paul bernardo existing during this time frame and getting away with what he did for so long is the good old days to you? Or do these brief snapshots of toronto do you enough justice to ignore all the crimes going around
@@leedleleedle6824Paul Bernardo was a criminal, he existed before and after this “time frame” . Paul wasn’t an era or a metric to assess the health of a city . Look for some positivity and shed that pessimism ✌️
I miss when Toronto was like this. Look how well dressed people are, look how clean the streets are, and Yonge St. looks like a street I enjoyed walking down. It's too bad we now only have the memories...
Canada is what's called a legacy country, the only thing propping it up today is it's former reputation. If it doesn't improve fast, it will lose that status and officially become a developing nation.
This is when Toronto peaked, honestly. MUCHmusic was a huge cultural cornerstone and its death (due to the MTV-ification of all music television) brought about the end for Toronto as a whole, as it gravitated its identity towards more of a corporate, glass and steel aesthetic and vibe. Late 90s is when the city was truly diverse and not just dominated by 1-2 ethnicities. RIP!
It's so hard to cycle in the bike lanes now. Their e-bikes with huge bags strapped on them block the entire bike lane and they ride super slow even though they're on e-bikes and they don't have to. When they're going fast they move over and drive on the roads adjacent to the bike lanes and get in the way of the motorists
I had just moved to Toronto in the fall of 1997. My first job was in Pickering and I stayed with my mom's sister in Scarborough. That is the Toronto that I remember.
This was probably peak Toronto in my opinion, it was just coming on the world stage, cleaned up a bit but had just enough sleaze to be interesting without being sleazy, still some Canadian business chains and lot's of mom and pop and independent retail stores. We didn't know how good we had it.
This is the earliest Toronto I have memories of. My aunt and uncle were raising my three cousins in the Beaches at the time, and my family used to bring me and my sister as little kids there to visit them. Watching this brought things back: the Rogers Video store, the fonts on store signs, the cars, the scaffolding. Thank you.
Rent was affordable, housing was nothing scary, just worked and saved. People line up, they talked to strangers or read books on the buses and subways. Didn't have to crunch numbers at the groceries stores, milk and meat were cheap. Cartoons, sitcoms, TV shows galore. Every day woken up looked out the window knowing I lived in the best country in the world and the best city in the world..........The only scary thing then was Y2K......now just a dream, now everything is scary.......
@@richyq8786 I doubt it. we were renting 2 bedroom units for 750-900 around 1992 around etobicoke/mississauga. So I doubt youd find apartments that cheap.
My family arrived at Yonge & Eglinton back in 1997 from Mississauga. This is how I remembered my neighborhood, and it was lovely to live there. Now it's an overcrowded, expensive eyesore.
From the Batman & Robin poster and the overall weather, I can definitely date this video to the final week of June/early July. I really can't believe gas was 57 cents per liter. It's amazing we still get to see Canada Trust, Rogers Videos and the old second hand stores on what is today Yonge-Dundas Square. I wonder what happen to these rickshaws today.
@OldTorontoSeries People who aren't willing to sacrifice our culture and the people who already live here for a welcome mat? Yes. Very much so. It's those who would rather stick their heads in the sand than address the issues who aren't needed.
I shed a tear. Everyone was so clean looking, happier, friendlier... streets were clean... the innocence in people was still there. Now... technology, social media, immigration and economic turmoil have destroyed not only Toronto but Canada. Truly sad.
I was so touched, watching all this footage. It is shot and edited as if reminiscing with an old friend. Extremely comforting. Thank you for putting this together and sharing with us.
My first apartment in Toronto I paid 520 a month in rent at Jones and Gerrard. In 1997. I was 20 years old making only 2000 dollars a month living very comfortably. Fast forward to 2024. JustInflation Trudeau has destroyed this once great City and great Country.
This film is Art. The fast cuts, the choice of subjects, the relentless movement. The film rests only briefly while we hear a mediocre rendition of the Canadian National anthem. Sharp, incoherent visual cuts underlined with the shifting drones of traffic. The director's tastes eludes the viewer, teasing us to find any discernible patterns. Sensual scrolls down buildings. A woman fixing her bike. Three fast shots of the same group crossing a busy street. Words. So many words. All the words. A black squirrel. City hall, again, later in the day. It could only be made on a video camera; no one could ever make this on a phone. My favorite was the sequence near the ferry that had 4 fast cuts into an angled shot. It's shocking. It jars us out of our city induced reverie. This is Art. Put it on loop in the AGO. New generations of filmmakers need to see this.
