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BONUS: Y2K feat. Colette Shade

Author Colette Shade joins us to discuss her new book “Y2K” on the millennial era of ~1997-2008. Will and Colette review how the boundless optimism of ‘the end of history’ curdled into the permanent pessimism of the 21st century, how computer doomed everything even if the specific prediction of the “Y2K bug” maybe didn’t literally come to pass, how nostalgia can be both useful and a trap, and of course, how everything is 9/11.


Purchase “Y2K: How the 2000s Became Everything”:

Bookshop: https://bookshop.org/p/books/y2k-how-the-2000s-became-everything-essays-on-a-future-that-never-was-colette-shade/21416954?ean=9780063333949

Audible: https://www.audible.com/pd/Y2K-Audiobook/B0D3G5JV6P


Catch Colette on here book tour, dates here: https://www.coletteshade.com/


BONUS: Y2K feat. Colette Shade
BONUS: Y2K feat. Colette Shade BONUS: Y2K feat. Colette Shade

Comments

so is your mom

One Sound Every Day (santino)

Will is such a generous interviewer.

Destino

Good ep and for whatever it’s worth, I think the “rock is dead” claim was just in regard to mass culture. That rock no longer has a hold over people like it once did (or in the way rap did in this y2k era) and that there are obviously tons of cool underground bands around can both be true

old crispin

How do you listen to this podcast?

Chuck Skooch

oh hell yes. this can get consumed before I finish Fren.

Chuck Skooch

Your best resource is probably YouTube this dude acid Marxist has uploaded all their shit over the years and linked keywords and stuff to where if you search “chapo trap house neoliberal Clintons” I’m pretty sure you’ll get some related stuff. They review Hillary’s book, her Apple TV series “gutsy”, … a lot of the old 2016 era stuff would probably be what you’re looking for. Best thing to do is SoundCloud or whatever just start at the beginning and go… upon checking if you google “chapo trap house Hillary Clinton” there’s a 3 hour comp of different shows discussing her.. hope that’s helpful, cheers mate

Anthony koz

I'm American and even I was taken aback 😅 The classic, read a word and have never heard it IRL. That's actually an indicator of being well educated so no shade.

Sean Macalrooneystein-Smithschidt

If you’re australian and you want a jumpscare listen to how americans say “bondi beach”

Adam Foster

You think Theseus12 was bad, I was Pentheus5

Jon

Great interview! Definitely want to read it.

Matt Murray

Oh god this looks exactly up my alley and is something I think about a lot. It’s hard to articulate the feeling of being miffed that I’m heading into my mid-30s and have never really experienced anything like the bewilderment my parents must have felt upon first hearing hip-hop or other cultural novelties. Thanks for the rec!

Sam

I enjoy listening to spergos talk over each other. It’s really not that serious man. I somehow found all the sensitive lame chapo fans with a single comment

Isaac Andersen

You could just not listen if you don’t want to

No Relation to Henry

Why do you feel the need to tell us this?

No Relation to Henry

The only issue was that was pretty much over by 2010, when the GOP went mask off fascist just a lot of libs didn't notice.

NLC

You probably don't like being gay also, but some things you just can't change what is.

TheHairyClevage

I don’t like this broads voice

Stinkamus

unc’s detected

mariol struga

legit hit me with them links, I wanna listen OG

Chuck Skooch

Whole family gathered around the monitor, watching the dial-up graphics like it was Christ on the Mount and the Sermon was about to start. Simpler times, more complicated brains.

Equality State Of Mind

and yes I started listening about 2 years ago. immediately subbed.

Chuck Skooch

OK that's fair. I would love more episode links from those. legit want to go back and listen. this pod reinforces so much of what I struggled to coalesce from different sources. So definitely link me some bc that reply made hella sense.

Chuck Skooch

theseus12 mentioned

Craven Moorehead

This would probably be fair analysis but for the likely hundreds of hours elsewhere that chapo critiques the Clinton’s impact politically and culturally. Taking a shit on the neoliberal turn that this era solidified forever is their bread and butter. Your version of this episode would have been redundant; if would largely just be stating their overall thesis…. This author wrote a collection of essays about her goopy Apple, AIM, my stealing the cover of my sisters’ Britney Spears cd and hiding it between sheet/mattress, hip hop replacing rock (what’s the most lasting radio rock band of the millennial era, foo fighters or something? Could anything be more mid?… too generous, just bad) and Luda “back seat windows up that’s the way” ……maybe you’re new to the show? Because I’d say the analysis you’re looking for out of this episode is already firmly implied

Anthony koz

Hey Little homie, I'm just trying bring flavor to your colorless life.

