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Paleofuture

A history of the future that never was

Past Imperfect

History with all the interesting bits left in


January 29, 2013

3D-TV, Automated Cooking and Robot Housemaids: Walter Cronkite Tours the Home of 2001

Walter Cronkite gives a tour of the home office of 2001 on his show The 21st Century (1967)

Legendary news anchor Walter Cronkite’s regular half-hour CBS documentary program “The 21st Century” was a glorious peek into the future. Every Sunday night viewers of the late 1960s were shown all the exciting technological advancements they could expect to see just 30 or 40 years down the road. The March 12, 1967, episode gave people a look at the home of the 21st century, complete with 3D television, molded on-demand serving dishes, videophones, inflatable furniture, satellite newspaper delivery and robot servants.

Exterior of the house of the future (1967)

Cronkite spends the first five minutes of the program deriding the evils of urban sprawl and insisting that everyone dreams of a house in seclusion on a few acres of land. Cronkite and his interviewee Philip Johnson insist that moving back into ever denser cities is the wave of the future. It’s interesting then that Cronkite must pivot before showing us the standalone home of tomorrow. This would be a second home, Cronkite tells us — far removed from the high density reality that everyone of the 21st century must face:

Let’s push our imaginations ahead and visit the home of the 21st century. This could be someone’s second home, hundreds of miles away from the nearest city. It consists of a cluster of pre-fabricated modules. This home is as self-sufficient as a space capsule. It recirculates its own water supply and draws all of its electricity from its own fuel cell.

Walter Cronkite in the living room of the future (1967)

Living Room of 2001

The living room of the future is a place of push-button luxury and a mid-century modern aesthetic. The sunken living room may feature inflatable furniture and disposable paper kids’ chairs, but Cronkite assures us that there’s no reason the family of the future couldn’t have a rocking chair — to remind us that “both the present and the future are merely extensions of the past.”

Once inside we might find ourselves in a glass enclosure where the lint and dirt we’ve accumulated during our trip is removed electrostatically. Now we step into the living room. What will the home of the 21st century look like inside? Well, I’m sitting in the living room of a mock-up of the home of the future, conceived by Philco-Ford and designed by Paul McCobb. This is where the family of the 21st century would entertain guests. This room has just about everything one would want: a big (some might say too big) full color 3D television screen, a stereo sound system that could fill the room with music, and comfortable furniture for relaxed conversation.

If that living room looks familiar it may be because it’s the same house from the Internet-famous short film “1999 A.D.” produced in 1967 (often mistakenly dated as 1969, which would make the moon landing stuff less impressive) and starring a young Wink Martindale.

Walter Cronkite showing off the control panel for the 3D-TV of the year 2001 (1967)

Cronkite explains that a recent government report concludes that Americans of the year 2000 will have a 30-hour work week and month-long vacations “as the rule.” He goes on to tell viewers that this will mean much more leisure time for the average person:

A lot of this new free time will be spent at home. And this console controls a full array of equipment to inform, instruct and entertain the family of the future. The possibilities for the evening’s program are called up on this screen. We could watch a football game, or a movie shown in full color on our big 3D television screen. The sound would come from these globe-like speakers. Or with the push of a button we could momentarily escape from our 21st century lives and fill the room with stereophonic music from another age.

Home Office of 2001

Later, Cronkite takes us into the home office of the future. Here the newspaper is said to be delivered by satellite, and printed off on a gigantic broadsheet printer so that the reader of the future can have a deadtree copy.

Walter Cronkite shows how the newspaper of the future will be delivered via satellite and printed (1967)

This equipment here will allow [the businessman of the future] to carry on normal business activities without ever going to an office away from home.

This console provides a summary of news relayed by satellite from all over the world. Now to get a newspaper copy for permanent reference I just turn this button, and out it comes. When I’ve finished catching up on the news I might check the latest weather. This same screen can give me the latest report on the stocks I might own. The telephone is this instrument here — a mock-up of a possible future telephone, this would be the mouthpiece. Now if I want to see the people I’m talking with I just turn the button and there they are. Over here as I work on this screen I can keep in touch with other rooms of the house through a closed-circuit television system.

With equipment like this in the home of the future we may not have to go to work, the work would come to us. In the 21st century it may be that no home will be complete without a computerized communications console.

One of the more interesting gadgets in the office of the future that we can clearly see but Cronkite never addresses is the “electronic correspondence machine” of the future, otherwise known as the “home post office.” In the film “1999 A.D.” we see Wink Martindale’s character manipulating a pen on the machine, which allows for “instant written communication between individuals anywhere in the world.”

Kitchen of 2001

Walter Cronkite in Philco-Ford kitchen of the future (1967)

The kitchen of the future includes plastic plates which are molded on-demand, a technology that up until just a few years ago must have seemed rather absurd. With the slow yet steady rise of home 3D printers this idea isn’t completely ridiculous, though we still have quite a ways to go.

