A few years ago this “Summer Mix 1999 burned CD” went viral all over the internet. Many, many people shared it because it really felt nostalgic and was such a throwback. However, I immediately called BS because A.) Making mix CDs in 1999 was not really a thing B.) Anyone making a mix/burned CD would add more than nine songs to the disc C.) This burned CD is actually a DVD+R, which is something that not only didn’t exist at the time but that you wouldn’t even be able to use in a CD player.
So, where am I going with this? Well, it’s an example of how the further we get away from a time period, the easier it is to confuse things, only remember certain things, or think of the entire decade as looking and being like its latter half. Sometimes, movies and TV shows set in other decades also make those same mistakes, with exceptions to shows like Mad Men and Stranger Things, which really went out of their way to make their time periods look historically accurate.
Recently, I stumbled upon a Reddit thread that touched up on that very subject, in it user Jerswar asked, “People who were adults in the 1980s: What does pop culture tend to leave out?”
Well, the thread got lots of responses from people wanting to share what they think gets brushed over about the ’80s. Below are some of the top and best comments:
1.“Anything we wore that wasn’t neon. Pop culture acts like the ’80s were just a sea of nothing but neon for 10 years.”
2.“The wild amounts of smoking inside. Especially in restaurants.”
3.“I was a child in the ’80s, but something that I don’t think I’ve ever seen in modern pop culture retellings of ’80s life, which I recall witnessing, is this: people think of the weird, wacky, fun colors and hair, etc., of the 1980s — like Madonna, Cyndi Lauper, Boy George styles. BUT for many people and mainstream communities, that was considered a ‘weird’ or ‘rock and roll character’ kind of presentation. People would often openly stare, laugh at, or disparage people who looked openly unique. It took a lot of courage to go out styled like that. It was acceptable to have a more ‘subtle’ take on the fun color trends.”
4.“Reading everything — literally everything — I could get my hands on. Cereal boxes, newspapers, magazines. Luckily, my library was a bike ride away but carrying those back on my bike was fun.”
5.“How much decor from the ’70s and ’60s were still in houses and offices throughout the decade.”
6.“This isn’t specific to the ’80s, but the experience of boredom. There were many periods of time during the week when you simply had to sit there with your thoughts and be bored. This has been almost completely eliminated by smartphones, and I think it explains why attention spans are so f’d.”
7.“TV was just adult shows for most of the week, especially during summer break. Just soap operas and other boring things.”
8.“Might be my own bias but being a kid in the ’80s there was a lot of casual bullying and conformism. Not that bullying and conformism ever went away, but the ’90s was more about counter-culture a bit.”
9.“I was born in the early ’80s. I’ve been totally blind since birth. In the ’80s, accessibility was virtually non-existent. That new Nintendo that the kids had? Good luck. Scholastic Book Club? Not in braille or audio. Everything is in print. Nothing to see here for me or mine. Then computers finally got accessible and Windows came out and they had to start all over again. I wouldn’t want to go back to the ’80s. I now have my phone that I can use to access the world, read what is on my grocery labels, have pictures described to me, and basically know what’s going on in the world. In the ’80s, so much went by without any context, and that was in the formative years of my childhood.”
10.“The sheer sense of doom and pervasive low-key terror of nuclear war. The Soviets’ nuclear arsenal pointing at us, and their nihilistic posturing in some ways remind me of the climate change dread we now have. Living with an existential threat is not something new.”
11.The cheap gas in the late ’80s. There was one time when I only had $2 and I rolled my truck into the gas station on empty. I pumped in $2 and had a quarter tank.”
12.“The homophobia.”
13.“The devastation of AIDS. We lost three guys just at my office. So many great creative minds were disappearing day after day. Artists, fashion designers, musicians, dancers, and actors. But all the news wanted to talk about was the occasional child or straight person who was infected by a tainted blood transfusion.”
14.“Being a latchkey kid it was no frequent communication with your parents. I can’t tell you how many times I stayed out all night as an 18-year-old and no one but who I was with knew where I was or what I was doing. My parents didn’t know what I was doing all day as a 12–17-year-old, either! You only called your parents at work only if it was an emergency.”
15.“Cars finally started not to suck. Lots of higher quality foreign imports and less Detroit rust buckets.”
16.The obsession people/media had about the ’50s and ’60s. Part of it was stuff like Back to the Future, ’50s-themed diners and baseball jackets being popular, then there was the 20th anniversary of things, like various Beatles albums. I think the boomers at that point were in positions of influence and were looking back on their teens and twenties with rose-tinted glasses, so the rest of us had to suffer these cultural echoes from the generation before.”
17.“Cruising. Before social media, we would drive up and down the street, see and be seen. Stop at different businesses, the cool kids hung out at the Walgreens parking lot, the jocks at the McDonald’s. But it was a small town so we would stop at all of them during the evening. That was our social world along with keggers in the desert all through high school and for folks that stayed in town for years after high school.”
18.“What a mess it was to get cleaned up! That sparkle-blue eye shadow didn’t come off easily and if it got in your eyes it was torture! That red lip gloss ran all over. And shampooing your hair three times to get out all the hair spray and the mousse. I loved the ’80s and I had a marvelous time. But it was messy… but way worth it!”
19.And lastly, “Trying to find something to read in the bathroom to pass the time. I remember shampoo bottles and the contents of my wallet were my go-to’s when a magazine or book was unavailable.”
You can read the original thread on Reddit.
Note: Some responses have been edited for length and/or clarity.