General Discussion
Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsI hated the fucking 80's
I hated Reagan with a white hot passion, I hated "Yuppies", I hated "greed is good", I hated the synthetic music that replaced music that had depth and meaning, I hated the death of free form f.m. radio with syndicated stations that played the same shit on a loop over and over, I hated the clothes, the union busting, I FUCKING HATED ALL OF IT.
And Trump came back like a ghost from that era to haunt me and make my "golden years" fucking miserable.
Fuck this shit.
Seriously.
Rant over.

Scrivener7
(58,361 posts)It was a pretty odious time, wasn't it?
Though my hair is naturally quite big, so I did at least have that going for me.
orangecrush
(28,420 posts)That has been a common observation, it seems that's where his policies come from.

Tasmanian Devil
(23 posts)Since New Year's I've been making *everyone* in my house watch the David Tennant BAFTA opening to try and improve our collective mental health. It's basically impossible to be too sad after watching this. And with recent current events we need all the help we can get. Of course it helps if you're a Tennant fan ... or Scottish!
(it's a little slow to start, give it time ...)
Pinback
(13,504 posts)I saw the Proclaimers do this live in a small club a good few years back, and everybody was clapping and singing along. I had no idea who they were! I had just tagged along with a woman I had a crush on.
I didnt get the girl, but I have fond memories of the song! And I love David Tennant and all things Scoish, so this was a treat!
Tasmanian Devil
(23 posts)So cool to have seen them in a small setting. Glad to try and share the smiles, they are hard to come by these days!
Scrivener7
(58,361 posts)misanthrope
(9,380 posts)It was the era that brought him into the national public eye. Everything about him -- the greed, the bigotry and racism, the misogyny, the insularity and lack of compassion, the lack of ethics, the lack of taste -- is such a perfect symbol of what Reaganism really meant and what it produced.
Since the Iranian hostage crisis begat the Reagan era, it would be poetically apropos if a similar situation overseas put a dagger through the Trump regime and ended the Reagan aftershock once and for all.
orangecrush
(28,420 posts)Leghorn21
(14,022 posts)I was at a friends house and there was this ROCKIN piece of music on his stereo and that stopped and then came this funky tune called Mary Had a Little Lamb and I turned my head and said who
in the fuck
Is THAT??!?!!?
Truth, Stevie Ray saved me from every creeped-out thing youve listed
W H E W
orangecrush
(28,420 posts)He's a Voodoo Chile that can't be touched by the 80's!
Strange story - when I was in high school around 1974, I got up, was eating breakfast and turned on the local f.m. free form station. There was a news report about a blues artist whose helicopter crashed in the fog. Then I woke up. It was a dream.
He really was a Voodoo Child.
DBoon
(24,745 posts)Last edited Mon Jan 5, 2026, 11:47 AM - Edit history (2)
On Edit:
60's music - Eve of Destruction
80s Music - Material Girl
60s hip auto - Volkswagen bug, well worn
80s hip auto - BMW 300 series, brand new
60s statement on race relations - MLK March on Washington
80s statement on race relations - Ronald Reagan Philadelphia Mississippi speech
60s attire - Blue Jeans
80s attire - Expensive designer suits
60s statement on foreign wars - Anti Vietnam war protests
80s statement on foreign wars - Cheering the invasion of Grenada
60s reading material - Walden
80s reading material - The Art of the Deal
I'm sure there are many more
orangecrush
(28,420 posts)Reagan hated the counterculture.
SidneyR
(206 posts)saying, "if they want a bloodbath, let's get it over with." A bloodbath? What an asshole--they were advocating peace, not a freaking bloodbath. Reagan was the friendly fascist. Now we have the belligerent fascist.
orangecrush
(28,420 posts)Was a real hippie hater.
