You're quite obsessed with the baby boomers.
And, the Glasses. I sent in for all kinds of stuff off the cereal boxes and such, but I never saw an offer for "Baby Boomer Glasses" I gotta get me some!

You're quite obsessed with the baby boomers.
No, it just proves the baby boomers are now the old age executives and decision makers.Coming late to the party:
The fact that Nimoy's death was front-page news, and that multiple "tribute" magazines quickly flooded grocery stores, drug stores, dollar stores, and so on, displayed alongside the latest issues of PEOPLE or COSMOPOLITAN, indicates to me that Spock (and by extension STAR TREK) is still deeply entrenched in American pop culture.
Again, we're not talking comic-book shops here or the dealers room at a Trek convention. We're talking the check-out line at your neighborhood grocery store.
The mainstream media would not have treated Nimoy's passing as a Big Deal unless they thought that the whole world still remembered Spock . . ..
Think when you were young were your parents white screen heroes your heroes?
No! Those folks were totally old hat!
Each generation has its new cultural icons and ideals.
The idea that the baby boomer era will be any different is just an illusion in the minds of people who look at the world through baby boomer glasses.
51675168
People of what age?When a comedian can paraphrase Scotty complaining about the engines for his routine and people get it, it is pretty much a known thing.
Not all people are baby boomers.
Those things pass when new generations arrive.
Bob Hope was mainstream once as well.
807
No, it just proves the baby boomers are now the old age executives and decision makers.Coming late to the party:
The fact that Nimoy's death was front-page news, and that multiple "tribute" magazines quickly flooded grocery stores, drug stores, dollar stores, and so on, displayed alongside the latest issues of PEOPLE or COSMOPOLITAN, indicates to me that Spock (and by extension STAR TREK) is still deeply entrenched in American pop culture.
Again, we're not talking comic-book shops here or the dealers room at a Trek convention. We're talking the check-out line at your neighborhood grocery store.
The mainstream media would not have treated Nimoy's passing as a Big Deal unless they thought that the whole world still remembered Spock . . ..
Think when you were young were your parents white screen heroes your heroes?
No! Those folks were totally old hat!
Each generation has its new cultural icons and ideals.
The idea that the baby boomer era will be any different is just an illusion in the minds of people who look at the world through baby boomer glasses.
51675168
Man, man, the world upside down! Now if we have to believe late baby boomers, the 60s and 70s generation was readily accepting their parent's culture.In part, this was because the old b/w movies were still playing regularly on TV (the same way, say, the TREK movies are constantly being rerun on cable),but it was also because we didn't automatically reject our parents' favorites as old hat.
No, it just proves the baby boomers are now the old age executives and decision makers.Coming late to the party:
The fact that Nimoy's death was front-page news, and that multiple "tribute" magazines quickly flooded grocery stores, drug stores, dollar stores, and so on, displayed alongside the latest issues of PEOPLE or COSMOPOLITAN, indicates to me that Spock (and by extension STAR TREK) is still deeply entrenched in American pop culture.
Again, we're not talking comic-book shops here or the dealers room at a Trek convention. We're talking the check-out line at your neighborhood grocery store.
The mainstream media would not have treated Nimoy's passing as a Big Deal unless they thought that the whole world still remembered Spock . . ..
Think when you were young were your parents white screen heroes your heroes?
No! Those folks were totally old hat!
Each generation has its new cultural icons and ideals.
The idea that the baby boomer era will be any different is just an illusion in the minds of people who look at the world through baby boomer glasses.
51675168
I grew up in the sixties and seventies and I was well aware of movie and TV icons that had their heyday well before I was born--and who were still household names. I knew who Bela Lugosi was, and Charlie Chaplin, and Abbott & Costello, and Humphrey Bogart, and Marilyn Monroe, and Shirley Temple, and so on. And, trust me, most everybody my age knew about King Kong and The Creature from the Black Lagoon and The Fly . . . even though they dated back to the fifties and thirties.
And when kids my age played "Robin Hood" in backyards and vacant lots, we were inspired by Errol Flynn in the old 1938 movie . . ..
In part, this was because the old b/w movies were still playing regularly on TV (the same way, say, the TREK movies are constantly being rerun on cable today), but it was also because we didn't automatically reject our parents' favorites as old hat.
And I would also question whether "pop culture" is exclusively defined by people under thirty, or whether it's a larger sea of shared cultural references that we all swim in, and sometimes inherit from our parents and grand-parents.
Man, man, the world upside down! Now if we have to believe late baby boomers, the 60s and 70s generation was readily accepting their parent's culture.In part, this was because the old b/w movies were still playing regularly on TV (the same way, say, the TREK movies are constantly being rerun on cable),but it was also because we didn't automatically reject our parents' favorites as old hat.
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Great post.Man, man, the world upside down! Now if we have to believe late baby boomers, the 60s and 70s generation was readily accepting their parent's culture.In part, this was because the old b/w movies were still playing regularly on TV (the same way, say, the TREK movies are constantly being rerun on cable),but it was also because we didn't automatically reject our parents' favorites as old hat.
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Well, I am proudly Generation X and I must say I agree whole heartedly with Greg Cox's statements. It sort of goes like this in my experience (very generally obviously YMMV):
You become aware of pop culture around the age of 3 or 4, specifically material made for young kids, Disney, Pixar, Sesame Street, Doc McsStuffins (to give a mix of today's and previous generations experiences.)
Around age 8-9 you become aware of contemporary youth culture - pop singers, movies that are hitting the screens right now. Your parents try to introduce you to things they loved growing up. These include their contemporary culture (I would show my kids ET, for example, because I saw that when I was 10 or so) as well as "classics" of pop culture - The Wizard of Oz.
