The Futurists (1967) | Scientists Predict The 21st Century

2018 ж. 14 Жел.
877 853 Рет қаралды

How close were they? What did they miss?
Discusses the physical, social, and economic forces which have contributed to world civilization. From the Internet Archive.
#####
Reelblack's mission is to educate, elevate, entertain, enlighten, and empower through Black film. If there is content shared on this platform that you feel infringes on your intellectual property, please email me at Reelblack@mail.com and info@reelblack.com with details and it will be promptly removed.

Пікірлер
  • The Futurists (1967) features a panel of experts and visionaries, including... Walter Cronkite - Bertrand de Jouvenel - Peter Medawar - Dennis Gabor - Daniel Bell - Walter Sullivan - Ritchie Calder - Gerard Piel - Buckminster Fuller - Herman Kahn - Isaac Asimov - Harrison Brown

    @erikals@erikals4 ай бұрын
    • B I N G O ! !

      @user-tb3lk9et1b@user-tb3lk9et1b3 ай бұрын
    • @@user-tb3lk9et1bbot

      @dirtlevel@dirtlevel3 ай бұрын
    • The future changes much slower than people think it will

      @asmukler@asmukler2 ай бұрын
    • @@asmukler...not really. it too is based on Moore's Law. though sure, there are wishful thinkers here and there.

      @erikals@erikals2 ай бұрын
    • universal attractors that determine the future are greed and paranoid-ed dominance. Very often these two have dictated nations courses for centuries. Bucky knew that, but he had hope a majority of leaders would seek the noble path...sorry Bucky its 2024 and todays leaders have yet to get the memo...

      @MrPanetela@MrPanetela29 күн бұрын
  • I work in retail. We used to go to training seminars put on by various companies whose products we sold. In the mid 80’s we went to a seminar by Kodak. The person running the class held up a roll of film and said one day we’d be able to take a picture on a camera and send it to a person across the country in seconds! Remember, this was before the internet was accessible to us as it is today. Almost nobody owned a personal computer. We couldn’t wrap our heads around it and I myself imagined a vacuum tube sending a photo like bank tellers used at drive thrus😂 It was simply beyond our comprehension at the time. And yet, just a few years later…..

    @pooky1959@pooky195910 ай бұрын
    • Yeah, the corporate bean counters sold our American intellectual property to the Japanese as well as let the Japanese dump their film into the county with no tariffs.

      @OneAdam12Adam@OneAdam12Adam10 ай бұрын
    • And yet Kodak pretty much went bust because they failed to diversify away from photographic film?

      @5piral0ut@5piral0ut10 ай бұрын
    • Yes! I often try to explain to our two daughters what life was like before our smart phones, microwave ovens, streaming services like Spotify, record players, the Telephone Catalogue!They ask things like “what did you actually DO with all that extra time? They’re so used to just getting things “now!” and I worry for their, everyone’s sanity sometimes.

      @monkmell@monkmell10 ай бұрын
    • By the mid80s people were already communicating via phone lines using modems and sending digital information. That wasn't much of a stretch. The internet was already in use by the military.

      @ricomajestic@ricomajestic10 ай бұрын
    • @@ricomajestic, I was pretty technically illiterate back then, so it was still a mystery to me.

      @pooky1959@pooky195910 ай бұрын
  • My father was a telecommunications engineer from the 1960s until he retired in the late 1980s. He told me stories about the early version of the internet which at the time was only used by the government between military bases and government facilities in the 1980s. Some of the servers he worked on were part of this early version of the internet. He used to tell a story about how one of his coworkers told him at the time that if this system went public, companies could advertise their products and services on it. My father's response was who would waste their money advertising on this? Little did he know 😂😂

    @someguy4911@someguy49114 ай бұрын
    • My father was a telecom engineer as well in the mid 60s until he passed in the early 90s. One thing I remember the most is when he brought home a piece of fiberoptic cable home and explained to me how it worked. As a kid I thought that was so cool. Oh and the early Internet stuff he told me about was amazing too. Lol..

      @colin7763@colin77634 ай бұрын
    • Your dad was a true visionary!

      @felixmadison5736@felixmadison57363 ай бұрын
    • talk about.... missed opportunities...

      @Spiritualbike644@Spiritualbike6442 ай бұрын
    • It took much more than just making the system public for it to become a platform worth advertising on. And really, advertising is rather small potatoes compared to the whole impact of the internet. I did some work in the 80s that made use of ARPANET (the "early version"), and it was PRIMITIVE and problematic, but it worked. By the early 90s, I was using email across oceans, in business, and that was much easier and more intuitive. In a few years, the emerging internet was a different story, with the WWW application, browsers, and multiple file and data transfer protocols for sharing information. That decade was a revolution. Your father was right at the time. He just didn't have his focus set on what was at work in out-of-the-way places. Some others did.

      @farmergiles1065@farmergiles1065Ай бұрын
    • I thought the internet was going to be a fad in 1998😢

      @RLee-we1fc@RLee-we1fcАй бұрын
  • Interesting how we all thought that everyone in the 21st century would be so intelligent, and ironically it's probably one of the most unintelligent societies we've seen in history...mostly by design.

    @markbowman5515@markbowman551510 ай бұрын
    • Idiocracy is a documentary

      @staceymaudlin2415@staceymaudlin24157 ай бұрын
    • People keep getting dumber and dumber.

      @slowanddeliberate6893@slowanddeliberate68937 ай бұрын
    • Yep! ABSOLUTELY!

      @michaelsherron7815@michaelsherron78157 ай бұрын
    • on purpose absolutely

      @happychappy492@happychappy4927 ай бұрын
    • No, the stupid ones are just louder now.

      @nickguh1323@nickguh13237 ай бұрын
  • Watching shows like this convinces me that we have actually regressed in the last 50 years. Hope so beautifully expressed by these great minds is gone now.

    @kevinfahey5240@kevinfahey52407 ай бұрын
    • I'm glad I live in the 2020's. We've added 20 years to the average world life expectancy since this video, and done many fascinating things with science. Democracy has expanded at the expense of colonialism, and women don't get told they need to bring a male relative with them to open a bank account in America any more.

      @Dan-dy8zp@Dan-dy8zp6 ай бұрын
    • @@Dan-dy8zpThat didn’t happen in the 80’s either. Stop thinking about things that ceased to exist 100 years ago.

      @garyfrancis6193@garyfrancis61935 ай бұрын
    • @@garyfrancis6193 I wrote "I'm glad I live in the 2020's. We've added 20 years to the average world life expectancy since this video". In what way did you misinterpret that to mean that I think people lived to be 100 in perfect health in the past? Until the 1974 ECOA law, it was legal and common for financial institutions to discriminate against people on the basis of sex. Not every single woman every time, no. Without colonialism (which involved lots of really gruesome mass murder) Africa would probably be much better off financially. Do you actually believe the only way to industrialize or build roads or acquire democracy is to be conquered? Do you think that's how the industrial revolution happened in Britain? Apartheid In South Africa ended in the 1990's.

      @Dan-dy8zp@Dan-dy8zp5 ай бұрын
    • Yeah, but they only had 2 genders to deal with back then.

      @biffwellington823@biffwellington8235 ай бұрын
    • Even the physicist who was wrong was very kind and elaborate. Our current society did not develop away from the idiots, they rose.

      @blackandcold@blackandcold4 ай бұрын
  • I miss the days when 2000 seemed futuristic and promising. I'm pretty disappointed by what has transpired since.

    @CatchThe80sWave@CatchThe80sWave5 жыл бұрын
    • To say that is crazy. If you bought back some of the knowledge and technological accomplishments from 2019/2020 these people would be perplexed

      @Pxrish@Pxrish5 жыл бұрын
    • Im talking to you from across the world on a tv that's also a phone that has access to all the knowledge in the wold. Look up tokamak reactor for some wow tech.

      @jamesbraine@jamesbraine5 жыл бұрын
    • @@jamesbraine LOL! IKR

      @Pxrish@Pxrish5 жыл бұрын
    • Polluted by propaganda keeping us all confused and fighting each other. If we are deprived of the truth, our ability to make reasoned choices is severely crippled.

