- Toy Story is that old?
- God, I can't even imagine
what it would be like
to just turn on the news
and see that as something
happening around you.
That's just history to me.
But for them, it's breaking news.
♪ (rock intro) ♪
- Hey, guys. It's Jack and Mikaela.
We've partnered with Adobe
to show you how we edit
our videos like the one
you're about to watch.
- Stay tuned to the end of the video
for more information,
but if you wanna check it out now,
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- Now, back to the video.
- (FBE) How well acquainted are you
with pop culture?
- I've heard of it.
What's that?
- I mean, all I do is watch TV,
so I think enough. Probably too much.
- (FBE) Today, we're gonna be showing
you 10 of the pop culture events
that happened from the last 50 years
that are all celebrating
some sort of anniversary in 2020.
- Okay. That's fun.
- (FBE) We're gonna start
with a news article today
that released 50 years ago
on December 31, 1970.
- "Paul quits the Beatles."
Wow.
- That was very devastating.
Paul left the Beatles.
So, that was the end
of the first real rock and roll band.
- Holy [censored].
That was that long ago?
I mean, I'm saying
that was that long ago
like I was alive,
but that's so wild.
- (FBE) On April 10th, 1970,
news broke out around the globe
that Paul McCartney was leaving
the Beatles to pursue a solo career.
Although fans were hoping
that McCartney and his bandmates
would get back together,
on December 31st of that same year,
McCartney filed a lawsuit
for the band's formal dissolution.
- That is pretty crazy.
- It was just a shock to see
a band that was so iconic
to just dissipate.
- He was a great songwriter.
He still is.
I mean, he's still keeping it going.
But John Lennon was awesome too.
And I know they had a competition.
They had a little friendly competition
with writing songs.
And they wrote some great songs, man,
that still stand the test of time.
- Those guys,
they were young at the time,
and they had young families,
and they just artistically
started going
into different directions.
But it was devastating for their fans.
- (Chase) Live from New York...
- It's Saturday Night!
- Chevy Chase, baby.
Chevy Chase was the man.
- Oh my god. Samurai warrior.
Come on, you guys.
- (samurai) Wa-sha!
- This show's been on forever!
(laughs)
- Look at his stupid face.
- That's what happens
when you don't tip!
- (warrior grunting in pain)
- This is insane.
It's so weird to see
how different it looks back then.
- Look how young Chevy Chase is.
He's a tiny little baby.
- (samurai yells in foreign language)
- (chuckles)
- (guest) Room service.
- (samurai yells in foreign language)
- That's fine.
- Dude, Belushi was
the freakin' funniest.
- (FBE) On October 11th, 1975,
NBC debuted Saturday Night Live.
45 years later,
SNL is still going strong,
reportedly averaging
just under 10 million viewers
every Saturday night,
making it one of the longest-running
American TV shows of all time.
- That's insane.
I mean, I genuinely thought
it started in the '80s or the '90s.
- Saturday Night Live is one
of the best ways to just trace history
through comedy,
'cause it's very much so based
on what's happening
in the world around us.
- It's crazy how a show
can have so much influence
and how really, there's so much
political meaning underneath,
so much social commentary underneath,
but on the surface,
it's supposed to be something
that's entertaining and funny.
- (reporter) This evening,
John Lennon arrived...
- Oh, you guys.
This was so terrible.
- (reporter) ...at the emergency room
at the Roosevelt Hospital.
- Oh, yeah.
- (reporter) He was dead on...
- He got killed, man.
- This was 40 years ago?
- (Tom) Good morning, everyone.
I'm Tom Brokaw.
This is today, December 9th.
I'm here with Jane Pauley and...
- This is so sad.
I've never seen any clips of this.
I just know that it happened.
- (Tom) I'm here with Jane Pauley,
and this entire half hour,
we devoted to the murder
of John Lennon, ex-Beatle...
- Ugh. Oh my god.
- (Tom) ...best-known musicians
and most influential people
of his time.
- God, I can't even imagine
what it would be like
to just turn on the news
and see that as something
happening around you.
That's just history to me.
But for them, it's breaking news.
- There are moments
that happened in American history,
where collectively everyone goes,
"Oh my god."
Like, when JFK was shot,
my parents talk about it.
Everyone knows where they were.
You know, I was listening to this
on the radio.
I used to listen to radio.
And it just was unfathomable.
- The thing about John Lennon
is he wasn't afraid
to say what he really thought
no matter how it made him look,
and that's gonna put a target
on your back, so we're all better off
for him having existed.
♪ (upbeat rock music) ♪
(thunder crashing)
- (voice-over) When you get hold
of the Nintendo...
- (chuckles) Nintendo.
Oh, damn.