Around 13-15, you are deeply involved in contemporary culture and you start to get an inkling that there was some pretty cool stuff from your parents and grandparents ages. These things have retro cache. I have now seen my generation and 2 others learn to dig the Beatles at this age.
By 18-20, you are really exploring more of pop culture and its history. You might discover the Marx Bros, Billie Holiday, the first "adult" comics of the 80s-90s (Moore, Gaiman, etc), Bogie. They will be a small part of what you consume, pop culture-wise, but you'll definitely start to encounter and really become interested in some things not of the immediate era. These tend to be things that have stood some test of time and multiple generations get into them. I would put Star Trek into this category. Now you may or may not encounter it at this age - but at this age or older, you're more likely to have enough of an understanding of the history of pop culture and have developed the ability to see beyond your own contemporary culture to give it a try. I recall, myself, not tolerating any black and white movies or tv shows until 16-20 years of age. Then I began to understand the charm and aesthetic of them and find them interesting historically and for their entertainment value.
After this, in your 20s, 30s, 40s you start building your personal list of pop culture favorites, that may go back some ways. I got into the Arthurian Romances of the 12th century in my early 30s. Does this make them "integral to pop culture" - well, in a way. They were the beginning of material that perpetuates today and they were a key influence not only in an King Arthur stuff that came later, but they set a tone of all medieval stories that came later. They influenced how Game of Thrones looks and feels even if you have never even heard of Wolfram von Eschenbach's Parsifal.
Star Trek is like this. Some people, of many ages, know it intimately because it speaks to them personally and they consume it directly. Some people know it through references which have become commonplace. Some people have never seen it and never will, but they will consume many movies, books, comic books, etc which would not look the way they look or sound the way they sound without Star Trek.
Perhaps the better way to think of it is Star Trek is an integral part of pop culture history, certainly still influential - the top rated tv sit com at the moment is populated by nerds who love Star Trek and the franchise is still actively being produced featuring the iconic characters of Kirk and Spock. It's not dead and it's not Taylor Swift. There is plenty of space in between though.
Yes, I would agree with that.Perhaps the better way to think of it is Star Trek is an integral part of pop culture history, certainly still influential
The Shatner and Nimoy versions, perhaps,but Pine and Quinto's or who ever comes after them might be their Star Trek.Yes, I would agree with that.Perhaps the better way to think of it is Star Trek is an integral part of pop culture history, certainly still influential
I'd give it 5-10 more years and then the "Spock and Kirk" thing is definitely "grandfather" stuff for the new generations
Generalize much?What always stuns me is the general lack of relativism that an aging generation exposes, they think their generation is some sort of center of everything that will remain eternally, their movies were best, their society was best, everything was better in the past.
I think that view is a minority one. Most people live firmly in the present and only occasionally wax nostalgicOf course it seems so to them when the ever so sweeter memories of the past overwhelm the more and more alienating reality of the present. They effectively stand still and come to an end while new generations and reality moves on. It's normal, it's life but not to realize it is a great miss.
Yes, I would agree with that.Perhaps the better way to think of it is Star Trek is an integral part of pop culture history, certainly still influential
I'd give it 5-10 more years and then the "Spock and Kirk" thing is definitely "grandfather" stuff for the new generations.
What always stuns me is the general lack of relativism that an aging generation exposes, they think their generation is some sort of center of everything that will remain eternally, their movies were best, their society was best, everything was better in the past.
Of course it seems so to them when the ever so sweeter memories of the past overwhelm the more and more alienating reality of the present. They effectively stand still and come to an end while new generations and reality moves on. It's normal, it's life but not to realize it is a great miss.
757
Of course it seems so to them when the ever so sweeter memories of the past overwhelm the more and more alienating reality of the present. They effectively stand still and come to an end while new generations and reality moves on. It's normal, it's life but not to realize it is a great miss.
Judging by some of the song choices for advertising, I'd say GenX is taking control. The leading edge of that group is pushing 50 and are probably well established in the board rooms.Yes, I would agree with that.Perhaps the better way to think of it is Star Trek is an integral part of pop culture history, certainly still influential
I'd give it 5-10 more years and then the "Spock and Kirk" thing is definitely "grandfather" stuff for the new generations.
What always stuns me is the general lack of relativism that an aging generation exposes, they think their generation is some sort of center of everything that will remain eternally, their movies were best, their society was best, everything was better in the past.
Of course it seems so to them when the ever so sweeter memories of the past overwhelm the more and more alienating reality of the present. They effectively stand still and come to an end while new generations and reality moves on. It's normal, it's life but not to realize it is a great miss.
757
Just what are you getting at anyway? You are typing like everyone on the board is a baby boomer, and that you will welcome the day when their tyranny ends or some other such fashion of denouncement. Is there a reason for this?
I'm cetainly not a baby boomer. I was born in the transition years between Generation X and Y. A lot of the board members that remember Trek being on when they were little kids are very early Generation X. The oldest members of the Baby Boomers are turning 70 next year.
<respectful snip>
I'd give it 5-10 more years and then the "Spock and Kirk" thing is definitely "grandfather" stuff for the new generations.
What always stuns me is the general lack of relativism that an aging generation exposes, they think their generation is some sort of center of everything that will remain eternally, their movies were best, their society was best, everything was better in the past.
Of course it seems so to them when the ever so sweeter memories of the past overwhelm the more and more alienating reality of the present. They effectively stand still and come to an end while new generations and reality moves on. It's normal, it's life but not to realize it is a great miss.
757
It's true of any generation!That's true of the current generation too.
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