Barely Historical

1963 | Vacuums, Vows, & Vitamin D


Listen Later

1963 looks polished in the photos. Pastel dresses, church picnics, men in suits who definitely smell like cigarettes and bad coffee. Underneath, it is a year of civil rights marches, Cold War nerves, televised grief, and housewives being told a vacuum is the ultimate romantic gesture.

In this episode of Barely Historical, Jo and Amanda walk through 1963 like a yearbook you are not sure you actually want to sign. We cover the March on Washington, JFK’s assassination and the national gut punch that followed, the space race energy at NASA, zip codes, lava lamps, tab soda, and why teens were about to turn music into a full personality. Along the way we drag vintage magazine ads, side eye “for the woman who has everything” appliances, and peek at the pressure building behind those picture perfect suburban lives.

You will get: civil rights, Cold War tension, pop culture, politics, and a NASA engineer vs radio DJ “day in the life” that makes it painfully clear who is saving the world and who is just spinning vinyl and vibes. At the end we tease our Patreon deep dive on “Mother’s Little Helper” and why 50s and 60s housewives were not just “tired,” they were medicated.

If you like your history accurate, opinionated, and slightly disrespectful to bad design and worse men, you are in the right place.
Follow us wherever you ruin history.

Instagram: @barelyhistoricalpodcast

TikTok: @barelyhistoricalpodcast

Patreon: patreon.com/barelyhistorical

Contact: [email protected]

Credits Hosts: JoLynne and Amanda

Produced by Barely Historical

Theme music: Licensed track

...more
View all episodesView all episodes
Download on the App Store

Barely HistoricalBy Barely Historical