Khemith

oh cool you thought of more riffs to edit in?

etienne

Ohh incel! Lets get 2019 in HERE! Hey I heard the pussy hat march will be named "The people's march" 🤣 Not enough pet parents this year for a proper women march.

Khemith

"ugly feminists are bitter about other women being sexy" is a top tier incel take

etienne

I love the pop culture analysis. But I feel like discussion really jumped the shark in this episode, not getting anything in about the content of all watched over by machines of love and grace (BBC documentary). Its impossible to discuss this without discussing Greenspan and Clinton's contribution to this cultural movement or the "all boom never bust" mindset

Chuck Skooch

Teach me how to get ass by crying to PJ Harvey.

Khemith

Yep, saw Dieselboy, Dara, Craze, Andy C and others multiple times

Drunk Millennial Parent

I was 20 in '97. That was really the year that felt like rock musics time had passed. Post- Cobain and Oasis were the last hurrah (here on this side of the Atlantic anyway) but by '97 they'd ran out of Beatles songs to rip off and brought out a coke bloated 3rd album. We were coming close to the 21st century so it felt like music had to be looking forward to the future. It's was platinium plated rap music and electronic music that seemed much more relevant for the time

Michael Bourke

I think it depends on your age, as far as Nirvana goes. I was just entering my teens and my head really did explode the first time I heard them.

Brad Plumb

WHAT? IS? IT? *flops around like a dead fish*

Brad Plumb

In my day, "hard disc" was an actual distinction!

Brad Plumb

Hanging out with Primus "too much" would have presumably produced stranger and cooler music. I still love Primus.

Brad Plumb

My college housemates and I were all convinced that the NFL rigged the Feb 2002 Superbowl so that the patriots would win.

Brad Plumb

This has been a very fun “remember some bars” episode

Cameron Young

dude who gets no ass has opinions ^

DR

this mtv news examines the 80's special from 1989 is an important time capsule. https://youtu.be/tIVExtODswQ?si=jVk0dp7SGgShuzbz

Eon Gattignolo

10 crack commandments is a neoliberal anthem

Cardboard

when she mentioned "The Israel Gene" I could physically hear Felix not being there to comment

etienne

we as a society fixed ONE problem and they never forgave us for it. they're never going to allow us to fix anything ever again

etienne

It absolutely was in 2001.

Mountain Dew Code Bipolar

Dr Peterson is that you? ⬇️

Howard Zyn

Her fun nostalgia is gilded with rabid 3rd wave feminism. I almost stopped listening to the interview because it got bogged down on how "sexy" everything was. Almost to the point of bitterness.

Khemith

Always

Peter Sullivan

So true, it has a similar feel to SoundCloud era rap

C. Ries

I did know a guy who was sexually into whipped cream and honey. His grandparents were siblings.

Clammy_Damp

Probably already mentioned but the Britney interview has to be from Chuck Klosterman IV

Clammy_Damp

Have you ever had Simon Reynolds on the show? Retromania seems more and more pertinent. Ironically though, his new book Futuromania argues the opposite.

Sam Worthington

Will getting horny on main

Jud

This eps' definitely the dessert to my veggies in terms of Chapo pod consumption. Not that I'm complaining. Gobble gobble.

I Let the Dogs Out. Me, Me, Me, Me.

That was excellent, I really enjoyed this one. I might just be haunted by the spectre of rock and roll but I also just wanna let everyone know that actually its not dead.

Riverbank Frank

Punk rock was a constant through this period, just not as a mainstream commercial "industry"

Nick Robinson

My AIM was redheadgirl911 pre 9/11 😬

Leah Lynn

does anyone have her venmo? I'd like to donate a pop filter

Harry

I’m starting to have reading series withdrawals

A person you vaguely know

Found the spergo

Isaac Andersen

ThesiusNutz69

DAW

Yeah it’d be way better if they weren’t passionate about what they’re taking about at all. It’s so fucking lame to be excited about anything. What are you 12? calling people spergo. Fuck you dude

Jack Gude

I was Ebola12 on AOL

Jerry Hernandez

There was of course a lot wrong with the music biz in the 60s and early 70s, but there were executives who let their A&R men take chances that none would think of now.

