What Makes A Good Party? by Coronet Instructional Films Shows teenagers how to plan and attend a party, suggesting games to play and songs to sing ("Jimmy Crack Corn"). #Coronet
Mick Philpott Sounds like you've been to some wild parties, Philpott. I'm gay, and I'm not jealous of YOU. I've never experienced nor seen any of that madness which you seem to have, and I wouldn't have it any other way. I'll bet your browser history would raise some eyebrows.
In the 2000s, I visited my brother in North Carolina when my 17 year old niece was hosting a party. She had bought a Slip-and-Slide and had a tent with a long table and chairs where kids could make their own balloon animals. Later on in the evening the kids gathered in the living room to listen to one of the guests play the piano. Not only would my niece's friends come up and talk with me on their own initiative but they invited me to make my own balloon animals with them. I was dumbfounded that such a party occurred anywhere in the US but am glad that my niece and nephew could have such experiences. BTW, there was no alcohol.
@@missanne2908 I remember, in the 1950's, teenage girls, were REAL girls, and teenage boys, were REAL boys and there was no MENTAL illness, or FAKE genders, and all kids, knew, what public bathroom, to use.
I have been at parties from age 14 and we allways had so much fun. Obviously we got a bit drunk too, but it was usually on a delightfull way. Only sometimes one of our friends got wasted and I remember how embarassed we started to feel for that person. I remember every single one of my parties, and when we discussed about them years later, my friends felt the same way, they were highly valued memories of our teen years. When I got to highschool I was soo shocked when I heard from all of my classmates their "weekend party" or "greatest party of my life" stories, which were all the same: "I don't know where I was, I don't know what I did, but I slept all night in my own vomit yeaaaahhh".. Every single time the same story: "Hell yeaaah, I drank soo much I vomited everywhere and I fell asleep". No memories, no difference between these occassions, no dancing, no having fun, just drink quickly untill you are wasted and a burden on other people. Once one of them got so intoxicated that the police and his family searched for him for an entire day, when he finally arrived home on his own feet. Turned out he was sleeping in the middle of a random cornfield. It happemed in those times, when many teenagers disappeared from our region and later found with an empty abdomen in a forest. Just think about how everybody who searched for him that day felt like. The teachers in our school and every student found it soo funny.
@@Bvillo Ain't nobody got time to read your extremely violent, left-wing, Communist garbage, or as you call it, your "Communist Manifesto', now, back to sleep, little LIBTARD wokester Babygirl.
When people cared about their appearance, and aspired to be the best person possible. Now people don't care what they look like or care about what people think.
Letty Guerra Get off it lol. We put far more emphasis on appearances now thanks to social media. It's probably a good thing that we're not as into conformity and can actually do what we please now.
This is just a educational vid and not actual reality. The average male in school wouldn't wear a suit to a party. But they were worn going to a religious service, to a nice restaurant, concert and by men working in offices etc. The only men that wore suits to school were ivy league types and those fairly off.
D N Thanks for sharing! Fashion is so interesting to me (even though I’m kind of a thoughtless dresser)... but I like to learn about culture and how it really was back then!
In the early 1980s I was in high school. One day while sitting in class, out of the blue, for reasons i cant recall, the school 16mm movie projector was rolled into the classroom. And they played for us several of these old, antiquated late 1940s-1950s coronet instructional films on how to date, how to be polite, how to behave, etc. My classmates laughed through them. The wooden acting, the cheap production values, the over politeness, the squeaky clean activities (a picnic, a carnival, bike riding, a day at the park, dinner at home with the family, etc), the innocent slang of the time (gee, golly, swell, keen, etc). I on the other hand, wasn't laughing. To the contrary. As someone who was being raised in a severely abusive, dysfunctional home, i found these films to be quite charming. A sort of a time capsule of a more innocent era. DON'T get me wrong. I had no illusions. I was well aware that the 1950s wasnt so perfect and innocent. No decade is. But still, even with the flaws of that decade, it seems to me that there were SOME things in the 1950s they were doing so right that we were doing so horribly wrong in the early 1980s as well as today.