All the places I used to frequent in Toronto have closed. The small Korean pastry shop near Yonge and Sheppard to the Armenian shawarma place I took many dates to. Just like Vancouver it has become a place where memories cannot be built anymore.
The 90s started in 1991 with the fall of the Soviets. The 90s ended on September 11 which is when the 2000s really started and they lasted until 2008 with the election of Obama. Things haven't changed much since 2012ish..streaming video, apps, smartphones, content algorithms, social media
There is less than half the number of people walking on the street than there is today. Tells you how much population we are trying to squeeze in the same place.
late 90's in Toronto was amazing. Great time and place to be a young person. Summer 97' the energy in the city was electric, so many amazing raves and parties happening everywhere. I made $10.50/hour, $420 bucks a week, it was enough to rent an apartment in Queen West with one roommate and have plenty of money left over for everything I could ever want. Didn't need a credit card, or a cell phone. Life was cheap, fun, exciting.. Now the city is dirty, everyone is miserable, overcrowded, overpriced, overbuilt. I feel bad for the kids today they don't know that world and how good we had it here.
WOW! My first summer in Toronto, Canada, at the age of 16... So much has changed, but somehow it feels like it was yesterday. 1997, you will always hold a special place in my heart.💖
I remember those days, the city was clean, there wasn't much crime and the rent was low. I worked in a restaurant, my salary was the minimum wage but I still had enough to pay the rent and to spend on the basics.
@@OldTorontoSeries If you take the stat at face value. A stat is meaningless if you take it at face value and don't consider how it could be twisted. I can assure you, every police chief, mayor, and city council have wanted to report crime as being lower while they're in charge. There's a reason there's a saying, "there are lies, damn lies, and statistics." Stats are easily manipulated and crime stats are no different. Take shoplifting for example. San Francisco put it to anything below $900 and the police won't bother to show up, meaning they don't take down a police report for it. A councilor in a major US city just recently said she doesn't want crime/shooting warnings to be sent to her constituents... crime is up in her ward and she doesn't want her voters to see it. How about when they outright hide it, like the UK hid the grooming gang scandals for well over 10 years? Hidden in all the stats at the time, obviously. Thousands of r*pes, kidnappings, etc. all underreported. How about plea deals? You can have 1 stat include the crime before the deal was made, having the crime categorized as one thing, and then a later stat categorizing it as something different (usually a lesser crime). Which one resembles reality more? Are you also comparing reported crimes with convicted/investigated crimes? How about the fact that a lot of people have lost faith in the police and justice system to actually catch criminals and so perhaps more crimes go unreported now.
Wow! So many places I miss. Senior's was a great steakhouse. And I remember Beckers being everywhere as a convenience store. And I'm only 2 minutes in. Good memories. Nobody holding a phone, awesome.
I grew up just a few blocks East of Mt. Pleasant, off of Eglington E. I'll never look back on this as the "good old days" cause it wasn't but I'll admit that Toronto was very different back then.
This one was special for me. This was the last year that I lived in Toronto. Strangely, I recall all the signs for new condominium development and never foresaw what we have there now. I don’t think one can see much of the sky downtown anymore. 😕
@@OldTorontoSeries Because they decided before even watching the video that they hate everything in the present and this video was meant to be their reassurance.
I've been to Toronto so many times it feels like it's my second home. I live outside of Toronto (about a 35 minute drive where I live). I remember seeing how beautiful Toronto was for the first time when I was a kid back in the 90's. And it felt like it was a very affordable city to live in. It was my dream to move to Toronto when I grew older. Toronto is still my all time favorite city to go to
I watch these and wonder what I was doing in this moment and time while they were filming the sights and sounds of my city. I would've been 21 in this one 🥰
I was 13 in 1997 and I remember I had no issues and felt comfortable to take the subway from Etobicoke to downtown. These days, not so much for my children who are 13 themselves.
