Broadway, New York 1930s in color [60fps,Remastered] w/sound design added
ฝัง
- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 7 ก.ย. 2024
- I colorized , restored, and created sound design for this video of streets of 1930s Broadway, New York City, as we unveil the city in the full light of day. This captivating video captures the essence of a bygone era, showcasing the hustle and bustle of the iconic Broadway district during the golden age of entertainment, towering marquees, and the timeless energy that defined the heart of the city that never sleeps, where the glamour of Broadway comes to life in the bright daylight of the 1930s.
Video Restoration Process:
✔ FPS boosted to 60 frames per second
✔ Image resolution boosted up to HD
✔ Improved video sharpness and brightness
✔ Colorized only for the ambiance (not historically accurate)
✔added sound design only for the ambiance
✔restoration:(stabilisation,denoise,cleand,deblur)
✔ Face Restoration
✔ added modern Noise grain for a natural result.
Please, be aware that colorization colors are not real and fake, colorization was made only for the ambiance and do not represent real historical data.
B&W Video Source: Ira H. Gallen
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📨 Contact me at :nassthegoodman@gmail.com
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Would you like to live in the 1930s??
This is amazing! Not sure if you would be interested, but my father is a Coney island collector and historian. Not only does he have the world largest collection of physical pieces, photos and souvenirs, he also has an extensive collection of film from Coney. Maybe something in his collection could be a project for you?!
This is 1932, considered the worst year of the Depression. Sure can't see it in the pictures but 30% of the men in the country were out of work and this was an era of single-breadwinner families, so 30% of the people were without income. Terrible time. Looks picturesque now. The place buying cars for cash and the store that buys up nearly-worthless stock (can't remember the exact terminology) show what's going on.
Living in the 1930s would have been fantastic for many different reasons. But not in NY. Too big, too loud, for me. greatings from Switzerland
@@justaseagull8406this movie is in colour yet very white.
Feb 20, 1939, a Nazi rally took place at Madison Square Garden, organized by the German American Bund. More than 20,000 people attended, pro-hitler themes & Amerika first rally event featured huge swastikas .@@justaseagull8406
My Great Grandfather was born in Mississippi and grew up in New York his family were apart of the Great Migration. He was actually an ironworker(which was rare for black people) he worked with the Scottish, Irish, Italians etc. this channel means so much to me, I can see what my great grandfather always loved about this era.
Thank you
Seu bisavô viveu no seio da modernidade daquela época na cidade mais famosa do mundo moderno.
Тоже хочется побывать в США, всем удачи!
Mais où est King Kong ?
NASS La meilleure chaîne spatio-temporelle de youtube 👍👍👍👍👍
@@Albert-so3jzМне хочется побывать именно в том старом NY, современный меня совсем не привлекает, как по мне, в 60-е его стали сильно уродовать.
This is incredible! My Grandmother moved to New York in 1926 from South Carolina. A farm girl who became one of the original Lindy Hoppers at the Savoy Ballroom in Harlem, where my mother was born in the early 30s. This is the world they lived in. I just dreamed about my mother last night, and then I see this today. I was born in The Bronx in the early 50s, and I'm getting homesick after being away for almost 20 years. Once a New Yorker, always a New Yorker! I hope to spend some time there this summer. I would love to move back, but we'll see.
Lovely words.
@@hmq9052 Thank you so much, Be well and prosper!
thank you
@@NASS_0 Well deserved. Beautiful restoration!
That’s lovely.
4:46 - "Papers from other cities". I love that stand! That was their internet back then! I love these old films. Keep up the good work!
That was called an advertisement genius. We have everything before the internet, you can't relate because you wouldn't understand
Everyone in this hustle and bustle video are long gone but the hustle and bustle style of life have been passed on to those of us who now toil in NYC. This is a good reminder as to how short life really is.
They were already senior citizens by the time I was born in 1980
Oh sooo cute with the cat and her kitten ❤
Everyone looks so beautiful in this film. And city looks wonderful.💙💙💙
I've visited New York a few times in my life and it looks so incredibly different now. I love how well dressed people were back then.
What does New York look now?
Feb 20, 1939, a Nazi rally took place at Madison Square Garden, organized by the German American Bund. More than 20,000 people attended, pro-hitler themes & Amerika first rally event featured huge swastikas .@@Indiansareallpajeets
Like shit- trust me- (I'm here)@@Indiansareallpajeets
Most of what's in the film is still there.