      @sevendaughs7d@sevendaughs7d5 жыл бұрын
    • divide and conqueir @@sevendaughs7d

      @empireofnoise2200@empireofnoise22005 жыл бұрын
  • 2019 over-worked. Underpaid. Over-taxed. Over-dosed. Narcissists. Depression. Anxiety. Addictions to money, drugs, food, drink, attention. Identity disorders. Drowning in debt while bombarded with corporate propaganda to consume 24/7... Science!

    4 жыл бұрын
    • Couldn't have said that better myself *smashing!*

      @atlasshrugged2u@atlasshrugged2u4 жыл бұрын
    • @@atlasshrugged2u Ditto.

      @jntj3007@jntj30074 жыл бұрын
    • smashing your Mom Sadly your accurate 💯 percent

      @90steenager89@90steenager894 жыл бұрын
    • Facts!!

      @IceManLikeGervin@IceManLikeGervin4 жыл бұрын
    • smashing your Mom don’t forget slow extermination of masses of people via endocrine disruptor‘s and an anti traditional family campaign

      @7jandi7@7jandi74 жыл бұрын
  • Seriously - amazing panel. With the exception of most of Bucky Fuller's imaginings, the majority of the issues elaborated are things we should have been tending all this time. We've known better since at least 1967, and yet here we are.

    @chipkrug4191@chipkrug41914 ай бұрын
  • "The FUTURE is NEVER what we predict...if it were....we wouldn't keep making the same mistakes!!!" - Mark Twain

    @michiganspencer6920@michiganspencer692010 ай бұрын
    • The statement doesn't even make sense. The future is not a thing, it encompasses limitless things. What about the future is not what we predict? Obviously many many many things ARE what was predicted decades ago, i.e. the Internet, electric cars, mobile phones, microwaves, the existence of Neptune, Higgs boson, the Cold war... so many things that people predicted that came to fruition.

      @fartpooboxohyeah8611@fartpooboxohyeah86118 ай бұрын
    • 2023 VISION BIG FACTS 😎

      @ronelltaylor3140@ronelltaylor31404 ай бұрын
  • 1967 - "We're going to develop into an intellectual society." 2021 - "The Earth is flat and gravity is a hoax!"

    @ll7868@ll78683 жыл бұрын
    • We are tho

      @OTB2002@OTB20022 жыл бұрын
    • The social engineers are the intellectuals mindf#$&+= society, and li’e he said, it’s probably won’t be a good thing

      @jpremier5743@jpremier57432 жыл бұрын
    • @@OTB2002 jokes on you

      @polskagurom12345@polskagurom123452 жыл бұрын
    • Oh my, sooo true. We've went backwards in a big way. Common sense is in short supply. Laughed hard at this one.

      @bradcurtis5324@bradcurtis5324 Жыл бұрын
    • 2023 The Earth is flat and gravity is a ho.

      @bonchidude@bonchidude Жыл бұрын
  • He said Opinion Control ...hmmmmmm that is definitely happening

    @maurianobaruso5859@maurianobaruso58594 жыл бұрын
    • Why do you think the internet was made public

      @chickenjuice4841@chickenjuice48414 жыл бұрын
    • Hearts and minds???

      @rankcrush4374@rankcrush43744 жыл бұрын
    • Arbeit macht frei is a German phrase meaning "work sets you free". The slogan is known for appearing on the entrance of Auschwitz and other Nazi concentration camps.

      @rankcrush4374@rankcrush43744 жыл бұрын
    • Johanis Ardnt, FACT. The Leftist Supremacist (fake) mass media like the Washington Post, New York Times, CNN, ABC-TV, CBS-TV, NBC-TV, MSNBC-TV, etc are definitely used to control public opinion by the Leftist Supremacists. They are definitely a cult.

      @richardharris3423@richardharris34234 жыл бұрын
    • And it sure ain't freedom, is it? A One World Order will result in manipulating the masses.

      @BaiAnNaTwitter@BaiAnNaTwitter4 жыл бұрын
  • If any of so-called "futurists" lived to see the 21st century, I'm sure they would've been mostly disappointed by how it actually turned out.

    @rsuriyop@rsuriyop10 ай бұрын
    • Don't worry, they would be watching porn on the internet, just like everybody else.

      @TheAlchaemist@TheAlchaemist9 ай бұрын
    • That first list of outcomes was pretty dead on.

      @crhu319@crhu3199 ай бұрын
    • ​@@TheAlchaemistlmao😂😂😂😂

      @kelcey7579@kelcey75799 ай бұрын
    • We're not even a quarter of the way into the 21st century, might as well make that same comment in 2005 and say "ah well it didn't pan out"

      @williammchardy5881@williammchardy58819 ай бұрын
    • I'm addicted to pigger nussy

      @redneckshaman3099@redneckshaman30999 ай бұрын
  • I find it interesting how optimistic most of these men are about what science and technology will do to improve health and living conditions. The reality today seems different, maybe even the opposite, in some cases.

    @brianmason9361@brianmason93617 ай бұрын
    • politics & greed

      @Ronhof72@Ronhof726 ай бұрын
    • Well, 20 years have been added to the global life expectancy since the video. Literacy rates have doubled from 40 some percent to nearly 90 percent, extreme poverty (i.e. can't get enough to eat or clean water) has declined from about 50% to 10% globally.

      @Dan-dy8zp@Dan-dy8zp6 ай бұрын
    • @@Ronhof72 which really means money Thanks for the boomers selfishness everything got fucked

      @rikmichaels9233@rikmichaels92333 ай бұрын
    • @@Dan-dy8zpPoverty has been going up, drug addiction is increasing, overdose is increasing mental illness increasing, and suicides skyrocketing -all since BEFORE Covid

      @rikmichaels9233@rikmichaels92333 ай бұрын
  • In my opinion, Asimov (20:47) got it right when he said that the issues of the future were more issues of motivation and will and heart than of technology. If humans can’t learn to value each other and work together, then society will be destroyed.

    @tomedmonson501@tomedmonson50110 ай бұрын
    • Agreed. Maybe we could call it a spiritual revolution , in opposition to an industrial one. A shift from competition to cooperation, from the individual to the collective. I'm afraid that we will probably never see that happening.

      @leandrodavila5975@leandrodavila597510 ай бұрын
    • Well, so be it then. What are you afraid of?

      @TalibanSymphonyOrchestra@TalibanSymphonyOrchestra10 ай бұрын
    • Exactly, that was very prescient of Asimov and we are pretty much destroying ourselves now.

      @bonwatcher@bonwatcher10 ай бұрын
    • @@leandrodavila5975 Exactly wrong, as it never goes as planned anyway. Collectivity is a recipe for the worst disasters humans know. Cases in point: recent China, Russa, Germany, Japan. Live and let live. Competition is good for human. All oif these guys, especially Fuller are full of themselves. The sky is not falling. Life goes on. Pull your head up out of the sand. Neither you nor they have a right to plan humanity, outside of you misguided opinions.

      @TalibanSymphonyOrchestra@TalibanSymphonyOrchestra10 ай бұрын
    • ​@@leandrodavila5975 Socialism doesn't work. The problem is that somebody has to be in charge, control resources & organize and people are inherently self-interested. It's how we are made, in order to lookout for ourselves! We are inevitably corruptible, in the name of self interest. Look at ANY government, any bureaucracy, down to the DMV. Mindless systems of blanket rules enforced whether beneficial or apt, or not. Everyone in the system focusing first on their own benefit, lol. Humans will ALWAYS strive to get more for themselves & those they love & seek power for it's own sake. When you lock in a system of enforced equity, those people start working for themselves like busy little bees, and the rest of the population is yoked to provide for THEM. Soon their hoards beggar society & they despoil the environment for more, more, more resources. China the USSR come to mind. Venezuela. It is better people are free to provide for themselves, and contribute as a group for those not intelligent enough, or physically capable, of self support. And that system is corrupted too! Anything that has human beings involved is going to be corrupt. The trick is to keep the corruption down to a minimum. Keep government as small as possible and let people run their own lives. Have laws that protect us all and give us equal opportunity. Then your labor benefits yourself, not a bunch of f****** bureaucrat fat cats like we are being ruled by, not SERVED, now. Term limits!