Let's all appreciate for a moment the epic walk that guy had to make down Yonge! Just because he thought maybe in the future people would like to see what it was like then. Thank you. ❤
Back then in 1997 you could actually afford an apartment downtown for 1000.00 and in some cases even less-especially in Yonge and Eglinton...Now...the streets are a haven for homeless addicts and if you cant afford a Condo or a $2,995.00 one bedroom apartment -then you will live in a TENT. Even Jobs were a dime a dozen back then...now most of the work has become Outsourced overseas...not the same Toronto anymore.
I wish there was some footage of Petro Canada. Just curious what was the gas price 27 years ago. I remember it was 65C/Litre for 87 Octane in the year 2000.
No reality TV, no entitled people with iPhones glued to thier heads recording everything is site, no transients openly shooting up, Saturday morning cartoons were still a thing for kids, and going to the video store to rent a few tapes for the weekend was a treat, as was hanging out at the mall, and this was just a quarter century ago, how time flies...
I remember those days...and totally prefer it now. Toronto back then was some place you took the GO train too and stayed the required eight hours in a glass tower before taking the train back to the burbs as fast as possible. On the weekends you might have driven in to see the cities many parking lots and abandoned industrial lots. Aside from the Skydome and Ontario Place there was little reason to be in the city.
The real Oh 🇨🇦 CANADA. there was ‘diversity’. Canadians were at peace!!! No one was divided. Everyone had opportunity to live in Canada. 🇨🇦 Canada of was moral !! Under the leadership our country was divided and turned upside down Lots of people lived together in unity. So the proof of this!!!❤
Look at the hustle and bustle. I remember Toronto being super busy but also having cool sights regardless of where you go. Now it's just condos, condos, condos. It all started around 2004 when they began building those condos near the Lakeshore area. Then in 2012, they removed a bunch of nightclubs to build more condos. Then in 2020, they got rid of the majority of specialty places for, you guessed it, more condos. I went back to the city last weekend and had no idea what to even do down there. Other than eating, there's nothing special to do.
> Other than eating, there's nothing special to do. The most repeated point, ad nauseum, about the benefit of diversity is quite literally "the food." So boring, so bland. Most of it isn't like how homemade stuff is and plenty are just downright terrible quality. Then you ask what someone's favourite cuisine is and it's almost always their background cuisine anyways. Also tend to be weird that these people are willing to try like 1 or 2 super popular dishes from the cuisine and refuse to ever get anything else.
It reminds me the good old days. Streets were clean and not crowded. They are exactly the same when I had my walk after lunch during those days. it was beautiful. That is what Canada should be.
Ahhh 'the good old days'. it might be a cliche to say, but to me these truly were the good old days. I could actually afford to live in the city
it was near the end of the good ol' days. (1991-1999)
paul bernardo existing during this time frame and getting away with what he did for so long is the good old days to you? Or do these brief snapshots of toronto do you enough justice to ignore all the crimes going around
Fr lll
a lot of good people were still walking the earth back then
@@leedleleedle6824Paul Bernardo was a criminal, he existed before and after this “time frame” .
Paul wasn’t an era or a metric to assess the health of a city .
Look for some positivity and shed that pessimism ✌️
I miss when Toronto was like this. Look how well dressed people are, look how clean the streets are, and Yonge St. looks like a street I enjoyed walking down. It's too bad we now only have the memories...
too small of a city leave if u dont like it
Are you kidding me? In the 90s? I don’t think so
Canada is what's called a legacy country, the only thing propping it up today is it's former reputation. If it doesn't improve fast, it will lose that status and officially become a developing nation.
Ok boomer
It is still clean
This is when Toronto peaked, honestly. MUCHmusic was a huge cultural cornerstone and its death (due to the MTV-ification of all music television) brought about the end for Toronto as a whole, as it gravitated its identity towards more of a corporate, glass and steel aesthetic and vibe. Late 90s is when the city was truly diverse and not just dominated by 1-2 ethnicities. RIP!
How old were you during this time
@@mark3464 clearly none of your business
100%. electric circus, speaker's corner etc.
@@h0neypufff Why is it none of his business? ARE YOU HIS MOM??
A city not absolutely flooded with delivery guys on ebikes is such a beautiful sight..
I don't mind delivery guys on e-bikes but they should stay on the road, not the sidewalk.
True. A lot more violent crime back then though.