@@Indiansareallpajeets A third world country.
My dad was in New York in the early 30s when this was filmed. He was a music major at Columbia University. Even so, I would not have wanted to live in that era. The Depression, and the looming war in Europe were extreme hardships for many people.
I don’t know. Even with their ‘hardships’, it seems they had it better.
Seems even with their “hardships “ they had it better. They were resourceful and knew how to have a good time without a lot of money
What an age for stylish hats. How is it that in the middle of the worst depression in the country's history everybody is dressed better than most people are today for Easter?
Great point!
that is the inmediate conclusion .......it seems with time and in small steps we accept a deterioration of everything.....from the way we dress, to architecture or urban landscape.
How stylish ffs dude. Literally the entire planet during 30's era was in the process of dropping off the abyss into a World War 2 dumpster fire.
At that time WW2 & Holocaust entered the chat ffs no small steps.@@harlhequim
@@fluffy1931 do you think ww2 or the holocaust happened suddently without an incremental deterioration of humanity, respect or responsability?
Frankly I dont get what its rhe relation about a comment of aesthetics of the 1930's with the explosion of ww2 or the horrors of the holocaust.
If you want give an opinion of those topics how about finding a comment which states that those events were irrelevant.
The actor John Gielgud was on Broadway in 1937 and wrote letters to friends saying how the Depression was behind them and marvelling at how modern and sophisticated NYC was. He was dazzled by the Rockefeller Centre and subterranean shopping malls as well as ‘moving staircases’ as well as the gleaming skyscrapers of Manhattan and seemingly endless choices of places to eat, drink and party. New York was dazzling and futuristic to a European eye then.
Yes, and this was filmed in 1932
Pls enlighten us mere plebes about how sophisticated NYC was back then. IRL the German American Bund, an organization with HQ's in Manhattan and thousands of members across the United States. In the 1930s, the Bund was one of several organizations in the United States that were openly supportive of Adolf Hitler and the rise of fascism in Europe. Yep they had parades, bookstores and summer camps for youth. Their vision for America was a cocktail of white supremacy, fascist ideology
Everything looks aesthetically better. People used to put so much care into how things looked.
it should be mandatory to show this in schools.......it would be useful to learn how can we go backwards in plain sight.
Feb 20, 1939, a Nazi rally took place at Madison Square Garden, organized by the German American Bund. More than 20,000 people attended, pro-hitler themes & Amerika first rally event featured huge swastikas .@@harlhequim
And do you dress that nice when you go out now? Be the change you want to see
@@bonniegaither3994 yes, I take pride in what I wear and how I do things.
Great film quality, really brings that era to life. I love how the city seemed so energetic. Everyone looked like they had something to do or somewhere to be. Even the cat carrying her kitten looked like she was on her way to something important .
thank you very much
Like And Share Please
Stunning work. Surprising how busy the scenes are when you consider the US population back then was only 120m people, 64% lower than today
Thank you
Love all the old vehicles in this. 👍😊
Those last shots are gold...
I really love how the cameraman who was filming played around with so many different angles. I like to think there was someone else capturing plenty of postcard worthy still shots as well. 🎞 ❤
How cool was that? I enjoyed it so much I had to watch it twice.
Thank you NASS for bringing this living history to us in such splendid detail. You never fail to impress.
thank you ^^
Okay! My guess is 1932. At 2:29-an aerial of the Ninth Avenue Elevated looking South down Broadway toward Columbus Circle at 59th Street SW corner tip of Central Park. This was probably taken from the top of the famous Ansonia Apartment House where Broadway intersects with Amsterdam Avenue at West 72nd Street looking South (downtown). At 3:10, we can see the Empire State Building in background completed in 1931 and at 4:35 a streetcar going uptown on Broadway in Times Square with original facade of Times Building from circa 1904 in background. It was redesigned mid-sixties and original beauty of building destroyed as was done to many ornate buildings in 1950‘s through seventies. Later part of production is lower Broadway financial district at tip of Manhattan by Battery Park where you see policeman and another aerial of elevated from South Ferry terminal. I believe they dismantled that in the late 1930‘s. The police officer‘s cap and badge are the original crest from City of New York founding still used to this day! I had to laugh at Now Entering New York City“ at West 241st Street and Broadway! That’s right! Would I love to have that sign today!!! I remember a more modern sign when I was a child but that sign brought me a smile!!! Bless Momma cat and her baby!!!! Lookin Pretty Lookin Pretty, New York City, New York City! Good job NASS. I’d say 1930 or 1932 from the old familiarity with New York license plates.