      @hensonlaura@hensonlaura10 ай бұрын
  • I remember 1967 very well and the social turmoil of the day. From my perspective we missed out on our society's intellectual progress when colleges became a profit center for oligarchs. Privatizing college loans, like creating our for profit healthcare, was beyond these good scholars imagination.

    @randystone4903@randystone4903 Жыл бұрын
    • In other words, capitalism

      @BrobraKai@BrobraKai10 ай бұрын
    • Exactly. And convincing the electorate this stupid situation is good for them. Which is exactly what we have in America today.

      @butterfacemcgillicutty@butterfacemcgillicutty10 ай бұрын
    • I worked for Sallie Mae and saw the problem firsthand. For-profit and public funding are a toxic combination and should never mix.

      @timhaldane7588@timhaldane758810 ай бұрын
    • God was up to something big but His plans were thwarted.

      @aguerra1381@aguerra138110 ай бұрын
    • Exactly....

      @analyticalhabitrails9857@analyticalhabitrails985710 ай бұрын
  • I was 13 when this was made, and the possibilities of a brighter future was on the horizon. But know I am 68, and though the advaces made in Technology and in Science have made things convenient and we live longer, yet mankind refuses to consider the impact they have on others so that we still live in our small communities incased in a bubble. We see evenmoreso now, that if we don't change mankind will surely destroy themselves. This needs to be played in every classroom so that our children don't grow-up making the same mistakes we did. Just another reason teaching and learning History, Sociology, and Psychology really, really matters.

    @JustASliceOfSweetPotatoPie@JustASliceOfSweetPotatoPie9 ай бұрын
    • 68? Almost 69! NOICE

      @svenjansen2134@svenjansen21346 ай бұрын
    • @@svenjansen2134silly, 😂 but we would be remiss not to listen to and appreciate information from any elder. I. 44 rn and I AT LEAST process even the most ridiculous of takes because I gain perspective. Each one, teach… 🙏

      @raenaldo@raenaldo4 ай бұрын
    • Please learn Earths disaster cycles. We’ve entered into one already. There are phony agendas currently propagated designed to keep consumerism/capitalism alive and distract humanity from comprehending the magnitude of the impending destruction. However all hope is not gone. Earth has endured these catastrophes for millions of years and humans also for as long as we’ve been on this planet. The greatest threat is living without electricity. Indigenous and aboriginal peoples will suffer less because they’re not dependent upon electricity. THIS IS of utmost importance. Knowledge is power

      @bobwoww8384@bobwoww83842 ай бұрын
  • Cronkite, Helmer Piel and Bell actually got to see the year 2001 and compare notes with their predictions in 1967

    @salus1231@salus12319 ай бұрын
  • The future isn't what it used to be.

    @brianarbenz7206@brianarbenz72064 жыл бұрын
    • Can I use that in a song?

      @GermanDisla@GermanDisla4 жыл бұрын
    • “Reality isn’t what it used to be.”

      @orkaodyssey8926@orkaodyssey89264 жыл бұрын
    • Thats deep

      @nordini3516@nordini35164 жыл бұрын
    • Nice

      @actualideas8078@actualideas80784 жыл бұрын
    • @@orkaodyssey8926 Bingo..

      @EsoTownBizz6500@EsoTownBizz65004 жыл бұрын
  • Some guy from the 20th century: "In 2020, we'll have flying cars." Me, in 2020: Bro, not even planes are flying right now.

    @Its_Mango@Its_Mango3 жыл бұрын
    • Just Google or KZhead flying car. People have accomplished more than you can possibly imagine. Don't forget to thank GOD

      @JESEE818@JESEE8183 жыл бұрын
    • @@JESEE818 I'm not so sure if you get the joke mate...

      @Its_Mango@Its_Mango3 жыл бұрын
    • @@Its_Mango i didn't watch the whole thing. 😶

      @JESEE818@JESEE8183 жыл бұрын
    • @@JESEE818 didn't need to. Coronavirus has forced planes not to fly as much anymore so not even planes are flying right now ._.

      @Its_Mango@Its_Mango3 жыл бұрын
    • @@Its_Mango yes they are buddy 🛫

      @JESEE818@JESEE8183 жыл бұрын
  • Bell said that he didn't think gadgets would have much of an impact on the future. Personal computers, smart phones, broadband networking, and the growth of social media on those platforms completely changed the world. Few people foresaw the impact of solid-state technology and social media sofware.

    @srellison561@srellison5617 ай бұрын
  • Walter Cronkite lived until 2009 so thankfully he got to see some things develop like internet and social media forums in the 21st century compared to what these scholars were taking about in 1967. In some ways I'm glad Walter isn't around to see how stuff has turned to crap in 2023.

    @victorkreitner754@victorkreitner75410 ай бұрын
    • Cronkite seemed to never tire of being wrong--about everything. He had a bully pulpit (TV)--he spouted off every night and we said he's the most trusted man in the world--but why? He was a thoughtless liberal and the TV culture gobbled him up--without a care that his ideas worked or not. Left wing ideas never work!

      @gymshoe8862@gymshoe886210 ай бұрын
    • The internet was made public on January 1, 1983. Yes, seriously.

      @le_th_@le_th_8 ай бұрын
    • The Great Reset after COVID. These guys would be rolling over in their graves hearing about all this crap and “our friends” Klaus Schwab, Putin, Biden, Trudeau and a certain King in England. Or that I could complain to everybody in the world on this contraption called an iPad.

      @dorothywillms115@dorothywillms1158 ай бұрын
    • @@le_th_to whom? I heard the first one was called the beast somewhere in Brussels. They called it that not only because it was so large, they literally thought it would enter the age of the Anti Christ and was the image of the beast. Sometimes I wonder if that might actually be right.

      @dorothywillms115@dorothywillms1158 ай бұрын
    • Do you really believe that the world suddenly turned to crap in 2023? Was 2022 better in some particular way? Why? Seems like the best year humanity has ever had yet to me. Like most years.

      @Dan-dy8zp@Dan-dy8zp6 ай бұрын
  • "It's not that we have more knowledge, which we do. it's a change in the character of the knowledge"🤔

    @loadinginprogress2339@loadinginprogress23395 жыл бұрын
    • Good statement. Especially since People Have Moved further, and further Away from GOD-JESUS!

      @craigmoreland9569@craigmoreland95695 жыл бұрын
    • @youareonthetube1 I wish it would hurry up.

      @htos1av@htos1av4 жыл бұрын
  • Hey ReelBlack. Apparently lots of persons don't understand what you are doing...helping us.Some of us comprehend. Your work is appreciated.

    @JonnRamaer@JonnRamaer4 жыл бұрын
    • Yea even the part where is sooo obviously completely ignorant.

      @johnhickum8967@johnhickum896710 ай бұрын
    • @@johnhickum8967 Eat at Joe's

      @alphaomega8373@alphaomega83739 ай бұрын
    • If the veil is lifted , you truly hear and understand what your seeing. Thanks for the upload!

      @michaelmuhammad142@michaelmuhammad1429 ай бұрын
    • Got that right@@michaelmuhammad142

      @BiometricFileHasBeenCorrupted@BiometricFileHasBeenCorrupted8 ай бұрын
  • I love how sociology and the nature of time are addressed first before any ideas for the future are discussed.

    @NobodyOfTheTardis@NobodyOfTheTardis2 күн бұрын
  • That sociologist was the most accurate. It was society which changed the most, not the "gadgets" or technology. Intellectual knowledge is now most valuable

    @caezar55@caezar5510 ай бұрын
  • It was Isaac Asimov for me. His message essentially is "Come together and tackle the next century's issues or perish divided"

    @missjade2940@missjade2940 Жыл бұрын
    • Hello Cynthia how are you doing today?....Buckminster Fuller said "we're going to have to make all of humanity successful or none" and Alexandre Dumas replied "one for all and all for one". Nothing new under the sun.