Phil Hostak

I called it A.I.M.

Jon

You're the man now dog.

July17

Everything is Chrome in the Future

S.E. Nyarady

No one called it Aim ever

Mike Goulis

You’ve had nearly a decade to get a podcasting mic, Colette 😂 Enjoying the commentary/discussion though!

Brendan Kneeland

No, it was not. I was a senior in high school when it came out, literally ground zero for this. It shifted the paradigm precisely as much as “Epic” did the year before. (And “Epic” was a much better song.) I was not “I Wanna Hold Your Hand,” and even after that, middle-of-the-road bands held sway in the US charts for years. It took a few years for there to be big switches in the number of modern rock stations (which, honestly, was a crap format anyways), and even then, stuff like U2 dominated those charts. Nirvana wasn’t that great or groundbreaking. It got promoted in no small part to promote girls’ underarm deodorant.

Demented Avenger

The unrelated direct to DVD sequel is a cherished American artform. Check out how many sequels there are to Jarhead.

nick

Preparing to get pegged?

Christian Johnson

Last song I heard that blew my mind as something totally new was "I Luv U" by Dizzee Rascal in 2003 & his subsequent "Boy in da Corner" album

Christian Johnson

It was a paradigm shifting song, the other one about 11 years that had that same effect (at least on me) was "I Luv U" by Dizzee Rascal, also it was the first song I heard on a computer before a 💿, tape, or record (I'm old BTW)

Christian Johnson

We love our grill pilled boy, don't we folks?

Christian Johnson

Yeah, whatever happened to coffee favored coffee?!

Christian Johnson

You want it that way?

Christian Johnson

I am a Gen Xer & huge jungle/drum & bass fan in the 90s

Christian Johnson

Break out the MAGA hats

Christian Johnson

Wait, is this Barenaked Ladies erasure?

Christian Johnson

X-Pac just weighed in: "Suck it!"

Christian Johnson

Not to mention their collaboration with Lou Reed

Christian Johnson

I like to listen to gangsta rap on my way to the farmer's market

Christian Johnson

Bill Belicheck in his short sleeve hoodie nods in agreement

Christian Johnson

Fellow Gen X here, brought back memories for sure.

Christian Johnson

Simon Reynolds, "Retromania"

Christian Johnson

Nice, my old ass was born in 1968 & this was very interesting to me.

Christian Johnson

Re: Will's nostalgia take, a good book on that is Retromania by Simon Reynolds

Christian Johnson

Entertaining conversation and great analysis of that time.

DNygk

To follow up here, I don’t think it is possible to seriously argue that the amount of investment in artist development that was sloshing around a place like Greenwich Village in the 60s is anywhere near how music is funded and sustained these days. I’m sorry, but that fucks with innovation.

Michael

Greetings from A fellow millennial from NOVA! We got the best of all of it!

Darbi Simmons

I’m gonna change my username to Theseus12!

Fernslinger

Will getting ready to interrupt a woman mid-sentence: *insert lebron all of the lights clip*

Kyle Smyth

Regarding country music popularity, I think it exploded primarily because it gives people an excuse to tailgate outside of the college and pro football season.

Steve D

going to skateparks these days and every kid has jncos, bleached tips, slipknot shirts and even tribal tatoos. It's absolutely mind blowing

etienne

Podcasting is full of spergos but this one was like listening to Adam friedland talk to Adam friedland

Isaac Andersen

It’s called “Aim”. No one calls it A.I.M.

Hey_Blinkin

Haha "Mo Money Mo Problems" is Biggie, the first verse is Ma$e though. The song is just Diana Ross - "I'm Coming Out" with raps on it. Seems like Will is just trolling not knowing the songs. He did it with Wu-Tang too.

Robert Sayre

The part about country music being more attainable is spot on analysis. I have several friends who grew up in suburbs who were bigger on country than rap and explained it in the same way of be more relatable. It probably varies by personality whether you like that or like the grandeur associated with rap

kron

Are you new to podcasts or

Whistle Dog

So many haters here. Black Album and Load are incredible albums

Mark Herrera

Gen X here. That did hit hard.

Laurie G

Well, where do you look?

Michael

As someone born in 1997 - technically a zoomer but came up in the wake of the millennial world - this interview did a lot for me. Gave me so much context for a cultural landscape that I don’t fit neatly into and have felt very adrift in.