Also the name of the performers at 4:15 . Patsy Kelly, Eddie Leonard and Dave Apollon at the Palace, put the date to April 1932 ( NY Times) one of the last vaudeville performances , a few months later the Palace turned into a a movie theatre.
By reading your comment, you make it sound like you know NYC like the back of your hand. It is sad though that most NYC residents do not know the original name of NYC.
NASS, another valuable video, which should be shown in American classrooms, so that youngsters will understand history did not start with their birth... Bravo to you!
Thank you
@@NASS_0 You're welcome.
An excellent point.
These videos are great. What would be fantastic would be to get someone to lip-read some of these clips. Seen it done on a 1st world war documentary on the BBC of soldiers in the trenches. Adds a whole new perspective to the clips.
Great work... Thanks 👏👏👏
thank you very much
Another great video from Nass loved the horse drinking from the water fountain and the cat with the kitten
thank you very much
Having been born in 1948, gone to university, worked and lived in Manhattan for a few years and having gone into NYC as a child a lot when I was growing up in the 1950s and 60s, I've always wanted to go back in a time machine to the 1930s and even before! I have some great books with photos of old NYC from the 19th century by Dover publications. They also have a book with photos from the 1930s when my late parents were in their 20s. I remember in the 1950s the seats on the subways were pale yellow whicker rattan before they put the plastic seats in! Thanks for the trip down Memory Lane~ I ♥ New York!
It is so wonderful that so many people are interested in history and want to preserve it. These videos help so much. Thank you. :)
thank you very much
Beautiful restoration ❣️
So glad you do this work for all of us to see- history come to life- thank you NASS🥰
thank you very much ;)
This work of enhancing, coloring and giving natural rythm to the movements is literally gods work.
You are binging back to life people lost in time and lost in our faulty perception to see people from the past similar to ourselves.
thank you very much
This period is supposed to be the height of the Great Depression. Yet, the imagery doesn't seem to indicate much of a depression. The city looks as energetic and bustling as it usually does, with everyone having something to do and somewhere to go. People are well-dressed. Businesses are hopping. No one looks like they're clinging to economic survival by their fingernails.
Feb 20, 1939, a Nazi rally took place at Madison Square Garden, organized by the German American Bund. More than 20,000 people attended, pro-hitler themes & Amerika first rally event featured huge swastikas .
Scared me @ 1:08 thought that was a real person..
Because it hit the cities later than it hit the rural areas.
What a wonderful interlude.
Time for me to get in a my time machine as I watch thse videos to travel back
NASS ! Thank you for posting.
Thank you bro !
Your best yet!
Parts of it make New York look like a BIG, fun toy!
thank you very much
@@NASS_0 Sure thing. I've watched it four times. It's my go-to when I went to feel good.
Superb upload, in them days even not having much money did not stop you from having style it seems❤
Thank you
If people realize for a moment the value of all those footages for us and future generations and if the American school system was capable to fix the horrible and poor curriculum to creat thinkers and not video games players and at the same time start value the History of the country?! As always ,thank you for your fantastic job .!👏👏👏💐
I’m thinking, judging by the cars, the latest this could be is 1932. Possibly 1933. In 1933 the automobile started to get more softer, rounder styling.
Agreed. Also based on the hats the women are wearing. They seem to have moved on from the helmet style that was popular in the late twenties up to around 31.
Yes!!
Based on the women's hats, I agree that it's around 1933. There are still a few women wearing cloche hats, which makes me think it's no later than '33 - the year my father was born in Queens.
I took another look and found that it is definitely a 1932 Ford sedan zipping by at 1:25.
@@jec1ny 1:30 3:20 cloche style was extremely popular in winter and is showcased here. What do you mean by helmet style going away, this is the exact same thing. 1926 was the big cloche year for the hair fitting cloche that became less of a hat and more of a hair fitting. 1924 was the first big year for the cloche aka the fashionable sailor hat that started turning into this style for women, popularized in 1915.
