John Jenkins
John Jenkins
  • Видео 32
  • Просмотров 669 016
Skimming the nightime AM dial in 1971
This is from an audio tape made on a March night in 1971 in the days when the AM radio dial was filled with radio stations broadcasting all over the United States. It was a magical time for young kids who wanted to be disc-jockeys on the radio. Featured are WLW, WLS, WBT and other 50,000 watt clear-channel AM powerhouses of the day. Hear great DJs, newscasts and commercials from that night. Recorded by me at the time.
Просмотров: 250

Видео

Lem Secret Service Man Trailer
Просмотров 4354 года назад
Lem: Secret Service Man. An anecdotal look at the life of Lem Johns, SAIC for Lyndon Johnson. Stories of his career which spanned 3 presidents during the 50's and tumultuous 60's. Follow Lem's service as a revenue agent, in the street during the assassination of President Kennedy and the swearing in of a new president on Air Force One, and the subsequent life running the White House Detail for ...
Lisa Mason 1990s
Просмотров 1,6 тыс.5 лет назад
Lisa Mason on 103.7 The Q in the 1990s.
1963 The Year That Changed Everything
Просмотров 575 тыс.7 лет назад
1963 changed the direction of the country and Birmingham, Alabama was front and center through it all. "1963- The Year That Changed Everything" chronicles many of the events that happened that year. See and hear first-hand accounts of the boycotts, the Children's March, the integration of the University of Alabama, and the tragic bombing of the 16th Street Baptist Church. This film offers uniqu...
4ktest
Просмотров 1327 лет назад
Test 4k footage
1963 Excerpt Church Bombing
Просмотров 58 тыс.8 лет назад
An excerpt from the film "1963: The Year That Changed Everything" This segment covers the bombing of the 16th Street Church in Birmingham. Thomas Blanton, later convicted of that bombing is now being considered for parole. Sarah Collins Rudolph (the fifth surviving victim of the church bombing and sister of Addie Mae) talks about the events that day in 1963.
Linda & Roy Parnell
Просмотров 1969 лет назад
Linda & Roy Parnell
Dr. Bivins
Просмотров 5210 лет назад
Dr. Bivins of Urology Centers of Alabama talks about surgical treatments for bladder cancer.
Lem: Secret Service Man
Просмотров 4,1 тыс.12 лет назад
An excerpt from the John Jenkins film, Lem: Secret Service Man. After the assassination of President Kennedy and the swearing in of a new president on Air Force One, everyone on the president's staff headed back to Washington D.C. Nita Johns, wife of Special Agent In Charge Lem Johns, describes how she first heard about the assassination and the sadness that befell the country during these tumu...
WGACrevised2.mpg
Просмотров 10013 лет назад
News Talk Radio 580 Augusta Georgia.
WGAC Radio
Просмотров 69413 лет назад
WGAC 580 News Talk Radio Augusta Georgia
HD983 Augusta
Просмотров 29913 лет назад
HD 98.3 FM Augusta, Georgia, Hit Music, produced by edgevideo productions
HD 98.3 FM Radio Augusta Georgia
Просмотров 1,1 тыс.13 лет назад
HD 98.3 Hit Radio Augusta Georgia. Television Spot.
JamzSpot2edit3
Просмотров 8613 лет назад
JamzSpot2edit3
BOB FM Fayetteville NC
Просмотров 72913 лет назад
BOB FM Fayetteville NC
1077JamzEdit1
Просмотров 10713 лет назад
1077JamzEdit1
96.5 BOB FM Fayetteville
Просмотров 1,7 тыс.13 лет назад
96.5 BOB FM Fayetteville
SupercellsNew
Просмотров 4313 лет назад
SupercellsNew
HowStormsForm
Просмотров 8013 лет назад
HowStormsForm
intro
Просмотров 3213 лет назад
intro
The Hot NEW 97.5 FM Phoenix
Просмотров 65613 лет назад
The Hot NEW 97.5 FM Phoenix
The New Hot 95.7 Phoenix
Просмотров 41213 лет назад
The New Hot 95.7 Phoenix
RailRoad park Birmingham Alabama
Просмотров 2,1 тыс.13 лет назад
RailRoad park Birmingham Alabama
In Memory CW4 Durward B Jenkins
Просмотров 19513 лет назад
In Memory CW4 Durward B Jenkins
Steadicam DSLR
Просмотров 47313 лет назад
Steadicam DSLR
Petro Cosmetic Center Patient Interview
Просмотров 6614 лет назад
Petro Cosmetic Center Patient Interview
Dr. Melanie Petro patient testimonial and Juvederm
Просмотров 96614 лет назад
Dr. Melanie Petro patient testimonial and Juvederm
Larry_King_Helen_Thomas.mpg
Просмотров 41714 лет назад
Larry_King_Helen_Thomas.mpg
RoboticSurgicalEdgeVideo.mpg
Просмотров 39614 лет назад
RoboticSurgicalEdgeVideo.mpg
IGRT RADIATION TREATMENT OF CANCER
Просмотров 17 тыс.14 лет назад
IGRT RADIATION TREATMENT OF CANCER