- This was just before my time.
- (voice-over) ...R.O.B.,
the video robot.
- Love the good ol' '80s music.
- Video game commercials
used to be so much cooler,
'cause the games looked
so much [censored],
so they had to make it,
like, "Whoa! In your face!"
But now we just show the game.
- Wow. This is like--
it looks like those
vintage video games
in vintage arcades.
But this was brand new at a point.
- Yup.
- (voice-over) Batteries not included.
Super Mario Bros. and other games...
- The whole set!
And I knew I would never get it.
- (FBE) Although it had launched
in Japan two years earlier,
the Nintendo Entertainment System
made its American debut 35 years ago.
The robot featured in this commercial,
R.O.B., which stands
for Robotic Operating Buddy,
R.O.B. was initially used
to market the NES
to make a game system
seem more sophisticated
than previous game consoles.
- Sophisticated?
All right.
- I look at this, and I see
all these accessories going on.
And now, it's almost like,
the more simple the better.
I know that we have so much technology
at our fingertips,
but when you really look
at everything, it's truly impressive
just over the past 50 years
how far everything has come.
- (Peter) What else
could we be forgetting?
- Home Alone.
- Oh my god.
And it's Moira Rose...
- (Kate) Kevin!
- ...for you Schitt's Creek fans.
♪ (upbeat music) ♪
- Wow. Oh, Macaulay.
- How do you forget your kid?
I just wanna know.
- This is such a timeless movie.
- This movie's such a classic.
I feel like everyone has seen it
or it's always on TV
during the holidays.
- Ooh!
It hurts watching this trailer.
- I mean, it was just
crazy dumb slapstick
but, you know,
you wanna capture
the American imagination?
You gotta do something really stupid.
- (FBE) So, that was Home Alone,
and it will be celebrating
its 30th anniversary in 2020.
As of filming this episode,
the Home Alone franchise is reportedly
expecting a reboot of this movie.
- How many times
can they forget their kid?
I feel like after the first one,
you get a leash.
- I don't necessarily love
when people touch classics like that,
(laughs) but we'll see.
I'm open to it.
♪ (grand brass music) ♪ 
- Walt Disney. Okay, Pixar.
- (Sarge) Yes, sir!
- (gasps) Toy Story is that old?!
- This is one of the best movies
literally of all times.
- (Sarge) Move, move,
move, move, move!
It's a...
(over monitor) It's a big one.
- (voice-over) Walt Disney Pictures
presents...
- I'ma cry. I might do it.
- (voice-over) ...the story
of two toys.
- So classic.
I can even see the difference
in animation between now
and the new ones.
- I can't even picture a world
where you're just casually like,
"Wanna go see Toy Story in theaters?"
It's the biggest thing
on the planet.
- (Buzz) To infinity and beyond!
- I low-key, like, let's just stop.
Let's just watch the movie
for a minute.
- Toy Story was big.
That started, you know,
a big situation when it came
to kids' films like that
and bringing characters to life
and the animation comes to life.
It's like, that stuff started
a whole trend that'll always...
- (FBE) It's pretty impressive.
- ...be around forever.
- (FBE) Toy Story was released
in November of 1995,
and the rest is history.
It was Pixar's first feature attempt
as well as one of the first
all 3D animated movies.
- Wow. That's so crazy.
- The whole thing from, you know,
when Disney cartoons were like--
people were animating them
pretty much, I think,
to the whole computer generated thing.
It was pretty crazy
when you think about it like that
in the last quarter century.
And the Toy Story franchise
is amazing. It's iconic.
(silence)
- ♪ Did it again ♪
Wow.
- Damn! Britney Spears.
Oh my god.
- Oh my god. I love Britney!
- We was like, "Who is this girl?"
- Ah, she's great.
- And I'm gonna be scared
at how old this frickin' video is.
Let me say that much.
- (FBE) So, 20 years ago,
in December of 2000,
Britney Spears released
her second studio album
titled, "Oops!... I Did It Again."
This album and single would go on
to sell over three million copies
in its first week and debuted
at number one on the Billboard 200.
- That's it.
She had the marketing team behind her.
And she did great her first album too.
So, you know, she did it again.
- That's the era of radio,
you feel me?
That's the era of MTV,
and MTV is all about
music videos, you feel me?
Today, you can go on SoundCloud,
you can go on YouTube,
you can go on Spotify,
you can go on a person's Instagram
to hear their music.
It's popular because music
is controlled by a small group
of people who say,
"You're gonna listen to this,
and if you want something else,
good luck."
♪ (soft instrumental music) ♪
- YouTube!
- Whoa! 2005.
- Search the videos! (chuckles)
- It looks like Google.
