The Eighties: Difference between revisions

no edit summary
(defaultsort, examples template, tropelist)
No edit summary
 
(4 intermediate revisions by 4 users not shown)
Line 1:
{{Useful Notes}}
[[File:80s_pop_culture_nutshell_7983The eighties 3159.jpg|framethumb|link=media:the_eighties_3159.jpg400px|'Twas a good decade for pop culture.]]
 
{{quote|''"Legend has it that man once washed his jeans in pure acid!"''|'''[[Stephen Colbert]]''', ''[[The Colbert Report]]''}}
|'''[[Stephen Colbert]]''', ''[[The Colbert Report]]''}}
 
[['''The Eighties]]''': a time where you [[The Go-Gos|go-go]] when you want to [[The Bangles|walk like an Egyptian]], [[Prince|hear doves cry]] or feel the [[Punky Brewster|Punky power]].
 
All the men were preppies who wore pastel suits with narrow ties, drove sports cars that Lee Iacocca personally stood behind and traded stocks on Wall Street - after all, as [[Oscar Wilde]] said, nothing says success like excess. (Unless they happened to be teenagers, in which case they were [[Totally Radical]] or studied karate and learnt the meaning of "[[Wax On, Wax Off]]".) Everyone had [[Eighties Hair|huge hairdos]], enough make-up to sink a ship and power suits with shoulderpads big enough to knock the giant mirrored sunglasses off anyone who walked within a three foot radius of them. And those without them had flat-tops and wore gym clothes and break-danced on top of cardboard. Generation Y started being born, one day to become, [[Adult Child|despite their best efforts]], the young adults of The [[Turn of the Millennium]].
Line 10 ⟶ 11:
Computing technology first became a true cultural force in this decade, starting a trend that would keep on snowballing to this very day. The Eighties was the decade of [[Cell Phone|cell phones]] literally sized and shaped like bricks, jokes about being unable to program VCRs, the death of Betamax, and the beginnings of personal computers and gaming consoles beginning to proliferate inside homes, perhaps one of the trends from this decade with the largest of cultural implications. Cable television also took off big time, with [[MTV]], [[TBS]], [[HBO]], and [[Cable News Network|CNN]] becoming household acronyms.
 
In the US, it was also the first wave of the [[Japanese Invasion]], the inklings of which started in '78 with the dub of ''[[Battle of the Planets]]'', continuing on with ''[[Star Blazers]]'' ('79),'' [[Voltron]]'' ('84), [[Took a Level Inin Badass|getting even more hardcore]] with ''[[Robotech]]'' in '85, and hitting its apex by [[Crowning Moment of Awesome|cranking the quality]] [[Up to Eleven]] with the nationwide release of ''[[Akira]]'' ('88).
 
On the homefront, the 1980s produced a rash of pop-cultural icons that today are looked upon, at worst, with [[Affectionate Parody]], and at best, as the national ideal. The conservative political culture of the era meant two rather contradictory things for the production of pop-culture; on the one hand, the surge of private enterprise together with new media technologies allowed corporations such as Hasbro an unprecedented ability to build [[Merchandise-Driven|massive franchises]] around their products, typically with a TV show and accompanying toys, but on the other [[Moral Guardian]] complaints would challenge the ethics of making a show that was "essentially one large commercial." The result was the rather spoof-worthy [[And Knowing Is Half the Battle]] segment common to many mass franchise shows, shoving an [[Anvilicious]] moral into the action. Fortunately, these were conveniently located after the actual plot, so kids could just turn it off at that point and run down to buy the toys. Besides, the segments [[So Bad It's Good|make]] [[Memetic Mutation|great]] [[YoutubeYouTube Poop|joke]] fodder.
 
