no, we're a "baby bust" generation caught between two much larger generations. between the boomers' narcissism, larger population, and grasp on capital, we had to endure their grip on popular culture long past their prime (and 1989, the 20th anniversary of woodstock, was just awful to live through... so much self-congratulation). after that, we had about 3-5 years where pop culture paid attention to us in the 90s before britney spears and the boy bands marked the cultural ascendancy of the millennial. not long after that the media landscape completely fragmented to narrowcasting and i think some xers are salty that we won't be able to loudly congratulate ourselves to same degree the boomers did (honestly, if you want to know what the late 80s were like, imagine don henley's "boys of summer" on a human face, forever)
no, we're a "baby bust" generation caught between two much larger generations. between the boomers' narcissism, larger population, and grasp on capital, we had to endure their grip on popular culture long past their prime (and 1989, the 20th anniversary of woodstock, was just awful to live through... so much self-congratulation). after that, we had about 3-5 years where pop culture paid attention to us in the 90s before britney spears and the boy bands marked the cultural ascendancy of the millennial. not long after that the media landscape completely fragmented to narrowcasting and i think some xers are salty that we won't be able to loudly congratulate ourselves to same degree the boomers did (honestly, if you want to know what the late 80s were like, imagine don henley's "boys of summer" on a human face, forever)
but honestly, who cares?
oh well whatever nevermind
At least you had a chance to revive swing music in the most terrible way imaginable
fuck, don't remind me
Boys of Summer is a banger, though
deleted by creator
deleted by creator