The generation that time forgot

I feel that Generations X and Y have been deleted from the annals of history.

All the great music I remembered from the Nineties gets sod-all views on YouTube; the only exception being the Beastie Boys.

I guess that us Britpopers didn't procreate enough! Expressionless

Parents
  • I have been wondering how much stuff from the 1990s is now forgotten or fading into obscurity. Could AS sadly go down the same avenue?

    The younger generation seems to gravitate towards gangsta rap, hip-hop, and embrace black American and black Caribbean subcultures, whilst Britain seems incapable of producing any modern day equivalent of punk or rave - both of which are no longer familiar to anybody born this side of 1995ish.

  • Again, it was the Bubblegum Poppers who had the most kids in the Noughties.

    Some kids saw nothing outside MTV/Comedy Central/Newgrounds and view the world from an American Lens.

    We weren't genuine enough for the Punkers/Beatniks, but too snobby for Millenials.

Reply
  • Again, it was the Bubblegum Poppers who had the most kids in the Noughties.

    Some kids saw nothing outside MTV/Comedy Central/Newgrounds and view the world from an American Lens.

    We weren't genuine enough for the Punkers/Beatniks, but too snobby for Millenials.

Children
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