedestrians streets days on select weekends year round.

  • @stephen9609
    @stephen96093 жыл бұрын

    Considering the population of the city is 3 million today, I highly doubt it was 3 million in the 1970s... I think you mean the population of the GTA was 3 million (which is a pretty big difference than just Toronto...)

  • @ALuimes

    @ALuimes

    3 жыл бұрын

    Back then it wasn't. The 905 cities were still mostly undeveloped.

  • @BrianBaileyedtech

    @BrianBaileyedtech

    Жыл бұрын

    In 1976, Metro Toronto had a population of 2.7 million.

  • @bobbbxxx

    @bobbbxxx

    Жыл бұрын

    The GTA is 6,700,000 people today, and was around 3 million back then.

  • @trainrover

    @trainrover

    Жыл бұрын

    Ton-o-rot 💡💡💡

  • @trainrover

    @trainrover

    Жыл бұрын

    tellingly that dump's the continent's worst judging by fuckingly miserable bouncers that even menace entertainers their bosses'll have invited to perform for imps posing as revelers thereabouts :brrrRrr:

  • @bobconrad578
    @bobconrad5782 жыл бұрын

    "Covered in soot and filth"??? 🤣

  • @davidbrewer7937

    @davidbrewer7937

    2 жыл бұрын

    Now it is covered in drugs, beggars, homeless, gangs, loan sharks, garbage, pot holes & congestion!

  • @jeffreyrombough8360

    @jeffreyrombough8360

    2 жыл бұрын

    It wasn't that bad. 8mm film makes it look old. I saw a 'film' from 1986 (Not sure who would be still using super 8mm film in 1986) and it made everything look old and dirty. It was not that bad. At least you could afford a house there at that time without needing the income of a drug lord. The city then was priced for people within it and not the draw from foreign capital.

  • @r.pres.4121

    @r.pres.4121

    Жыл бұрын

    If you wanted soot and filth, you crossed the border and visited either Buffalo or went to Cleveland. Both Buffalo and Cleveland were filthy disgusting industrial towns that were declining and deteriorating steadily with very high crime rates.

  • @sg6474

    @sg6474

    11 ай бұрын

    I first visited in 1975. Very clean, modern. Was very impressed with the Don Valley Parkway !!!!

  • @mastersamurai7683

    @mastersamurai7683

    11 ай бұрын

    In those days I'd go out to deliver papers at 5am and come home looking like a coal miner an hour and a half later

  • @IntrepidMilo
    @IntrepidMilo3 жыл бұрын

    My father was a cop in Toronto in the 70s before moving to Kingston in the late 70s to be a cop there.

  • @johnpatterson4272

    @johnpatterson4272

    9 ай бұрын

    My respect to your father. I was with TPS for 32 years.

  • @khanman6874
    @khanman68743 жыл бұрын

    I think they mean metro Toronto was 3million

  • @JERREY-vw3do
    @JERREY-vw3doАй бұрын

    Time has really changed things THEN AND NOW

  • @Nightcool678
    @Nightcool678Ай бұрын

    It wasnt covered in dirt. Rain and snow washed most of it away. It also wasn't crammed tight - you could move around easily.

  • @dh5040
    @dh50405 ай бұрын

    Notice no graffiti. Some of more recent arrivals in Canada think graffiti is art.

  • @TrueNorth1217

    @TrueNorth1217

    Ай бұрын

    Graffiti was most prominent in 70s and 80s what are you talking about 😂

  • @ront769

    @ront769

    Ай бұрын

    @@kkjppt5359 Absolutely was here. Witnessed it myself all over trains & some infrastructure. Not just an American problem.

  • @InvisibleHotdog

    @InvisibleHotdog

    Ай бұрын

    You watched a 90 sec video and think there was no graffiti? Find a brain

  • @clark85

    @clark85

    Ай бұрын

    @@kkjppt5359 absolutely was lol wow you did not get out much

  • @clark85

    @clark85

    Ай бұрын

    @@kkjppt5359 oh wow no wall of text im impressed

  • @StuMarston
    @StuMarston4 ай бұрын

    Brings back memories. Sitting right up on sniff row at the old Brass Rail.