"Edwin Meese III was a prominent figure in the conservative backlash against the counterculture movement, primarily through his roles in law enforcement and the Reagan administration. His actions and philosophy were in direct opposition to the values and protests of the 1960s and 1970s counterculture. "
BannonsLiver
(20,279 posts)bucolic_frolic
(54,062 posts)but the 80s were the best decade of my life. There were good movies, New Wave music, small fuel efficient cars, the illusion that health care solved problems, Nike waffle bottoms, Ben & Jerry's, acid-washed jeans. It was before we knew all the downside of what was happening.
orangecrush
(28,420 posts)I hated that fucking piece of shit.
bucolic_frolic
(54,062 posts)They were real low to the ground, noisy, and acceleration was poor. But they were an improvement on 1970s exploding Pintos.
orangecrush
(28,420 posts)A VW beetle.
wcmagumba
(5,652 posts)the timing belt did break, hmmm...
bucolic_frolic
(54,062 posts)orangecrush
(28,420 posts)Embraced the spirit of the 80's completely.
wcmagumba
(5,652 posts)I have always had chronically bad judgement in cars, in my old age I have a Corolla I bought new in 2008...still rolling...
orangecrush
(28,420 posts)Hard to kill.
NBachers
(19,185 posts)Diamond_Dog
(39,770 posts)We often laughed, who would want to steal that piece of shit?
Tetrachloride
(9,385 posts)BonnieJW
(3,081 posts)It was the color of Velveeta. Hated it.
paleotn
(21,563 posts)Got rid of it and bought a used Toyota. a couple decades later it was on to Subarus and I've never looked back. That shitvette jaded me to US cars ever since.
orangecrush
(28,420 posts)bamagal62
(4,353 posts)It had a really hard time getting over hills!😂😂😂horrible piece of crap.
But, I had a car and that was a big deal
For me!
KLK1972
(26 posts)My young adult kids have even commented numerous times they're jealous we got to "live in the 80s" lol, because its become such an iconic period of the 20th century.
bucolic_frolic
(54,062 posts)It was Woody Allen's heyday ... all those nostalgic NYC scenes, a time before quants tookover investing, when the little guy could gain an edge by reading and thinking. The food supply was in some ways cleaner, the roads were less crowded because the population was 1/3 of what it is today. Leaf peeping season was pre-online booking and available. See? you got me started.
KLK1972
(26 posts)Were not leashed to devices that tracked our every move, photographed our every worst moment, broadcast our every worst thought, and blasted us with every horrible headline 24/7? Those were the days!
NotHardly
(2,630 posts)yaesu
(9,009 posts)orangecrush
(28,420 posts)orangecrush
(28,420 posts)?si=IPjo-vc1F6JWRbY2
Ishoutandscream2
(6,774 posts)🤮🤮🤮🤮
orangecrush
(28,420 posts)Coventina
(29,172 posts)All my favorite bands are from the 80s (although some of them started in the 70s)
The Cure
Echo & the Bunnymen
The Smiths
U2
Bauhaus / Love and Rockets
Go - Gos
Madonna (fuck the haters)
Social Distortion
Depeche Mode
OMD
I could go on.
yaesu
(9,009 posts)orangecrush
(28,420 posts)Celerity
(53,701 posts)
Coventina
(29,172 posts)Love New Order!!!
I could have listed 20 more bands near and dear to my heart, but I would've had a crazy list!!
AStern
(693 posts)Everything mentioned about Yuppies, Wall Street, Trump, Reagan sucked ass.
Coventina
(29,172 posts)I could go on and on:
Eurythmics
Elvis Costello
Bryan Ferry
Guadalcanal Diary
Jesus and Mary Chain
English Beat
Ministry
Pixies
They Might Be Giants
Cocteau Twins
Geez, the more I think about it, the 80s totally ruled, music-wise.
Chipper Chat
(10,770 posts)Coventina
(29,172 posts)But I realize I've forgotten:
The Clash!
The Church
Sisters of Mercy
INXS
XTC
Violent Femmes
Simple Minds (much more than "Don't You Forget About Me"
Pet Shop Boys
Salt n' Pepa
Run DMC
Sir Mix-a-Lot (his 1988 album Swass is a masterpiece)
Celerity
(53,701 posts)The collaborative record featuring Patricia Morrison, James Ray, Lucas Fox, and Alan Vega, was released by Andrew Eldritch to prevent his former bandmates from The Sisters of Mercy from using The Sisterhood as the name of their new band.