      @parkersmith7611@parkersmith7611 Жыл бұрын
    • @@parkersmith7611 indeed Parker. Thanks and have a pleasant week ahead

      @missjade2940@missjade2940 Жыл бұрын
    • @@missjade2940 Thank you Cynthia same here...where are you texting from?

      @parkersmith7611@parkersmith7611 Жыл бұрын
    • Agreed, I am creating a social VR application sort of like VrChat, and my god. The world has got so much smaller, and I can see that we have no idea as a civilization just how small it is about to become

      @DaysOfFunder@DaysOfFunder4 ай бұрын
    • How did you make his name able to be clicked on?

      @dirtlevel@dirtlevel3 ай бұрын
  • Entertainment and communication technologies have increased, while education, wisdom, and morals have fallen off the charts.

    @ronjones2266@ronjones22664 жыл бұрын
    • Indeed.

      @LegoGBlok@LegoGBlok3 жыл бұрын
    • Well said.

      @JFmK-sh5nh@JFmK-sh5nh3 жыл бұрын
    • Which is a compounding problem within our society.

      @Alan-in-Bama@Alan-in-Bama2 жыл бұрын
    • Very, very, well said!! I'm gonna steal your observation.... Ill totally attribute you, haha

      @ZDiddy7777@ZDiddy77772 жыл бұрын
    • Yes, with all the racism, misogyny, and homophobia back then, but we’re less moral today because we use Instagram too much

      @osamabad3597@osamabad35972 жыл бұрын
  • I watched this show as a kid, and we're now almost a quarter of the way through the 21st century. I like the mention early on in the episode of how one futurist did not make predictions, and wouldn't have liked seeing what things would be like 35 years later. He wanted to live his values and influence what would happen for the best (as he saw it). Looking back at it all, it's only too clear that intelligence shapes what happens less than we think it will, and that technology may make far-reaching changes, but the consequences are a mix. It should give us pause looking at this video. It shows clearly how "progress" is a phantom. What comes is what we do to ourselves, and many times it's not pretty. How much care we should take, then, to appreciate what is good and kind when it appears!

    @farmergiles1065@farmergiles1065Ай бұрын
  • Phones information sharing and gathering and computing power did exponentially change over the time from 67-2000. Almost everything else was already invented but was simply improved. Cars planes phones tv etc.

    @sneakyquick@sneakyquick8 ай бұрын
  • The one gentleman was spot on regarding clean energy and the development of batteries.

    @spydude38@spydude385 жыл бұрын
    • 9:45 Yeah, it's too bad there are corporate interest prohibiting the progress of this technology, even in Thorium reactors

      @rossonerodiavolo8074@rossonerodiavolo80744 жыл бұрын
    • Spot on? Or has been planned since man first sinned? Where are these "futurist" getting their information?....... Dark evil forces my friend.

      @ripdinecola7250@ripdinecola72504 жыл бұрын
    • In 1967 we had real problems with pollution, we cleaned that up with technology to improve efficiency and catalytic converters for exhaust emissions in the 70's. Clean energy would be fission that we are so stupidly afraid of, but I think he means fusion that has been promised for 80 years, it doesn't exist. Batteries were around in 1967, yes there has been improvement, but I'm thinking you mean the storage in electric car batteries now. Ever heard of entropy? Where/what is the energy source to charge that batterie coming from? Let me guess where all this clean energy might come from solar and wind? Dream on.

      @devinangola3458@devinangola34584 жыл бұрын
    • @@devinangola3458 spot on

      @Sealight007@Sealight0074 жыл бұрын
    • @@devinangola3458 Even though I hate catalytic converters, your comment is right on!

      @ChrisfromGeorgia@ChrisfromGeorgia4 жыл бұрын
  • I am half a century into the future. I watch shows like this when I was a kid. I was expecting so much more of the 21st-century. It's not what you think it's going to be.

    @idesofmarchUNIAEA@idesofmarchUNIAEA10 ай бұрын
    • i honestly believe this is the case today because of the extreme focus on Global Warming, we are literally stifling the use of Energy, we are putting a COMPLETE HaLT on most inventions right now and have been drastically drawing down since 2001, thats why inventions and ingenuity are at an all time low. Our own governments and the richest people in the world all believe human population will continue to rise as it did during the last 1900s and it definitely will not nor can not, in fact, were already on course for Population Collapse due to the policies and laws introduced over the past 20 years. We are driving towards complete collapse of humankind with those in power currently, its sickening and pathetic. There is a real cancer in the heart of mankind, seeing ourselves as PARASITES. That is completely Backwards! We are Symbiotes to this world, we can, if we want to and put effort into it, make this world better on ALL Fronts.

      @JoeBoxerNo1@JoeBoxerNo110 ай бұрын
    • Agree and things are much more stranger these days than I expected. I often don’t understand what is happening or why

      @brianmeen2158@brianmeen215810 ай бұрын
    • right? is so disappointing with all the advance, how much more stupid society has become... is like they say, with good times, comes weak people...

      @migovas1483@migovas148310 ай бұрын
    • We,ve GONE BACKWARDS

      @harlow743@harlow74310 ай бұрын
    • Meet George Jetson!🎶👾🔭 😂😅😭😢 no flying cars?! 😭😭😭 These BIG HEADS are all a bunch of STUFFED SHIRTS with FLAPPING JAWS and WAGGING TONGUES. BLAH, BLAH, BLAH!!! They all sound so smart. 😯😮😲😬😳🙄🤔🤓🤧🤥🤣

      @christopherbellore3511@christopherbellore351110 ай бұрын
  • …think the eerily distorted music at the end - that of course was originally composed as regal and triumphant - sums things up perfectly.

    @sean_wells@sean_wells3 ай бұрын
  • Hearing the editor of Scientific American acknowledging the horrors of the Industrial Revolution and advocating for economic aid is so refreshing to hear.

    @seanquaint3258@seanquaint32588 ай бұрын
    • It bothered me. He sounded like a toxic socialist

      @DavidMcdonald-df8tb@DavidMcdonald-df8tb2 ай бұрын
  • Hey 2089 if you get this we knew Mark Zuckerberg was a robot all along.

    @Appolloscott@Appolloscott4 жыл бұрын
    • I thing he is an alien

      @crayzeeCrystal21@crayzeeCrystal213 жыл бұрын
    • Lizard

      @chasestickler4396@chasestickler43963 жыл бұрын
    • Imagine someone reading your comment from the year 2089.

      @ERTChimpanzee@ERTChimpanzee3 жыл бұрын
  • That was television when people had interests and an attention span...

    @iqnill@iqnill4 жыл бұрын
  • If (as Isaac Asimov says here) the "one thing" we cannot control is the human heart, then all of us must acknowledge we are in service of that center of feelings and dreams and yearning to find wholeness. Also, on a totally different subject, love the unintentional distortion of the music at the end.

    @richard169@richard16910 ай бұрын
  • 8:31 Walter Seager Sullivan, Jr. (January 12, 1918 - March 19, 1996)

    @JerryDLTN@JerryDLTN9 ай бұрын
  • “It's tough to make predictions, especially about the future” - Yogi Berra

    @tigerwolf8338@tigerwolf8338 Жыл бұрын
  • "A liberated slave still dies in the ditch of hunger" That's deep and very profound as I can look around and see a lot of that going on right now in various forms!

    @ralphsanchico2452@ralphsanchico24523 жыл бұрын
    • Read The Fourth Turning if you want to know why.

      @Itwontfitn@Itwontfitn Жыл бұрын
    • You Know it Sad but True!!! Even in today's Sad World Juas As MLK STATED,,,. KNOWLEDGE IS POWER,,&. Power Brings Freedom,. So Why Do Politicians Treat Us Like Mushrooms By KEEPING US IN THE DARK. AND. FEED US BULLSHIT!!!!??!

      @curtiskryla@curtiskryla Жыл бұрын
    • ​@@Itwontfitn Yes, slavery kept them from learning. Freedom and know-how are two different things.