After dinner, the plates are melted down, along with any leftover food and re-formed for the next meal. It’s never explained why the molding and re-molding of plates would be any easier or more efficient than simply allowing the machine to just wash the dishes. But I suppose a simple dishwasher wouldn’t have seemed terribly futuristic to the people of 1967.

This might be the kitchen in the home of the future. Preparation of a meal in the 21st century could be almost fully automatic. Frozen or irradiated foods are stored in that area over there.

Meals in this kitchen of the future are programmed. The menu is given to the automatic chef via typewriter or punched computer cards. The proper prepackaged ingredients are conveyed from the storage area and moved into this microwave oven where they are cooked in seconds. When the meal is done the food comes out here. When the meal is ready, instead of reaching for a stack of plates I just punch a button and the right amount of cups and saucers are molded on the spot.

When I’ve finished eating, there will be no dishes to wash. The used plates will be melted down again, the leftovers destroyed in the process and the melted plastic will be ready to be molded into clean plates when I need them next.

Robot Servants of 2001

Later in the program Cronkite takes us to the research laboratory of London’s Queen Mary College where we see robots in development. Cronkite interviews Professor M. W. Thring about the future of household robotics.

M. W. Thring (left) and Walter Cronkite watch two robots in action (1967)

Cronkite assures us that the robots are not coming to take over the world, but instead to simply make us breakfast:

Robots are coming. Not to rule the world, but to help around the house. In the home of 2001 machines like these may help cook your breakfast and serve it too. We may wake up each morning to the patter of little feet — robot feet.

A robot arm holds a juice glass in the March 12, 1967 episode of the CBS program “The 21st Century”

During the interview, the professor addresses one of the most important questions of the futuristic household robot: will it look like a human?

CRONKITE: Professor Thring, what are these?

THRING: These are the first prototypes of small scale models of the domestic housemaid of the future.

CRONKITE: The domestic housemaid of the future?

THRING: Yes, the maid of all work. To do all the routine work of the house, all the uninteresting jobs that the housewife would prefer not to do. You also give it instructions about decisions — it mustn’t run over the baby and things like that. And then it remembers those instructions and whenever you tell it to do that particular program it does that program.

CRONKITE: What is the completed machine going to look like? Is it going to look like a human being?

THRING: No. There’s no reason at all why it should look like a human being. The only thing is it’s got to live in a human house and live in a human house. It’s got to go through doors and climb up stairs and so on. But there’s no other reason why it should look like a human being. For example, it can have three or four hands if it wants to, it can have eyes in its feet, it can be entirely different.

Thring explains that the robot would put itself away in the cupboard where it would also recharge itself whenever it needed to do so — not unlike a Roomba today, or the automatic push-button vacuum cleaners of “The Jetsons,” which first aired just five years earlier.

I first saw this program many years ago while visiting the Paley Center for Media in New York. I asked Skip over at AV Geeks if he had a copy and it just so happens he did. He digitized it and released it as a DVD that’s now available for purchase, called Future Is Not As Good As It Used To Be. Many thanks to Skip for digging out this retro-futuristic gem. And if anyone from CBS is reading this, please release “The 21st Century” online or with a DVD box set. Cronkite’s show is one of the greatest forward-looking artifacts of the 20th century.



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13 Comments »

  1. Jameseq says:

    i love it, the exterior and interior still look futuresque

    even now ‘Exterior of the house of the future (1967)’ looks cool n futuristic.
    it all looks so yummy, so optimistic – better than this dull pedestrian age, horizons, possibilities

  2. davonskevort says:

    most of the stuff is spot on but not what we call it in todays terms. very impressive. flat screen 3d tv (be it about 10 years early), desktop computers, skype… with microphone that was spot on, printers, sat com system.

  3. It’s amazing to think how far we have come with certain technologies over the last half century. However, it is also disappointing to see how little we have improved other things. The dishwasher, for example, has undergone great improvements, but the operator must still prepare the dishes, load them and then store them once they have been sanitized. Surely, we can come up with a more automated process for this?

    It’s fun to look back and see where we thought we would be compared to where we actually are. Thanks for sharing this great trip back in time!

  4. Daniel Kim says:

    The home closed-circuit video in the home office is a bit creepy, though. Fortunately, the wife and daughter were just making the bed, instead of in the middle of dressing.

  5. Ben says:

    I know the story behind the remoldable dinnerware. I can’t find a link for this, but the gist is:

    China is fired in a kiln at high temperatures for long periods of time. This requires lots of energy. The same amount of energy could be used in the remoldable dinnerware over from what I remember a 5 year period.

    I really wish I had a link, but that is the gist.

