4 PERSPECTIVES The Michigan Daily Monday, December 4,1989 Page 8 Everything old Back in the Dark Ages, everyone Fat chance. Thanks to the magic Was terrified of the year 1000. It was of nostalgia, you're going to have what they referred to as "the millen- the chance to live the Reagan Years hium" - 1000 years after the com- over and over again, whether you Ing of Christ. There were Biblical like it or not. prophecies, or so they interpreted You're going to listen to the Top Ihem, that said that was when the 500 songs of the '80s on the radio. vorld would end. The Beast would You're going to read enough '80s Pe loosed from the pit. Cities would chronologies in the newspaper to tall into the sea. The earth would be wrap around the equator. You're go- pelted with rice cakes the size of ing to view and review the Top Ten service Merchandise outlets. news events of the '80s on every Of course, now, in these more news show short of maybe the enlightened times, we can look back morning farm report, and that's be- at this superstitious activity and cause that's going to be recapping laugh. But we shouldn't, because the the Top Ten sweet corn hybrids of Wncients were absolutely right in be- the '80s. iPrr itha rtin meir dnp a is new Wretched Refuse by Jim Poniewozik ing from, say, the 50th annivers, of the start of WWII (1989) to 1 80th Armistice day (1998), and peating into eternity in the form Time magazine cover stories a VFW interviews in your local pal (although we're starting to run ( of doughboys from the Great W so we re going to have to start a n one soon). But the end of a decade sends n again (ar spectives on its cover for the past few weeks (we anxiously await the Top 100 Pie Graphs of the '80s), and even MTV recently aired the decade's Top 100 videos (giving the top spot, ironically, to Neil Young's "This Note's for You," a mediocre at pry best lampoon of rock commercial- he ism which MTV originally refused e- to air for fear of offending its spon- of sors). nd This is not to imply that taking per time to look back and reflect on )ut where we've been is a bad thing; it's ar, not, and the end of a decade is as ew good a time for it as any. But seeing people attempt, over and over again, id again, and...) U. S. troop withdrawal from Viet- nam until the release of Never Mind the Bollocks, Here's the Sex Pistols, leaving our nation's sound-bite manufacturers hungry for a real decade to sink their pearly whites into. We'll probably manage to pull through the end-of-the-'80s crisis, though. Our real problem comes when we hit the year 2000 - a triple-nostalgia bonanza. The end of a decade. The end of a century. And the end of a millennium. All they had to worry about in the year 1000 was Satan - we've got the entire world media corps to deal with. Imagine it - a wholesale on- slaught of reflection. Radio stations playing The Doors' "20th Century Fox" over and over. "Recapping the Top 100 singles of the second mil- lennium A.D., we had 'Greensleeves' coming in at number one, followed by 'Happy Birthday,' 'The Messiah,'...." Industry will grind to a halt. People will lock themselves inside their homes for fear of being trapped and repeatedly interviewed by wanton packs of journalists. We won't have enough resources to relive the past, much less do anything in the pre- sent. The world will end. It seems to me there's only one solution to the impending crisis. Postpone the 21st century for 10 years. In its place will be a "leap decade" devoted to nostalgia/looking ahead. Everyone will take a ten-year leave of absence from work, during which time they will be debriefed ou the past. People will spend the first month writing down everything they can remember about the past millen- nium, and for the rest of the decade, announcers will read the lists on na- tional TV. Then, maybe then, we'll be ready for time to continue. Wake me up in 2001. I E ii leving tnat certain mystic ates can oteu e er fnsoyit n Milking an anniversary for all dia into orgiastic frenzies likeLUoPh- t1dy, ring on horrible disasters. it's worth is nothing new in the me- ing short of a presidential oth - tidy, meaningless little package You see, the Eighties are cor- dia world, of course. Take, for ex- a major Hollywood divorce. We've ("The 'Me' Decade," "The 'We' s d. ample, the war phenomenon. Hap- been feeling the first warning ripples Decade ")Te tiring. This probably sounds silly, pily for publishers worldwide, World of the 1990 tsunami for several Aevel' Decade") gets tiring.h -ight? I mean, the Eighties are over, Wars I and II had the courtesy to take months now. Rolling Stone, for ex- the 's followed close on the heels rall cross the word "Cajun-style" 4 place from 1914-191 and1939- ample, recently listed its 100 top al- of the '70s, a mediocre decade at :anallcros he ord"Cjunstye"1945 respectively. This means that bums of the '80s (speaking of milk- best. They elyol pne bu ut of our dictionaries, right? any given calendar is the decennial ing a concept for all it's worth), three or four years, roughly from the Rleght? anniversary of some war event, rang- USA Today has featured '80s retro- C0XF10F EE CC )0 FF E F DD rc~kITC AN r-VuLID ITifLI f^C 0 TIfSW OF FEELIGLIKE Big, beautiful 2 bedroom apartments available now for as little as $550.00/month. 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