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^ Every ascending generation tries to find new and better meaning through clarification, it's an explicating quest but it isn't effectual or absolute in resolution or people like Timothy Leary & Alan Watts would have huge religious followings rivalling Jesus. There is only so much you can do to figure out existence in a lifetime, short of hanging pictures of ones navel on the wall to facilitate such contemplation with ease of viewing. Relax & enjoy the ride. ;) |
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When one reads about the Beat Generation searching for ‘it’, or Timothy Leary peddling enlightenment through acid for $3 a hit, or the jaded cynicism of Gen X as they already knew of the dead-ends before they even came of age, the theme is constant. The theme of searching for something more to life. Even the Millennials - in that brief window before reality ran them over (moreso in the United States than here) - thought they were leading the charge for something greater. Not sure if the Zoomers even care, or hold that optimism though. Alas, reality doesn’t care. The churn continues on. |
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I was born in 1969. Back in the late 80s, I recall reading articles about how Gen-X was totally screwed: Squeezed out of the lucrative job market (and housing market) by the (greedy) boomers, but with likely higher tax rates to pay for all the boomers once they retired en masse. No doubt, the boomers (especially the ones born in the early 50s) had it easier in terms of access to jobs, education, and housing, coupled with lower taxation rates. I fear that the current generation will be even more screwed; however, given the insane price levels of housing coupled with stagnating, below-inflation wage/salary increases, and (the day of covid-spending reckoning will come sooner or later) higher taxes/reduced social spending. Oh, and something called climate change.
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Bingeing Seinfeld when it showed up on Netflix made this transition really apparent. The first few seasons felt like they were treading lightly around the censors and a sensitive, socially conservative society. Hence they'd talk about "the naked channels" and pretend not to drink alcohol. But that's also the surprisingly rich earth from which classics like "master of your domain" sprang. By the middle of the series they're shouting about pornos like it's nothing. As the series progresses the characters get worse; they lose a lot of their charming traits, their flaws become glaring. By the end it's kind of nasty. The finale reflects it. The thing is though, TV in the '80s was a regression from TV in the '70s--at least from what I've seen. I'd love to hear what some older forumers think, but my impression is that shows like All in the Family and Taxi were way more challenging and liberal than anything in the '80s. I mean, this; https://youtu.be/j-c4cd_Lm-Q is a lot even for the '90s. |
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Peak Seinfeld: https://i.pinimg.com/originals/d0/a6...9b34cb88e1.jpg |
Dude, George eating the eclair out of the garbage...
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The Summer of George... The handicapped bathroom... Festivus... Frogger... |
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Arguably the two best shows of the decade, Cheers and The Wonder Years, while they may have some deeper moments, were very much feel-good programming. I think there might be a few factors responsible for this. For starters, a whole bunch of stuff had already been "done" in the 70s, aside from All in the Family and Taxi. For example: - divorce and blended families: Brady Bunch - urban ethno-cultural diversity: Welcome Back Kotter - African-Americans front and centre: Good Times and Sanford and Son - the psychological effects of war: MASH - a woman striking out on her own when a man ditches her: Mary Tyler Moore - Hispanics front and centre: Chico and the Man - First openly gay character: Soap Even though Cosby Show was often heralded as the first show to feature affluent African-Americans, in fact The Jeffersons beat them to it a decade earlier. All of this was probably related to the fact that the boomers were moving out of their edgy contestation phase (they still had it in them when they started their careers and took control of the TV industry in the 70s) to a more mature, settled-down mindset in the 80s. |
I'm guessing part of it also had to do with Reaganism.
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Jerry was bland and couldn't act his way out of a paper bag. His Coffee with Cars show is boring I find other than the occasional car he drives. His narrow outlook on the world and his general un-worldliness comes across loud and clear in the show. |
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The Jeffersons >> The Cosbys
It wasn't even close. And that toe-tapping, great theme song... |
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^good point about escapism from a world that was dealing with some really tough topics.
Thanks for the rundown of those shows, Acajack. It's pretty interesting to reflect on these big cultural shifts. From here it's possible to see all of these things--duller television, aging boomers, wealthier boomers--as different facets of the same phenomenon. Quote:
I understand now that he kind of invented the "what's the deal with x" style of comedy that seemed so hokey and played out in the '90s. He even pokes fun at himself for it in the show, most famously through Bania and the "What's the deal with Ovaltine" joke. And, of course, in the show he isn't actually as successful as he is in real life. It's like the story of his career distorted by the present in which he tells it--in which his career has already preceded what happens. It was a brilliant show. |
The '80s definitely had more risque films being produced, although that was a sector I suppose not as censored as television. And many such films were not mainstream (eg anything by David Cronenberg), although films such as Robocop reference the cocaine culture of the era.
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