Комментарии

  • @KishaAmenio06x
    @KishaAmenio06x День назад

    My mom would tell me stories about the white and black bathrooms in 1960 in Florida! She has very white skin. We are asian. And was allowed to use the white bathrooms! 😂😂😂

  • @Shane542
    @Shane542 3 дня назад

    I’ll bet Alabama and Mississippi, Louisiana etc were real proud of their mean spirited selves then! Shame on all of you who stood around and allowed this deplorable way of treating other people or participating in it! Ignorance is NO excuse…it’s just plain CRUEL!

  • @RashawnHebrewEL
    @RashawnHebrewEL 5 дней назад

    #US AKA JIM CROW AMERICANS \ HEBREW ISRAELITES will never get our just due in this life time bcuz we don't stick together unless we are attacked by another ethnicity publicly and most of all We all every single Negro=#ADOS / HEBREWS must worship JESUS LORD OF SPIRITS AND REPENT OF OUR SINS AND ANCESTORS SINS FOR PICKING THE CRIMINAL OVER JESUS

  • @beadingbusily
    @beadingbusily 21 день назад

    When they used the fire hydrants, the water pressure in everyone's place dropped, too. A relatively minor problem, but a problem anyway.

  • @harrybeavers9906
    @harrybeavers9906 Месяц назад

    This solution works with the black GP 7 too. A million thumbs up.

  • @bigdaddyhebrew5793
    @bigdaddyhebrew5793 Месяц назад

    America Forces you to forget about your History.

  • @ifoxxmedia3782
    @ifoxxmedia3782 Месяц назад

    My Son was born in 1963 And I was Discharged from The United States Air Force Honorably JFK was Assasinated November 22, 1963 the day before my Birthday ! My Son was born Friday September 13, 1963 I have Lived The “Black Experience” was my first My Play Production Coming Soon “Red, White and Blues Rise Up!

  • @ifoxxmedia3782
    @ifoxxmedia3782 Месяц назад

    A Must see Film for Today If you care about what happens to the Country! Vote 2024❤🎉

  • @EllisiaCathey-mg7qj
    @EllisiaCathey-mg7qj Месяц назад

    Does anyone know who sings this song at the end ?

  • @thenextsamcassell
    @thenextsamcassell Месяц назад

    thank you so much

  • @Nappyfox
    @Nappyfox Месяц назад

    Bro you are the man!!! Thank you! GOBRO!!!

  • @laphilliaandrews1739
    @laphilliaandrews1739 2 месяца назад

    Thank you!!!

  • @owenmarkey2394
    @owenmarkey2394 2 месяца назад

    It was such a simple solution. I was losing my mind. I laughed out loud and fixed the problem in one second after watching your video. Thank you!

  • @bladimirization
    @bladimirization 3 месяца назад

    Sir, you just saved me hours of trying. Thank you for your public service!!

  • @paulrobinson2697
    @paulrobinson2697 3 месяца назад

    Can’t actually see what u r doing to the cover…

  • @uiPublic
    @uiPublic 4 месяца назад

    Risen Christ Received a Lumen Skins so His Disciples Must've Found it Difficult Identify Easy?!