I get what you’re saying, and overall, I agree. However, humans don’t really change over time. Definitely not in a span of three decades. These videos are not an honest portrayal of how the 50s actually we’re, and I’m sure kids back then laughed at them too, as they weren’t actually like this. People are more or less the same across time, except I’d argue that we have become more civil. Even in the 1950s, In certain parts of the country, people who look like me were being lynched by people who looked like the people in this video. Women had few rights, neither did children. A teen or preteen boy could be charged with a crime if he were molested by an older man and told the authorities. This is because sodomy laws of the time made no distinction between a victim of abuse and an abuser, even for a child (most often, these children got probation, but they were still criminally charged. If you don’t believe me, reference the “homosexuality PSA” video that was made around this time. It was really a video about pedophiles, but in those days, there was little distinction). Values have absolutely changed for the better in terms of what matters, and I stand by that wholeheartedly.
One episode of _60 Minutes_ in the 1990s featured a museum in NYC dedicated to instruction films such as these. They showed these films to a group of teenagers thinking that they would laugh at their corniness. Instead the teenagers were pretty wistful about them.
"Let's have an informal party!! And by informal, I mean let's plan everything out beforehand, have a ton of games to make sure people don't get distracted, and everyone will be dressed very very very nicely. It'll be fun! And easy!"
Have you noticed teenagers back then looked older and more mature than the ones today. I was looking through an old yearbook from the 60s and the seniors looked like they were in there late 20s
Yes they sure did. No hormones in milk back then. And Joe: LESS sun exposure. The skies in those days were smoked over everyday except on Sunday (unless you lived in Kansas).
It’s amazing the amount of human interaction that occurred in the days before smartphones: ‘Let’s text everyone about the party!’ Heck no! We will call them on the telephone! How novel. How innocent. To me, this is how I now think of the 1990s!
Why am I in my late 20's, and this looks great and fun as hell compared to recent parties over the past couple years that i've been too? The suits. the hair... Fuck, i don't think i even have a single friend that plays piano...
I remember having a party when i turned 13 yo. Mother helped me plan it.i invited my entire class (I'm from a very small town).we had hot dogs, chips, cold drinks and cake.i had a record player and we made up dances to different songs. It was a fun time
Please. Nowadays it's practically a scandal if a man makes eye with a woman without a written consent contract. The sexual revolution has come full circle.
Bon Bon we used to play twister with Missoula oil in the 80s now that was fun three or four couples there Naked on the floor squirming around with each other it was great talk about a mixer
Well, to answer your question (What Makes A Good Party?), it all depends on the guests that you've invited. You've got to know and understand them enough in order to be able to give them what they want. Also, you have to know yourself. You're just as much a part of the party as they are. You've got to try and set the party up in a way that everybody will win including yourself. That's what makes a good party in my opinion; you've got to know, understand, and be able to cater to yourself and to your invited guests.
@@sarahshouse1890 I remember, in the 1950's, teenage girls, were REAL girls, and teenage boys, were REAL boys and there was no MENTAL illness, or FAKE genders, and all kids, knew, what public bathroom, to use.
The way they talk sounds so different back then! The folks that I have come across over the years who were in their eighties or so, usually retained that old way of sounding. Imagine high schoolers now singing "Jimmy Crack Corn And I Don't Care"-lmfao!
Laugh all you want. In school we sang songs like this and we were serious. We had to stand and recite the preamble and pledge allengence to the flag. We did it as natural as breathing. We were taught to honor and respect God and country. I am glad I was in this era.
Alot of people dont realize this is actually the shortened edited footage... just a few minutes after this clip ended everyone started twerking and pop-locking
When I moved to Cleveland three years ago it was partly because my neighborhood resembled the location of several Coronet Educational Films I'd remembered from school in the 60's. Tell me I've done the wrong thing.