Label: Merciful Release SIS 020
Format: Vinyl, LP, Album
Country: UK
Released: Jun 1986
Genre: Electronic, Rock
Style: Industrial, Synth-pop, Goth Rock




electric_blue68
(25,939 posts)electric_blue68
(25,939 posts)Happy Hoosier
(9,404 posts)orangecrush
(28,420 posts)Happy Hoosier
(9,404 posts)But ya know
. You do have Freedom of Choice!
Gen-Xers unite!
https://tse2.mm.bing.net/th/id/OIP.KvfnJElHISs39D-zX0NW-AHaHa?pid=Api&P=0&w=400&h=400
BannonsLiver
(20,279 posts)Last edited Mon Jan 5, 2026, 01:31 PM - Edit history (1)
Also a big Cure fan.
valleyrogue
(2,588 posts)It keeps coming back in new and more toxic forms.
orangecrush
(28,420 posts)That it didn't stick.
They're serious this time
sdfernando
(6,020 posts)So I can't say I hated it....that would be like saying I hated my youth. Sure there were bad sides as there are with every decade. Reagan and Bush 1 sucked big time!
IbogaProject
(5,622 posts)Lots of artists flourished in the 80s. I was fortunate to catch one of SRV's few shows b4 Bowie kicked him off the Serious Moonlight tour. Caught the Dtop Making Sense tour w the Talking Heads that same summer, mind blown.
My biggest gripe starting college in 1986, was too much repition. Most kids all had the same few CDs and many, though not all, parties had the same songs playing. And I can't count how many parties would have the Stop Making Sense concert movie video tape on one kid's hi-fi vcr playing on the TV & Stereo. Never any other concert movie, even though there were quite a few by then. It lead me to seek out friends who had eclectic music collections. It guided me to not buy the same stuff as everyone else.
wcmagumba
(5,652 posts)The ambient society we live in can influence us of course but each individual is ultimately in control of his or her life...
orangecrush
(28,420 posts)Is a real thing.
Trump is the 80's zeitgeist for me.
Him, Ghoulliani, that whole fucking crew.
ProfessorGAC
(75,855 posts)The music part, no.
ananda
(34,439 posts)And it was Reagan and Bush in the 80's
that set us up to culminate in this
monstrosity of a world.
UTUSN
(76,970 posts)UpInArms
(54,084 posts)Thank you for putting it all into words
orangecrush
(28,420 posts)
Faux pas
(16,171 posts)you on your whole (nailed it!) rant orangecrush!
orangecrush
(28,420 posts)underpants
(194,948 posts)REM
Lets Active
Pixies
Replacements
Hüsker Du
Maniacs
Smithereens
Etc.
KLK1972
(26 posts)ALT music was born in the 80s, that IS 80s music!!!
underpants
(194,948 posts)DBoon
(24,745 posts)underpants
(194,948 posts)Ishoutandscream2
(6,774 posts)And with all you mentioned, music never sucked more.
PatSeg
(52,197 posts)Though I think I am hating this era even more.
BannonsLiver
(20,279 posts)Sorry you had to suffer through the Joan Baez and Peter, Paul and Mary era of music. Id feel shortchanged too.
Sequoia
(12,719 posts)Sad. I loved the 80s...good job, fun BF, camping in Yosemite National Park, roller skating beside the sparkling Pacific ocean, Venice boardwalk, friends from England and none of us liked Ray Gun, or Thatcher, the 1984 Olympics in Los Angeles. And yes, great music from English and European bands.
BeneteauBum
(327 posts)Even with the illegal war, it was some of the best years of my life. College, traveling, sailing
.pretty care free. Some of the best music ever was produced during that era. Still wear a freak flag and continue to embrace peace and love.
Peace ☮️
KLK1972
(26 posts)I'm a bit younger, came of age in the 70s and 80s so I remember them most fondly. I feel like many gfenerations probably love the era of their teens/twenties best.... well, its hard to imagine Gen Z will ever feel that way about today but who knows, I guess.
misanthrope
(9,380 posts)The 1980s/Reagan era comprised the last part of my adolescence and the first part of my 20s. But I couldn't stand it. I didn't like the conformity and conservatism that seemed to become de rigeur and being in the Deep South, it was even more pronounced. I was able to plug in to elements of regional underground scenes -- college radio, alt newspapers and fanzines, bands out of places like New Orleans, Athens, etc. -- but it overall felt constrictive.
