I'm currently getting through the first season of The X-Files (slowly).
The episode "Space" is about a space shuttle being sabotaged. And damn, people really did think it was the end of history in the 90s, didn't they? The episode starts with Scully asking Mulder "Who would want to sabotage the US space program? The Soviet Union is gone." And Mulder is like "Maybe terrorists. The space program represents the superiority of American progress. Or maybe it was sabotaged by people who hate technology." And then he talks about maybe its about hiding aliens because it's Mulder and of course he would say that.
And here I am thinking about the current state of US Space exploration and Space X, and how naive people were in the 90s. They really thought the US was funding space research because they cared about human progress.
They really thought that this was it. That the US had won and capitalism had won and that it could only get better from here. They didn't realise that the Soviet Union was the only reason the US was pumping money into Space exploration. It wasn't about progress to the US oligarchs, it was about propaganda. That's why it took Sputnik to really get US to really try and catch up.
Once the Soviet Union broke up and "Space race" propaganda glow wore off, they didn't have to compete with Soviet science anymore, so the funding slowed down now the whole thing is gradually becoming a privatised mess whose progress pales in comparison to Soviet or 70s NASA.
Now all they have to do for space propaganda is get Elon to dance around and send a car or some billionaires into orbit on a piss leaking shuttle now and again.
The West in the 90s had no idea just how screwed they were about to be, now that capitalism no longer felt threatened by a scientific communist superpower.
Holy shit Dirt_Owl it was just a throw away line in the X-Files what is wrong with you.
Ive been watching malcolm in the middle and yeah the 90s do just seem like they really were a fever dream for everybody involved.
Funny enough Malcolm in the Middle is the most honest 90s US sitcom because it actually acknowledged that the average American family wasn't some rich ass mansion owning mofos.
Hal is a working class hero too. He leads a workers revolt at a grocery store. Towards the end of the show it is revealed that he has skipped every Friday at work for years
Hal is the only good sitcom dad
He's an amazing rollerskater too.
Malcolm in the Middle is about the only sitcom to age well at all, and the only one I can still bear to watch from the time.
Malcolm in the Middle was entirely in the 2000's