@@steveb9151and by "standing up to it" you decide that everything we did was beneath you and the 50s were so much better. For most, decency brings out decency, civility brings out civility. If everyone you meet is rude, then it's a you problem. Even your comment reeks of a condescending attitude
Damned good thing that they didn't invite me, I'd of brought the MD20/20 red. How else can we find out why they all agreed that Marjorie was so much fun with the guys...
@@4x4pup51 I'm a millennial parent, and it has little to do with how old a parent is. There are many in other age demographs who would also qualify as "self-centered brats".
I love playing charades but no one I know does. We used to play it when I was younger. What were the rules of rhythm at 7:22? I haven’t played that. I wasn’t sure why one person was out or what the rules are.
I only figured it out because someone else commented that they call it Zoomie. First, everyone must sit in a circle. Then, you number off everyone starting with zoomie (zoomie, 1, 2, 3…) until everyone has a number. The person who is Zoomie should know how to play the game. Zoomie starts the game by patting his legs twice and then clapping his hand twice saying,”zoomie, zoomie, zoomie, zoomie.” Everyone joins in with Zoomie by patting their legs and clapping their hands. This pattern must be kept through the whole game. Then Zoomie says zoomie, zoomie, and a number(i.e. zoomie, zoomie, 1, 1) Then the person with that number must say his number twice and then someone else’s number (ex. one, one, three, three) It is alright to call zoomie as a number, but the person who is Zoomie can speed up the game. The pattern continues like this until someone messes up by forgetting to go or by not following the rhythm. Then that person is out. Zoomie then starts the game up again. Also if anyone calls the number of someone who is out then they are out. The game continues until only one is left.
Hmm, Steve plays one song and everyone notices it's time to go home. Maybe now Steve can hook up with the gal he was chatting with earlier in the evening, before being dragged back into the fun and games.
To have an incredible party they just need to share whatever pills they took before they started PLANNING the party. Man, these girls at their sleepover are flying!
Oh The way was my 9 years old because I didn't have any cell phone. but these days, the plan is some irritating and bothering for some people. They just enjoy off-the-record or the improvisation but many planned refreshments and some melas flourish the party maybe.
* I remember a 1960's TV commercial for a device that turned any resonant plywood surface into a great hi-fi speaker. A teen guy said "I got one and the gang thinks it's super!" NOW that may indeed be a party plus ~> Good tunes on a huge speaker. ☺
"Gay Entertainment" has a whole new meaning today.
Are yall good?
Mick Philpott
Sounds like you've been to some wild parties, Philpott. I'm gay, and I'm not jealous of YOU. I've never experienced nor seen any of that madness which you seem to have, and I wouldn't have it any other way. I'll bet your browser history would raise some eyebrows.
Sadly.
el precioso si U mad bro?
I’m kind of sad that the word ‘gay’ has been totally overtaken now.
Man, a party centered around having fun together instead of getting wasted. As a teetotaller, I'd sure love to see this become the norm again.
In the 2000s, I visited my brother in North Carolina when my 17 year old niece was hosting a party. She had bought a Slip-and-Slide and had a tent with a long table and chairs where kids could make their own balloon animals. Later on in the evening the kids gathered in the living room to listen to one of the guests play the piano. Not only would my niece's friends come up and talk with me on their own initiative but they invited me to make my own balloon animals with them. I was dumbfounded that such a party occurred anywhere in the US but am glad that my niece and nephew could have such experiences. BTW, there was no alcohol.