      @Wis_Dom@Wis_Dom Жыл бұрын
    • It neither deep nor profound nor accurate. A free man will find a way to feed himself. And he is likely in so doing to feed many other people at the same time.

      @markjohnson7488@markjohnson74889 ай бұрын
  • So sad @22:10 it’s not been a century yet but it’s extremely clear which way we’re headed

    @FROBcom@FROBcom8 ай бұрын
  • Star Trek came out in '66. They were already thinking about transporters, space travel, and synthesized food, but couldn't imagine not having to have a pencil and paper handy on which to take notes.

    @BonzoDrummer@BonzoDrummer10 ай бұрын
    • That's what cheap stenographers were for.

      @Research0digo@Research0digo10 ай бұрын
  • Opinion control? Fertility control. Wide communication. Household robots. They told people what they were doing .

    @xfiler-gl7nc@xfiler-gl7nc4 жыл бұрын
    • Fact

      @muertovivo2156@muertovivo21564 жыл бұрын
    • They still tell us but we are too busy watching games of thrones and reading Harry Potter to realize it.

      @turecomuerde@turecomuerde4 жыл бұрын
    • @@turecomuerde look at the baseball football and basketball stadiums

      @1Earl100@1Earl1004 жыл бұрын
    • Wide "band" communication... That's the technology that made cell phones possible.

      @edwardyang8254@edwardyang82544 жыл бұрын
    • @@edwardyang8254 that was discovered in the 1940s by Ingrid Bergman but wasn't credited because 1, she was an immagrint 2, she was Female 3she was an actress and not to be taken seriously . Think how far we would be now 70 years on.......? Irish citizen

      @derekmulready1523@derekmulready15234 жыл бұрын
  • And the young man in the back is our intern, Steve Jobs, pay him no mind, he just brings us coffee and sweeps up after we leave.

    @hrundibakshi6830@hrundibakshi68305 жыл бұрын
    • What part is that?

      @joshualee272@joshualee2724 жыл бұрын
    • @@joshualee272 It's a joke

      @gaminglegend@gaminglegend4 жыл бұрын
    • @@gaminglegend stuff like that does happen. Like when steve jobs went to xerox/IBM i forget which one and saw the future of computers and they didnt know what they had. I dont think they even patented the mouse.

      @joshualee272@joshualee2724 жыл бұрын
    • @@joshualee272 No, I meant that the other guy was making a joke about Steve Jobs being an intern, and it sounded like you didn't get the joke, because you asked what part is that?

      @gaminglegend@gaminglegend4 жыл бұрын
    • Hrundi Bakshi 🤣

      @brooklynred6762@brooklynred67624 жыл бұрын
  • I MET BUCKY FULLER IN THE LATE 70S .. EXTRA ORDINARY INTELLECT .. HE TALKED ABOUT THE 'TRINARY' COMPUTER SYSTEM THEN, USED NOW IN QUANTUM COMPUTING .. A VISIONARY!

    @thepunadude@thepunadude10 ай бұрын
  • They didn't seem to know that we'd be primarily watching porn on our cell phones.

    @johnaddeo2251@johnaddeo22514 жыл бұрын
    • He mentioned WAN connectivity..😎

      @totalcontrol154@totalcontrol1544 жыл бұрын
    • John Addeo now we know what you primarily do lol

      @alishabazz5905@alishabazz59054 жыл бұрын
    • @@alishabazz5905 - That's how much you know. I watch on cable.

      @johnaddeo2251@johnaddeo22514 жыл бұрын
    • Yes they did.

      @Monk-Amani.@Monk-Amani.4 жыл бұрын
    • Our libidos are being misdirected with pornography. Any men that are left try to stay away from that garbage.

      @scott6504@scott65044 жыл бұрын
  • Damn, they wouldve never thought of people watching them on a phone right now

    @stacks1548@stacks15484 жыл бұрын
    • One of them did im sure.. They're paid to think futuristic..lol

      @feodiente9460@feodiente94602 жыл бұрын
    • Isaac Asimov probably did.

      @Nekotaku_TV@Nekotaku_TV9 ай бұрын
  • Walter Sullivan (Science editor for the New York Times) was by far the most spot on of all those interviewed...amazingly so.

    @primovid@primovid8 ай бұрын
  • Glad to see Bucky on the program...He taught at SIU in Carbondale Illinois...you get to see him interview in his dome home...use to live right down the street from the dome home. But unfortunately by then Bucky was gone...

    @tristangossman8910@tristangossman8910Ай бұрын
  • The year is now 2019 and we have twerk contests....

    @JD-gx3ms@JD-gx3ms4 жыл бұрын
    • Dang 🤣

      @V12_smoke@V12_smoke4 жыл бұрын
    • John Disbro - lmao! 😂 😂

      @dorianphilotheates3769@dorianphilotheates37694 жыл бұрын
    • Like that Mike Judge movie, idiocracy!!!

      @anthonyb7949@anthonyb79494 жыл бұрын
    • LOL!

      @atlasshrugged2u@atlasshrugged2u4 жыл бұрын
    • And we thank black baby Jesus for that.

      @friendswitdadealer@friendswitdadealer4 жыл бұрын
  • It seems that the future is always portrayed as more advanced, more moral, better. In Wells story of the Time Machine, he realized that society can take backwards steps and dark ages, into something more primative.

    @Ballsarama@Ballsarama2 жыл бұрын
    • You're talking about being Woke

      @robblume3082@robblume3082 Жыл бұрын
    • @@robblume3082 no. you do.

      @aerobique@aerobique Жыл бұрын
    • Read 1984 hungry rat on face

      @gbob9971@gbob997110 ай бұрын
    • awesome point that is still valid in 2023.

      @binky777@binky7779 ай бұрын
    • This reminds of the story of a deceased ancient princes they found in Russia who was preserved in this liquid that kept her beauty intact. Perhaps she hopped in the future they could bring her back to life and cure her disease. But now they can't even figure out what the liquid she was preserved in is made of, much less cure her disease. Lol so much for cryogenics.

      @marciamartins1992@marciamartins19928 ай бұрын
  • In the beginning, when it explains about the RAND corporation studies and experiments, he calls out the planned 'features ' of the future... "Personality control drugs, household robots, fertility control, lifespan control, nuclear power, man machine symbiosis, wideband communications, opinion control, and continued urbanization."

    @shinehy403@shinehy4039 ай бұрын
  • It appears that the imagination of the 2nd half of the 20th century was far more impressive then the actual outcome of the 21st.

    @mattnorman3915@mattnorman39158 ай бұрын
  • He was optimistic about how valued scientists and intellectuals would be... The Scientific American guy had such good points about aid coupled with education. Asimov had it right when he spoke of mankind having to work as one to tackle problems, or not be around any more, and Harrison Brown was so insightful about the long term view being crucial and, unfortunately, how important it was to act back then, and so right about the dangers of putting off any action.

    @annebowman5954@annebowman59543 жыл бұрын
    • But none realized they had set up a game that rewarded corruption. Asimov was similarly deluded about human nature, and as this demand to work as one fails, we see them reveal their tyrannical nature, ever justifying "emergency powers".

      @churblefurbles@churblefurbles Жыл бұрын
    • @@churblefurbles Not saying you’re wrong but I’m curious about if you think there is or was a better system being used anywhere in the world?

      @1traphistory@1traphistory Жыл бұрын
    • @@1traphistory the laws and conventions exist, but, the game became about circumventing compliance (“emergency powers”, never went away?).

      @duellingscarguevara@duellingscarguevara Жыл бұрын
    • @Trap History Speaking as an American I think Holland seems to be doing it right. Countries like Switzerland and like that.

      @myeyeswentdeaf6213@myeyeswentdeaf621311 ай бұрын
    • @@myeyeswentdeaf6213 Success stories, of countries with universal health care, wont sell there. Let’s see how Britain’s nhs goes, now charley is in charge. I expect to see a few subtle changes,...let us see.

      @duellingscarguevara@duellingscarguevara11 ай бұрын
  • They never imagined that we would be able to watch this program on a hand held phone and You Tube.