Just incredible for us to witness this. Thank you so much for your work.
thank you very much
A elegância das pessoas daquele tempo é o que mais me chama a atenção, aliás tudo me chama muito a atenção... magnifico video obrigado por postar.
Thank you
This footage is great, so much better than I expected, it's great seeing the buildings, the cars, and people as they were. I've seen old footage, but the people moved fast and it all looked unreal, this is just amazing, so very well done in every way.
From research, it appears this was shot the last week of April 1932. According to the NY Times, Ethel Merman, Jack Haley, Benny Rubin, Patsy Kelly and Dave Apollon all appeared in a review at the Palace Theater that only played for one week then (the Palace changed shows weekly at the time!). The clothes and cars look more like 20's than 30's.
Wow you know how to research. I'll go with your research April 1932. I thought it might have been shot up until 1933, but I think I'm wrong.
@@BlueSky-gu2bx Well, it's not like I've never been wrong about anything, that's for sure. I was kind of shocked to find the Times mention but it specifically listed the lineup and stated that the Palace changed shows each week at that time. I carefully said 'it appears'--I've left myself a fig leaf just in case, but it does seem likely...
@@liblit What is 20s and 30s is the biggest question? Do you just imagine 20s fashion and 30s fashion in your head to come to some immediately conclusion because last I checked an outfit in 1922, is not remotely similar to an outfit in 1928, and an outfit in 1930 is so far from similar to an outfit in 1937. Everyone has a winter cloche on, and that style trend with a super hair tight cloche became popular in 1930. The depression cloche. A 1924 Cloche is different than a 1925-1926-1927-1928 & 1929 (all seperate) cloche hats. This is a 1930s era cloche but naming specific years is easily the best way to identify.
@@WitchKing-Of-Angmar If we're talking about dating the video, I think the Times review pretty much locks it in. The marquee is an unusual group, they only played one week so it all fits.
As to the clothes, I understand what you're getting at, but I find in our time--and so I suspect it to be true in the recent past, like this--that the lines aren't that sharp in practice. In fashion, there are always women ahead of and behind the curve, those who dance to their own drummer and those who are just cautious. I tend to look at the overall mix instead of details. I think, in particular in this case, it's pretty accurate simply because the national mood changed after the Crash in '29. There's a giddiness to the Twenties that disappeared on the streets by '33, '34.
Anyway, I was just making a generalization to support the dating, but to me the review is pretty conclusive.
Lubię to ogladac stare czasy fajnie że ktoś to kiedyś nakręcił 😊
20 sec. & 33 sec... Is the future site for 3424 Kingsbridge Gardens hoisting (back entrance) est. 1960.
7 mins & 27se.. .. Thats the vancourtlandt house.
7mins & 32sec. .. That the Dikemen st. House
WONDERFULL !!
;)
thanks for an actual glimpse into the past. having spoken with folks including relatives who have now passed but were there, it is true that they really liked the New York of that era. in strict contrast to this period, my aunt who lived there at that time was depressed by the New York she encountered when she visited it in the late 60's and early 70's. it was like what happened to my city and the vibe that existed there.. she said that before the late60's/early 70's that she always liked coming back to New York to get recharged, rejuvenated and to remember how good it was..
If I’m not mistaken , building at 1:03 is what we now know as Columbia Presbyterian Milstein. As a native NYr raised on W111/ Broadway, I love these old films ! Kudos to those who filmed them and you who has resurrected them.
Yes!!! It is !!!
1:14 is looking south on Broadway at 156th St
1:19 is looking north on Broadway at 158th St
1:36 is looking south on Broadway at 129th St
1:43 is driving south on Broadway at 125th St
1:57 is looking south on Broadway at 122nd St
2:03 long-demolished entrance for Columbia University on Broadway at 119th St
2:17 is driving south on Broadway at 72nd St
That's quite an odd vantage point at 06:05, but it appears that is of the old Post Office that was torn down in 1939. That fits in at the right place in our "drive down Broadway" that this film shows. For some reason, New Yorkers hated it, but it was pretty cool.
I am just mesmerized by your videos. Thank you so much for the work you put in and for making them available to us.
Many of the old buildings at Bowling Green and Broadway still standing to this day. time: 6:54
Another great job Nass...thanks!