@@missanne2908 I remember, in the 1950's, teenage girls, were REAL girls, and teenage boys, were REAL boys and there was no MENTAL illness, or FAKE genders, and all kids, knew, what public bathroom, to use.
it won’t
I have been at parties from age 14 and we allways had so much fun. Obviously we got a bit drunk too, but it was usually on a delightfull way. Only sometimes one of our friends got wasted and I remember how embarassed we started to feel for that person. I remember every single one of my parties, and when we discussed about them years later, my friends felt the same way, they were highly valued memories of our teen years. When I got to highschool I was soo shocked when I heard from all of my classmates their "weekend party" or "greatest party of my life" stories, which were all the same: "I don't know where I was, I don't know what I did, but I slept all night in my own vomit yeaaaahhh".. Every single time the same story: "Hell yeaaah, I drank soo much I vomited everywhere and I fell asleep". No memories, no difference between these occassions, no dancing, no having fun, just drink quickly untill you are wasted and a burden on other people. Once one of them got so intoxicated that the police and his family searched for him for an entire day, when he finally arrived home on his own feet. Turned out he was sleeping in the middle of a random cornfield. It happemed in those times, when many teenagers disappeared from our region and later found with an empty abdomen in a forest. Just think about how everybody who searched for him that day felt like. The teachers in our school and every student found it soo funny.
@@Bvillo Ain't nobody got time to read your extremely violent, left-wing, Communist garbage, or as you call it, your "Communist Manifesto', now, back to sleep, little LIBTARD wokester Babygirl.
Casual, informal party... suits and ties are a must! The 50s!
When people cared about their appearance, and aspired to be the best person possible. Now people don't care what they look like or care about what people think.
Letty Guerra Get off it lol. We put far more emphasis on appearances now thanks to social media.
It's probably a good thing that we're not as into conformity and can actually do what we please now.
This is just a educational vid and not actual reality. The average male in school wouldn't wear a suit to a party. But they were worn going to a religious service, to a nice restaurant, concert and by men working in offices etc. The only men that wore suits to school were ivy league types and those fairly off.
D N Thanks for sharing! Fashion is so interesting to me (even though I’m kind of a thoughtless dresser)... but I like to learn about culture and how it really was back then!
Casual informal party, quick let me get my suit and gay entertainment lol
That party looks like a real swell time. Bring on the refreshments!
Cool Aid sure sounds terrific
Marcus The Fire Breathing Duck oh hell yea
COVID19 has ended parties for now...maybe for GOOD!
Iced Tea & Lemonade were more than likely the favored choices.
Neato!
"Show Steve a good time..." LOL
This was 72 years ago,these kids would be pushing 90 now!
In the early 1980s I was in high school.
One day while sitting in class, out of the blue, for reasons i cant recall, the school 16mm movie projector was rolled into the classroom. And they played for us several of these old, antiquated late 1940s-1950s coronet instructional films on how to date, how to be polite, how to behave, etc.
My classmates laughed through them. The wooden acting, the cheap production values, the over politeness, the squeaky clean activities (a picnic, a carnival, bike riding, a day at the park, dinner at home with the family, etc), the innocent slang of the time (gee, golly, swell, keen, etc).
I on the other hand, wasn't laughing. To the contrary. As someone who was being raised in a severely abusive, dysfunctional home, i found these films to be quite charming. A sort of a time capsule of a more innocent era.
DON'T get me wrong. I had no illusions. I was well aware that the 1950s wasnt so perfect and innocent. No decade is. But still, even with the flaws of that decade, it seems to me that there were SOME things in the 1950s they were doing so right that we were doing so horribly wrong in the early 1980s as well as today.
I get what you’re saying, and overall, I agree. However, humans don’t really change over time. Definitely not in a span of three decades. These videos are not an honest portrayal of how the 50s actually we’re, and I’m sure kids back then laughed at them too, as they weren’t actually like this. People are more or less the same across time, except I’d argue that we have become more civil. Even in the 1950s, In certain parts of the country, people who look like me were being lynched by people who looked like the people in this video. Women had few rights, neither did children. A teen or preteen boy could be charged with a crime if he were molested by an older man and told the authorities. This is because sodomy laws of the time made no distinction between a victim of abuse and an abuser, even for a child (most often, these children got probation, but they were still criminally charged. If you don’t believe me, reference the “homosexuality PSA” video that was made around this time. It was really a video about pedophiles, but in those days, there was little distinction). Values have absolutely changed for the better in terms of what matters, and I stand by that wholeheartedly.
