Not as much of a cultural shift as there was between ‘85 and ‘55. He’d find clunky computers, no internet, no smart phones, answering machines, video rental stores, girls dressed like Madonna, video game arcades.
Thats why they invented in the late 60s this micracle called ........ VCR!!!!!! And it even gets better: You could watch them whenever you want and the movies and series are even smart and just partly dark as hell!!!! And again: Whenever YOU want! Not when some streaming company decides that they dont want to continue the contract for some movies and you will never be able to watch them again.
Streaming isnt cool in any way. Its just some way to control what you have to like!
Except I would still have to fastforward through stupid ads. Not like the way it is today where you can just buy the whole season of a show on DVD or streaming without ads. It takes 30 minutes to watch a 22 minute show and an hour to watch a 42 minute show.
There were many of such collections. Especially on Laserdisc. And today its better that the picutre quality is better. But as a movie fan streaming services are simply a step back in the horrible times before VCRs. When others decide what you had to watch and like.
Hell, Laserdisc wasn't even THAT much worse than DVD picture-wise. If anything DVD was just Laserdisc for the masses. Obviously far inferior to blu-ray though.
I confess absolutely nobody I ever knew growing up in the 90s had a Laserdisc player. Plus with them being so large, it'd be a pain in the butt to have them at all. Those Laserdiscs were the size of records so you couldn't even put them on a normal bookshelf of the time.
VHS entire seasons DID exist but they were much more massive and much more time consuming to produce provide. And then pre-Amazon there was the question how/where to sell them. DVD--esp slimline case has made producing whole seasons more time and cost effective.
"You could buy then also whole seasons on VHS or LaserDisc! But why buying when you get it for free and even earlier on TV?"
In 1988? Star Trek was the only one. It was the first TV series with a significant number of episodes to be released on home video in its entirety, and that was a two-year process culminating in 1986.
"There were many of such collections. Especially on Laserdisc."
You would have just had to have gone to the local video store and rent a couple of VHS tapes.
You'd have been better off to go to 1955 where they didn't really have it and you'd have to wean yourself off of it. It would be healthy for your mind.
Yep. And when Doc says the classic line, "Roads? Where we're going, we don't need roads.", the new script will have Martina McFly say, "You don't get to tell me what I need, white man."
If it came out now, all the “unnecessary” browning (as a well-known pitiful white power darling calls it) and gender-changing that conservatives fear will happen in a new BTTF, won’t come close to all the whitewashing that has happened in Hollywood’s history. Even things out? Nope, far from it.
Now if there’s the slightest chance this hypothetical modern version could be good, then bring on that progressive remake and let them tears flow.
Why should things be "evened" out? If whitewashing isn't a good thing, then neither is browning. What a ridiculous "an eye for an eye" way of thinking.
Exactly. Remaking films with minorities and/or women just for the sake of having "brown" and/or pussy involved, to placate modern radicals, is just as ridiculous as the actual whitewashing that happened back in the day.
"So future boy, who's President in 2018?"
"Donald Trump."
"Donald Trump! The real estate guy who's best friends with Oprah?"
"Yep, turns out he's a racist, not a democrat. Him and Oprah are not on good terms in the future."
Anyway, I would gladly sacrifice almost anything to get to live the rest of my incarnation or even just a few years, heck I'd sacrifice a lot even for just a few MOMENTS in the 1980s.
The atmosphere. The feel. The uplifting, incredible, powerful energy-atmosphere, colors allowed.. ahh. What a wonderful world that would be.
Who cares about smartphones, I don't even have them now - and my old, colorless cell phone doesn't see much usage, I would get by with landline famously.
All that's great was made mostly in the 1980s anyway, the rest is just 'extension', 'improvement' or 'different versions' of those things anyway. Sure, things were clunky, but they were also more free. People actually talked face-to-face instead of bookface.
Kids today can't probably even imagine that..
Coin-Up Arcade games with their authentic YM2151 chips.. I would GLADLY give up internet and modern computer systems for that. Internet is nothing but toxic gits anyway.
Either Edo-period Japan or 1980s western world, that'd be a dreamy time indeed. Smartphone-addicts might not realize how bad they have it now, and how great things were back then, but I'd go back in a heartbeat and never return to this horrible time.
It sounds good in theory. How long would you last there though? I think you would get bored pretty quickly. It might be interesting if everything you knew about the future was wiped from your memory.
I would miss a few things, but honestly, to have a conversation with someone once again, without having them interrupted by their phone beeping, would be great.
Yes, especially AIDS. Even though it still isn't curable, the drugs people take now extend their lives quite a bit. One thing that is different now is that people back in the 80's had better access to healthcare. Meds and hospital care are outrageously overpriced and even with insurance getting sick can bankrupt you, that is, if you can even get the help you need. Lots of people now go without due to the inability to afford needed medications and surgeries. In fact, I read that life expectancy is going lower in years in the US. Other countries have better outcomes.
I don't think I'd want to go back to 1988 I was in elementary school....my dad lost his job and we had to move. The place where we moved to was out in the middle of no where. I missed my best friend. Yeah I remember 1988 not a fan