I also recall that my knowledge of history told me there was likely to be a cultural swing in the opposite direction to follow in the 1990s. One night in late 1989, I was tending bar and watching the live coverage on the overhead TV set of the Berlin Wall coming down. One of our regulars, a highly conservative man who was a grocery store manager was elated and trumpeting the triumph of Reaganism. I quietly told him I had a suspicion that he wasn't going to like the oncoming decade very much.
What I anticipated in the early 1990s came to pass and felt like a liberation, both in my personal life and in cultural trends. I further freed myself from my familial influence, more fully embraced my personal tastes and preferences. I was surrounded by highly creative peers who were outside my family's stringent social norms. I felt like I was coming alive. I wasn't well off, but had good health and jobs that kept the wolf from the door. I had a well-running car, the freedom to find a woman who loved me for who I am, and a wonderful dog.
I didn't really want for much more. There were intermittent hardships but my overall memories are fond ones.
orangecrush
(28,420 posts)BeneteauBum
(327 posts)Thank you OC. Attending an anti ICE rally tomorrow with a bunch of like minded hippies
.
Peace ☮️
NBachers
(19,185 posts)Celerity
(53,701 posts)Label: EG EGOX16, EG 821 224-1
Format: Vinyl, 12", 45 RPM, Single
Country: UK
Released: Apr 1984
Genre: Electronic, Rock
Style: Post-Punk, Synth-pop





chowder66
(11,856 posts)Celerity
(53,701 posts)Label: Anagram Records 12 ANA 11
Format: Vinyl, 12", Single
Country: UK
Released: Aug 1983
Genre: Electronic, Rock
Style: Goth Rock, Indie Rock



NNadir
(37,304 posts)...marrying her, traveling with her, and having her to share the horror of Reagan-Bush, then Bush-Quayle, was a big time consolation.
Politically it was hard for us, but as soon as Clinton became President, we conceived our two sons.
That's for me personally, not, of course, for the world at large.
KLK1972
(26 posts)I didn't love Reagan but I'm an early Gen Xer through and through and think we had THE best music, movies, and television of the last century. I even loved the feral teen trends of the 80s. Bring back shopping malls, parties at the quarry, fast chevy's, Boones Farm, the brat pack, aquanet, real MTV, Miami Vice, and heavy metal PLEASE!
2026 is nothing like the cool 80s!
Martin Eden
(15,363 posts)Music was a helluva lot better in the 1960's, and in the 70's when I was in high school and college.
I enjoyed going to blues bars in Chicago during the 1980's, and still in my prime as a softball player. Generally had a lot of fun, though not happy with Republicans in the White House 12 straight years.
I joined DU in 2002 during the campaign of lies that took us into Iraq. Protested in Chicago & DC before the war was launched. Hated Bush with a passion, and was heartbroken when he got a 2nd term.
Trump is far worse. Getting a 2nd term after J6??!!! Might as well put Vlad Putin in the White House.
BluesRunTheGame
(1,928 posts)Liberal paradise. I paid $60.00 a month for rent. Tulagis sold beers for 60 cents on Monday nites. Groceries were cheap.
The music scene was phenomenal.
I saw Taj Mahal, Bonnie Raitt, Violent Femmes, Wynton Marsalis, Michael Hedges, Peter Rowan, Bill Monroe, Chris Hillman, and many others at small venues. Hot Rize was a local band. The guys from Leftover Salmon were getting started.
And
.I was in my twenties.
I go back to that right now, no questions asked.
flvegan
(65,784 posts)Grew up in it (Gen X). No internet, no social media, no bullshit. We didn't even have cable tv until the mid-80's. The Guess? triangle from the back pocket of the girls' tight jeans burned forever in my teenage brain.