The 50s were NOT as depicted. Mostly -- if you had a brain -- it was like living in a straitjacket and being pressured to say how much you liked it.
One episode of _60 Minutes_ in the 1990s featured a museum in NYC dedicated to instruction films such as these. They showed these films to a group of teenagers thinking that they would laugh at their corniness. Instead the teenagers were pretty wistful about them.
The original TH-cam tutorials... I'm planning a party and actually watched this unironically.
Was your party a success? Did you wear suits and play games?
I have never seen a group make decisions that fast in my life. If only company meetings were like that.
Somebody has a crush on Steve... don’t blame her
YEEESSS MOREEEE MEEEENN
That little one was following him everywhere
And that annoying 'friend' cl.t blocked her too when the went into the corner.
@@angelicasmodel what is this "cl.t blocking" of which you write?
@@PutDownTheBunny the female version of c*ck blocking.
Wish I watched this film before I planned my last party... it ended up being a sausage fest and someone got shot
username checks out
@@anorak78 Sausage fest? So it was gay entertainment all right!
🤣🤣🤣
Next time have everybody wear suits and ties
😅
"Let's have an informal party!! And by informal, I mean let's plan everything out beforehand, have a ton of games to make sure people don't get distracted, and everyone will be dressed very very very nicely. It'll be fun! And easy!"
'We just started that hat making game you like so much!' Priceless.
I have no idea why but that line killed me
@@alexdionisos me too - so corny - so priceless!
Steve seemed very excited as well about the Hat making game
Guest who respect the rules and clean up after themselves!
Nah f*** that I leave the joint trashed that's how the host knows they threw a wild party
@@TallyWackaTha2nd children like you shouldn't attend a party without the supervision of a trusted adult.
@@sophiadavenport3959 I get turnt AF
Absolutely, even at a party where we are drinking we would clean up and keep things tidy.
Respect to the host.
@@HikikomoriGirlHound you are right. I am sorry, Patricia
The quality of those hats....whatever was in that hot chocolate, it had to be good.
Looks a blast ...people actually interacting
Have you noticed teenagers back then looked older and more mature than the ones today. I was looking through an old yearbook from the 60s and the seniors looked like they were in there late 20s
I heard somewhere that they had more sun exposure back then, and things like less advanced sunscreen
Its the hairstyles
Yes they sure did. No hormones in milk back then. And Joe: LESS sun exposure. The skies in those days were smoked over everyday except on Sunday (unless you lived in Kansas).
Hired actors and actresses. The film back then, like today, probably cast 20 somethings as teenagers.
@@genek2384 in films yes, but not in yearbooks. I think it’s the hair styles and the suits.
And guests know when to go home on time when the party is over not shove straws down the kitchen sink and destroy grandpa's art shop.
Sounds like ptsd… what happened? XD
@@Brave_Sir_RobinOne Thanksgiving, my aunt was supposed to bring the Turkey. She showed up at 8:00 pm, and most had left.
Hat making contests and then sing along to Blue-tail Fly. Perfect party.
8:21 Ev'rybody gangsta 'til the 19th century American minstrel songs start.
I never thought about planning a party for a specific purpose that wasnt holiday or birthday related :o! The possibilities..
I’m so impatient for time travel 😭
It’s amazing the amount of human interaction that occurred in the days before smartphones: ‘Let’s text everyone about the party!’ Heck no! We will call them on the telephone! How novel. How innocent. To me, this is how I now think of the 1990s!
Life before the internet was so much better.