Peter Gambino

*Jlo voice* I’m real

Colette Shade

It's because Kirk was hanging out with Primus too much!! Lol

Matthew

My joke re: culture hasnt changed in 20 years is that 20-somethings in the 2050’s will be throwing 2020’s-themed parties where everyone dresses up like the era when everyone dressed up like it was the 90’s

Sam

underground rock, metal, and punk are very much alive and thriving if you know where to look.

Collin Slutzky

This is good pairing with the last episode of Hell of Presidents

Beej

You can’t cancel the pure of heart

SlowTrickle

That was great, but I did die a little when Will did the KK quote

SlowTrickle

Very true. By the time 9/11 happened, there was a whole pop culture based on longing for (my God) World War II. It started with Holocaust education slowly morphing from a cautionary tale about what racism can do into a reason why everything the US did was Right and Justified and anyone suggesting otherwise was Chamberlain (the culture sliding from a fascination with Schindler’s List to a fascination with Saving Private Ryan). By the time those planes crashed into WTC, it was a whole thing to want this to be a new Pearl Harbor. Such bullshit.

Michael

"Smells Like Teen Spirit" didn't have a greater impact on the teenage psyche than "Epic" by Faith No More did the year before. Literally everything you said applied to how we responded to both songs.

Demented Avenger

Great episode for us geriatric millennials. I heard Danny Besner in my head saying "that's correct" when Collette talked about the death of Kurt Cobain leaving a void.

Warbs

Created specifically for the purposes of extinguishing a truly creative and new genre, shoegaze. Instead we got a pair of thick-as-pigshit Mancunians drawling their way through their latest sibling rivalry

drewb

As a European i didnt know Bring It On and went to the wiki page of the movie and this escalation of its sequels is really reflective of the analysis of our times, especially the change after 08 and the title of the most recent sequel: It was the first of the Bring It On film series and was followed by six direct-to-video sequels, none of which contains any of the original cast members: Bring It On Again (2004), which shared producers with the original, Bring It On: All or Nothing (2006), Bring It On: In It to Win It (2007), Bring It On: Fight to the Finish (2009), Bring It On: Worldwide Cheersmack (2017), and the TV film, Bring It On: Cheer or Die (2022).

Creemi

Ya'll doing a Landman episode?

Chris Guest

Everything after Justice was varying levels of trash. Though Death Magnetic had some of the old juice.

Zach H.

I loved this interview! Idk what the hell you're talking about tho, I'm 12. Groovy!

Jared Sarnie

Nostalgia is the real mind virus. 🦠

Zach H.

Feminism in this era was in full force throughout pop culture from the spice girls’ girl power to tlc’s no scrubs.

Jake Creighton

like i unironically love the st anger snare, a lot of actually good grindcore bands also utilize Small Snare too

etienne

funnily enough I really liked the singles off that album because I was *really* young but quickly moved on to real music lol. the video at the prison was just .. cool?

etienne

I’ve commented way too much already but a couple other things. How was the boy band era of the late 90s not mentioned? And as for a music signifier of us leaving the Bush era post-2008 financial collapse will to me always be Kid Cudi’s “Day n Nite” which ushered in the skinny jean, downtrodden, and more drug-centric tropes

Peter Sullivan

Maybe this is outsized in my New Englander brain, but I also feel like the Patriots coming to prominence by winning their first Super Bowl in Feb 2002 was also part of ushering in the 2000s era. I distinctly remember them being seen as America’s Team post 9/11, and rewatching that halftime show with U2 where they dedicated the show to the 9/11 victims is embedded deep within my brain. I feel like this was part of that era where we were still “catching up” to the war on terror as the anti-Iraq rhetoric had yet to really pick up steam and it was more about rallying the country

Peter Sullivan

This is the correct answer

Matthew

Collette A'clit

justDave

Funny, I remember "bad Metallica" starting with the Black Album.

Brad Plumb

You’ll never convince me that Will isn’t talking to an AI here

Seymour Butz

Yeah I thought there was possibility in indie rock, too, but it was over pretty fast and I don’t think ever achieved real cross-pollinating scenes beyond maybe Toronto and Montreal.