  • @AEW4L1FE
    @AEW4L1FEАй бұрын

    Living in downtown Toronto since 92. Downtown Toronto was so lite up back then

  • @johncorcoran4250
    @johncorcoran4250 Жыл бұрын

    Much better than now

  • @animaldw6996
    @animaldw6996Ай бұрын

    Man I miss those days. Long gone now. Much better times for sure.

  • @leeluvslife

    @leeluvslife

    Ай бұрын

    Hop in my time machine, animal!

  • @JustinEastmanMedia
    @JustinEastmanMedia3 жыл бұрын

    The good old days

  • @christrudell7966
    @christrudell79662 жыл бұрын

    I remember getting on the lift at the Ex, smoking a joint on the way to the other side. Good times 😊

  • @truckerdave2446
    @truckerdave24462 ай бұрын

    It looked more hopeful back then.

  • @AEW4L1FE
    @AEW4L1FEАй бұрын

    Woodbine Beach looks so clean on that picture 😱

  • @cyberpleb2472
    @cyberpleb2472Ай бұрын

    I was born in 1970 in Toronto. It was a great time and place.

  • @pty8s
    @pty8s7 ай бұрын

    That’s when I tore it up down there and until not to long ago. What a city. In 1970 I saw, J Winters, Humble Pie, J Carrey was in bars around then, they said some crazy sob was rippin it up here. SCtv, E John, The best era, I think.

  • @jamesmacleod9382
    @jamesmacleod938211 күн бұрын

    I worked in Toronto then at the CIBC Main Branch. It was a an amazing city, clean, Lots of interesting unique stores (it was before chains took over) and it wasn't dangerous to go anywhere in it.

  • @percy6532
    @percy6532Ай бұрын

    Born in toronto in 2005 and lived here my whole life. Seeing the CN tower without skyscrapers is wild to me. Everything is so short and nearly unreconisable. So much stuff has been built in just a few decades its wild

  • @glenrobinson916
    @glenrobinson916Ай бұрын

    It was easy to find a place to live, for rent signs were all over, rooms, apartments for very reasonable cost.

  • @Zuka-fz3he
    @Zuka-fz3heАй бұрын

    It was a great city with great people and NOW nothing like the 70s

  • @dixonpinfold2582
    @dixonpinfold25829 ай бұрын

    (1) Sort of weird that in 2020 you use an image clearly from 1978 at the earliest and place text on it reading: "This is what Toronto looked like 50 years ago." It was 42 or less. (Royal Bank Plaza, South Tower, completed 1979, is clearly visible.) (2) I can't believe how lonely and isolated the Gooderham Building was. Berczy Park behind it was just a forlorn dirt triangle, dead flat and almost literally as featureless as parts of the Moon. Not even a weed is discernible.

  • @barrroger1162
    @barrroger1162Ай бұрын

    Paradise compared with today

  • @leeluvslife

    @leeluvslife

    Ай бұрын

    I'll take a little soot over what we have now.

  • @PopShoppekid
    @PopShoppekid9 ай бұрын

    Loved Toronto then. Very free city and kinda affordable not like now.

  • @terrygelinas4593

    @terrygelinas4593

    7 ай бұрын

    Actually there were dreary parking lots dominating the harbourfront area. So glad they are gone.

  • @davidbrewer7937
    @davidbrewer79372 жыл бұрын

    How did we come from this visionary place which people wanted to visit to where we are today, a gridlocked, overpriced, gang ridden, drug infested shopping mall?.... When I first moved to Canada in 2000 TO was a great, safe & interesting place to have fun, now it is a place people grudgingly commute to if they have no other option!

  • @theokanarellis9539

    @theokanarellis9539

    2 жыл бұрын

    It'll get worse trust me.

  • @BrianBaileyedtech

    @BrianBaileyedtech

    Жыл бұрын

    What nonsense. Toronto is now the fastest growing city in North America and one of the safest. I visit almost every year and it keeps getting better and better.

