Anonymous wrote:We used to go to the movies every week, especially in summer to enjoy the air conditioning (because our crappy group houses didn’t have it!) I also remember getting kicked out of the theater once for smoking! Yes, there was still a lot of smoking.
Anonymous wrote:Ok. I will wear pantyhose to the office, and then mid decade take my baby to playgroup. And wonder why my $35,000 salary just doesn’t go very far.
I DO miss the time before smart phones. As for the rest of it the nostalgia is strong because people miss being young. I was already working/married/new mom by then. Now the 70s was a time! Lol
Anonymous wrote:Does anyone still have their palm pilot?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That feeling of nostalgia and simpler times is really just because you didn't have a job. So chasing it is tough because the reason we all remember back so fondly is that we had no responsibilities. Of course life was good.
Ha! Speak for yourself. I had a job and responsibilities. What I remember was how many places in DC were sketchy and dangerous even during the daytime.
True. I went on a quest in mid 1990s to visit all the Smithsonian’s and ventured into anacostia for the one there. It was pretty rough then.
I remember when the MCI center was built (now Capitol One Arena). Chinese people actually lived in Chinatown back then.
I do not remember Chinese people living there. They mostly lived in the suburbs. I do remember all the really sketchy p&rn stores and peep shows with crack addicts slumped on the sidewalks outside and really low rent hookers. That was one of the most depressing areas I’ve ever been in, and I also lived in NYC and New Haven in tje early 90s, each of which also had their own share of issues.
We should all take a minute and thank the Clinton administration for somehow saving our urban areas. By the end of his administration they were somehow a million times better.
Chinese people started leaving Chinatown after the 68 riots, but there were still many there before the MCI Center opened. There were Chinese grocery stores, shops, restaurants, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:most people did not smoke in the 1990’s.Anonymous wrote:Inspired by the nostalgia of the JFK Jr Love Story series, I’m wondering what it would take to adopt a 1990s vibe for the summer (or maybe the spring).
What would it take to attempt to recapture that simpler time?
Silence my cell phone
No internet outside of the house, and only for specific tasks (no mindless scrolling)
Going out more with friends. Just for fun. No big plans.
Going dancing. (I’m probably too old to go clubbing, but I’d love to be out after dark listening to music with friends.)
I won’t smoke, but every time I see Carolyn light up it takes me back to having a cigarette towards the tail end of a drunken night when everyone is standing outside of the bar/club/party trying to decide where to go next. Sigh.
Simple clothes and makeup. Not fussing with my hair.
What else?
I guess you weren’t in college in the early 90s. People still smoked…especially when out drinking.
Anyone fellow Terps remember how smoky Planet X was? Or walking outside of Tracks on college night?
Anyway, I haven’t had a cigarette since the early/mid 90s and even then I wasn’t a regular smoker.
But people still smoked…especially young drunk people.
PP said “most people”. Some people smoked.
But it’s gross and most did not.
You just weren’t part of that scene I guess.
Singles and Reality Bites (among other films about young people during that time) had a lot of smoking.
And I guess you didn’t date tortured souls like some of us. Sigh.
Anonymous wrote:Murray’s gear from head to toe, cruising on the boat, clambakes on the beach with giant fires, Napa chards and Champagne for low prices and none of the Hampton types polluting the island with their poseur ways. Ah, my sweet romantic teenage nights!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:most people did not smoke in the 1990’s.Anonymous wrote:Inspired by the nostalgia of the JFK Jr Love Story series, I’m wondering what it would take to adopt a 1990s vibe for the summer (or maybe the spring).
What would it take to attempt to recapture that simpler time?
Silence my cell phone
No internet outside of the house, and only for specific tasks (no mindless scrolling)
Going out more with friends. Just for fun. No big plans.
Going dancing. (I’m probably too old to go clubbing, but I’d love to be out after dark listening to music with friends.)
I won’t smoke, but every time I see Carolyn light up it takes me back to having a cigarette towards the tail end of a drunken night when everyone is standing outside of the bar/club/party trying to decide where to go next. Sigh.
Simple clothes and makeup. Not fussing with my hair.
What else?
I guess you weren’t in college in the early 90s. People still smoked…especially when out drinking.
Anyone fellow Terps remember how smoky Planet X was? Or walking outside of Tracks on college night?
Anyway, I haven’t had a cigarette since the early/mid 90s and even then I wasn’t a regular smoker.
But people still smoked…especially young drunk people.
PP said “most people”. Some people smoked.
But it’s gross and most did not.
Anonymous wrote:Didn’t people have phones in the 90s?