Michael

As much as it seems apocryphal, I too remember where I was when I first heard Smells Like Teen Spirit (in my room, pretending to be asleep, listening to a clock radio with the "sleep" button on). Indie rock seemed to be thriving when I left college in 2003, but then it was gone before you knew it. All Spotify has ever done is encourage me to get into ever older and more specific genres/artists

Brad Plumb

Fuck that. What about ICQ?

Brad Plumb

my 7th grade year was dominated by guys playing with yo-yo's and people wearing austin 3:16 gear

calvin kilby

i caught an episode of remember shuffle with colette on it just a few days ago. it's a nice podcast.

calvin kilby

you're like finn mckenty but not a soulless piece of shit

calvin kilby

Love to listen to white women recite rap lyrics

spacerainbow000

Oh God I remember the attitude era. The height of Steve Austin smashing people with chairs and drinking beer like it was nothing.

Benny Ortiz

By the time St. Anger was released it was five years after Napster and we were all accustomed to bad Metallica. The real shock was (as Metal Hammer magazine put it) Metallica "dropping a Load on the fans" with their 1996 post-haircut albums. Too soft, too bluesy, too many weird lyrics about feelings. That was the beginning of the end.

Plainwrap

I'm so glad that they started talking about the death of rock music. I always had a feeling that the one two punch of Metallica releasing the flop that was St. Anger and also their very public whining about music sharing and pirating laid bare how rock was so very out of touch with the youth of that time and removed from anything rebellious or anit establishment.

Benny Ortiz

One blind spot in the episode (and I imagine in the book) is the absence of the pop cultural impact of late 90's pro wrestling: the WWF 'Attitude Era' and WCW's 'nWo Era'. Between 1997 and 2001 the most innovative entertainment medium wasn't movies or music or publishing but instead two competing male soap operas with simultaneous live TV broadcasts every Monday night essentially doing nonstop sweeps week stunts to try and keep their audience from changing the channel to watch the other. The most tasteless and shocking gimmicks alongside an almost Andy Kaufman-esque audience participation element that predicted the hyper-brand fan identity you see all over the internet today. Gotta get some dirtbags to consult on your Y2K nostalgia book.

Plainwrap

Hearing Will sing Dirty made me giggle so hard. Thanks Will. 🤣

Ralley Taura

Spot on. It was in this period I got a guitar and dreamed of being a musician. By the time I was out of college in 2003, the assumptions of that world were already overturned. A scene like Greenwich Village in the 60s, as portrayed in A Complete Unknown, was simply unavailable and now has been for a while. So many songs haven’t ever been written, I feel. But maybe that is what 43 does to a mf.

Michael

Listen to two spergos talk over each other for one hour and six minutes

Isaac Andersen

"Smells Like Teen Spirit" had a major impact on the music industry. Within less than a year money was flooding into Seattle in search of the next Nirvana. Money flooded into indie labels across the country. Bands that would have been labeled as "college rock" a few years earlier and that could have only been heard on college radio stations were being featured on MTV and were getting airplay on FM stations high on the dial in major media markets. The "voice of a generation" bit was just pure marketing b.s. However, the impact of "Smells Like Teen Spirit" was no joke. Part of the deal was that the hair metal bands had some level of technical sophistication and polish. Nirvana was just simple, straightforward rock. Someone with rudimentary guitar training could figure out the chorus and lead to Cobain's guitar riff in a single afternoon (speaking from experience). It was highly accessible pop music. I remember hearing "Smells Like Teen Spirit" when it first hit the radio and it was one of those rare songs that really made you sit up and listen. I have to imagine that it was probably like hearing the Beatles for the first time on the radio. Stations that were playing classic rock or hair metal, changed their format overnight in response to the new sound. I can tell you exactly when and where I was when I heard "Smells Like Teen Spirit" for the first time. I can't really say that about any other band or song (especially Silverchair). I can't remember another instance too where people in school the next day or two are talking about "that song". It was a really unique moment. One of the parts of this that is hard to convey too is just how unusual the sound was. Within a year or two the sound may have been absorbed into the culture. There were plenty of bands that sounded "like Nirvana" or grunge. However, when the familiar frame of reference was hair metal or classic rock, Nirvana sounded like it was coming from a completely different universe. There was nothing like it. Because the music was so accessible too, it was something that encouraged people overnight to start bands, and organize local music festivals. You didn't have to go to New York or LA either to make it in the industry either. For a brief period of time there were dozens of small and medium sized cities that launched viable national acts (e.g. Chapel Hill, NC (dozens of bands); Akron, Ohio (the Breeders and Guided by Voices); Washington, DC (dozens of bands); etc). The thing that really started to burst the bubble was iTunes in 2001 and and Napster in 1999 and rising rents in major metro areas. Bands that occupied the "middle class" of the industry could no longer really sustain a career through album sales, because people started buying singles only, or just trading digital music files without any compensation. Similar to the rest of the economy, the market transitioned into a "winner-takes all" system, where a handful of major acts were able to prosper regardless of distribution systems, or where you really had to be a kid with rich parents in order to sustain any kind of a professional career. That wasn't the case from 1991 to about 2000.