  • @bobbbxxx

    @bobbbxxx

    Жыл бұрын

    Perhaps you have become jaded; it is still a great city that people want to visit which is why Toronto gets more tourism annually than any other Canadian city. "Drug infested shopping mall"? Really?

  • @r.pres.4121

    @r.pres.4121

    Жыл бұрын

    Toronto doesn’t have half the crime that most USA and Latin American cities suffer from. Despite some violent incidences on its subway lines, Toronto is still one of the safest major cities in the Western Hemisphere.

  • @bobbbxxx

    @bobbbxxx

    Жыл бұрын

    @@r.pres.4121 Most of the people who say things like this don't even live in Toronto.

  • @ReverendObe1
    @ReverendObe1Ай бұрын

    I bussed tables at Egerton's (pub close to Ryerson U) in the summer of 75 making $2.25 an hour plus tips and free bowl of chili every shift. Good times!

  • @AnhTuPhucDerrickHoangCanada
    @AnhTuPhucDerrickHoangCanada7 ай бұрын

    Stats in your videos, Toronto's present downtown skyline is a graphical represention of the 1%,but everywhere else outward,is poor!

  • @rickbaker8188
    @rickbaker81884 ай бұрын

    Lighthouse at Ontario. Guess Who at the CNE for free!! Born there, grew up there. Home my parents bought for $42,000 now valued north of a million. Jiminy Hendrix at MLG!!

  • @Duckify_
    @Duckify_Ай бұрын

    Im curious, do well people know about the CN tower in foreign countries?

  • @plutoniusis
    @plutoniusis2 ай бұрын

    Up to that time prosperity to majority of people was visible, but then happen...

  • @anantpathak2899
    @anantpathak28993 жыл бұрын

    the only thing that bothers me is the sea of parking lots. Cant imagine all the beautiful buildings that were torn for an empty piece of lot

  • @lassepeterson2740

    @lassepeterson2740

    2 жыл бұрын

    They were mostly rail yards and outdated factorys that were torn down for parking lots .

  • @sahibaforoz7905
    @sahibaforoz790510 ай бұрын

    My late father worked there from 74 to 78.. thats y there is connection

  • @jamesanthony5681
    @jamesanthony56812 ай бұрын

    Toronto politicians at the time were fixated on Toronto becoming a 'World class City', thinking the CN Tower would help them get there and put Toronto on the map. Some FM Radio stations at the time would incessantly spout 'Toronto the Good.' 'Toronto the Good,' morning, afternoon and night. Meaning (I'm assuming ), you could walk the streets at night and not get mugged or murdered, like in those bad American cities. However, as critic Henry Morgan said in response to those sanctimonious ads, "Sure, you can walk the streets after dark, but where would you go?"

  • @stevenc.6502

    @stevenc.6502

    Ай бұрын

    I went to see a play at CAA Theatre recently, as we left the Yonge-Bloor subway station we had to avoid a violent brawl between three people. After the play my wife wanted to walk along Yonge Street, but it was dirty and stank and there was a naked man wearing a bedsheet half-covered in foam; this was all during the daytime!

  • @district5198
    @district5198 Жыл бұрын

    We can’t afford a vacation to India, but thanks to out of control immigration. We can now visit Toronto, same difference 🤔.

  • @LHRTW

    @LHRTW

    11 ай бұрын

    Go to North Pole and live there or better return to Amsterdam where your roots are.

  • @arricammarques1955

    @arricammarques1955

    10 ай бұрын

    'Sooner or late were going to hump you' (c) Russel Peters

  • @terrygelinas4593

    @terrygelinas4593

    7 ай бұрын

    ????

  • @rickbaker8188

    @rickbaker8188

    5 ай бұрын

    Wow, your inside voice came out in a racist kinda way.