    @williamdillard5060@williamdillard5060 Жыл бұрын
    • And we never imágened, that in the midle of the 20th century, scientists, would predict, a lot of modern inventions used today...

      @alfredobracero8314@alfredobracero8314 Жыл бұрын
    • in a way they did, on the board it mentioned watching canned lectures from professors on TV :)

      @mediathreat@mediathreat Жыл бұрын
    • It's not that miniaturization wasn't an ongoing thing. These men saw radios with vacuum tubes shrink to hand-held radios with transistors. Even TVs had gotten smaller in their lifetimes. They probably simply couldn't fathom why the hell anyone would want to carry a phone around with them and read electronic telegrams on them 24-7. Chase Manhattan put up an ATM in 1939. They removed it a few months later...lack of interest. People didn't see the need to have access to cash 24-7. The key is to predict changes in society, not advances in technology.

      @valentinius62@valentinius62 Жыл бұрын
    • I was born in 1971 and I first didn't like the PC (except for playing games on) and the mobile phone. And I still use cash sometimes and drive a manual car.

      @francisdec1615@francisdec161510 ай бұрын
    • @@mediathreat So they predicted VCR's.

      @user-bj5zs2tj8g@user-bj5zs2tj8gАй бұрын
  • Wow the way they talk is so much more interesting and intriguing compared to today we're people are now spoken down to like we're stupid I wish people still talked like this today

    @davethomas1241@davethomas124110 ай бұрын
    • Did you mean to say you wish people spoke like this today?

      @Research0digo@Research0digo10 ай бұрын
  • I remember I had an early 70's comic book that showed folks wearing special full body suits (tights) to protect against harmful rays from the sun. I dont recall if it was a marvel or dc; Im pretty sure it was one of those, but a good collector might find it. It is interesting to note that that one seems to have provided the most accurate prediction of the future we live in now

    @laszlozoltan5021@laszlozoltan50219 ай бұрын
    • There was a DC comic published in the late 40s or very early 50s with a feature that predicted large screen TVs , TV shopping, microwave ovens in homes and the first moon landing would take place in 1974 and would be televised in color. But I'm still waiting for the Space Taxi !! :)

      @harleyray4654@harleyray46547 ай бұрын
  • Really appreciate whoever transferred this to video. Great job on the video and especially the sound. All about the telecine and the capturing device used. This is a very cool video also! 😉

    @ScottyKirk1@ScottyKirk1 Жыл бұрын
    • Yeah, man ... Eugenics is cool.

      @Research0digo@Research0digo10 ай бұрын
  • Very interesting! 1:38 Buckminster Fuller, while definitely an amazing architect, I don't think fully understood the concept of teletransportation. Although we have not realized it technologically (and may never fully realize it), it would still require killing the original person. Consciousness would not continue uninterrupted, so it would not technically be a form of transportation at all. 9:01 Walter Sullivan was right about learning more about the nature of matter with atom smashers already existent at the time, discovering the Higgs Boson. He was also right about zero-emission automobiles becoming more widespread, although the electric car was already in existence for at least 50 years prior to this interview. And he seems to be right about nuclear fusion, but time will tell as all the kinks are ironed out. 11:15 Interestingly, population explosion is something that the world has had to endure, but with declining fertility rates due to demographic transition, the growth rate of the world is decreasing toward 0% annually. On that note, world hunger had fortunately been on the decline over the last 50 years, up until a recent uptick.

    @DavidMcCoul@DavidMcCoul9 ай бұрын
    • The Geodesic Dome!

      @jackilynpyzocha662@jackilynpyzocha6623 ай бұрын
  • Today is both yesterday's tomorrow, and tomorrow's yesterday. It is all a gift, that's why they call it the 'Present'...

    @soundmindbodydivine@soundmindbodydivine25 күн бұрын
  • This was already a plan in action

    @rayveilevans9213@rayveilevans92135 жыл бұрын
    • CBS & RAND - yep.

      @Research0digo@Research0digo4 жыл бұрын
    • Exactly!

      @atlasshrugged2u@atlasshrugged2u4 жыл бұрын
    • HalleluYAH

      @misma9596@misma95964 жыл бұрын
    • predictive programing and social engeniering 101..

      4 жыл бұрын
    • @ From the cradle to the grave. You're right *Cyro!*

      @atlasshrugged2u@atlasshrugged2u4 жыл бұрын
  • Issac Asimov, spot on! (At 21.11) He spoke so presciently about the greatest threat to our world and future, which we are seeing play out in real time today.

    @msmuse7483@msmuse748310 ай бұрын
    • Cronkite had a look on his face like "what that n****a saying?"

      @patrickfitzmichael5940@patrickfitzmichael59407 ай бұрын
    • Scary

      @rorimckinnon2875@rorimckinnon28755 ай бұрын
    • Absolutely! He nailed it.

      @DaysOfFunder@DaysOfFunder4 ай бұрын
  • In the future, i predict people will be watching this film on a small hand-held device whilst sitting on the toilet

    @SimirJohnson@SimirJohnson8 ай бұрын
  • 22:43 Harrison Scott Brown (September 26, 1917 - December 8, 1986)

    @JerryDLTN@JerryDLTN9 ай бұрын
  • I saw visionary, inventor, engineer, architect, scientist and Harvard dropout Buckminster Fuller lectures at Hunter College. Fuller was on a different level and preferred to speak to the youth because he knew they were more receptive to innovation!

    @pablolsanchez4021@pablolsanchez40214 жыл бұрын
    • They had skulls full of mush and would listen to his ideas without a hint of wisdom. They would accept him easily.

      @gymshoe8862@gymshoe886210 ай бұрын
    • @@gymshoe8862 Adults tend to be too judgmental sometimes without giving you the a chance. Buckminster Fuller was and outsider with new ideas and was ridiculed for it. Young people never called him a “quack pot”!

      @pablolsanchez4021@pablolsanchez402110 ай бұрын
    • @@pablolsanchez4021 quack pot or crack pot? :) I've been a huge fan of Fuller's for as long as I can remember. His earth (globe) projection is superior to the Mercator as Richard Petty was to every other race car driver - til this day.

      @Research0digo@Research0digo10 ай бұрын
    • @@Research0digo “Crackpot”🤣! Your so right, Fuller was way ahead of his time and a true humanitarian.

      @pablolsanchez4021@pablolsanchez402110 ай бұрын
    • Today with social media’s worst, anyone can discredit by posting falsehood!

      @pablolsanchez4021@pablolsanchez40219 ай бұрын
  • Despite all of the technology available, for the most part, humans do not improve. Mentally, physically or spiritually.

    @tomwilliams4885@tomwilliams48854 жыл бұрын
    • @steal threaded good for you. What was this video about anyway. That's right. Who cares really. I wasn't needing feedback. I don't dwell on this stuff. And I'm done thinking about it. Have a good day. I'm going to.

      @tomwilliams4885@tomwilliams48854 жыл бұрын
    • He also talked about the loss of identity. Dr. McLuhan claimed we are returning back to the bi-cameral mind as well as becoming collective and tribal, without any individual consciousness whatsoever. As we become closer (via the Information Age / Globalization) we become more tribal as we lose our identity.

      @rayjr62@rayjr624 жыл бұрын
    • @@rayjr62 That may be true. Interesting. Thanks.

      @tomwilliams4885@tomwilliams48854 жыл бұрын
    • @Truth the average knowledge that a person has has gone up significantly due to the technology available to the common folk, I believe humans were getting smarter and smarter because they kept making better and better technology and getting better ideas... It's just after they did so, everyone kind of layed back and doesn't want to think because we can just search anything up on the internet in order to know it, iq is going down but overall knowledge per person is going up

      @imwinningthisone7613@imwinningthisone76133 жыл бұрын
    • @Truth I'd say knowledge is literally knowing something and intelligence is based on what you can make and think of by yourself

      @imwinningthisone7613@imwinningthisone76133 жыл бұрын
  • They had no idea that we would be entertaining idiocy to the extreme that social media would dictate via “feelings” of what is truth or a lie. History repeats itself when it is hidden by who’s in charge.