J P 3

MSN messenger baby!

Savannakhet

Nah, the rot was beginning to set in in the 90s - in Britain you had Blur and Oasis which were very self-conscious fascimiles of sixties rock.

Savannakhet

As someone who was busy being homeschooled by the kind of people who listened to Gen 1 of the ghouls from Looking for a Fren (focus on deez nuts), I will enjoy listening to this as reassurance that I wasn’t missing much

EvilCorgi

Lots of love. Fantastic interview, Will you're really adept in dialogue (also where tf is Felix?! this is Felix territory!). Yes, there is a way through, It's up to us to imagine it. There are really clever guides to novel sociopolitical formations in fiction, that i think can synthesized into something useful. Look at Ada Palmer's Too Like The Lightning series or U. K. Le Guin's"Dispossed." Compiling and making such dreams digestible to people is a long time ... what i wish my life were about, but keeps getting interrupted by work and real life and fact that i'm stupid as shit.

seasound

as a tr_nny in nashville with a Toby Kieth tattoo i cant believe they said my favorite jingoistic cynical war profiteering patriot country star sucks. wth? lol “beer for my horses” is like a jan 6th, vigilante classic and i cant believe willie nelson hasnt been cancelled because of it

Creamer

Song of the summer since 1999. Len is probably like 29% of Canada's GDP (complementary: it's not like Our Lady Peace could keep a dental clinic running)

Grease Witherspoon

I mean my dad was in the military enlisted and we were on WIC growing up but as I got older and he stayed in longer we were firmly in the specialist side of the working classes or as most Americans say middle class. My parents family was poor but we grew up with alot of poor people living on base.

Matt Colston

God damn it Chapo. My reading list was already five long

Shane-A112

I should prolly listen to the ep first.... but, I'm 30 years too old for it and still going to shitty diy punk shows cuz those kids fucking rip.

chairman bs

I was also in middle school. Yes, STP was the first commercial creation to ride the wave but literally nobody when I was a high school freshman in 1995 thought of Silverchair as legitimate. Grunge people were already onto either metal or industrial and everyone was starting to ironically (at first) get into rap. Talking white suburbia here.

Michael

Who do you consider a peer though? Are we talking same class position here?

Michael

I would hope not, and it sounds like a pretty subjective metric, but insufferable is certainly something I've been called before. *shrug*

Brad Plumb

The fuck even is MSN?

Michael

Are you one of these insufferable Xers?

Michael

Steal My Sunshine was the last fun song.

Michael

This one’s for the gays and the girlies

Jared Bauer

I'm about to buy the hell out of this book.

chubbs941

It pains me how much I've only come to recognize this in retrospect.

Brad Plumb

Well, you have to remember that it all happened quickly and in a very compressed span of time. Basically 91-94, which coincidentally coincides exactly with my junior high years. Silverchair was on the latter end and Bush was definitely aftermath, but STP were already popular in 92 or so. Sex Type Thing was a big hit on MTV way before Nirvana crashed.

Brad Plumb

You guys are just a few years younger than me but you see. It was even worse If yiu were a bit older.

Christopher Girard

Fair enough but Silverchair/STP/Bush were just the commercialized response to the breakthrough. Grunge definitely died with Cobain.

Michael

I’m so fucking sad about the end of rock. I’m sorry, A Complete Unknown sent me into a spiral about how nobody gets paid to write songs like that anymore.

Michael

Yes

Sean Carton

One interesting thing -- and maybe this is just me -- but as an Xer on the cusp, I can remember this longing for a return to 60's counter-culture that existed in the mid-90's. along with the sense that politics had gotten "boring." I felt (and heard other people articulate this too) that the generations before me had had clear enemies, whereas our enemies were all hidden out of sight and it was harder to discern what you should be be against. That definitely changed with 9/11 and the Bush years, and it was that psychic trauma that made me vulnerable to Obama/hope & change. But in retrospect, and this interview highlights that, 9/11 didn't change anything. It was just the moment when the things that were obfuscated became visible. I got what I wanted and it sucks.