  • @district5198

    @district5198

    5 ай бұрын

    @@rickbaker8188 Sorry if truth hurts. Truth and racism are not the same fyi

  • @lawrencelewis2592
    @lawrencelewis25922 жыл бұрын

    Soot and Filth? Think of how bad it must have been when homes used coal for heating and the steam powered trains just south of Front Street. Also the stink of cattle at St. Clair and Keele. I knew a guy who remembers that- He said that you could smell it on Roncesvalles when the wind was right.

  • @lawrencelewis2592

    @lawrencelewis2592

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@Moxy770 Yes, there were several and there still are some on Glen Scarlett road and Gunns road Plus a plant that processes cow hides. I had to go there for work and I stunk horribly for two days. At the northwest corner of St Clair and Keele. I first came to Toronto in 1989 and the sheds and corrals were there at the southwest corner but that's all gone now.

  • @lawrencelewis2592

    @lawrencelewis2592

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@Moxy770 I had to go that plant to inspect the boiler. I went in the morning and called my boss and said I had to go home and take a shower. He said, "You went to the rendering plant didn't you? Take the rest of the day off." The stink was unreal. Next door is Universal Drum (still there) they recondition used 55 gallon drums, It is a Charles Dickens industrial hell! So glad I don't have to go there anymore.

  • @bigideatelevision8658
    @bigideatelevision8658Ай бұрын

    I miss all the parking.

  • @maximilliancunningham6091
    @maximilliancunningham60912 ай бұрын

    Moved here from Montreal, 1979.

  • @robhersey1796

    @robhersey1796

    Ай бұрын

    Yep. Toronto can in part thank the PQ for its huge growth during that time.

  • @situational.analysis
    @situational.analysis2 ай бұрын

    Wait. Wasn't that Ratso Rizzo walking there? 😊

  • @zoranvuk1231
    @zoranvuk1231Ай бұрын

    Luv this

  • @MrPatrick1414
    @MrPatrick14147 ай бұрын

    Can't find any outdoor parking lots now...all converted to condos

  • @herschelwright4663
    @herschelwright46632 ай бұрын

    TRUE GRIT!👍🏽💯

  • @skeetsmesquita8100
    @skeetsmesquita8100 Жыл бұрын

    Wasn't that "dirty" as per ..

  • @cinthia9602
    @cinthia9602 Жыл бұрын

    I remember...

  • @ginnel_snicket
    @ginnel_snicket2 ай бұрын

    It's such a cesspool now. Expensive-Mediocrity personified too. Lived in city since '98 or '79 if you count east burbs after being shipped over as a youngster from the UK. Going back to the homeland is the plan.

  • @leeluvslife

    @leeluvslife

    Ай бұрын

    I wanna go back, too. They keep telling us Canadians to go back to where we came from. Happily.

  • @criticalmass613
    @criticalmass6132 ай бұрын

    3 million in 1970?

  • @clearlynotwoke4929
    @clearlynotwoke4929 Жыл бұрын

    Nicer and safer then, not so much now…

  • @korloffkorloff2134

    @korloffkorloff2134

    Жыл бұрын

    uhhhh wat lmao

  • @clearlynotwoke4929

    @clearlynotwoke4929

    Жыл бұрын

    @@korloffkorloff2134 🤡🤡

  • @LHRTW

    @LHRTW

    11 ай бұрын

    @@clearlynotwoke4929before Columbus bandit landed

  • @jumbothompson

    @jumbothompson

    2 ай бұрын

    The 70s had more violent crime than now. That's pretty much the trend for all major cities across North America. Toronto for the most part has always been safe.

  • @clearlynotwoke4929

    @clearlynotwoke4929

    2 ай бұрын

    @@jumbothompson that is totally untrue and the government statistics refutes your lie. All major western cities have seen crime increase due to third world immigration into once safe homogeneous countries!

  • @liberatetutemeexinferis5902
    @liberatetutemeexinferis5902Ай бұрын

    Now Toronto is part of India.😂

  • @anthonyattard6726
    @anthonyattard672611 ай бұрын

    back when Canada was a real country

  • @Mrgreen2558

    @Mrgreen2558

    7 ай бұрын

    That time 70s,80 and 90s were amazing incredible. No Internet, no mobile and the life was amazing. Yes it was real country

  • @terrygelinas4593

    @terrygelinas4593

    7 ай бұрын

    ??????