Hi Dear, thank you very much ;)
Wow back in those days did all men wear suits and hats when they went out in public very nice 😊
This is so cool !! This city has always been a beast
Instantly reminds me of the Mafia game. They did an excellent job recreating the 1930s
thank you very much
Let's check it out, remember, back then video was mad money mad expensive to get.
Hi matt
@@NASS_0🙋🏻
People knew what true style and manners were. I love this channel!❤
thank you very much 🙏
@ 7.36 one could buy a car off of the front row for a couple hundred bucks up to 600,800,or off of thw back row for as little as 20 bux to 40 bux and all of then started and ran with little to no issues other than being the most basic automobiles ever manufactured including points,manually adjusted timing,very little air filtering,very archaic clutches,and transmissions,rear diffs were straight cut gears with the driveshafts enclosed inside of a tube with zero greaseable points,or adjustable places... the interiors consisted of plank flooring covered by either leather or a wool type covering and the bodies being literally stamped sheetmetal over wood,or wood over sheetmetal depending on the model.. Seat were often whatever the manufacturer dreamed up,or sub co tracted and accepted..
Thank you for making these video's 👍👍👍👌
Thank you
They could dress in the 30s 40s and 50s. Boy what eras. That jazz music. Was off the charts🎉😆🤔👍
A beautifully edited source video, thoughtfully colorized. Many of the streets and squares look remarkably the same, as in every great city.
2:19 72nd street subway station. I was born and raised in 71st Street. Wow! What a sight.
Thanks! I love this! Aside from being a huge NY buff (and New York-ER), I'm reading a book that takes place in the 30's & this totally helps me visualize it. Good work!
My grandfather actually lived in NYC 1911-22, so this is from after his time there, but still interesting to see. I love scenes of old New York.
5:25 Is that a cat or dog carrying the cat! Hilarious!
It’s a Mama cat carrying her kitten 😂
^^
It's memories we are watching.
It's crazy how not much has changed, apart from taller buildings and railroads. WOW i live 10 blocks away from that bridge that's broadway 225th st called the Broadway Bridge! Today's trains feel very old and they need an upgrade. i live on Broadway and watching the train run just reminds me of the 1 train today. People dressed better back then always well dressed it didn't matter where they were going, i like that. We really haven't advanced much we could be a lot more advanced today in my opinion.
1:08 - Sandwich Board man. A popular form of advertising. Also seen at 2:46.
I live at 125th and Broadway now and can see my building!
The 1 Train viaduct is still here and still a testament to the steelworkers who built it.
4:10 The names in the marquis place this in the spring of 1932.
Lovely street scenes
My Grandfather was a member of the NYPD during this era. I always wanted to know how he did it because he was black 🤯 His badge number was 8988. How can I find out more information on his NYPD career?
While technically not your best, it was chockfull of super shots and had plenty of superlative evocative footage. Thank you!
I grew up at Broadway and 225th. So interesting to see how sparsely settled Broadway above 225th was at that time. Nothing like what it looked like in the 50s and 60s when I was growing up
INCREDIBLE VIDEO THANK YOU. MY GREAT GRANDPARENTS GREW UP IN NEW YORK CITY I AM THIRD GENERATION. AND MANY PICTURES FOR MY GRAND AND GREAT GRANDPARENTS DAYS SHOW UP IN THIS VIDEO. THIS VIDEO MAKES YOU FEEL LIKE YOU'RE RIGHT THERE IN THAT TIME AS IT WAS IT IS AMAZING. I WAS ACTUALLY ABLE TO LINE UP MANY PICTURES WITH MY GRANDPARENTS AND GREAT-GRANDPARENTS STANDING IN CERTAIN AREAS AND THE PICTURES WERE ACTUALLY ABLE TO LINE UP WITH THE BUILDINGS. SO SURREAL I TELL YOU
It’s so cool to see my neighborhood and how little the buildings have changed even to this day
Amazing footage! Thank you so much!
Great work! So amazing!!
thank you very much
Thank you Nass doing this
thank you very much
Ottimo video, come sempre.
Saludos y felicitaciones muy bonito y facinante video, 👍👏🤗❤️🇲🇽
thank you
Fascinating,… Back when people dressed as adults to go in public and not like toddlers!….
How about goose stepping !
@@fluffy1931 ?