    @steveisgood2go@steveisgood2go10 ай бұрын
  • 14:30 Richard Buckminster Fuller July 12, 1895 - July 1, 1983

    @JerryDLTN@JerryDLTN9 ай бұрын
  • The Monte Carlo technique is also used around every D&D table, these guys really rolled random society generator tables

    @BrettCaron@BrettCaron Жыл бұрын
    • And nobody rolled Trump for President. They missed the saving roll vs narcissist.

      @doughaffner5087@doughaffner508711 ай бұрын
    • @@doughaffner5087 omg

      @markfoster1520@markfoster152010 ай бұрын
  • Always thought the 2000’s be like the jetsons.... man I’m pissed lmao

    @brooklynred6762@brooklynred67624 жыл бұрын
    • I did too growing up!! 🤣

      @tfarley34able@tfarley34able4 жыл бұрын
    • Brooklyn Red It’s amazing how we’ve gotten a lot dumber. But it’s good that people are more stupid than ever before. Gives me so much time to take advantage of what i can achieve.

      @darkaquawings@darkaquawings4 жыл бұрын
    • Nothing's changed but holding small computers that also make calls. Well, inability to FUNCTION w/o them. Smh.

      @kcfrancis94@kcfrancis944 жыл бұрын
    • @@darkaquawings Please explain how people have gotten dumber? Scientist are out here doing research while you bitch and cry saying "people gotten dumber", if we gotten dumber then why is our technology 100 times more advance than 1967?

      @jeremiahmitchell5312@jeremiahmitchell53124 жыл бұрын
    • What do you mean. No black people

      @charlespeterson348@charlespeterson3484 жыл бұрын
  • “Making predictions is tough. Especially about the future.” Yogi Berra.

    @Boblw56@Boblw566 ай бұрын
  • It’s always the humans that do nothing but prognosticate that demand the results of the people that actually innovate and work.

    @jasoncrandall@jasoncrandall8 ай бұрын
  • I am taking my time going through your other postings, Mike. Your site is a true treasure.

    @Riogi@Riogi2 жыл бұрын
    • Your smile is the only treasure..

      @MiticDane@MiticDane2 жыл бұрын
  • Not so much predictions of the future, but plans for the future.

    @Fenstrosity@Fenstrosity4 жыл бұрын
    • That's why it is more valuable knowledge.

      @_ata_3@_ata_33 жыл бұрын
  • Forget the professional predictions, @01:08 the dice were about 20 years behind, but... Omg! 😲

    @syverian1@syverian18 ай бұрын
  • That music at 02:00 is the future! Haha we need more of that.

    @rsalek@rsalek13 сағат бұрын
  • I remember figuring out how old I would be in the year 2000 when I was in junior high. Like 3 years older than my parents were at the time. It was incomprehensible. And now 2020 around the corner. Also incomprehensible...

    @gerardguitarist@gerardguitarist4 жыл бұрын
    • I remember reading Orwell's 1984 and thinking that it seemed impossible for us to reach that year.

      @60-second-HACKS@60-second-HACKS4 жыл бұрын
    • Time flies

      @roodborstkalf9664@roodborstkalf96644 жыл бұрын
    • I remember the new issue of Mechanics Illustrated in the mail: "The New 1966 Cars Are Here!" My brother and I gloating over it before dad even got to see the issue. I was 10. I read 1984 before 1984.

      @thomasewing2656@thomasewing26563 жыл бұрын
    • @@60-second-HACKS I remember Conan's in the yr 2000 skit.

      @bighomie404able@bighomie404able Жыл бұрын
    • @thomasewing2656 I liked the 1966 Oldsmobile Toronado, it looked so futuristic for the time.

      @williamanderson7074@williamanderson7074 Жыл бұрын
  • Interesting documentary on what is the past within the present. Energy cannot be destroyed

    @GearsinMotionGraphics@GearsinMotionGraphics4 жыл бұрын
    • This is how I know we don't really die. We have souls, a spirit, or in today's terminology *"energy"* Our bodies break down and give out, but the soul can not. So let me go ahead and finish that phrase you quoted by A.Einstein. *"Energy can never be lost or destroyed, only* *transferred from one [place, time, dimension] to* *another"* Or, as the bible puts it *"Just as a man is* *appointed once to die, and after that to face* *judgement"* Hebrews 9:27

      @atlasshrugged2u@atlasshrugged2u4 жыл бұрын
    • @@atlasshrugged2u you took the exact words out of my mouth, I was just about to comment and say the same. Except for the bible phrase, everything else I understand..

      @totalcontrol154@totalcontrol1544 жыл бұрын
    • @@totalcontrol154 That's because great minds think alike *Tony!*

      @atlasshrugged2u@atlasshrugged2u4 жыл бұрын
    • T Davis cool i see what you did there

      @Jj-rq9sp@Jj-rq9sp4 жыл бұрын
    • Many years ago I had an interesting dream about what 'heaven' really was. Frequencies & nothing more, hence our 'immortal' souls. :)

      @Research0digo@Research0digo10 ай бұрын
  • Buckminster Fuller at 15:55 to about 17:40 explaining how we need to use more and more energy not less and less.

    @GoodNewsJim@GoodNewsJim8 ай бұрын
  • Not to be a conspiracist but Bucky was about to lay down some grand truth at 17:54 about the nature of wealth that obviously didn't go over well with the editors... Horrible obvious editing. That man was something else. He broke out of conventional thinking and achieved so much. Every geodesic dome you see was his idea. Loads of other great ideas like his easily manufactured houses. He was also a big proponent of green ideas. A man way ahead of his time. Luv and Peace.

    @ianedmonds9191@ianedmonds919110 ай бұрын
    • YES!!!!!!! Thank you Ian. :D You have his map projection on your wall, or his globe put together on a shelf, yes? I do. :D

      @Research0digo@Research0digo10 ай бұрын
  • thank you KZhead for sending me down this rabbit hole, I just watch seven episodes of this. Now I'm nostalgic for a future that never was

    @erinrising2799@erinrising2799 Жыл бұрын
  • "We're gonna have to make all of humanity successful or none." Damn, that IS some futuristic thinking.

    @kirkjohnson9353@kirkjohnson93534 жыл бұрын
    • And we are still to accomplish that.

      @_ata_3@_ata_33 жыл бұрын
    • Hell yeah!

      @sistersamich2075@sistersamich20752 жыл бұрын
    • He ain't wrong

      @AnakinandPadme1231@AnakinandPadme12312 жыл бұрын
    • Your joking?

      @setoalgorytgm2748@setoalgorytgm27482 жыл бұрын
    • 🌏🌎🌍✊

      @aerobique@aerobique Жыл бұрын
  • I used to watch this show on TV every Sunday night. I was 12.

    @Ernie_Centofanti@Ernie_Centofanti8 ай бұрын
  • Back in 1967 they thought this was the future! Buck is the Star Trek guy in real life. RIP Buck😢

    @bauhnguefyische667@bauhnguefyische6678 ай бұрын
  • Mike Judge made a spot on prediction about the future.

    @kaduisaui4596@kaduisaui459611 ай бұрын
    • Idiocracy is the most important movie of the last 30 years. Young people nowadays don't even know the difference between TO and TOO.

      @pdcdesign9632@pdcdesign963210 ай бұрын
    • I see what you did there. "I like money."

      @catholicdad@catholicdad10 ай бұрын
    • Brawndo it’s got what plants crave.

      @One-Crazy-Cat@One-Crazy-Cat10 ай бұрын
    • Don't worry scrot. Lotsa tards livin' really kick-ass lives.

      @catholicdad@catholicdad10 ай бұрын
    • @@One-Crazy-Cat brought to you by Carl's Jr.

      @catholicdad@catholicdad10 ай бұрын
  • I remember sitting in a school lesson in what would been maybe my 2nd or 3rd yr at secondary which was somewhere like 85/86 , thinking how far off the year 2000 was and working out how old I would be then.. I remember it seeming a lifetime off..it passed and now 22yrs on top with is my whole school life and a half...madness..time flies and you don't realise til it's passed.

