I disagree that it's silly. It's the sadness for a situation that will never return. Like smoking sections in resturants. Looking forward to sitcoms on a specific night. Sitting near a lake or ocean at night just to feel the breeze. So many tiny things that kids today won't experience for a lot of different reasons
So many tiny things that kids today won't experience for a lot of different reasons
I really do miss the era before cellphones, where, as a kid, we would have to meet up at a specific time and place.
Waiting close to a train station as a 13 year old, at a specific landmark near city hall...
If they didn't show up, what happened? Did they miss the train? Did I give them bad directions? Did they get distracted?
How long should I wait for them? Should I wait for them at all? It wouldn't be cool for me to wait to long. Or should I shout out there name, so they know where I am?
I miss pre-cellphone problems.
It struck me, but I didn't wanna non sequitor in with it. I had no idea what city pop was when I was in my teens and 20s. But it so accurately encapsulates that era, those places, that time, those experiences, that it's like audio fine wine now for me
I had no idea what city pop was
What is 'city pop'?
Sounds like a suburban Mid-Westerner referring to a hobo drinking a 40
Ah, he just drinking that City Pop