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Post by John Titor on Oct 4, 2018 4:24:25 GMT 10
If you could reside in any 2 mini eras right now for a little while what would it be? Ill give mine
The Late 90's : Late 1996- Around early 1998 Period (The vibe felt very futuristic and still had some classic 90's feeling to it)
Early 2000's : Late 2001- August 2002 Period (Had a very powerful vibe, life changing, very Adult like for a kid in 8th grade, excellent pop culture)
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Post by Deleted on Oct 4, 2018 6:46:42 GMT 10
1963-1967 Life was simpler then, at least for me! 10 November 1986-6 November 1987. The happiest time of my life.
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Post by Deleted on Oct 4, 2018 8:39:51 GMT 10
The late 50's - I really hope that I don't get a lot of hate for saying this
The mid 80's
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Post by John Titor on Oct 4, 2018 10:55:11 GMT 10
The late 50's - I really hope that I don't get a lot of hate for saying this The mid 80's The 80s would be fun to revisit altho I have no personal attachment to them other than the last 2 years lol
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Post by SharksFan99 on Oct 4, 2018 20:08:38 GMT 10
1. Late '90s - The Late '90s were a culmination of so many different aspects of the '90s that I like. The alternative-rock scene was still going strong, Beavis & Butthead and Seinfeld were on the air, The Simpsons was still in it's creative peak and pop-culture was incredibly diverse. It would have been great to experience the hype leading up to the new millennium as well. 2. Late '60s - I would love to have the chance to experience the Late '60s, even if it was just for a short while. There were so many great songs that were released during the era; from the studio years of The Beatles, to absolute gems such as "Waterloo Sunset", "Caledonia" and "With a Little Help From My Friends" (Joe Cocker's cover). It was just an incredibly innovative and progressive time for pop culture. The late 50's - I really hope that I don't get a lot of hate for saying this Just out of curiosity, why would you want to travel back to the Late '50s? Is it because of the rock 'n roll that was popular at the time or something else entirely?
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Post by Deleted on Oct 4, 2018 21:23:27 GMT 10
1. Late '90s - The Late '90s were a culmination of so many different aspects of the '90s that I like. The alternative-rock scene was still going strong, Beavis & Butthead and Seinfeld were on the air, The Simpsons was still in it's creative peak and pop-culture was incredibly diverse. It would have been great to experience the hype leading up to the new millennium as well. 2. Late '60s - I would love to have the chance to experience the Late '60s, even if it was just for a short while. There were so many great songs that were released during the era; from the studio years of The Beatles, to absolute gems such as "Waterloo Sunset", "Caledonia" and "With a Little Help From My Friends" (Joe Cocker's cover). It was just an incredibly innovative and progressive time for pop culture. The late 50's - I really hope that I don't get a lot of hate for saying this Just out of curiosity, why would you want to travel back to the Late '50s? Is it because of the rock 'n roll that was popular at the time or something else entirely? I like the music of the time along with the whole "malt shop" thing.
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Post by Telso on Oct 4, 2018 22:17:03 GMT 10
The 1920s but I personally think I would prefer participating to a Great Gatsby/Roaring Twenties-themed evenement than really re-living the decade itself and be highly disappointed by the romanticized we made out of the decade... The late 70s because going to the disco and then chilling with punkers sound fun The early 2010s Oh, I just misunderstood the subject of this thread Favorite decade-parts: late 70s & early 2000s B)
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Post by John Titor on Oct 5, 2018 4:10:03 GMT 10
1. Late '90s - The Late '90s were a culmination of so many different aspects of the '90s that I like. The alternative-rock scene was still going strong, Beavis & Butthead and Seinfeld were on the air, The Simpsons was still in it's creative peak and pop-culture was incredibly diverse. It would have been great to experience the hype leading up to the new millennium as well. 2. Late '60s - I would love to have the chance to experience the Late '60s, even if it was just for a short while. There were so many great songs that were released during the era; from the studio years of The Beatles, to absolute gems such as "Waterloo Sunset", "Caledonia" and "With a Little Help From My Friends" (Joe Cocker's cover). It was just an incredibly innovative and progressive time for pop culture. Experiencing 1997 as a child was unreal the vibe was so fast paced
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Post by Deleted on Oct 5, 2018 4:26:52 GMT 10
1. Late '90s - The Late '90s were a culmination of so many different aspects of the '90s that I like. The alternative-rock scene was still going strong, Beavis & Butthead and Seinfeld were on the air, The Simpsons was still in it's creative peak and pop-culture was incredibly diverse. It would have been great to experience the hype leading up to the new millennium as well. 2. Late '60s - I would love to have the chance to experience the Late '60s, even if it was just for a short while. There were so many great songs that were released during the era; from the studio years of The Beatles, to absolute gems such as "Waterloo Sunset", "Caledonia" and "With a Little Help From My Friends" (Joe Cocker's cover). It was just an incredibly innovative and progressive time for pop culture. Experiencing 1997 as a child was unreal the vibe was so fast paced "Experiencing 1997 as a child was unreal the vibe was so fast paced" What do you mean here?