That's so weird
that it used to look like that.
- I remember we used to have
to use proxies in high school
to be able to get into YouTube
or Myspace back then.
- It took me a minute to really--
my brain to comprehend
what this actually is.
And it's been a short period
of time from the time of that
of just it skyrocketing.
- (FBE) So, 15 years ago,
above a pizzeria
and Japanese restaurant
in San Mateo, California,
three PayPal employees,
Chad Hurley, Steve Chen,
and Jawed Karim would go on
to start one of the biggest
video sharing websites
the internet has seen to date.
And because of them,
we are here today.
- That's so cool.
That's honestly--
that just gave me chills.
- It's not even just a platform
at this point.
It's a way of life.
Every single artist's music video
is put on here.
Every trailer for every movie
is put on YouTube.
This is the way to get
any information in the world
and market anything is YouTube.
- I love the ordinary person
becoming extraordinary
within what they wanna do
with this platform.
To have a platform like this
to be able to do that
without being caught up
in the corporate America
or red tape of this, that,
and the other,
and just can be creative?
Ah. (claps)
It's fantastic.
- (crowd cheering)
- (Lady Gaga) I never thought...
- Lady Gaga!
- (Lady Gaga) ...to hold
my meat purse.
- (chuckles) The meat dress!
- (Lady Gaga) ...nervous for tonight.
- A good Lady Gaga outfit,
and a star was born.
- (Lady Gaga) I love you so much.
Thank you to my family and...
- See, this, to me--
I feel like this outfit,
I saw it maybe five years ago.
- (Lady Gaga) ...I'd announce
the name of my new record.
- I love her. She's so pure!
- (Lady Gaga) It's called
"Born This Way."
- Wow. That's so crazy.
That was such a big deal.
- (FBE) So, that clip
was of Lady Gaga accepting
her award for the 2010
Video of the Year Award
at the VMAs for "Bad Romance."
As you may have gathered,
it wasn't her 14 nominations
or eight wins that caught
everyone's attention.
It was her meat dress.
- Oh my god.
It's like aged beef now.
(laughs)
(rim shot)
- Everyone's [censored] criticized her
for the [censored],
and now it's like everyone
would've glorified her,
like, "Oh yeah, stunning
[censored] meat dress"
or whatever, but back then,
I guess people were just like, "No."
- Lady Gag wasn't really
respected as an artist until then,
because I remember seeing this
and everyone being like,
"Oh, she's in a meat dress.
That's so weird. I don't like it.
She's just a weird person."
And then, just slowly watching her
be respected as a real artist
and then seeing "A Star Is Born,"
I love just being able
to see the whole timeline of it.
(silence)
- Left shark?
- Oh, I remember this.
At the Super Bowl,
they see them sharks dancing.
- Wait. Was this--
this feels so much longer.
This feels like
10 years ago at least. (chuckles)
- This is how you're ending it?
You started with the Beatles.
- Oh, man. He's getting it.
He's getting it.
That's all I could say
is he's an icon.
- This isn't even the best
shark-based pop culture icon!
Where is Baby Shark?
- (FBE) So, back in 2015,
now five years ago,
the Super Bowl launched
an unwitting star.
During the song "Teenage Dream"
by Katy Perry, she was flanked
by two dancers dressed
in shark costumes,
and the left shark drew attention
due to his off-script choreography.
The moment quickly caught fire
on social media,
and the left shark became
an internet sensation.
- Mm. Nope.
Don't remember that at all.
- It's a big moment.
The Super Bowl, everybody's watching.
It's one of the most watched
events in history.
- This is so crazy.
It's like, you see how times
have changed. The first thing
was a newspaper clipping
back when newspapers were a thing
for when the Beatles broke up.
And the last one is internet culture
and sharks going viral
with a meat dress
somewhere in the middle.
- I don't know how we got to the point
that we are now with technology.
And then also, why does time
fly so fast? I don't get it.
- Hey, guys! Jack and Mikaela.
As we mentioned before,
we partnered with Adobe
to show you how we edit our videos.
- Now, we make a ton of videos,
so staying organized
is super important,
which is why we're so excited
to tell you about Productions.
It's this great tool
in Adobe Premiere Pro
that helps us stay organized,
so we can continue to make the content
that you guys know and love.
- This new tools helps you
be more collaborative with your team.
So, if you're making videos
with your coworkers or your friends
and you wanna learn
how to be more efficient,
check out the links
in the description for some tutorials.
Thanks for watching!
- Thanks for watching
this commemorative episode
of The 10s.
- If you liked this video,
make sure you hit that Like button.
- Thanks for watching, guys. Bye!
- Hey, everyone!
Lauren, producer here at FBE.
Thank you guys so much
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