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Nostalgia and thousands of likes. This is commentary from James Brown.
¶ Reflecting on Nostalgia and Simplicity
I came across a YouTube comment on a Google Dolls video the other day. It said, I miss the 90s. Things were so simple and everyone didn't hate each other over politics. Thousands of people liked it, and I almost did too. I get the appeal.
¶ The Magic of the 90s
The 90s had a kind of magic. The music hit differently. Saturday morning cartoons still mattered, and for some, of our biggest distraction was whether we had enough quarters for the arcade. But let's not rewrite history. The 90s wasn't full of political harmony, trust me. The culture war was already underway. It gave us the LA riots, the O.J. simpson trial, the unending Clinton Lewinsky drama, Tim McVeigh, and oh, so many more fault lines.
¶ The Landscape of Cultural Conflict
The divide was there, as sharp as ever. The difference was the feeling. And as a guy who lived through both eras, it's clear that feelings matter, as does the location of those shouting about how different our worlds are. In the 90s, they didn't yet dominate the airwaves or every national conversation. They were on the edges, not in our pockets, buzzing with every headline. Today, every political conversation is about playing for keeps. And I think I know why.
Back then, we could live in our different worlds and still bump into each other. Maybe it was at the movie theater, maybe it was at Blockbuster, or listening to the same band on the radio.
¶ The Disconnection of Shared Spaces
We had shared spaces, shared escapes, a shared narrative. All that isn't easy to find anymore. We chucked it away somewhere along the way.
¶ Divisions and Common Ground
So are we really more divided now or just more aware of the cracks? I can make arguments either way. And can we find common ground again? Or is nostalgia all we have left? What do you think? Let's talk about it at jamesbrowntv.substack.com on that note, I'm James Brown and as always, be well.
