General Jack D. Ripper said:
When I was younger, Gen X would get a kick out of older generations' attachment to nostalgia. We always kind of laughed at it and found it a bit pathetic. Yet, here we are and Gen X is chugging down the nostalgia and pandering to greater degrees than the prior generations.
All the remakes and reboots. It's pretty weird and leaving us with crappy product.
All of the remakes and reboots and past celebrity idols continued representation (e.g., just recently with Mike Tyson) is because the current cultural paradigm has stifled creativity and today's generation's ability to raise up an icon/s that the broader society can all rally behind.
We
all watched Mike Tyson fight. We all listened to Phil Collins (strange that Jake Paul entered to
In the Air Tonight when their has been 43 years of music to choose from, surely this generation could have produced something more representative of kids today?).
We all cheered for
Rocky. Italian-American from Philadelphia overcoming the odds. I was a child in a small town outside of Philly, and unbeknownst to me at the time, full of Italian families. But all of America could relate. It's hard for me not to think that the final Rocky film influenced this absurd fight. It appears life imitates art and not the other way around.
And despite the obsessive cries of racism we all watched
The Jeffersons,
Sanford and Son, and
The Cosby Show, which was only one of two tv shows to spend five consecutive seasons as the number-one rated show.
When we watched in Hicks's staticky video feed a terrified Hudson yelling "The Sarge is gone! Let's get the **** out of here!" We empathized with the loss of a good leader.
We felt that loss again when a masculine Latina sacrificed her life and would die held by a cowardly (white) lieutenant who redeemed himself by attempting her rescue.
What I'm getting at - because I can continue to ramble on with examples - is the reason for the nostalgic remakes and reboots is
Our music was better. Our stories were better. Our respect for one another was better. Our cultural identity as Americans was better.
Our generation was better.
So there