  • @toolguyslayer1
    @toolguyslayer1 5 месяцев назад

    41:50 They tried to tell you what was going on about religion you didn't listen that didn't give them a reason to find your church but yeah study religion the first study should be why is religion used the second one should be where does religion come from😮😢🤔🧐

  • @toolguyslayer1
    @toolguyslayer1 5 месяцев назад

    They couldn't tell you to go home before bubba and his friends come out to get you if the word got out that would be an issue so they did what they could and tried to warn you as best they could without actually talking to you😮😢

  • @blairfranklin7320
    @blairfranklin7320 5 месяцев назад

    This makes me very upset to hear this. Insane

  • @ericisrealite8626
    @ericisrealite8626 5 месяцев назад

    It's one thing I can't understand and that is how the sister to last see the girls answered the phone and was told that there is three minutes! But does nothing although there were bombings in Alabama going off like on the norm! Wow

  • @carydavidhoffson6014
    @carydavidhoffson6014 5 месяцев назад

    TV was showing what was going on were you can see what white people were doing to black people and children for themselves

  • @njmontgomery5338
    @njmontgomery5338 6 месяцев назад

    The year God sent TD to earth!

  • @GrantKloulubak-bf7bm
    @GrantKloulubak-bf7bm 6 месяцев назад

    Black american have gone through a lot.of racism but there still still standing

  • @randlejackson3091
    @randlejackson3091 6 месяцев назад

    SHAME on America...especially for arresting young CHILDREN for simply protesting for Human and Civil Rights! To all that stood before, during and after those times...may the Blessings of Our Father shower you and your families.💯🙏

  • @NellieGCabo
    @NellieGCabo 7 месяцев назад

    I was Born later of this Generation and I come from South East Asia by which I Consider myself Colored ,But in my Country, as my FORE FATHERS and Generations Before us, it was the Spaniards who Colonized in OUR COUNTRY who BULLY and DOWNGRADE the FILIPINOS BUT I NEVER HEARD of the SYSTEM ,SEGREGATIONS what so ever. During the time,it Was the FILIPINOS that was Considered 2nd Class Citizen / Minorities and the INVADERS are the LEADERS. I might NOT be ACCURATE but it is /was the Fact

  • @MrTazmrt
    @MrTazmrt 7 месяцев назад

    John Binkley slave owner

  • @berniecioffoletti3398
    @berniecioffoletti3398 7 месяцев назад

    If only Lincoln lived.

  • @laurac8659
    @laurac8659 7 месяцев назад

    Born in 1963, in the Deep South, white, not racist, not even unconscious bias! ❤ I grieve for these people’s stories 😢

  • @jimtrack3786
    @jimtrack3786 8 месяцев назад

    Being white and alive during this period, I am sickened by the treatment, the hostility, and the violent nature of the so called God fearing whites not just in the south, but also in Chicago where I grew up. The scars of racism will never heal. There will always be racists and race baiters. There is however a great silent majority on both sides who pray for peace. Count me with them.

  • @loditx7706
    @loditx7706 8 месяцев назад

    This is inspirational! Thank you! Love the music! ❤ stay strong. 💪 🦾

  • @loditx7706
    @loditx7706 8 месяцев назад

    They used those poor dogs like the Nazis. You can’t blame the dogs, blame the men. I have a part pittie who is the most friendly, gallomping dog in the world. I live in a building where the people are about half black and half white. I am from Texas so it is strange to me not to have a significant Mexican presence, but anyway when I walk my dog all his friends say, “It’s McBride! Hello, McBride!” And he runs up for rubs and hugs. Most everybody loves McBride, but there’s a few who shout at me to short leash him or won’t get on the elevator with him. I understand the fear, but it makes me sad.