It's so hard to cycle in the bike lanes now. Their e-bikes with huge bags strapped on them block the entire bike lane and they ride super slow even though they're on e-bikes and they don't have to. When they're going fast they move over and drive on the roads adjacent to the bike lanes and get in the way of the motorists
Nowhere for kids to ride their bike yet though. At least they fixed Bloor.
Top Thinker, top comment❤
I had just moved to Toronto in the fall of 1997. My first job was in Pickering and I stayed with my mom's sister in Scarborough. That is the Toronto that I remember.
So you stayed with your aunt
You mean Pickering! Pickering!Pickering!
My God, what have we done?
politicians sold out Canada
A communist mayor was voted in ... Olivia Chew
Trudeau and its plethora of lies!
you've abandoned religion and family, and in turn your society turned to shit, that's what.
The majority voted for traitors who sold our country out from under us to globalists and "tiny hat" interests.
Diversity is their strength.
This was probably peak Toronto in my opinion, it was just coming on the world stage, cleaned up a bit but had just enough sleaze to be interesting without being sleazy, still some Canadian business chains and lot's of mom and pop and independent retail stores. We didn't know how good we had it.
I agree, well put.
Beckers, wildcat beer, Stollery’s…ah such memories! I think I saw a sign for luxury townhomes for less that $400,000 near St. Clair too 👀
Toronto was so nice and clean back then.
It wasn’t. On hot days, if it hadn’t rained for a while, Yonge street stank of piss.
@@EvelynSaungikar The whole Kensington area smells of piss 24/7. Then there's areas that just smell like bad weed.
@@EvelynSaungikar Ill take that over it being flooded with invading Indians any day
I was in Toronto in both 1994 and 1996, video looks much of what I remember.
And whoa, Sam the Record Man sighting! I remember that store.
This is the earliest Toronto I have memories of. My aunt and uncle were raising my three cousins in the Beaches at the time, and my family used to bring me and my sister as little kids there to visit them. Watching this brought things back: the Rogers Video store, the fonts on store signs, the cars, the scaffolding. Thank you.
When a townhome was $200,000. Not $2,000,000.
you meant the detach.... detach costs around 300k back then
Wages were lower to be fair.
200k was way too expensive back then for a townhouse.
@@Shik0njuul934 not 10x lower
And minimum wage was $6/hour now it's $17
What's your point?
Take me back.
Amazing :) Good ol Toronto, good ol simple days :)
Rent was affordable, housing was nothing scary, just worked and saved. People line up, they talked to strangers or read books on the buses and subways. Didn't have to crunch numbers at the groceries stores, milk and meat were cheap. Cartoons, sitcoms, TV shows galore. Every day woken up looked out the window knowing I lived in the best country in the world and the best city in the world..........The only scary thing then was Y2K......now just a dream, now everything is scary.......
rent was 300 a month lol
@@richyq8786 I doubt it. we were renting 2 bedroom units for 750-900 around 1992 around etobicoke/mississauga. So I doubt youd find apartments that cheap.
How did people file their taxes back then?
Pre collapse
Thank you so much for taking us down memory lane 😭... Soooo many memories!!! God bless❤
$124900 for a condo!... if only I were old enough to have bought a condo in 1997 😅
bought my first one for just $151k by Village by the Grange in 2007.
Unfortunately I was wasting time being a newborn back then 😭
Forget the condo…buy a house!
I was too busy being -5 years old. Dangit
My family arrived at Yonge & Eglinton back in 1997 from Mississauga. This is how I remembered my neighborhood, and it was lovely to live there. Now it's an overcrowded, expensive eyesore.
How was sauga in ‘97? Was there anything west of square one mall ?
From the Batman & Robin poster and the overall weather, I can definitely date this video to the final week of June/early July. I really can't believe gas was 57 cents per liter. It's amazing we still get to see Canada Trust, Rogers Videos and the old second hand stores on what is today Yonge-Dundas Square. I wonder what happen to these rickshaws today.
Before it became New New Delhi 😞💔
Back when Paul Bernardo’s trial was going on, great vid
Thanks for pointing that out! Toronto The Good and Bad^^
It was so nice before the country was flooded with people we don't need
Are you needed?
@OldTorontoSeries People who aren't willing to sacrifice our culture and the people who already live here for a welcome mat?
Yes. Very much so. It's those who would rather stick their heads in the sand than address the issues who aren't needed.
@@OldTorontoSeries the city is in the shitter
before the international student invasion
What an absolute great place to live then. What's happened to this once great city?