Politically, the first part of the decade, [[Cold War]] tensions continued to escalate. Some accuse this of being an [[Batman Gambit|intentional move]] by the West to render the economically inept Soviet Union infeasible by drawing its resources away from things like infrastructure and feeding its people, which market economies could accomplish easily. While this is, essentially, what ended up happening (though more complicated than that in real life; in Eastern Europe the decade's real deathblow to communism was considered to have been all the new media technology), the fact that the other possible outcome of such a strategy was global thermonuclear annihilation had a profound impact on Western media tropes. Most obviously, dystopian [[Speculative Fiction]], particularly set [[After the End]] [[Twenty Minutes Into the Future]], enjoyed a surge.
Line 43 ⟶ 44:
* [[I Was Quite a Fashion Victim]] (applying to works looking at this decade in hindsight), a survivor of the so-called "decade fashion disaster" might confess to this.
* [[Japan Takes Over the World]] (A staple of the decade, particularly in [[Cyberpunk]] works. Often seems a little silly now.)
* [[Merchandise-Driven]] (Virtually [[Thundercats|every]] [[MASKM.A.S.K.|original]] [[Centurions|cartoon]] [[Strawberry Shortcake|made]] [[Rainbow Brite|in]] [[The Real Ghostbusters|the]] [[G.I. Joe|eighties]] [[The Transformers (animation)|seems]] [[Care Bears|to]] [[He-Man and the Masters of the Universe|be]] [[Jem and The Holograms|this]] [[Western Animation/My Little Pony|way]].)
* [[Montage Ends the VHS]]: It's when a commercial VHS tape has trailers, intros or just a compilation montage promoting a line of VHS's come up at the end after a movie or episode it contains is over.
* [[Mini-Dress of Power]]: and by power, they mean "powerdressing"
Line 126 ⟶ 127:
** Damian Wayne. First appeared (as an infant) in 1987. He would grow up to become a Robin.
** Timothy "Tim" Drake. First appeared in August, 1989. Became Robin in December, 1989.
* ''[[Amethyst, Princess of Gemworld]]''. First appeared in April-MayApril–May, 1983.
* ''[[D.R. & Quinch|DR and Quinch]]''. First appeared in May, 1983.
* ''[[Albedo: Erma Felna EDF]]''. Series started in Summer, 1983.
Line 151 ⟶ 152:
* [[Nightwing]], a new persona for Robin/Richard Grayson. First appeared in July, 1984.
* ''[[Power Pack]]''. First appeared in August, 1984.
* ''[[The Transformers (ComicMarvel BookComics)|The Transformers]]''. Series started in September, 1984.
* [[XIII]]. Series started in September, 1984.
* [[Steel]]/Henry "Hank" Heywood III. First appeared in October, 1984.
* [[Spider-Woman]]/Julia Carpenter. First appeared in October-NovemberOctober–November, 1984.
* ''[[For the Man Who Has Everything]]''. Published in 1985.
* ''[[Crisis on Infinite Earths]]''. First appeared in April, 1985.
Line 168 ⟶ 169:
* ''[[Booster Gold]]''. First appeared in February, 1986.
* ''[[The Dark Knight Returns]]''. First appeared in February, 1986.
* ''[[X-Factor (comics)|X-Factor]]''. First version. Debuted in February, 1986.
* Kid Flash/Wallace "Wally" West assumed the mantle of [[The Flash]] in March, 1986.
* ''[[Watchmen (comics)|Watchmen]]'': First appeared in September, 1986. Remember that it's an alternate form of the world we know. Fashions, technology, drugs, and politics are different. Except in [[Watchmen (film)|the movie]].
Line 276 ⟶ 277:
* ''[[The Color Purple]]''
* ''[[A Confederacy of Dunces]]''
* The ''[[Discworld]]'' series started with ''[[Discworld/The Colour of Magic|The Colour of Magic]]''
* ''[[Dragon's Egg|Dragons Egg]]''
* ''[[Earth's Children|Earths Children]]''
* ''[[Empire of the Sun (novel)|Empire of the Sun]]''
* ''[[Foucault's Pendulum]]''
* ''[[Garrett P.I.]]''. The series started in 1987.
Line 341 ⟶ 342:
 
 
== Live -Action TV ==
* ''[[The A-Team]]''
* ''[[Airwolf]]''
Line 352 ⟶ 353:
* ''[[The Bill]]''*
* ''[[Blackadder]]''
* ''[[Blake's 7|Blakes Seven]]'' (Technically ran from 1978-1982, but had plenty of tropes landing here, including [[Deconstruction]]... and most of Servalan's costuming)
* ''[[Blockbusters]]''
* ''[[Body Language (TV series)|Body Language]]''
Line 361 ⟶ 362:
* '[[Chucklevision]]''*
* ''[[The Cosby Show]]''
* [[Countdown]]*
* ''[[Crazy Like a Fox]]''
* ''[[Dallas]]''
Line 412 ⟶ 413:
* ''[[Out of This World]]''*
* ''[[Pee-wee's Playhouse|Pee Wees Playhouse]]''
* ''[[Pink Lady and...And Jeff]]''
* ''[[Poirot]]''*
* ''[[Police Squad!]]''
Line 423 ⟶ 424:
* ''[[Small Wonder]]''
* ''[[Star Trek]]''
** ''[[Star Trek: The Next Generation|Star Trek the Next Generation]]''*
* ''[[Super Sentai]]''*
** ''[[Battle Fever J]]''
Line 440 ⟶ 441:
* ''[[This Morning]]''
* ''[[Too Close for Comfort]]''*
* ''[[WhosWho's theThe Boss?]]''*
* ''[[Whose Line Is It Anyway?|Whose Line Is It Anyway]]''* - The radio show and the British version started in the late Eighties.
* [[Wipeout 1988]]
Line 446 ⟶ 447:
* ''[[The Young Ones]]''
 
* [[The Seventies]] series ''[[UFO]]'' attempted to foretell this era... and [[Zeerust|failed entirely]].
 