Patricia tha bibliophile And ironically much less isolated.
this is the 50s why are you talking about the 90s lmaoo
Even growing up in the 80’s I still got and made telephone calls inviting or being invited to parties
I’m busy looking at the wall pockets and vintage lamps . 😊
Those are sconces.
Let’s all go to the lobby lets all go to the lobby to get ourselves a treat🤣
Everyone has manners and helps each other.
Yes, and they are concerned that EVERYONE is having a good time.
"Make sure everyone at the party is having a good time." [proceeds to sing Jimmy Cracked Corn]
Unintentional humor is the best.
Palace Of Wisdom Oh!!!! I just noticed that 😟. Wow
At last party, we sang NWA's .."Be my lady not just another hoe" and, "Slam the child on the hard concrete"...
that song should be dubbed over with something more appropriate
@@GaryRoseCO Break on Through to the Other Side.
I remember seeing this in Home Ec class. In 1987. Yes, our teacher thought we would get something out of a 37 year-old film.
what was your teacher smoking?
If you didn't follow through with proper party planning, well, that's on you.
I got something out of it in 2022
Me too, they used to show shorts like this on Mystery Science Theater 3000
Pro-tip kids: The wildest parties are the ones where everybody has to sit down halfway through to compose a personal essay.
What a swell idea! Can we write analysis about each others essay with a minimum word count of 2500 words afterwards?
@@hanzfranz7739 You betcha!
Why am I in my late 20's, and this looks great and fun as hell compared to recent parties over the past couple years that i've been too? The suits. the hair... Fuck, i don't think i even have a single friend that plays piano...
More out of the ghetto.
I remember having a party when i turned 13 yo. Mother helped me plan it.i invited my entire class (I'm from a very small town).we had hot dogs, chips, cold drinks and cake.i had a record player and we made up dances to different songs. It was a fun time
"How about Alice and Ted?" Don't forget to invite Carol and Bob, too!
That creepyass panda bear, though! Looks like a Stephen King character. I love these videos!
Peggy Deffley 😂
Kids dressed really nice back then
Gee golly! This is inspirational for the holidays coming up ☃❄... lol I can only imagine how twister would be so... scandalous back when 🤣
Please. Nowadays it's practically a scandal if a man makes eye with a woman without a written consent contract. The sexual revolution has come full circle.
Bon Bon we used to play twister with Missoula oil in the 80s now that was fun three or four couples there Naked on the floor squirming around with each other it was great talk about a mixer
Pictionary!
Twister came out when I was in junior high. Problem was I wore a bulky body brace and as such was one of the few people my age who never played it.
It's crazy how drastic a change to 20 years later, 1970,🤔🙆
Well, to answer your question (What Makes A Good Party?), it all depends on the guests that you've invited. You've got to know and understand them enough in order to be able to give them what they want. Also, you have to know yourself. You're just as much a part of the party as they are. You've got to try and set the party up in a way that everybody will win including yourself. That's what makes a good party in my opinion; you've got to know, understand, and be able to cater to yourself and to your invited guests.
Excellent video, love the 50's!🩷🩵🩷
Wouldn't the world be a nice place if it were actually like this? Strangely I don't think it was like this even back then
Heck no. There'd be beer at that party and mother'd be out of the house.
I'm really not sure when in the history of ever a party would not let people sit down for a simple chat for a while.
A carnival designed for gay entertainment. Definitely means something different now.
But what on earth did it mean back then?
@@WendyLopezGazquez Back then gay basically meant festive. Being gay was being in the party mood.
It's kind of like merry.
I’m not so sure. I mean... did you see those balloons?
would've left at the hat-making contest.
A dance hall and a good band
Great video 😃 How our society has changed for the worse.
Agreed!
@@sarahshouse1890 I remember, in the 1950's, teenage girls, were REAL girls, and teenage boys, were REAL boys and there was no MENTAL illness, or FAKE genders, and all kids, knew, what public bathroom, to use.