It Has Become Greater: *GTA*
politicians sold it out
The Ontario Municipal Board decided to bend over and take it up the ar*e from the developers.
I shed a tear. Everyone was so clean looking, happier, friendlier... streets were clean... the innocence in people was still there. Now... technology, social media, immigration and economic turmoil have destroyed not only Toronto but Canada. Truly sad.
Someone, who's name is Shahid complains about immigration
That's not my real name. My name is Shaine, I'm 45yrs old from Brantford. Don't judge and don't assume.
so what? immigrants who are actually SKILLED contributed a lot more to this country than you ever have I'm willing to bet @@oleksii1406
I was so touched, watching all this footage. It is shot and edited as if reminiscing with an old friend. Extremely comforting. Thank you for putting this together and sharing with us.
Make Toronto safe and great again like this
Our crime rate has actually gone down since 97.
And much less woke.
im in your walls
you smell divine
It was great if you weren't black, brown, lesbian, gay, trans, bi, or queer. Toronto is better now.
My first apartment in Toronto I paid 520 a month in rent at Jones and Gerrard. In 1997. I was 20 years old making only 2000 dollars a month living very comfortably. Fast forward to 2024. JustInflation Trudeau has destroyed this once great City and great Country.
I came to Canada as a teenager with my family in 1996, I really miss those days
Lucky u
I can actually see the sky again and not just 10000000 condos... I miss this Toronto..
This film is Art.
The fast cuts, the choice of subjects, the relentless movement.
The film rests only briefly while we hear a mediocre rendition of the Canadian National anthem.
Sharp, incoherent visual cuts underlined with the shifting drones of traffic. The director's tastes eludes the viewer, teasing us to find any discernible patterns.
Sensual scrolls down buildings. A woman fixing her bike. Three fast shots of the same group crossing a busy street. Words. So many words. All the words. A black squirrel. City hall, again, later in the day.
It could only be made on a video camera; no one could ever make this on a phone.
My favorite was the sequence near the ferry that had 4 fast cuts into an angled shot. It's shocking. It jars us out of our city induced reverie.
This is Art. Put it on loop in the AGO. New generations of filmmakers need to see this.
All the places I used to frequent in Toronto have closed. The small Korean pastry shop near Yonge and Sheppard to the Armenian shawarma place I took many dates to. Just like Vancouver it has become a place where memories cannot be built anymore.
This video made me depressed as hell. I was born in 1990.
At least you got to experience a bit of the 90s, I was born in 97…I basically missed all of it 😭
The 90s started in 1991 with the fall of the Soviets. The 90s ended on September 11 which is when the 2000s really started and they lasted until 2008 with the election of Obama. Things haven't changed much since 2012ish..streaming video, apps, smartphones, content algorithms, social media
cant believe hte 90s are considered the good old days now. jesus christ time is a bitch
Bud, the early 2010s are considered the good old days now.
There is less than half the number of people walking on the street than there is today. Tells you how much population we are trying to squeeze in the same place.
Back when this city was amazing.
late 90's in Toronto was amazing. Great time and place to be a young person. Summer 97' the energy in the city was electric, so many amazing raves and parties happening everywhere. I made $10.50/hour, $420 bucks a week, it was enough to rent an apartment in Queen West with one roommate and have plenty of money left over for everything I could ever want. Didn't need a credit card, or a cell phone. Life was cheap, fun, exciting.. Now the city is dirty, everyone is miserable, overcrowded, overpriced, overbuilt. I feel bad for the kids today they don't know that world and how good we had it here.
Wow! Two years after I was born down the road at Mount Sinai! I’m working on a short film of vintage Toronto and would love some of these clips 😭
Yup. Those were the days. Social life. Today. It's mostly Social Media.
I went to school downtown from 1995 to 2000. We'll never get that vibe again.
Back when Toronto was home... I don't recognize it anymore.
Final days of HS in 97; myself and a bunch of friends went ROLLARBLADING down Spadina towards the Toronto Island Ferries. What a crazy, great time. ❤
The streets are not cratered, almost no traffic. People are well dressed. Peak Toronto. Makes me wish i could go back in time.
WOW! My first summer in Toronto, Canada, at the age of 16... So much has changed, but somehow it feels like it was yesterday. 1997, you will always hold a special place in my heart.💖
People who lived through that time and still here feel like strangers in their own city.
