2004 List
- Most students entering college this fall in the class of 2004, were born in 1982.
- Grace Kelly, Elvis Presley, Karen Carpenter, and the E.R.A. have always been dead.
- Kurt Cobain’s death was the “day the music died.”
- Somebody named George Bush has been on every national ticket, except one, since they were born.
- The Kennedy tragedy was a plane crash, not an assassination.
- Huckleberry Finn has always been a “banned book.”
- A “45” is a gun, not a record with a large hole in the center.
- They have no clue what the Beach Boys were talking about when they sang about a 409, and the Little Deuce Coupe.
- They have probably never lost anything in shag carpeting.
- MASH and The Muppet Show have always been in re-runs.
- Punk Rock is an activist movement, not a musical form.
- They have always bought telephones, rather than rent them from AT&T.
- The year they were born, AIDS was found to have killed 164 people; finding a cure for the new disease was designated a “top priority” for government-sponsored research.
- We have always been able to reproduce DNA in the laboratory.
- Wars begin and end quickly; peace-keeping missions go on forever.
- There have always been ATM machines.
- The President has always addressed the nation on the radio on Saturday.
- We have always been able to receive television signals by direct broadcast satellite.
- Cities have always been trying to ban the possession and sale of handguns.
- Watergate is as relevant to their lives as the Teapot Dome scandal.
- They have no idea that a “presidential scandal” once meant nothing more than Ronald Reagan taking President Carter’s briefing book in “Debategate.”
- They have never referred to Russia and China as “the Reds.”
- Toyotas and Hondas have always been made in the United States.
- There has always been a national holiday honoring Martin Luther King, Jr.
- Three Mile Island is ancient history, and nuclear accidents happen in other countries.
- Around-the-clock coverage of congress, public affairs, weather reports, and rock videos has always been available on cable.
- Senator Phil Gramm has always been a Republican.
- Women sailors have always been stationed on U.S. Navy ships.
- The year they were born, the New York Times announced that the “boom in video games,” a fad, had come to an end.
- Congress has been questioning computer intrusion into individuals’ personal lives since they were born.
- Bear Bryant has never coached at Alabama.
- They have always been able to afford Calvin Klein.
- Coors Beer has always been sold east of the Mississippi, eliminating the need for Burt Reynolds to outrun the authorities in the Smokey and the Bandit films.
- They were born the same year that Ebony and Ivory lived in perfect harmony.
- The year they were born, Dustin Hoffman wore a dress and Julie Andrews wore a tuxedo.
- Elton John has only been heard on easy listening stations.
- Woodstock is a bird or a reunion, not a cultural touchstone.
- They have never heard a phone “ring.”
- They never dressed up for a plane flight.
- Hurricanes have always had men’s and women’s names.
- Lawn darts have always been illegal.
- “Coming out” parties celebrate more than debutantes.
- They only know Madonna singing American Pie.
- They neither know who Billy Joe was, nor wondered what he was doing on the Talahatchee Bridge.
- They never thought of Jane Fonda as “Hanoi Jane,” nor associated her with any revolution other than the “Fitness Revolution” videotape they may have found in the attic.
- The Osmonds are talk show hosts.
- They have never used a bottle of “White Out.”
- If they vaguely remember the night the Berlin Wall fell, they are probably not sure why it was up in the first place.
- “Spam” and “cookies” are not necessarily foods.
- They feel more danger from having sex and being in school, than from possible nuclear war.