Brad Plumb

I remember this time, and I remember missing the grunge movement that came before it. I rejected the shallowness of this time and instead hung out with the gen xers and went to raves.

Drunk Millennial Parent

Gotta also reference the album cover of Backstreet Boys’ “Millenium” album to capture that late 90s style

Peter Sullivan

But yeah, "rock is dead" was inherently baked into the concept of alternative rock from the beginning. I really am a product of that aeshetic and its related nihilism and to be honest, I don't have many regrets about that. I'd still take it over the y2k culture brought up in the interview.

Brad Plumb

Those bands are how we knew it was over. (with the exception of Foo Fighters who were at least decent for their first couple of albums)

Brad Plumb

It’s Xena Warrior Princess. Not Xena Princess Warrior

More Human than Human

IRC for me! This is what I'm talking about.

Brad Plumb

Just the conversation about sexuality and blackness during the 90s and the 00s. The vibes were cool but growing up during the crack era was tough. Cousin's going to jail constantly or being killed surprisingly by mostly cops. Like she brought up Katrina but like as a black teen that was like 911 times ten for a lot of us watching a part of the US just being completely abandoned but knowing that it's possible to happen to my family.

Matt Colston

I was MSN!

Eddie Siv

What about the butt-rock phase of the late 90s and early 2000s? I.e. Foo fighters, Creed, Lifehouse, 3 Doors Down. Staind, Nickelback, Finger Eleven, Jet, Shinedown, etc?

Peter Sullivan

Any examples? Not saying you’re wrong btw

Peter Sullivan

I (heart) y2k. I have a snow globe for y2k and the snow is all 1 and 0s and I am not kidding.

Sean Carton

Great interview, but it's really reinforcing the gen-x/millennial divide for me. It explains how close and how far away I feel from Will & Co culturally sometimes.

Brad Plumb

The “Y2K bug” was a real problem that required a huge effort and billions of dollars to fix. It became a punchline because that collective effort succeeded. Truly a living monument to an era of dumb yet enduring takes.

Chuck

i was a baby working in tech so yeah it was very clearly real

Shivvy

This episode is making me feel like my brain is releasing the DMT 💀

Matthew

Also I have 3 minutes left in the episode… waiting for Felix to pop in with a question…

Anthony koz

+1

Shivvy

🤝 me every time they say dianne fineSTEEN - i mean fuck her but it still grates. love from Cali where we know how to say Bondi!!

Shivvy

The IRC/AIM/MSN divide 😂 (I was an AIM kid, my sn was foolycooly24)

ab

Fun episode as soon as it started I couldn’t wait to hear about wills AIM life. Maybe not the right place for this insight but I’ve always thought an under reported on phenomenon is how the vast speed of tech growth in the oughts created micro generations amongst millennials… as someone born in 89 this stuff is all super relevant for me, but my sister born 4 years later had an entirely different youth culture experience as did my sister born 4 years after that. Neither ever knew what it was like to sit around in a Taco Bell parking lot waiting for the crew to assemble and figure out who was “having people over”… last thing, I reported on my 66 year old fathers turn to chapo through the gateway drug of hell of prez about six months ago. On Xmas eve I was excited to tell him about the return of …. He cut me off and told ME, how happy it made him that matt was back… tears to my eyes folks we love to see it

Anthony koz

Wow... This shows me that my white peers were and are so sheltered.

Matt Colston

Key thing to remember about the Y2K hysteria is that a few people did take it seriously: the computer programers who were responsible for identifying and fixing all the bugs in various systems that actually would have caused problems had they not been fixed. Because they did their jobs, it looks like there was no reason to be worried in the first place. This matters because right-wingers use Y2K as an example of “fake” panics when they argue against addressing current problems, like climate change.

Eric Herde

Awww you always know just what to say to me. Sorry, I mean "yes mistress"

Eamon Short

Pay up piggy, you aren't getting out of this one

Timothy Buttons

Oh yeah I wish there was more than the, what? 6 episodes of Table Top Game Theory plus the live Epstein-killed ep. Hearing the first for free on YouTube was why I became a patreon so I could get the original one, the Russian interface and Musks of Nyallathyrtap (I don't know how it's spelt at all)

Eamon Short

Two of my besties had the best AIM handles back in the day - "tanstud" and "womanlesbo".