  • @loditx7706
    @loditx7706 8 месяцев назад

    @muurisoros: I can’t tell you why that is so. I was raised with no racial prejudice. My parents have been dead a long time, so I can’t ask them, but I don’t think they made any conscious decisions; that was just how it was. But I kept worrying in my mind about how it happened. And then looking back I realized that never once at home had I heard a racial slur or epithet. If there was any news that involved something bad that happened to a minority they would express indignation or sympathy. I remember one time my mother reacted in a way that demonstrated their beliefs. My maternal grandfather worked for the railroad. He was a brakeman and one night fell from the caboose and lost a leg when the train ran over him. Well, nobody in the train noticed him missing and when he didn’t come home my grandmother went to the train yard looking for him and then they started a search for him and found him, but he’d been laying out there for hours. The doctor said what saved his life was that when the train went over his leg the heavy wheel had crushed the blood vessels and that had kept him from bleeding our. Anyway, he was obviously not dead, so his friends came to visit him. A black man who had some job at the rail yard came and knocked on the door to visit him. My grandmother went to the door and wouldn’t let him in. She told him he had to go to the back door. He has come to me in my family’s history as told by my mother as “Lightning”. That was the nickname the white men he worked with called him. I don’t know if his black friends called him that, too, but I feel it was a white practice at that time to bestow nicknames to black people and call them that, rather than the dignity of their own names. That belittles a person and must have hurt and angered some; I think it was tolerated because the black person had no choice. Lightning did go to the back door to visit my granddaddy and stayed an hour talking and laughing and cheering him up. I think that speaks well of my grandfather, that he had such an easy and caring relationship with a black coworker. Lightning never came to visit again, probably because of my grandmother’s disapproval. When my mother told me the story she was disturbed by my grandmother’s action. I remember that. It was in these ways, daily behavior and actions that my parents raised an child without racial prejudice. Well, not entirely. This story of my grandparents took place in East Texas in the 1930s. My family was poor, probably there were black families better off than mine was, not my nuclear family, but the extended family. We did not suffer the depression as much as some because my grandfathers and all my uncles worked for the railroads and had steady jobs. My Daddy was career Navy so that was always secure, too, and had many benefits: health and dental care, base shopping for groceries and such. My Daddy met many nationalities whose ships would be in same ports as his ship sometimes and the crews would mingle. Sailors would bring sailors from other ships to their “mess” (I always thought that a strange name to call the kitchen and dining areas) to eat and the American crews would visit Russian or British ships or others. He did not like British cuisine, but he never commented about the food on other nation’s ships so I guess they were ok. During the 50s in school we had three kinds of drills. Fire drills where we all lined up and practiced leaving the building quickly, tornado drills where we had to go into hallways and sit against the walls to be away from glass, but in more danger, I thought, from being crushed from building collapse, but nobody asked my opinion. And “the bomb” drill, when we had to crouch under our desks. What that would accomplish to protect us if the Russians decided to drop an A bomb on anyplace we lived I never understood. We weren’t afraid of Russians in my family because my father had known many and liked them. Maybe world peace would be achieved if we all ate in each other’s “messes”. When my children were in school they’d ask if they could have some friend over to spend the night and I’d say, ok. I never knew until the child came through the door what they were, black, Mexican, Asian, alien, cause it just didn’t matter. Now a kosher Jew would have been a problem, but probably would not have come to stay over anyway, cause they would know we certainly didn’t keep kosher. I grew up in a very proJewish, pro Israeli household, so some prejudice against Arabs was passed on, but vaguely, not in any violent way. So that’s my belief in how to raise kids who do not feel prejudice. I am very old and my older boy is married to a woman who was born in Shanghai; my grandson Is beautiful. My only grandchild. I have noticed a mixed race child frequently is. The deeper the gene pool the better the swimmers maybe. I love all of you and I am sorry everyone doesn’t feel that way. Because of my work as a social worker I was invited to make a presentation to a regional NAACP meeting about sex education classes my unit was doing in small rural communities. It was fun, but halfway through I commented to a black coworker that I was the only white person in the room and she said, “now you know how it feels” and I said, “Not really, none of y’all have ropes or cans of gasoline.” Everyone at our table choked and laughed. Cause see, I was eating in their “mess” as a guest. Best wishes and luck to all y’all. ❤

  • @Queen_D777
    @Queen_D777 8 месяцев назад

    No comment

  • @blacckvoices
    @blacckvoices 9 месяцев назад

    They always say put the past behind How the hell can anyone forget shit like this! GTFOH!

  • @HMS1955-hs6zi
    @HMS1955-hs6zi 10 месяцев назад

    Did it change "everything"?

