That '70s Show/Headscratchers: Difference between revisions

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*** Yes, but the point stands that the "old hippie" tropes that surround Leo are hugely anachronistic. I suppose this is part of the joke.
** Wasn't there an episode where they showed him as a young man around the time of WWII, and someone gave him some marijuana for the first time?
*** Yep. Red is surprised to learn that Leo is a military veteran, so we get treated to a flashback featuring a clean-cut, morally upstanding Leo leaving a military base after getting discharged and hitching a ride with a car full of stoned jazz musicians. And, yes, [http://en.[wikipedia.org/wiki/Leo_Chingkwake:Leo Chingkwake#Age_and_birthdayAge and birthday|he is older than Red.]]
* Why do the main characters have to express 1990's and later attitudes in a show set in the late 1970's?
** How are they expressing 1990s attitudes? I figured it strange at first that they remind me more of the 90s in behaviour and traits than the 70s, but then this troper grew up in the 90s, and consequently developed a schema where he associated teenagers with 90s culture. Who's to say teenagers weren't the same in the 70s? Difficult to say unless you actually lived it. Ask anyone who grew up as a teenager in the 70s, and ask them if That 70s Show is a good reflection of what teenagers were like in the 70s. Whatever era, they were still teenagers. Although teenagers in the 70s weren't as highly sexed and useless as teenagers are now.
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{{reflist}}
[[Category:Live Action TV/Headscratchers]]
[[Category:That 70 s70s Show]]
[[Category:Headscratchers]]
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