Monday, February 18, 2013

Keep sippin' that gin & juice and let me tell you why 1994 was pop culture gold, yo



Real, grainy Hip Hop flowing off cassette tapes, Andy Dufresne holed up in a Shawshank cell, Run, Forrest, Run? Seinfeld, The Simpsons, Friends, ER ... Al Borlin?



I don't know what my fascination is with 1994. I was 7, but I wish I was 17. It just seems like everything was imperfectly perfect. Even the fashion. The stretched-out tee/baggy shorts, the backwards snap-backs (made popular by David Robinson), big headphones, small studs. I would still wear all of that today -- if today was 1994 and I had style.

And it seemed even more real and edgy in NYC.  The 2008 movie "The Wackness," set in '94, reaches back and captures the time period pretty well. Even the word "wackness" screams early-90s.
The film's soundtrack includes mostly R&B/Rap from that era -- Biggie, Faith Evans, A Tribe Called Quest, R. Kelly, etc. And along with the nostalgic shots of the city, the rooftop parties and the "fresh-to-death" lingo, you can almost feel the humidity of those warm city nights and live in the innocence of the main character, Luke Shapiro, as he sips forties and puffs Parliaments in Central Park. Fire Island looks like Bermuda.

That's the Hollywood version of '94 and it's pretty spot-on. But anyway, enough of the Wackness. Let's talk a little about the dopeness of this memorable year.

First off, Hip Hop was Hip Hop. No Lil' Wayne. No auto-tune. No Ke$ha. Off-the-street, socially-conscious Hip Hop. Ready to Die, Illmatic, Southernplayalisticadillacmuzik(keep trying to pronounce that), Resurrection, Regulate ... G Funk Era. Top singles ranged from Snoop's "Gin and Juice," Biggie's "Juicy," Wu Tang's "C.R.E.A.M.", and R. Kelly's "Bump N' Grind" to Ace of Base's "I Saw the Sign." And oh yeah, there was this. 1994 probably consummated mad babies:


And the movies. Oh man, the movies. First off, we have The Lion King -- which is still the top-grossing traditionally-animated film of all-time. I still hope to be a father figure like Mufasa someday. Then there was Forrest Gump, which won Best Picture and nabbed Tom Hanks his second consecutive Best Actor award. Pulp Fiction, Speed, Dumb and Dumber and True Lies also came out in '94. Hoop Dreams, one of the greatest documentaries ever, balled out that January. And a Stephen King short story you can almost definitely watch on AMC right this minute, came out later that Fall. "I have no idea, to this day, what those two Italian ladies were singing about ..." but it went a little something like this:



TV, like it is today, was also pretty tremendous. Some of the greatest shows were in their prime or more or less entering it. Everybody was watching E.R. Seinfeld was huge. Girlfriends watched Friends with girlfriends while talking about boyfriends of other girlfriends' girlfriends. The Simpsons was taking off AKA moving away from Bart and pushing Homer as the funnier, more marketable character. Saved By the Bell reruns, Boys Meets World, SNICK ... the premiere of All That?!?! What an intro:


That's it. Honestly, I really have no idea why I wrote this post. Why am I still writing this blog? Does anybody read it? This is pretty pointless. But yeah, I do love "The Wackness" and you should go see it.