Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Watching Space Camp and wanting so badly to become an astronaut. Then, devastated by the Challenger explosion.[/quote]
Were you really? I can't say I've ever met anyone who was really devastated by that. I just thought it was a media myth.
Me too. I was a junior in college, and I remember exactly where I was when I saw video of the explosion. Why would it be a myth?
Anonymous wrote:Cute guys working on their cool cars in driveway
Anonymous wrote:If you miss the 80s, you really should watch "Stranger Things" on Netflix. It starts slow, but picks up speed in Episode 3 and it's wall-to-wall 80s nostalgia.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was born in July of 1961. Do you think I should consider myself a late Boomer or an early Gen X'er? My siblings were born in '65 and '67 and all of us identify with a lot of these memories. I don't really think those of us born around then identify with Baby Boomers. For instance, I don't remember when (either) Kennedy was shot.
Cut off for Baby boomer is '64. You are a boomer.
Those "cut offs" are meaningless. Do you really think someone born in 1963 has more in common with someone born in 1948 than with someone born in 1965?
+1. Even the people studying generational trends don't all agree on the cutoff years.
Anonymous wrote:Steakumm sandwiches!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Watching Space Camp and wanting so badly to become an astronaut. Then, devastated by the Challenger explosion.[/quote]
Were you really? I can't say I've ever met anyone who was really devastated by that. I just thought it was a media myth.
what? the explosion itself or that people found it greatly upsetting? i watched the launch with my third grade class. right at the age where they're telling us we can be astronauts when we grow up, which sounds so so cool and then a spacecraft full of people explodes right on the screen in front of your eight year old face? yeah, that's devastating. i'm not PP btw.
I'm not PP either, and yeah, what a terrible thing to say! I saw it explode in real time, too, and yes, it was pretty horrifying. You knew it wasn't a movie; it was real people being killed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Watching Space Camp and wanting so badly to become an astronaut. Then, devastated by the Challenger explosion.[/quote]
Were you really? I can't say I've ever met anyone who was really devastated by that. I just thought it was a media myth.
what? the explosion itself or that people found it greatly upsetting? i watched the launch with my third grade class. right at the age where they're telling us we can be astronauts when we grow up, which sounds so so cool and then a spacecraft full of people explodes right on the screen in front of your eight year old face? yeah, that's devastating. i'm not PP btw.
Anonymous wrote:Watching Space Camp and wanting so badly to become an astronaut. Then, devastated by the Challenger explosion.[/quote]
Were you really? I can't say I've ever met anyone who was really devastated by that. I just thought it was a media myth.
Anonymous wrote:Watching Space Camp and wanting so badly to become an astronaut. Then, devastated by the Challenger explosion.