Thank you for the trip down memory lane
This is the Toronto I know and Love.
I remember those days, the city was clean, there wasn't much crime and the rent was low. I worked in a restaurant, my salary was the minimum wage but I still had enough to pay the rent and to spend on the basics.
Crime rates in 97 and 2023 are almost identical.
@@OldTorontoSeries If you take the stat at face value. A stat is meaningless if you take it at face value and don't consider how it could be twisted. I can assure you, every police chief, mayor, and city council have wanted to report crime as being lower while they're in charge.
There's a reason there's a saying, "there are lies, damn lies, and statistics." Stats are easily manipulated and crime stats are no different. Take shoplifting for example. San Francisco put it to anything below $900 and the police won't bother to show up, meaning they don't take down a police report for it. A councilor in a major US city just recently said she doesn't want crime/shooting warnings to be sent to her constituents... crime is up in her ward and she doesn't want her voters to see it.
How about when they outright hide it, like the UK hid the grooming gang scandals for well over 10 years? Hidden in all the stats at the time, obviously. Thousands of r*pes, kidnappings, etc. all underreported.
How about plea deals? You can have 1 stat include the crime before the deal was made, having the crime categorized as one thing, and then a later stat categorizing it as something different (usually a lesser crime). Which one resembles reality more? Are you also comparing reported crimes with convicted/investigated crimes? How about the fact that a lot of people have lost faith in the police and justice system to actually catch criminals and so perhaps more crimes go unreported now.
@OldTorontoSeries yup. Just less news/media back then
@OldTorontoSeries At least 1 thing about the city hasn't gotten worse
Wow! So many places I miss. Senior's was a great steakhouse. And I remember Beckers being everywhere as a convenience store. And I'm only 2 minutes in. Good memories. Nobody holding a phone, awesome.
I grew up just a few blocks East of Mt. Pleasant, off of Eglington E. I'll never look back on this as the "good old days" cause it wasn't but I'll admit that Toronto was very different back then.
I remember seeing Joseph and the Technicolor Dreamcoat back then with Donny Osmond
I can almost hear the City TV guy voice over …Hogtown memories
I was 17. Love the nineties.
This one was special for me. This was the last year that I lived in Toronto. Strangely, I recall all the signs for new condominium development and never foresaw what we have there now. I don’t think one can see much of the sky downtown anymore. 😕
😢 I miss what it used to be
I used to hop on a GO bus to TO and walk around, felt safe and really enjoyed exploring the city. Last time I was there was in 2012.
Thanks to whoever must have been carrying a massive camcorder back then!
This was 1997. Sony Handycams and other compact camcorders were already pretty common back then.
Uptown theatre! Brass Rail! Memories.
Not a single crackhead in sight, this was truly the time when Canada's politicians cared for Canadians.
“There are no crackheads”….. you weren’t watching the entire section of porn shops and strip clubs in this? Why comment without watching?
@@OldTorontoSeries lmao those scenes make Jane and Finch look like paradise in Canada
@@OldTorontoSeries Because they decided before even watching the video that they hate everything in the present and this video was meant to be their reassurance.
Man the nostalgia, wow. Toronto was amazing back then.
I've been to Toronto so many times it feels like it's my second home. I live outside of Toronto (about a 35 minute drive where I live). I remember seeing how beautiful Toronto was for the first time when I was a kid back in the 90's. And it felt like it was a very affordable city to live in. It was my dream to move to Toronto when I grew older. Toronto is still my all time favorite city to go to
*Still*? Why? We have good food, that's about it.
I watch these and wonder what I was doing in this moment and time while they were filming the sights and sounds of my city. I would've been 21 in this one 🥰
Wow this seems like forever ago! Definitely feeling nostalgic after thus video:(
I was 13 in 1997 and I remember I had no issues and felt comfortable to take the subway from Etobicoke to downtown. These days, not so much for my children who are 13 themselves.
This is pretty much how I remember Toronto. I lived there in 1998-2000
Things are so bad now, the 90's are starting to look like the 50's.
Oh, to be 27 again...
Let's all appreciate for a moment the epic walk that guy had to make down Yonge! Just because he thought maybe in the future people would like to see what it was like then. Thank you. ❤
I liked the vibe. Speedy garages and 90-s cars.