  • @karldonutz7770

    @karldonutz7770

    4 ай бұрын

    Globalist shit hole now, repopulated by the overflow population of the 3rd world, brought here by traitor politicians and their globalist money people.

  • @MapleSyrupPoet
    @MapleSyrupPoet7 ай бұрын

    💙💙💙👍

  • @christrudell7966
    @christrudell79662 ай бұрын

    And then something happened in the 80's... Can't quite put my finger on it.. 😮

  • @leeluvslife

    @leeluvslife

    Ай бұрын

    Someone happened.

  • @christrudell7966

    @christrudell7966

    Ай бұрын

    @@leeluvslife yup

  • @chickenburgerfan88
    @chickenburgerfan88Ай бұрын

    RIP Canadian culture

  • @MarkWalsh-ku5dn
    @MarkWalsh-ku5dn8 ай бұрын

    You see those people boarding a bus at the beginning of the clip? It looks nice and quick and easy. But in reality you might have stopped at a bus stop for five minutes or so because bus drivers used to sell tickets and sometimes people might fumble around looking for money in their pockets or purse or ask a friend for change so they could buy a strip of tickets. A bus ride that takes 15 minutes today might have taken 25 minutes then. Also, because people knew that bus drivers used to carry money you'd sometimes hear reports of them getting beaten up and robbed. The trains used to be red, the lights would sometimes go out for a second or two and then come back on, and they had windows that you could open as you rode through the tunnels. On the weekend the trains were shortened to four cars instead of the usual six, making it entirely possible to miss a train even though you were standing on the platform. If you didn't know about this and were standing at either end sometimes you had to run for it. Vintage TTC.

  • @monicapushkin3274

    @monicapushkin3274

    8 ай бұрын

    I think smoking was allowed on buses into the early 70s.

  • @MarkWalsh-ku5dn

    @MarkWalsh-ku5dn

    8 ай бұрын

    @@monicapushkin3274 Maybe, I just don't remember it. Not on the vehicles themselves although people used to smoke on the subway platforms, maybe up until the eighties or nineties. Even then I'm just guessing but I'm pretty sure it was finished by the year 2000.

  • @Rob-pz5lf

    @Rob-pz5lf

    7 ай бұрын

    I remember those red trains growing up, and those windows you could open and close. The draft was so needed during hot summer days. I also remember rush hour was from 7 to 9 in the morning and 4 to 6 in the afternoon. Outside of those hours, travelling around the city was a breeze. Not any more. “Rush hour” starts at 6 am and ends at around 9 or 10 pm on weekdays.

  • @goldenretriever6261
    @goldenretriever62612 ай бұрын

    Look at all white people! Good old days.

  • @mariusfacktor3597

    @mariusfacktor3597

    Ай бұрын

    Hahaha go back into the woodwork, we don't want to hear your crap.

  • @user-br1gm3et5w
    @user-br1gm3et5w16 күн бұрын

    I arrive vancouver then then...

  • @thevinmeister5015
    @thevinmeister5015Ай бұрын

    Back before every building that gave the city character was demolished in favour of some bland condo building.

  • @Governmentiscorrupt
    @GovernmentiscorruptАй бұрын

    No crime....wonder why

  • @tylerarnold943
    @tylerarnold943Ай бұрын

    Not enough money in the world you could give me to live in Toronto.

  • @Dosai99
    @Dosai99Ай бұрын

    Back when it was actually affordable 🙄

  • @judistench2167
    @judistench21672 ай бұрын

    Gritty…but much more live-able than today’s 💩 hole GTA

  • @americanhotdog
    @americanhotdog2 ай бұрын

    Beautiful place before the 3rd world showed up

  • @Gillz22
    @Gillz222 жыл бұрын

    Everyone was white

  • @erics9754

    @erics9754

    Жыл бұрын

    So much for the myth that Canada was always multicultural lol.