The music? The 80's gave us Guns n Roses and Beastie Boys, Metallica and Bon Jovi, Motley Crue and Jane's Addiction, Madonna and Public Enemy. It was also some of the best years for AC/DC and Van Halen. Maybe not for everybody, but I wouldn't trade it.
iemanja
(57,397 posts)Both the politics and the music.
hannah
(410 posts)Couldnt find any music I liked. Had an awesome stereo but struggled with the music. Did Arc of the Diver come out then?
By Stevie Winwood? Loved Traffic and Stevie. Sort of liked Cindy Lauper but not really Madonna.
biocube
(169 posts)...but it was definitely a lame decade of music and movies.
Cheezoholic
(3,535 posts)As soon as we recovered a little along comes GWB and Nixon Pt 3. And now as I enter my "golden" years these fuckers are going to fuck it all up even more until I die. Every generation has its challenges socially/politically but I swear it feels like I've had an Elephants knee on my neck for most of my adult life and there's been little in the way of stopping it.
orangecrush
(28,420 posts)rampartd
(3,825 posts)his role model is sinatra and his philosophy is straight out hefner.
but his hedonistic sadism has always been popular in america
misanthrope
(9,380 posts)Trump would have never abided, "The House I Live In." Especially once he discovered the lyrics were written by Abel Meeropol, who also wrote the anti-lynching ballad "Strange Fruit" and who adopted the children of Julius and Ethel Rosenberg.
mvd
(65,841 posts)But I basically grew up then and it was a happy time. Yes, bad things were happening that were a precursor to today. But that is looking back on things. I personally enjoyed the music - U2, REM, Madonna, Cyndi Lauper, Bruce Springsteen, and more.
LisaM
(29,496 posts)Eliminating the Fairness Doctrine, busting a federal union, doing Margaret Thatcher's free market bidding, plus the debacle in Afghanistan...all with that creepy, oily voice that used to send me fleeing from the room. Trickle down economics. All of it. UGH.
orangecrush
(28,420 posts)Martin68
(27,075 posts)Last edited Tue Jan 6, 2026, 09:35 AM - Edit history (1)
on today.
Shermann
(9,008 posts)CaptainTruth
(8,048 posts)But that was about it.
soldierant
(9,287 posts)with Boomers - and I honestly don't even know what you are talking about. I spent the 80s in a small college town, where apparently no one cared about fashion - I know I never have except historically (I've dabbled in theatrical costuming). I've never listened to any music but classical on a regular basis, although I try to keep up intellectually. Like one of the other commenters here, the 80s was when i met, fell in live with , and married my spouse (husband) and after 41 years and some months we are still in love, so there's that. Of course Reagan was godawful (and corrupt) and the Me culture is even worse but Reagan was nowhere near as bad as Trump**(*), who, to the extent he is Reagan, is massively on steroids.
Tim Walz has been quoted as having said "Mind your own biscuits and life will be gravy." I guess that's how I got through the 80's.
twodogsbarking
(17,582 posts)Rinse, repeat, Republican.
Kali
(56,638 posts)got married in the early 80s
Kali
(56,638 posts)orangecrush
(28,420 posts)Made sure of that.
progressoid
(52,595 posts)And a lot of us wanted to rebel against all of that. Unfortunately there was also too many of us boomers and ex-hippies who supported the "greed is good" mantra; who scoffed at the punk rockers who rejected corporatized, overproduced mainstream music, who abandoned the liberals for an easier, third way; who became the people that helped Reagan and Trump thrive and survive.
Also, Stranger Things, fucking rocks!
Aristus
(71,658 posts)adolescent period when I was developing my own tastes and identity separate from those of my parents. But for the rest of it, I was an unpopular, unlikable kid floundering around in the swamp of hormonal changes.
I wont endorse the toxic axiom that military service makes a man out of you - barf- but it must have given me the kind of glow-up that made the early 90s a lot more fun for me than the 80s.
ABC123Easy
(52 posts)Great post! I particularly agree with, "I hated the synthetic music that replaced music that had depth and meaning". Synthesizers everywhere. Everything was fake and plastic.
Much like the majority of music now. I can't listen to the radio anymore. It's just shit. To use an analogy from South Park, modern music just sounds like fart sounds to me now, hahaha.
orangecrush
(28,420 posts)kwolf68
(8,262 posts)...the music of the 1980s was way freaking better than the crap in the 1970s. Oh lookie an opinion. I am half joking, there was plenty of great shit in the 70s, but the 1980s were WAY MORE than hair metal and new wave.