I moved there in 2000, I recall everything - lived close to eaton ctr
Great replacement
I was living in Victoria, BC back then. I sure miss the last century though 😔
No bike lanes!
No cyclists and streetcars
That's the one thing that's better about Toronto now. City Council finally realized that drivers aren't the only people who matter.
Sadly we will never return to this reality.
The biggest selling album that year was Spice girls
Yeah, but we also got Ok Computer.
@OldTorontoSeries Biggest selling album this year is Taylor Swift.
Back then in 1997 you could actually afford an apartment downtown for 1000.00 and in some cases even less-especially in Yonge and Eglinton...Now...the streets are a haven for homeless addicts and if you cant afford a Condo or a $2,995.00 one bedroom apartment -then you will live in a TENT. Even Jobs were a dime a dozen back then...now most of the work has become Outsourced overseas...not the same Toronto anymore.
"We're being replaced!" - person who doesn't use his own name because he's scared of bicycles. lol. loser.
I wish there was some footage of Petro Canada. Just curious what was the gas price 27 years ago. I remember it was 65C/Litre for 87 Octane in the year 2000.
unrecognizable now. Toronto is its own little third world country now... about as safe as one too. I don't dare visit anymore you couldn't pay me to
Record tourism in 2023 - and a crime rate similar to this video. Stop being such a drama queen.
although I didn't witness it in person, I can feel the vibe in front of the screen. I like it.
No reality TV, no entitled people with iPhones glued to thier heads recording everything is site, no transients openly shooting up, Saturday morning cartoons were still a thing for kids, and going to the video store to rent a few tapes for the weekend was a treat, as was hanging out at the mall, and this was just a quarter century ago, how time flies...
Commenters are like "I miss the good old days", meanwhile the city in the video looking like downtown Windsor today
Thanks for video. I find the rapid short cuts a little hard to watch though.
No orange cones! Driveable streets!
1997 doesn't even seem that long ago to me but this footage looks ancient
Great time to be alive ❤
My right ear really enjoyed this!
Back when sam the record man. Hmv. Cd discs and the internet was just starting to flourish
they will fight tooth and nail to tell you the past was never better remember that
Back when it was Toronto the Good!
Reminds me of being a kid again.
Around the time I got my first Playstation 1 console and Sony Walkman cassette tape at dufferin mall.
I remember those days...and totally prefer it now.
Toronto back then was some place you took the GO train too and stayed the required eight hours in a glass tower before taking the train back to the burbs as fast as possible. On the weekends you might have driven in to see the cities many parking lots and abandoned industrial lots.
Aside from the Skydome and Ontario Place there was little reason to be in the city.
8:14 love that zoom.
Crazy how far its fallen in such little time since then
Ah yes, the good old times before the GTA was also known as New Mumbai.
The real Oh 🇨🇦 CANADA. there was ‘diversity’.
Canadians were at peace!!!
No one was divided. Everyone had opportunity to live in Canada. 🇨🇦
Canada of was moral !! Under the leadership our country was divided and turned upside down
Lots of people lived together in unity. So the proof of this!!!❤
Look at the hustle and bustle. I remember Toronto being super busy but also having cool sights regardless of where you go. Now it's just condos, condos, condos. It all started around 2004 when they began building those condos near the Lakeshore area. Then in 2012, they removed a bunch of nightclubs to build more condos. Then in 2020, they got rid of the majority of specialty places for, you guessed it, more condos. I went back to the city last weekend and had no idea what to even do down there. Other than eating, there's nothing special to do.
> Other than eating, there's nothing special to do.
The most repeated point, ad nauseum, about the benefit of diversity is quite literally "the food." So boring, so bland. Most of it isn't like how homemade stuff is and plenty are just downright terrible quality. Then you ask what someone's favourite cuisine is and it's almost always their background cuisine anyways. Also tend to be weird that these people are willing to try like 1 or 2 super popular dishes from the cuisine and refuse to ever get anything else.
I was 3 and the first 5 mins was my area if o my we could go back In time thanks for the share :”)
Wow, I was 7 that year!!!!
Bring old Toronto back ❤
It reminds me the good old days. Streets were clean and not crowded. They are exactly the same when I had my walk after lunch during those days. it was beautiful. That is what Canada should be.