
Same as it ever was?
I’m old: I have several silver hairs sprouting up around my temples just like Earth-2 Superman, pop music makes me angry, and if I don’t get to bed before 11 PM, I tend to be forgetful at work the next day and wander away from my cubicle. And, like most old people, I am of the firm conviction that everything was way better when I was younger. The rock stars wore more makeup, the movies had more space ships, and the tv shows had more hair. Hell, even the bad things were somehow cut from a finer cloth than the bad things we’re stuck with today. When I was younger, bad things were bad in a way that had meaning and gravitas. These bad things–like the nuclear threat presented by the Soviet Bloc, and the belligerent wholesomeness of The Lawrence Welk Show– represented the culmination of a generation’s worth of massive-scale ideological brinksmanship from which there could be no turning back. I’m talking about a time when the “zealot” pigeonhole was big enough to house more than just a contingent of Middle Eastern malcontents; back in the day, bad things and their respective attendants truly believed in their causes. And they meant business. With this historical perspective in mind, I really have a hard time taking Carrie Prejean seriously. After all, I remember Anita Bryant. (more…)
Carrie Prejean, You’re No Anita Bryant
November 15, 2009Same as it ever was?
I’m old: I have several silver hairs sprouting up around my temples just like Earth-2 Superman, pop music makes me angry, and if I don’t get to bed before 11 PM, I tend to be forgetful at work the next day and wander away from my cubicle. And, like most old people, I am of the firm conviction that everything was way better when I was younger. The rock stars wore more makeup, the movies had more space ships, and the tv shows had more hair. Hell, even the bad things were somehow cut from a finer cloth than the bad things we’re stuck with today. When I was younger, bad things were bad in a way that had meaning and gravitas. These bad things–like the nuclear threat presented by the Soviet Bloc, and the belligerent wholesomeness of The Lawrence Welk Show– represented the culmination of a generation’s worth of massive-scale ideological brinksmanship from which there could be no turning back. I’m talking about a time when the “zealot” pigeonhole was big enough to house more than just a contingent of Middle Eastern malcontents; back in the day, bad things and their respective attendants truly believed in their causes. And they meant business. With this historical perspective in mind, I really have a hard time taking Carrie Prejean seriously. After all, I remember Anita Bryant. (more…)
Tags:1977, Anita Bryant, Carrie Prejean, Chastity Bono, Elton John, Miss USA, National Organization for Marriage, Save Our Children, social commentary
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