I choose to look at the underground hardcore and metal scenes, the alternative rock scenes, goth rock, etc....you had some amazing shit in the 80s, I'll start with REM, Killing Joke, the Cure, Metallica, Huskur Du, U2 before they got weird and the rise of actual good punk rock like Bad Religion and the Descendents. You had killer stuff like the Smiths and Bauhaus. Tears for Fears were solid. You had the rise of real metal (not glam) as Judas Priest and Iron Maiden did their best work ever and the rise of thrash metal like Slayer, Megadeth. Thrash bands Testament and Anthrax had songs about native Americans, Testament did shit on the global warming and environmental decay. Before he became a nut, Dave Mustaine of Megadeth wrote a song about extinction of animals and the fault of waring for religion. I could go on and on and on.
Bruce Springsteen was continuing to dominate the charts and John Mellancamp both, who sang of inclusiveness in their music. Mellancamp always made it a point to let people know rock n roll was basically created by black people (and he's right). David Bowie took MTV to task for not playing black artists in the early days, because Bowie spoke out MTV not long after saw the ball. Artists tried their hand at "helping people". The we are the world was kinda a failure but not because the artist, rather because some unscrupulous people used a good movement for their own cause with much of the money raised ending up in the wrong hands. Still, people did try.
You also had decidedly left wing political perspective resonating with bands like Minor Threat, DRI, Corrosion of Conformity and seminal punk bands like Dead Kennedys, TSOL, and Circle Jerks.
Lets move toward rap and soul. The Dazz Band, Kool and the Gang, Gap Band picked up where the masters Earth, Wind and Fire left off. Of course the 1980s you had the rise of rap. Now you had black artists singing about their lives. Do yourself a favor and look up "The Message" by Grand Master Flash, it's genius. That was at the start of the 1980s, by the end you had rap groups like Public Enemy spreaking total truth to power, overt and radically political, damn near every PE song was a "news report" of some type. Chuck D should be given a nobel laureate for poetry.
Oh no, the 1980s were totally badass. You had trash in the 60s and 70s, and you had trash in the 1980s, but don't think the 80s didn't have some amazing, thoughtful and awesome contributions to the history of music.
That all said, yes fuck Ronald Reagan.
live love laugh
(16,204 posts).
hunter
(40,380 posts)Can't really say much about music, radio, television, or fashion. I simply wasn't paying attention to any of that.
Some Good things:
That was the decade I clawed most of my mind back after it had gone a little sideways in adolescence. ( Some people take drugs to trip out. I take drugs so I don't. )
That was the decade I got my asthma under control, thanks to newly developed meds.
I didn't die! ( See above. )
JPL space exploration.
https://www.jpl.nasa.gov/timeline/?jumpTo=1989-08-25
I had access to university computers and the internet. The computers I owned and built were finally powerful enough to do some really interesting stuff.
That was the decade I met my wife and we married.
My wife and I bought our first house, for $8,000, in the U.S.A. "Rust Belt."
Some Bad things:
Reagan, of course.
Friends and patients dying of AIDS.
All the assholes, many self-proclaimed "Christians," who thought gay people and drug addicts somehow deserved AIDS.
MichMan
(16,637 posts)While I loved the 70's and came of age so to speak in that decade, it was the 80's that I felt really defined me.
I entered the 80's as a 22 year old college drop out with few job skills and working for close to minimum wage at entry level jobs. Struggling to pay rent and lonely, in need of female companionship. When the 80's ended, I was married, a college graduate with an Engineering degree, and in the midst of establishing a successful career. My income had quadrupled and we will be celebrating our 40th anniversary this year.
I thought the music and culture was great. Loved the rock and soul music of the times. Sammy Hagar, Def Leppard, Asia, Stevie Nicks, Stevie Ray Vaughn, Whispers, Evelyn King, Patrice Rushen, and so many more. IMO, Lonesome Jubilee by John Mellancamp is one of the finest albums ever recorded. Iconic comedy films like Caddyshack (love Rodney), Vacation, Fast Times at Ridgemont High, Blues Brothers, Stripes, Trading Places, Revenge of the Nerds.