    @Sol-Cutta@Sol-Cutta Жыл бұрын
    • Think about this, we are as close in time to those gentlemen as they were to 1911, with masters & servants, before radio, before womens rights and before the Great War which changed everything.

      @SirAntoniousBlock@SirAntoniousBlock Жыл бұрын
  • I only somewhat recently learned, how seemingly histories prerequisite. Is for society to be pretty much oblivious to unfolding events details. And not until those who were only kids at the time tasked with looking back in order to judge and determine what degree or what kind of history had actually occurred. By gathering together facts, possibly to avoid prevent same going forward.

    @CONCERTMANchicago@CONCERTMANchicago10 ай бұрын
  • The scientist seeks to put his head in the heavans. The artist seeks to put the heavans in his head. - Chesterton.

    @F0ndlzDaKl0wn@F0ndlzDaKl0wn8 ай бұрын
  • OMG! Second day on your channel. Where did you find all these old videos but are extremely describing us today! Lord bless you! I am hooked 😳

    @user-tu2jw7vu7m@user-tu2jw7vu7m4 жыл бұрын
  • I wish I could go back and tell them that people are commenting on this video 54 years later on technology they never could have envisioned.

    @zanderpop5517@zanderpop55172 жыл бұрын
    • But nobody in university can define what a woman is.

      @One-Crazy-Cat@One-Crazy-Cat10 ай бұрын
  • As a child of the 50s and 60s, I would say that nearly all physical and technological things have improved dramatically since then. What has digressed to some degree is morality and spirituality in individuals, and society. These things benefit the individual and society in general. For example the war in Ukraine. Great and fantastic technological weapons, but wouldn’t it have been better for everyone if the decision to invade and kill to gain had been rejected because it would not be pleasing to God and my fellow man? Is it better to love and do good to others, or to hate and do evil to others? If you want a better world, start by making better, and more moral people.

    @larryfinley9221@larryfinley922110 ай бұрын
    • I think that when most scientists see a new technology, they think in terms of human progress---not realizing that somebody else sees it as a commodity that they can use to make a fast buck.

      @nightwind7022@nightwind702210 ай бұрын
    • You 'make' better people when they learn to imitate what they see Mom & Dad do. Please don't put teaching kids wisdom & morals off on other people or institutions. You yourself as a parent are who is responsible for how your kids turn out - no one else.

      @Research0digo@Research0digo10 ай бұрын
    • I would argue that architecture has progressively gotten more boring and cheap, at the same time it has gotten more drawn out and expensive. So much of Post-WW2 architecture is baffling and temporary. No heft, no permanence in the events of disaster. Little beauty. Disposable.

      @kubrickenigma7977@kubrickenigma79779 ай бұрын
    • Actually more educated would be better. Religion has been around in various forms since the dawn of time, and it's the failure that has proven the definition of insanity. Our next major growth, will be when we put away our imaginary friends.

      @robertward8035@robertward80359 ай бұрын
    • lets just call you a barney the purple dinosaur lover. anyone that brainwashes children with religious propaganda is the enemy.

      @MrCcragg27@MrCcragg278 ай бұрын
  • Tracy Kidder "Soul of A New Machine", Alvin Toffler"Future Shock", Harry Harrison "Make Room, Make Room" for "Soylent Green". Irwin Allen for "Lost In Space" 1965-68. Computers, Robots: "These compute(paraphrased)"

    @jackilynpyzocha662@jackilynpyzocha6623 ай бұрын
  • The power of the RAND Corp think tank and it's reach is mind blowing. They made 2019 to their desire - Mankind is now consumer based with no real purpose.

    @type1008mm@type1008mm4 жыл бұрын
    • And Monsanto is killing all the pollinators...

      @thomasewing2656@thomasewing26563 жыл бұрын
    • Ha. Read Camus. The only purpose is the one you make.

      @johnpapiewski8232@johnpapiewski82322 жыл бұрын
    • pre "internet age" bs like MTV were responsible for DEFINING entire Generations sense of IDENTITY. And with the advent of the internet age....the hegemony/powers that be have only quadrupled down on such a concept. IDK i remember "pre-meta" bs like Trading places or wife swap...as shows...ppl would GENUINELY be fans of watching PURELY for the TROLLING....and now ppl claim to be aversive towards the concept of trolling...as if both could be true. As big as reality tv is or tik toc...or broadcasting self aggrandizement seemingly also become part of the status quo since then.

      @anhiirr@anhiirr11 ай бұрын
    • ​@@johnpapiewski8232Camus was a pedofile

      @deejaye2647@deejaye264710 ай бұрын
    • That's what capitalism is.

      @Research0digo@Research0digo10 ай бұрын
  • great video. covering alot of what I've researched and want to know more about.

    @samsonsimpson7648@samsonsimpson76484 жыл бұрын
  • TY @ReelBlack for offering this piece of media actual history

    @rebeccaLV@rebeccaLV2 ай бұрын
    • 👊🏿

      @reelblack@reelblack2 ай бұрын
  • Daniel Bell's prediction slightly fell short: the 21st century didn't become an intellectual society, too many uninformed people roaming around. However, his prediction can become a full truth if people used the Internet the right way; for example, less time on social media, more time learning from legit academic sites. Less time viewing porno, more time becoming more attuned with world events and taking courses. That's my opinion.

    @michaelmachung7233@michaelmachung72339 ай бұрын
    • The. 21st century is not over yet so maybe the people who lack intelligence will become wise via a certain hero!

      @fraserdunn8563@fraserdunn85636 ай бұрын
    • Neural Links for everyone. Who can argue against an intelligent populace?

      @ozbullymorales1020@ozbullymorales10202 ай бұрын
  • I remember when I was a little kid I was born in 1960 thinking wow in the year 2000 I'm going to be 40 years old I couldn't even fathom that it seems so far away now it's 2022 and 2000 still seems so far away

    @bertram46@bertram46 Жыл бұрын
    • That's because as a 10 year old 1 year was one tenth of your life whereas as a 60 year old 1 year is only one sixtieth, a lot less.

      @SirAntoniousBlock@SirAntoniousBlock Жыл бұрын
  • There's a video around here made in the mid 1960s that pretty accurately predicted PCs, the internet, online shopping, looking up weather online, digital video/audio recording and implied peer to peer data file transfer. It was shockingly prescient. The earliest film I've seen of internet capabilities was made in 1969 and this was a few years before that.

    @valentinius62@valentinius62 Жыл бұрын
    • Futureshock is the book, made into sorta lame documentary narrated by Orson Welles.

      @Johnjohn-gq3du@Johnjohn-gq3du11 ай бұрын
    • You're thinking of an AT&t commercial and it came out of the early '90s

      @uscdave1124@uscdave112411 ай бұрын
    • @@uscdave1124 No. It came out in 1967 and was called "The Home of 1999". It was made by Philco-Ford. It's here on KZhead.

      @valentinius62@valentinius6211 ай бұрын
    • BBC program in england..tomorrow's world was good.

      @idolhanz9842@idolhanz984210 ай бұрын
    • Yeah and those aren’t even new technologies anymore.

      @9852323@985232310 ай бұрын
  • D&D has really changed over the years

    @haruruben@haruruben9 ай бұрын
  • Kind of ironic this was shot on 16mm film transferred to video uploaded to KZhead and I was watching it on a phone in 2023 22 years from the time in 67 they were talking about

    @toyguy1956@toyguy19565 ай бұрын
  • Man, I want to live in the 21st century. It sounds so cool.

    @loneprimate@loneprimate10 ай бұрын
    • I will swap places with you I would not mind going back to 1974 but then again I can remember everything the stock market did since then anytime in history is cool if you're loaded

      @somedumbozzie1539@somedumbozzie153910 ай бұрын
    • It actually sucks.

      @1981menso@1981menso10 ай бұрын
    • Ok

      @katharsis3754@katharsis375410 ай бұрын
    • Just imagine! You could even get yourself a machine allowing you to talk to people on the other side of the world.

      @c.eb.1216@c.eb.12168 ай бұрын
    • Open the pod bay doors, HAL.

      @debswatching@debswatching5 ай бұрын
KZhead