Feb 20, 1939, a Nazi rally took place at Madison Square Garden, organized by the German American Bund. More than 20,000 people attended "America First" rally featured huge swastikas & goose stepping. @@mikeseier4449
And do you dress that nice when you go out now? Be the change you want to see
To look at this and imagine the elders that were around during things like Lincoln's presidency. So surreal
05:28 Wonderful shot : rescue of kitten by his mother, among cars and buzy crowd ! Many thx for the beautiful job.
I immediately recognized 72nd and Broadway by the train station, I grew up on the upper west side. I also lived in the Bronx and recognized the last stop and Van Cortlandt Park,. Amazing to see people were still farming there. Thanks for all the work you do!
Great restoration. It’d take 50 years to get it looking like that again.
Fenómeno Nass!! Fenómeno. 👏👏👏From Spain Saludos.
thank you ;)
Beautiful i simply love watching these good old days, and the old vintage cars, and horse and cart, and trams, and the hussle and bussle of those times.better times back then, before things took a turn for the worse, people were more respectful to each other❤❤
Great job, looking forward to your next video! 🎉
This is incredible! Thank you
The audio is incredible
My mother and aunt were young girls in the 1930s growing up in East Harlem, the 100s near Third Avenue. They told me how in the summer- especially during the great heat wave of 1936- with air conditioning non-existant, people would sleep on rooftops, fire escapes, and even in Central Park, by the thousands, on sheets and blankets, wearing as little clothing as possible- like the crowd at Woodstock on the hottest nights. It was totally safe. Can't do that now...
Surprisingly modern for the 1930’s.
Insight to how short 100 years really is.
Things that struck me watching this:
1. How few black people were shown
1. How few trees NYC had back then. We’re serious about our trees here. My Brooklyn neighborhood has tags on the trees reminding the community to water them when the weather is hot and dry.
- Seeing an elevated train in Bowling Green
- Seeing a farm animal plowing someone’s land in the Bronx! lol
Thanks for the great video!It 's nice to see beautiful , neat people , a wonderful era !
Why don't I see any commercials on your videos? Your videos are great btw!
Thank you 😉👍
Another excellent gift shared by Nass
Thank you for your work, contribution and dedication.
Otro Excelente regalo que nos comparte Nass
Gracias por tu trabajo, aporte y dedicación
Thank you
The colors look faded out. I'd rather see the original B&W film. But, very interesting.
what a lovely video. Usually I want to do my car spotting, but here I am limited to big car , small car, luxury model, etc., nothing more
Faszinierend
Thank you
I know it was the Depression, with all of the attendant hardships. But NYC was a much better place then.
Bruh how? It was the depression. Folks were starving!!
Nostalgia is a powerful drug.
@@rockyrobleedo3008 You’re mixing the Time with the Place. I’m talking about the place. The time of the depression sucked, no doubt, but NYC as a place was a better place back then as compared to now. The streets were cleaner, the people were more courteous to each other, no drugs, it was a safer place. You could ride the train at all hours without fear. The Place, not the Time.
@@robertmack7116 I’d argue it was not safer. Between 1930-1938 homicides ranged from 458-579 in a year. Compare that to 2022 and it was 438. Right before Covid it was 295 in 2018. Similar to the amount of homicides in the 40s after the depression. You can’t just assume the nostalgia factor negates all crime. Less drugs u are correct.
@@rockyrobleedo3008 Its a good argument, but the statistics don’t tell the whole story. First thing I’ll say is that homicide is not representative of all the crime in the city, it’s only representative of homicide. Rape, robbery, street crime are more common and in their own categories. The point I’d make re: homicide is that there’s a greater sense of fear in the city now, greater than I ever remember. Years ago, most of the murders occurred in shady parts of town among shady people. There were bad areas that if you were smart, you stayed away from. Now, with all the nuts on the street, you can get killed in midtown on Sixth Ave in the middle of the day. That didn’t happen years ago, not even in the 70s when things were bad. It feels like you’re not safe anywhere. Just walk through Penn Station and it’s like a dystopian nightmare. The nuts and the monsters are out on the streets, and the judicial system has failed those who abide by the law and want a more civil society. I’m not some xenophobe, I do live here.
Thank you
outstanding video nass.
Thank you
Imagine seeing Albert Fish walk past the camera.
Дякую тобі,друже,за ще одну мандрівку у часі🖐️👁️🇺🇦
Thank you