== Music ==
=== Genres: ===
* [[MTV]] debuted and had a huge influence on the popularity of acts during this decade.
* [[Hair Metal]]
Line 457 ⟶ 458:
* [[Hip Hop]]'s golden age starts late in this decade (circa 88).
 
=== Musicians: ===
* ABC
* [[Paula Abdul]]
Line 611 ⟶ 612:
* [[TNT]]
* Tommy Tutone (867-5309)
* [[Tom Petty (Music)|Tom Petty]]
* Tracy Allman
* [[Twisted Sister]]
Line 641 ⟶ 642:
* [[Talisman]]
* [[Warhammer Fantasy Battle]]
* [[Warhammer 4000040,000]]
 
 
Line 712 ⟶ 713:
** ''MechWarrior'' (1989)
* ''[[Mega Man (video game)|Mega Man]]'' (the original NES game was released in 1987)
* ''[[Metal Gear 1987(video game)|Metal Gear]]'' (the original game for the MSX2 and NES)
* ''[[Metroid]]'' (The very first Metroid game was released on the NES in 1986)
* ''[[Millipede (video game)|Millipede]]''
Line 738 ⟶ 739:
** ''Shadow Dancer'' (1989)
** ''The Revenge of Shinobi'' (1989)
* ''[[Sim CitySimCity]]''
* ''[[Street Fighter]]''
** ''[[Street Fighter (video game)|Street Fighter]]'' (1987)
Line 745 ⟶ 746:
* ''[[Super Mario Bros. 2]]'' (and ''[[Doki Doki Panic]]'')
* ''[[Super Mario Bros 3]]'' (in Japan in 1988, anyway)
* [[Taipan!]]
* ''[[Taiyou no Shinden Asteka II]]''
* ''[[TakeshisTakeshi's Challenge]]''
* ''[[Tapper]]''
* ''[[Tecmo Bowl]]''
* ''[[Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (video game)|Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles]]''
* ''[[Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles the Arcade Game]]''
* ''[[Tempest (video game)|Tempest]]''
* ''[[Terra Cresta]]''
* ''[[Tetris]]'' (the [[Elektronika-60]] original, as well as a variety of classic iterations)
Line 797 ⟶ 798:
* ''[[Code Monkeys]]''. Set in this decade.
* ''[[The Comic Strip]]'' (particularly its ''Tiger Sharks'' segment)
* ''[[COPS (animation)|COPS]]''
* ''[[Danger Mouse]]''
* ''[[Defenders of the Earth]]''
Line 806 ⟶ 807:
* ''[[Dinosaucers]]''
* ''[[Dogtanian and the Three Muskehounds]]''
* ''[[DuckTales (1987)]]''*
* ''[[Fantastic Max]]''
* ''[[Fat Albert and the Cosby Kids]]''. The long-running series ended in this decade.
Line 835 ⟶ 836:
* ''[[The Little Rascals]]''. Based on the film series.
* ''[[The Littles]]''
* ''[[MASKM.A.S.K.]]''
* ''[[Mighty Orbots]]''
* ''[[Mister T (animation)|Mister T]]''
Line 862 ⟶ 863:
* ''[[Saturday Supercade]]''
* ''[[Scooby-Doo (animation)|Scooby Doo]]''
** ''[[The 13 Ghosts of Scooby -Doo]]''
** ''[[A Pup Named Scooby -Doo]]''*
* ''[[The Secret of NIMH]]''
* ''[[She-Ra: Princess of Power|She Ra Princess of Power]]''
Line 883 ⟶ 884:
** ''[[The Transformers (animation)|The Transformers]]''
* ''[[Turbo Teen]]''
* ''[[Visionaries: Knights of the Magical Light]]: Knights of the Magical Light''
* ''[[Voltron]]''
* ''[[The World of David the Gnome]]''
Line 901 ⟶ 902:
 
{{reflist}}
[[Category:The Eighties{{PAGENAME}}]]
[[Category:Hollywood History]]
[[Category:The Twentieth Century]]
[[Category:indexIndex]]
[[Category:The Eighties]]
[[Category:Pages with working Wikipedia tabs]]
{{DEFAULTSORT:Eighties, The}}