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Post by John Titor on Oct 6, 2018 3:35:39 GMT 10
"Experiencing 1997 as a child was unreal the vibe was so fast paced" What do you mean here? That was the year I got ps1, n64 vs ps1 war, Familly Matters moved networks, went to the UK for a week, Attitude era started in WWF, The year my SNES was getting less play, the year South Park came out, I also traveled in Milan for 3 days, School had a more y2k vibe then the ones prior, plus Spice Girls I know I just named dropped a bunch of stufff but thats how it was LOL
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Post by SharksFan99 on Oct 6, 2018 19:37:53 GMT 10
The late 70s because going to the disco and then chilling with punkers sound fun I would be interested to hear the perspective from someone who was alive at the time, but I think the chances of someone heavily partaking in the Disco sub-culture and the Punk scene would have been quite rare. Members of the public would generally try to steer clear from punks (as people feared them) and punk music itself was not even well embraced in the mainstream (with the exception of the UK punk rock scene). I can remember my Dad telling me stories about his encounters with punks when he was a kid in the Late '70s. In such a scenario, It would probably be very hard for you to participate in both cultures and get away with it. If a punk caught you grooving to "Stayin' Alive" or "Boogie Wonderland", it probably wouldn't go down too well.
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Post by Deleted on Oct 7, 2018 1:13:51 GMT 10
I lived through it all and hated both punk and disco although I had punk friends. Punk philosophy was great though as it was a backlash against these remote, inaccessible creatures most music performers had become.
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Post by Telso on Oct 7, 2018 3:52:05 GMT 10
The late 70s because going to the disco and then chilling with punkers sound fun I would be interested to hear the perspective from someone who was alive at the time, but I think the chances of someone heavily partaking in the Disco sub-culture and the Punk scene would have been quite rare. Members of the public would generally try to steer clear from punks (as people feared them) and punk music itself was not even well embraced in the mainstream (with the exception of the UK punk rock scene). I can remember my Dad telling me stories about his encounters with punks when he was a kid in the Late '70s. In such a scenario, It would probably be very hard for you to participate in both cultures and get away with it. If a punk caught you grooving to "Stayin' Alive" or "Boogie Wonderland", it probably wouldn't go down too well. I forgot to say it is more planned as a only-two-weeks-trip (or something like that) to the past, and of course I wouldn't be able to get away by participating at both subcultures . More of a planned-out fake out where I first participate at one then move to the next (but tbh knowing myself even though I was able to, I'll prob be too lazy for that hassle but I can dream!). I've greatly been interested these last few years in the punk subculture and everything around it, from the anarchist lifestyle to the DIY music scene, with maybe the exception of their mainstream-hate mentality (still better than nowadays internet whine tho).
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Post by Cassie on Oct 10, 2018 3:54:12 GMT 10
2003-2007
2010-2012
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Post by astropoug on Jul 17, 2021 20:16:46 GMT 10
Mid 1990s - Beavis and Butt-Head, The Lion King, Toy Story, Friends, The Simpsons, Doom, Mortal Kombat Late 2000s - Angry Video Game Nerd, iCarly, Phineas and Ferb, old-school YouTube, Club Penguin, Flash games, Call of Duty, Guitar Hero
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