As a big car enthusiast, the malaise of the 70's, was replaced by some great new models and performance was back, with the dreaded 55 mph speed limit going away. Finally, one could go to the beach and women with unsightly tattoos were few and far between.
Mossfern
(4,628 posts)having babies - 1978, 1980, 1985, 1988.
Musically, we were very much into Raffi.
Actually, James Taylor had a wonderful children's album out then - In Harmony
.
https://www.google.com/search?q=James+Taylor+In+Harmony+youtube&client=firefox-b-1-d&hs=nKRU&sca_esv=f89be96fa9d53e8d&sxsrf=AE3TifNAEYUq54baUVm26pjPXfI106bsoA%3A1767586886942&ei=RjxbaZ2hOdSg5NoPxeGxgQw&ved=0ahUKEwid3IWkxvORAxVUEFkFHcVwLMAQ4dUDCBE&uact=5&oq=James+Taylor+In+Harmony+youtube&gs_lp=Egxnd3Mtd2l6LXNlcnAiH0phbWVzIFRheWxvciBJbiBIYXJtb255IHlvdXR1YmUyBRAhGKABMgUQIRigATIFECEYoAEyBRAhGKABMgUQIRigAUinLlDDBljgLHABeACQAQCYAV-gAdsKqgECMTm4AQPIAQD4AQGYAhKgAtIKwgIKEAAYsAMY1gQYR8ICCxAAGIAEGJECGIoFwgILEC4YgAQYkQIYigXCAgoQABiABBgUGIcCwgIFEAAYgATCAgUQLhiABMICBhAAGBYYHsICCBAAGKIEGIkFwgIFEAAY7wXCAggQABiABBiiBMICCxAAGIAEGIYDGIoFwgIFECEYqwKYAwCIBgGQBgWSBwQxNy4xoAfRZLIHBDE2LjG4B8sKwgcGMC42LjEyyAc6gAgA&sclient=gws-wiz-serp#fpstate=ive&vld=cid:4ea19a5c,vid:d0uV4zRJFL4,st:0
(I don't know if I'll ever get this link thing down)
GreatGazoo
(4,482 posts)I traveled around Canada in 1990 and found myself thinking "This is what the US would be like if we hadn't turned right in 1980."
A lot of good music was made in the 1980s -- Tracy Chapman, Lenny Kravitz, Robert Plant, Sting, Peter Gabriel, U2. John Fogherty got his rights back and toured.
Lem1951
(36 posts)I was drowning in the AIDS crisis. Watching friends waste away. Sitting at bedsides holding hands of those who would die soon. Hating Reagan and Nancy for their cold hearts and insensitivity towards those suffering. My PTSD will never go away!
drmeow
(5,929 posts)and a guitar playing boyfriend who loved the late 60's and early 70's music and absolutely HATED my 80's new wave music. Once they listed to the music with an open mind, they BOTH came back to me to say that the music was actually really good with some great guitar playing and great song writing.
Every era has shitty music, including the 60's and 70's, and not all music is to everyone's taste. There are genre's I absolutely hate - but I can also acknowledge the musical skill of the artists creating the music within that genre. A lot of pop music from every era sucks!
My HS yearbooks have comments giving me a hard time for hating Reagan from 2 people. One of those has come around to hate him, the other is a lost cause.
Be The Light
(135 posts)60's and 70s was the golden age of rock!
I feel blessed to have grown up in that time. Here's how we rocked back in the day.
https://www.facebook.com/reel/1194258752103196
Mme. Defarge
(8,889 posts)but I was a registered Republican (because of my dad) until a B actor ran for president in 1980. That was a bridge too far. I re-registered as a Democrat and have never looked back.
fond of the eighties either, except a couple of years when I met my husband and we got married in the mid eighties. I finished college early eighties and had an extremely hard time finding a halfway decent job.
Happy Hoosier
(9,404 posts)Ranting Randy
(379 posts)Callie1979
(1,150 posts)I was probably in the best shape of my life too
orangecrush
(28,420 posts)I was living in the Pittsburgh area and due to my union and other left wing involvement, found myself on the radar of one Richard Mellon Schaife.