    • @jamesjohnson7519
      @jamesjohnson7519 8 месяцев назад

      Yes it did change everything some whites had black friends and can hangout and go to work together. Some whites in that time didn't wanted to change their view on black people. Karen's still hate black people still. It's 2023 it been all over the news, calling cops on black people that minding there business. Cops taking the Karen side

  • @jb-vb8un
    @jb-vb8un 10 месяцев назад

    Johnson and the Democrat plantation The New Deal Coalition began to fracture as union and religious leaders demanded support for civil rights, upsetting the party's traditional base of Democrat segregationists who themselves became dependent on government largess. In 1948 the party platform for the first time in its history showed some support for civil rights. The Republicans passed civil rights legislation with the 13th Amendment, 14th Amendment, 15th Amendment, Emancipation Proclamation, the Civil Rights Act of 1875, and first passed anti-lynching legislation in 1922, which Democrats killed by filibusters. The party's reversal on civil rights culminated with Democratic President Lyndon B. Johnson finally signing the bi-partisan Civil Rights Act of 1964, which he called "the N****r Bill."[143] In lobbying fellow Democrats for the bill, Johnson said, "I'll have them n*gg*rs voting Democratic for two hundred years." Democrats tried to block passage by filibustering for 75 hours, including a 14-hour and 13-minute speech by the Exalted Cyclops, Sen. Robert Byrd,[146] who later became Senate Democrat Leader in the Reagan era. The filibuster failed when the Senate invoked cloture for only the second time since 1927. The law was intended to block Republican gains in the South followed by buying off Blacks with Great Society welfare and affirmative action programs. According to LBJ biographer Robert Caro, Johnson told his chauffeur: "Let me tell you one thing, n*gg*r. As long as you are black, and you’re gonna be black till the day you die, no one’s gonna call you by your g*dd*mn name. So no matter what you are called, n*gg*r, you just let it roll off your back like water, and you’ll make it. Just pretend you’re a g*dd*mn piece of furniture." Johnson's big government giveaways and affirmative action programs attracted Blacks for the first time. African-Americans formed an anomalous coalition with low-income white Democrat racists who were dependent on New Deal and Great Society welfare programs.[149] Both African Americans and racist Democrats opposed Republican efforts to maintain fiscal and budgetary sanity. The coalition gave cover to bigoted Democrats to hide their racism, while accusing Republicans who wanted to balance the budget of prejudice. Malcolm X described it this way: "The white Liberal differs from the white Conservative only in one way; the Liberal is more deceitful, more hypocritical, than the Conservative. Both want power, but the White Liberal is the one who has perfected the art of posing as the Negro's friend and benefactor and by winning the friendship and support of the Negro, the White Liberal is able to use the Negro as a pawn or a weapon in this political football game, that is constantly raging, between the White Liberals and the White Conservatives. The American Negro is nothing, but a political "football game" that is constantly raging between the white liberals and white conservatives. Contrary to popular Democrat mythology, Democrat Governor George Wallace won the South in 1968 in a three-way contest against Nixon and Humphrey. There was no Nixon "Southern Strategy." The South continued to reject Yankee liberals (Humphrey in 1968, McGovern in 1972, Mondale in 1984, Dukakis in 1988, Kerry in 2004). At the state and local level, the Republicans made slow but steady gains. As racism in the South declined, Republicans in the South increased. The South became competitive in presidential politics as early as the 1920s and by 1980 gave strong support to Republican Ronald Reagan, rejecting northern liberal candidates. Democrats responded with a new Southern Strategy - putting Southerners at the top of the ticket - Carter in 1976 and 1980, Clinton in 1992 and 1996, Gore in 2000, and calling Yankee Republicans "racist."

