Why 80s Nostalgia Still Hits So Hard for Gen X
From mixtapes to mall arcades to Saturday morning cartoons, 80s nostalgia keeps pulling Gen X back. Here’s why the decade still won’t let go.
From mixtapes to mall arcades to Saturday morning cartoons, 80s nostalgia keeps pulling Gen X back. Here’s why the decade still won’t let go.
From a Bronx rec room in 1973 to Run-DMC selling out arenas, here’s how hip hop crawled out of NYC block parties and took over the 80s — boomboxes, breakdancing, and all.
Squirm 1976 is still a gross little cult miracle, all stormy Georgia dread, practical effects, and pure drive-in horror nerve.
On April 21, 1989, Nintendo launched the Game Boy in Japan and changed portable gaming forever. Here is why that gray brick still matters.
The history of hip hop begins on one specific night: August 11, 1973, in the recreation room of an apartment building at 1520 Sedgwick Avenue in the West Bronx. An 18-year-old Jamaican kid named Clive Campbell — who the neighborhood would soon know as DJ Kool Herc — hooked up two turntables, grabbed a microphone,…
Tracey Ullman Simpsons history starts on April 19, 1987, when the crude little Good Night short introduced TV’s most durable family.
Dead Hand system panic, Stanislav Petrov, WarGames, The Day After, and Red Dawn show how 80s nuclear fear seeped into everyday pop culture.
Remember the smell of cap gun smoke? Every 80s kid had a cap gun, a roll of caps, and a backyard full of imaginary battles. From roll caps to ring caps, neighborhood wars to the orange tip era.
Why The Jeffersons TV show still matters, from George and Louise to Florence, Movin On Up, Norman Lear, and prime-time cultural impact.
Before caller ID, every phone call was a mystery and prank calls were an art form. The story of *67, *69, and how a little LCD screen killed telephone anonymity forever.
How did we go from free tap water to a $300 billion bottled water industry? The wild story of Perrier, Evian, Aquafina, and the marketing genius that convinced the world to pay for something that falls from the sky.
The death of disco was never a clean ending. Here is how the 1979 backlash turned into new wave, synth-pop, house, and the sound of the 80s.