The way they talk sounds so different back then! The folks that I have come across over the years who were in their eighties or so, usually retained that old way of sounding. Imagine high schoolers now singing "Jimmy Crack Corn And I Don't Care"-lmfao!
Laugh all you want. In school we sang songs like this and we were serious. We had to stand and recite the preamble and pledge allengence to the flag. We did it as natural as breathing. We were taught to honor and respect God and country. I am glad I was in this era.
These days, everyone would be sitting around taking selfies and texting their friends who aren't at the party.
not really
True, its better to enjoy nice chocolate soggy bread and sing songs that slaves use to sing. 😂😂😂
@@Blazz20 I have no idea what you are talking about. Where are you from? Definitely not North America.
Ignorance is bliss lol. Look up jimmy cracked corn, the song they sing in the video, you’ll get what I’m saying. :)
Thats because there wasnt a hat making contest.
I wish parties now were like this...
Apparently Margie was actually the girl that 'puts out'
My friends and I still play a game exactly like Rhythm, but we call it Zoomie.
I have no idea what they were doing.
Funny? ...... Fascinating 50's! .... I love it! ......
Alot of people dont realize this is actually the shortened edited footage...
just a few minutes after this clip ended everyone started twerking and pop-locking
When I moved to Cleveland three years ago it was partly because my neighborhood resembled the location of several Coronet Educational Films I'd remembered from school in the 60's. Tell me I've done the wrong thing.
Nothing wrong with a White Christian neighborhood. Stultifyingly dull though if this is typical.
It's so easy to make fun of these clods...and yet you can't help but envy them for living in a time when decency and civility were not scorned.
No one scorns decency and civility. Except for you, clearly.
@@dewilew2137 You're joking, right? Decency and civility are CONSTANTLY mocked by much of society today. I was the one standing up for it.
@@steveb9151and by "standing up to it" you decide that everything we did was beneath you and the 50s were so much better. For most, decency brings out decency, civility brings out civility. If everyone you meet is rude, then it's a you problem.
Even your comment reeks of a condescending attitude
@@goose7215 You'd better sit down and rest after all those ENORMOUS conclusions you jumped to.
These helpful videos are my favorite thing to watch.
Well that WASP party took a dark turn with Jimmy Cracked Corn...
Damned good thing that they didn't invite me, I'd of brought the MD20/20 red. How else can we find out why they all agreed that Marjorie was so much fun with the guys...
That was an awfully white party!
@@mikezylstra7514 suburban redlining was in full force... :-(
What a swell bunch of kids!
Sounds like a swell time. Haven’t been to a good party in ages.
Rhythm? We called that “thumper” :)
'Plan that party around a purpose!'
Thank you 🍉
I sure did get a lot of ideas for my next party 🍕 🎈 🎉
Hope you made a list, and restricted it to college boys and southern belles. 🧐😌. If you did, it should have turned out just swell.
Every party includes someone you don't want to invite, but your pal insists they join for various reasons; it's the classic guilt trip.
I wish I had grown up then . In the 1970's , what made a good "party" was keg of beer and plenty of pot to smoke .
Compare this to a Jersey Shore party to put the fall of society into perspective.
Back when parents actually equipped their kids to function as productive members of society.
oh man
2manynegativewaves I don’t think that’s fair at all, my parents grew up in the 50s and they were not those kind of people at all.
Yes, they werent self centered millennial brats!
@@4x4pup51 I'm a millennial parent, and it has little to do with how old a parent is. There are many in other age demographs who would also qualify as "self-centered brats".
@some fat loser with no friends or life I'm 34. That makes me a Millennial.
Wow!
I am eighty four and parties I went to all revolved around dancing with records(vinyl) think bsndstand!
🥰🥰
Yeah right, your 84 and leaving comments on You Tube
That Panda thing resembled a Chucky Doll, if I took that to bed with me it would scare my pyjamas off
Classic Steve!