  • @conniebaker1958
    @conniebaker1958 10 месяцев назад

    I don’t get now and didn’t understand then. What makes the difference what color your skin is? Why did the white people make the black people go to the basements at restaurants or hospitals? Why? I’m white and native am I to live only on a reservation or ???? It Some things have got better since then but the hate needs to stop now. If people would Understand we all bleed the same color. We have the same body parts. Our biggest differences is male or female. The color of our skin shouldn’t make a difference. Jesus loves us all regardless. We all have to live here on earth. As my granny once said if we were all the same what a boring place this would be. I agree with him, We are all in the big Salad bowl 🙏

  • @cancelchannel3394
    @cancelchannel3394 10 месяцев назад

    Amen to a big American salid ❤❤❤😇😇😇😊😊😊🥰🥰🥰

  • @cancelchannel3394
    @cancelchannel3394 10 месяцев назад

    We need Donald J.Trump back in the President's chair, he will make life better for us all 😊

    • @jamesjohnson7519
      @jamesjohnson7519 8 месяцев назад

      Trump family is part of the KKK and he started the Karen movement against black people

  • @cancelchannel3394
    @cancelchannel3394 10 месяцев назад

    America is on a path back to the dark ages, under the democratic party, we need to stand up and choose a better path for our future 🤨

  • @cancelchannel3394
    @cancelchannel3394 10 месяцев назад

    It's shameful the way democrats treated folks over the history of America, and to this day and age "/

  • @therealchuck1353
    @therealchuck1353 10 месяцев назад

    My gratitude to those then children who are my elders❤..What they fought for can never be relinquished. ✊️🤨

  • @therealchuck1353
    @therealchuck1353 10 месяцев назад

    😬🔥🇺🇲🔥

  • @geekmeee
    @geekmeee 10 месяцев назад

    Why are we always surprised… When were shown examples that Neanderthals still roam the earth 🌍

  • @Nazokod0mo
    @Nazokod0mo 10 месяцев назад

    It’s unfortunate that ppl like nba young boy are luring the youth into their own demise. All that fighting for nothing

    • @jamesjohnson7519
      @jamesjohnson7519 8 месяцев назад

      That's the problem people blame gangs and rappers for the youth, when parents aren't acting like parents, trying to be their children friends instead. I never look up to no rapper or gang member growing up. My hero was my grandmother and my mom. I never follow the streets rules. Have a 22 year old son and 11 year old son. I teach them my childhood ways. Still got come in the house when the street lights come on. If my son have a day off from work. He in some organizations volunteer his time to help. My 11 year old still act like an 11 year old, no leaving the house when he wants to and hanging out with out bad kids. Parents need to go the old ways with their children and teens. I was born 1985, grew up in the 90s. So yes my two sons on the 90s parent way rule. My 22 year old son doesn't like going to clubs,because people don't know how to act right. Yes they listen to rappers music but they not acting like crazy fools in the street.

  • @57highland
    @57highland 10 месяцев назад

    Bombings in Birmingham, yes. *"There have been more unsolved bombings of Negro homes and churches in Birmingham than in any other city in this nation. These are the hard, the brutal, and the unbelievable facts."* Martin Luther King, Jr., "Letter from the Birmingham City Jail", April 1963

  • @57highland
    @57highland 10 месяцев назад

    There were three major events over just two days in the second week of June that year: President Kennedy's televised speech on civil rights, the murder of Medgar Evers, and the immolation (setting one's self on fire) death of the Buddhist monk in Saigon which was another turning point in the early phase on the Vietnam conflict. I think those things happened on June 11-12, 1963.

  • @abbyarnold4477
    @abbyarnold4477 10 месяцев назад

    I was born in 1964 and I am proud . Great year because I was born .😅

    • @loditx7706
      @loditx7706 8 месяцев назад

      I agree. I had my first child in 1964.

  • @SN-ty2rg
    @SN-ty2rg 10 месяцев назад

    Eventually Dr.Martin l.king, didn't stand for the integration in the long run and I agree. We never needed to fight to be included or integrated with their establishments, we just needed justice against brutality and leave us alone.

  • @SN-ty2rg
    @SN-ty2rg 10 месяцев назад

    My dad lived through this Era and he did not have the experience that the people had in Birmingham. However I do respect most of what the Civil rights movement protest, but I never agree with the integration process of it all, because we did not need to eat at their restaurants or go to their schools or any of their establishments, we could build our own just like the other races of people did. The other races of people wasn't fighting , marching, protesting or even trying to do business with the white races 🤔 period. So I do believe in the protesting for justice as for the criminal activities against us but not the part where we need to integrate, they can have their establishments and we can have ours.