  6. Scot says:

    One thing I don’t get – if in the future people will be required to live in ever denser cities but with second homes in the country, and those country homes have offices where “the work comes to you” then why would you ever need to go into the city?

  7. A couple of years ago, I was waiting to catch a plane home from Johannesburg and was hanging out in the departure lounge checking out a display (from Panasonic, I think) of some great stonking huge 3D TV sets — and y’know, I just wasn’t that impressed. You had to stand a certain distance away and at a certain angle for the 3D effect to work, and even then it was like a really huge version of those funky little rings you used to get in a box of Cracker Jack, where you tilt it one way and it’s Bruce Wayne, and you tilt it the other way and he turns into Batman. Yawn.

    When we got our first automatic dishwasher at our house in the early ’70s, we had a family joke, “don’t forget to wash the dishes before you put them in the dishwasher”. They’ve gotten way better now, but back in the day they seemed pointless because of all the pre-rinsing we had to do before actually putting the dishes in the machine.

    Cronkite’s program sorta kinda got the home office concept right, although back then the Internet was embryonic, and the idea of a desktop computer was something people were just starting to get their heads around.

    Videophones? Well, we’ve got ‘em now — after a fashion — but no matter how much the tech/internet hucksters hype the idea, nobody really seems to care for it. I remember seeing a demo of an actual two-way video-over-the-phone system as a young kid in the mid ’60s; I thought it was really cool at the time, but even then nobody was that nuts about it. Then, as now, all we could think of was what a pain in the butt it was to hear the phone ring while in the shower, and how a bigger pain it would be if that were to happen on a videophone system. And, don’t even get me started on telemarketing.

    3D printing has gotten really good really quickly, but I think it might be a while before a 3D printing system can synthesize disposable dinner plates out of a material you can actually eat off of.

    Cronkite’s got the home-entertainment system concept nailed down fairly well, too, except that we don’t control our home stereo/theater system from something that looks like Mr. Spock’s bridge console on the Enterprise.

    Last year, my wife bought a Roomba to replace our worn-out “old-school” vacuum cleaner. She’s totally sold on it, though I’m not too sure about it yet — but I certainly do like the idea of not having to schlep the vacuum cleaner around the living room myself.

    Still, the big question on my mind now is: where’s my flying car? I mean, c’mon, man, it’s the 21st Century. Where’s my flying car??

  8. Edd Mark Starr says:

    Thank you Matt for bringing Walter Cronkite’s “The 21st Century” back. What a joy to see this again after all these decades. In 1967 I was 10 years old and this is the type of stuff I couldn’t get enough of. There was no doubt in my mind that we were on our way to a spectacular future, by mid-60′s standards, lol.

    Walter Cronkite shared many of the same interests as Walt Disney such as the future of humanity is space and the world of the 21st century. Cronkite and Disney, like most of the adults I knew in my own life, both had that “forward vision” that appealed to me.

    It really wasn’t until the end of the 1970′s that I began to encounter people that were using a different playbook for the future. I wanted dramatic cities soaring into the sky, hovercraft cars with automatic controls, and high-tech gadgets to make life effortless.

    Yet all around me there were people that wanted trees, flowers, open meadows with clear running streams. Instead of hovercraft these folks wanted horses. Instead of Disney’s “house of tomorrow”, they wanted a log cabin.

    Now I live the real 21st century. Right versus Left, East versus West; and all the while we split down the middle and fight over everything – even the constitution.

    To paraphrase Carl Sagan; “a spectacular future requires spectacular citizens – to make it all happen.

  9. susan says:

    more on this tv series please. i loved it as a girl.

  10. Chris says:

    Nice Piece, thanks for putting it together. Looks fairly accurate to todays typical house. Even though we do not mold our own plates on site, most of our foods, packaging and consumption is transient and recycled, just at a higher level vs. on site. Only thing missing was some slick industrial design to todays styling.

  11. Mari says:

    Now all the electronics fit in your hand through your smart phone.

  12. Daniel Case says:

    You want “dramatic cities soaring into the sky” in 2012? Watch this video, and book yourself a ticket to Dubai:

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z1-jLX0sL5Q&feature=related

  13. Matt Ratcliff says:

    In 1976, I was fourteen and I couldn’t get enough of the futurist’s vision of tomorrow. Until I saw an ad (In, I believe, Smithsonian) that completely changed me. The ad was a simple photograph of maybe eight people wearing average clothing. Beneath the photograph it read “America in 2076″. And I got it. People, and every wonderful or horrible thing that comes with them, will always be people. The future I had been dreaming of would be no better or worse than the world now. I had been living in the wonderous future that people had dreamt of in 1876 and I found it wanting. Microwave dinners or jet-packs, it doesn’t matter; they are just props. The corollary is, that past was no better or worse; times were simpler then…or they weren’t. For the future I predict dramas and comedies, everything else is backdrop.

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