Miles_B

Ugh … Kurt Cobain was not the voice of GenX, which had no voice, and his death had no immediate impact on rock. Silverchair, which was pretty much a clone of Nirvana, had a big year in 1994. It took until 1996 for the alternative music bubble to burst. Rap was already on the rise before grunge. People talk about how grunge displaced hair metal, but that was already on the wane; grunge displaced the MC Hammer-era of rap among white teenagers. Grunge was already a last hurrah. We just didn't realize it as it was happening.

Demented Avenger

Theseus12! That’s so good 🤣

Cody S

Collette Shade would be a great drag name

Sam

I run those xmas specials and d&d eps a lot, side note thank you chris for playlists esp hell on earth & presidents ❤️❤️❤️

The True Horror

Ever increasing circles

NYCM&AHole

I think what y'all are referencing at the end is postmodernism we have copies of copies of copies until the original is no longer in sight. It felt like the '90s and the early 2000s were the last era of original everything now just feels like slop. I can't tell you the last time I went somewhere looked at something or seeing something and thought wow what an original all inspiring thing place etc that wasn't the side of a mountain or nature. All we do is follow the same profit model over and over and over again and even now indie music isn't even independent it's hypercurated music it's just pop labeled independent and bands that are signed on a major labels

SkeepyBeeper

The Obama era brought a second optimistic End of History imo: apps and self-driving cars were going to save us, stocks go up. Government couldn’t accomplish anything good, but it didn’t matter bc Elon (and watching documentaries on Netflix) would solve global warming anyway

J.P. McD.

Loved her on Remember Shuffle! Can’t wait to read the book.

Jake MacLennan

It was a wild time

NYCM&AHole

I was 13-24 in the time period this book covers, she really nailed it.

kmd

I might check it out, although I'll emarassingly admit, I have a long reading list, it's been almost two months since I last cracked a spine

Eamon Short

Def will be checking out this book! 🫡

jay alan

You can do this by purchasing her book with money.

Scoundrel Babe

I gotta say, Colette Shade is a hot dominatrix name. I'd "sub" to her if you get what I mean.

Eamon Short

Yeah, I musta listened to their JFK and 300 reviews collectively 50 times

Eamon Short

Also the design on Colette’s website is 🧑‍🍳💋

Scoundrel Babe

😎 bonus

Pablo

Some of us are chronic listeners of old movie review episodes, you’re never alone.

Scoundrel Babe

Oft. It hurt my Aussie heart to hear Bondi pronounced like that. Like you yanks fuck up a gotta our pronunciations but Bondi is so world famous you guys normally get that one right. For those wondering its pronounced "bond-eye"

Eamon Short

How do they do it

J. A.

Hey time flies.

Sam Zeng

remember shuffle is so good lol

etienne

Only 90s kids will understand 😤🤯🤯🖥️🌐🛹🇮🇶🇸🇦✈️✨👽 post Soviet neoliberal induced mirage utopia

interzoa

Jesus fuck you ain't wrong. And thats a fair response to it.

Eamon Short

Aw thanks guys. I was hurting bad during your break. I needed some chapo methadone so I was listening to old eps but now in a week you've dropped off like 2 grams. I mean I'm junkie, it's never enough, but spacing it out and not over-indulging I've managed to stay in the sky for the week. Thanks for that Speed-Boat Dope Dry Boys.

Eamon Short

Cue story of my life by social distortion https://youtu.be/oh8zcbC_Dcw?si=5RQI7gagJYUmSgf0

NYCM&AHole

"It's OK, we still love you"- Mom + Dad

Militant Agnostic

I just realized that in like 11 months it will be 10 years since 2016 and for some reason it gives me existential despair

Elijah Crawford

Just hook it to my veins!

Scoundrel Babe

American prestige, remember shuffle and now chapo...quite the book tour already lol

Marcel Szabo

President Bohrok Obionicle

Notpickinganame

Bonus episode!? We gooning tonight boys !

Goonba

God I just farted up all the cum in my ass out of excitement for the extra slop, thanks boys

Shawn

Also, I’m gay

WillyGetSilly

The new y2k movie rocks btw

WillyGetSilly


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