In a minor way, relatively speaking, but not a good experience.
BannonsLiver
(20,279 posts)Im not surprised people who are now in their late 70s and early 80s arent fans of Depeche Mode or Duran Duran. .
Conversely, as someone who grew up in the 80s Im not terribly excited about Joan Baez or Peter, Paul and Mary.
orangecrush
(28,420 posts)The period 1970 to 1975 was incredible.
Callie1979
(1,150 posts)If I recall the average age here is above 70
Hugin
(37,444 posts)My friends and I cobbled together from the noise.
I hated the 80s we were/are trying to be sold.
BannonsLiver
(20,279 posts)But I love the 80s enough to more than make up for your hatred!
orangecrush
(28,420 posts)Of possibility
BannonsLiver
(20,279 posts)orangecrush
(28,420 posts)ironically
MustLoveBeagles
(14,801 posts)I liked the 70's better. With moms divorce the 80's went downhill fast. We were poor at a time when being such wasn't fashionable and we were bashed for circumstances beyond our control. Reagan didn't help in that regard. Honestly I was relieved when the 80's were over. Unlike you , I liked 80's movies and music. They were my only escape outlets.
Pluvious
(5,241 posts)It's pretty amazing that it was just two guys, though
orangecrush
(28,420 posts)?si=5kovd7R0BQ4WtdY1
bagimin
(1,661 posts)a letter carrier in the 80's 90's 00's and teens. Today, I'm retired and afraid (tonight on Fox!)
Kid Berwyn
(22,990 posts)
50 years of tax cuts for the rich failed to trickle down, economics study says
https://www.cbsnews.com/news/tax-cuts-rich-50-years-no-trickle-down/
dameatball
(7,653 posts)Even then I couldn't believe what an arrogant asshole he was. Made me cringe that he was popular enough with some portions of the country that he would get air time and publicity but I underestimated the viewing public and the corporate bigwigs that saw dollar signs. Little did i know what was to come.
moondust
(21,214 posts)https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wealth_inequality_in_the_United_States
When "Trickle-Down Ronny" was reelected in 1984 in a 49-state landslide...my tea leaves waved goodbye.
Raine
(31,095 posts)but HATED Reagan!
Trashman272
(18 posts)Doc Browns Delorean I'd go back to the 80s in a heartbeat. I had wayyyyy to much fun and didn't stress about shit back then. A couple doobies and a Judas Priest concert and life was as good as it gets.
beaglelover
(4,428 posts)electric_blue68
(25,939 posts)Being a political person; Reagan was horrible! Being one who believes in ethics, and fairness the "greed is good" "ethos" fostered bad behavior.
Otoh had I had a mostly interesting and creative job mid '80s. And previously a good 18 month temp job, good
co-workers, nice boss; only lost bc my boss's boss wanted his teacher daughter to have a job. Made some good new friends. Found SW Zine Fandom where I did B&W illustrations for fan stories through late '80s - part of the '90s.
Liked, and loved a lot of music! Tears for Fears, Talking Heads, New Order, The B-52's, Devo, Simple Minds, The Police, The Pretenders, Culture Club, Echo & the Bunnymen, Blondie, Eurythmics, The Smiths, The Fixx.
Finding U2 early! More Springsteen!
Saw some of these live!
We had a great nicely designed dance, and music club in NYC - Harruh's for a few years. A far cry from grungy CBGB's though I was there from late ?'76 through part '80s.
I was never a '60's music snob even through I grew up with The Beatles, The Who, The Animals, C,S,N & Y, Jefferson Airplane, etc.
In '80 I went on my second Big USA trip. Up to South Dakota for a particular event, then to Denver where my cousin took me on his motorcycle to visit The Red Rocks Amphitheater (not at concerts time), and then up into The Rockies! Then back to Arizona- to revisit The Navajo & Hopi Nations, and revisited my dad's friends in Albuquerque.
So many personal great times!
Dave Bowman
(6,676 posts)Permanut
(7,996 posts)I'm gonna go play some Irene Cara.