  • @ceer9141

    @ceer9141

    Жыл бұрын

    @@erics9754 what myth? No one thinks it was ALWAYS multi cultural. Learn some history.

  • @erics9754

    @erics9754

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ceer9141 Many do and I know my history. Why would you assume other wise?

  • @korloffkorloff2134

    @korloffkorloff2134

    Жыл бұрын

    @@erics9754 you clearly don't lmao. Canada has always been multicultural. It's early beginnings it was people from scotland, ireland, france and england. Then we had africans and chinese people bulding the railroads in the 1800's followed by japanese people coming here etc.

  • @multipass888

    @multipass888

    11 ай бұрын

    LOL! Umm, 'white' looking people speak different languages and have different cultures and are from different countries, just like people of color. And not all 'white' looking people are Caucasian, if that's what you mean by white. I grew up in Toronto in the early 80"s and Toronto was indeed ethnically diverse...

  • @angusmackaskill3035
    @angusmackaskill30352 ай бұрын

    when the political climate in montreal looked sketchy so business and educated people moved there en masse. maurice duplessis is the father of torontos economic growth

  • @tilaman3
    @tilaman3Ай бұрын

    2024 the population is over 3 million GTA 6.7 million

  • @frankgarrett242
    @frankgarrett242 Жыл бұрын

    We used to be a proper country, with proper citizens. They're all gone now, only to be replaced by an assortment of raving mental patients.

  • @tarotbyamber7233

    @tarotbyamber7233

    Жыл бұрын

    Bit like the UK that's why I moved to Spain

  • @LHRTW

    @LHRTW

    Жыл бұрын

    @@tarotbyamber7233UK is full of East European Untermensh and Muslims

  • @arricammarques1955

    @arricammarques1955

    10 ай бұрын

    Queens Park & Ottawa = Political Asylum.

  • @johnziegelbauer4999
    @johnziegelbauer4999Ай бұрын

    Actually very clean back then . No garbage and no homeless...

  • @g.w.7893
    @g.w.7893Ай бұрын

    Back when Canada was the real deal.

  • @Keefterdam
    @Keefterdam5 ай бұрын

    Toronto was way better in the 70s. The Eaton Centres destroyed the downtown cores of all the major cities in Canada. Then Eatons went bankrupt. "Toronto the good" is ,known as the Toilet now.

  • @xieulong
    @xieulongАй бұрын

    Wow.. it looked shitt# back then too.

  • @sushmasinghkisibhibdestark9170
    @sushmasinghkisibhibdestark9170Ай бұрын

    Yurop.

  • @tarotbyamber7233
    @tarotbyamber7233 Жыл бұрын

    Looks like new York

  • @playboyflash
    @playboyflash2 ай бұрын

    Better people and better city back then.

  • @squangan
    @squanganАй бұрын

    As a Canadian my only visit to Toronto was in 1976 and I have never had any inclination to go back. Give me the never ending boreal forests, lakes, rivers and towns under 10,000 in population. I don’t need the traffic, crime and crowded everything that cities like Toronto have to offer.

  • @rip2025
    @rip2025Ай бұрын

    It was a toilet then,and an even bigger one now

  • @drew6194
    @drew61942 ай бұрын

    Leave it to blogTO to spout complete rubbish.

  • @canuckerjay
    @canuckerjay5 ай бұрын

    What is this some grade 11 project?.😂

  • @galaxiedance3135
    @galaxiedance31352 ай бұрын

    Amazing how the name Trudeau can screw things up.

  • @sushmasinghkisibhibdestark9170
    @sushmasinghkisibhibdestark9170Ай бұрын

    Sata.ghher.ka.eta.fakna.building.move

  • @Art--Deco
    @Art--Deco5 ай бұрын

    "covered in soot" Hilarious. I was there. Ummmm, no it wasn't. But the MASSIVE parking lots downtown? Yes.

  • @sushmasinghkisibhibdestark9170
    @sushmasinghkisibhibdestark9170Ай бұрын

    Danesh.ke.house.ke.bagal.may.sata.2.house.ka.wood.doore.reach.people