I used to have sleep over at my home and there homes.boy did we have fun.
Glad I missed that party
Back then people at parties dressed up. Not anymore. 😔
Tatoos,body piercings and colorful hair is the party standard for today's millennial generation.lol
Steve has untapped depths!
I think the guy carnival sounds like a good time!
the bed the three girls are jumping on seems like an air mattress
It's all so so swell
I love playing charades but no one I know does. We used to play it when I was younger.
What were the rules of rhythm at 7:22? I haven’t played that. I wasn’t sure why one person was out or what the rules are.
I only figured it out because someone else commented that they call it Zoomie.
First, everyone must sit in a circle. Then, you number off everyone starting with zoomie (zoomie, 1, 2, 3…) until everyone has a number. The person who is Zoomie should know how to play the game. Zoomie starts the game by patting his legs twice and then clapping his hand twice saying,”zoomie, zoomie, zoomie, zoomie.” Everyone joins in with Zoomie by patting their legs and clapping their hands. This pattern must be kept through the whole game.
Then Zoomie says zoomie, zoomie, and a number(i.e. zoomie, zoomie, 1, 1) Then the person with that number must say his number twice and then someone else’s number (ex. one, one, three, three) It is alright to call zoomie as a number, but the person who is Zoomie can speed up the game.
The pattern continues like this until someone messes up by forgetting to go or by not following the rhythm. Then that person is out. Zoomie then starts the game up again.
Also if anyone calls the number of someone who is out then they are out.
The game continues until only one is left.
Hmm, Steve plays one song and everyone notices it's time to go home. Maybe now Steve can hook up with the gal he was chatting with earlier in the evening, before being dragged back into the fun and games.
we get way more lit now this is sad haha
To have an incredible party they just need to share whatever pills they took before they started PLANNING the party. Man, these girls at their sleepover are flying!
The party looks like a meeting to me
Yeah, a Klan meeting. "Jimmy Crack Corn?"
I know why we're all here. Actually, the 1st part of that video gives us some fascinating insight
What a better time.
A smidge too much fun for me
I couldn't handle all the excitement.
“Reflections on Icebreaking:
Candy is dandy
But liquor is quicker”
Ogden Nash
FUN WITH JELLO SALAD 101!
Một mái ấm thật hạnh phúc Chúc thầy ngày càng thành công Luôn theo dõi và ủng hộ thầy lộc ❤❤❤️
Dumb
Aaaand How!
Margie's a goer.
that panda like creature looks creepy
I was waiting for the girls to break into "Look At Me I'm Sandra Dee".
These parties in the 50s sure seem different than those represented on the show Euphoria.
Hot chocolate and sandwiches is bubble guts guaranteed
I suggest cabbage and la croix instead
😂😂😂
Justin Rinehuls
Ok then
Tuna rarabit with milk
My party days we're the late 70's & 80's, if you know what I mean.
I've been to worst parties that would make "the big chill" look like a renaissance festival
Oh The way was my 9 years old because I didn't have any cell phone. but these days, the plan is some irritating and bothering for some people. They just enjoy off-the-record or the improvisation but many planned refreshments and some melas flourish the party maybe.
What the fuck?
yeah what in the fuck are you trying to say
Oh Steve
“Plan that party around a purpose.”
Purpose: strippers need to eat
2:20
That's my birthday, and it's in 3 days!
Jimmy cracked corn & I don't care. lol Haven't heard that in 60 years.
waiting on the jokes to start flowing in. So far there's only boomers
* I remember a 1960's TV commercial for a device that turned any resonant plywood surface into a great hi-fi speaker. A teen guy said "I got one and the gang thinks it's super!" NOW that may indeed be a party plus ~> Good tunes on a huge speaker. ☺
@2manynegativewaves then don't watch. Millennials and X'ers are the reason our world is going to the dogs!
is this music copy write free? I would love to use it in a short film project. Is that possible?