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    Don't Call Me "Generation X", Call Me A Child of the Eighties
    By Bryant Adkins, Originally Published in "The Reflector", January 20, 1995

    I am a child of the Eighties. That is what I prefer to be called. The nineties can do without me. Grunge isn't here to stay, fashion is fickle and "Generation X" is a myth created by some over-40 writer trying to figure out why people wear flannel in the summer.

  • When I got home from school, I played with my Atari 2600. I spent hours playing Pitfall or Combat or Breakout or Dodge'em Cars or Frogger. I never did beat Asteroids.
  • Then I watched "Scooby Doo." Daphne was a Goddess, and I thought Shaggy was smoking something synthetic in the back of their psychedelic van. I hated Scrappy.
  • I would sleep over at friends' houses on the weekends.
  • We played army with G.I. Joe figures...
  • and I'd set up galactic wars between the Autobots and Decepticons.
  • We stayed up half the night throwing marshmallows and Velveeta at one another.
  • We never beat the Rubik's Cube.
  • I got up on Saturday mornings at 6 a.m. to watch bad Hanna-Barbera cartoons like "The Snorks," "Jabberjaw," "Captain Caveman," and "Space Ghost."
  • In between I would watch "School House Rock." (Conjunction junction, what's your function?")
  • On weeknights Daisy Duke was my future wife. I was going to own the General Lee and shoot dynamite arrows out the back. Why did they weld the doors shut?
  • At the movies the Nerds got Revenge on the Alpha Betas by teaming up with the Omega Mus. I watched Indiana Jones save the Ark of the Covenant, and wondered what Yoda meant when he said, "No, there is another."
  • Ronald Reagan was cool.
  • Gorbachev was the guy who built a McDonald's in Moscow.
  • My family took summer vacations to the Gulf of Mexico and collected "Muppet Movie" glasses along the way. (We had the whole set.)
  • My brother and I fought in the back seat. At the hotel we found creative uses for Connect Four pieces like throwing them in that big air conditioning unit.
  • I listened to John Cougar Mellencamp sing about Little Pink Houses for Jack and Diane.
  • I was bewildered by Boy George and his colors of his dreams, red, gold, green.
  • MTV played videos.
  • Nickelodeon played "You Can't Do That on Television" and "Dangermouse" Cor!
  • HBO showed Mike Tyson pummel everybody except Robin Givens, the bad actress from "Head of the Class" who took all Mike's cashflow.
  • I drank Dr Pepper.
  • "I'm a Pepper, you're a Pepper, wouldn't you like to be a Pepper, too?"
  • Shasta was for losers.
  • TAB was a laboratory accident.
  • Capri Sun was a social statement.
  • Orange juice wasn't just for breakfast anymore, and bacon had to move over for something meatier.
  • My mom put a thousand Little Debbie Snack Cakes in my Charlie Brown lunch box, and filled my Snoopy Thermos with grape Kool-Aid.
  • I would never eat the snack cakes, though.
  • Did anyone?
  • I got two thousand cheese and cracker snack packs, and I ate those.
  • I went to school and had recess. I went to the same classes everyday. Some weird guy from the eighth grade always won the science fair with the working hydro-electric plant that leaked on my project about music and plants.
  • They just loved Beethoven.
  • Field day was bigger than Christmas, but it always managed to rain just enough to make everybody miserable before they fell over in the three-legged race. Where did all those panty hose come from? "Deck the Halls with Gasoline, fa la la la la la la la la," was just a song. Burping was cool. Rubber band fights were cooler. A substitute teacher was a baby sitter/marked woman. Nobody deserved that.
  • I went to the Cub Scouts.
  • I got my arrow-of-light, but never managed to win the Pinewood Derby.
  • I got almost every skill award, but don't rememberever doing anything.
  • The world stopped when the Challenger exploded.
  • Did a teacher come in and tell your class?
  • Half of your friends' parents got divorced.
  • People did not just say no to drugs.
  • AIDS started, but you knew more people who had a grandparent die from cancer.
  • Somebody in your school died before they graduated.
  • When you put all this stuff together, you have my childhood. If this stuff sounds familiar, then I bet you are one, too.
  • We are children of the eighties. That is what I prefer "they" call it.

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