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Great clothes, no Instagram — was this last ‘best decade ever'?

Great clothes, no Instagram — was this last ‘best decade ever'?

Gulf Today5 days ago

One of the stranger trends on the discussion platform Reddit highlights just how many variations there are on this one question: why did the Nineties look like that? Most of the time the people posing them are too young to remember 9/11, let alone the years immediately preceding it. But they share a fascination with the photographs taken of that decade, and the clothes, and the makeup.
Sometimes the question is about the era's cars, or its architecture, or its films and television. What was up with how good everything looked? Why did light seem that much kinder? Why do street scenes in the original Sex and the City hold so much colour and vibrance, yet the street scenes in And Just Like That look as if you're watching Sarah Jessica Parker skip around an Apple store? Why, the children ask, do the Nineties just seem... better?
It's a tiny microcosm of what is increasingly accepted as a fact of modern life: that the Nineties were better than whatever we're dealing with currently. Think of all the music and the filmmaking! Put aside the Gulf war, Aids, the Rodney King riots, OJ Simpson, Bill Clinton and Monica Lewinsky, Bosnia, mad cow disease, increased globalisation and corporate fiefdom, and the dawn of focus-on-the-family conservatism, and it was practically a blissful utopia of good vibes! And you, dear reader, may be one of those pining nostalgia-heads, sitting in your cramped, hopeless, still-traumatised-by-Covid flatshare and wishing you could go back.
Monica Lewinsky
Others echo that view, at least. A few years ago, a YouGov poll found that the Nineties were the UK's most fondly remembered decade. A similar poll, published earlier this month, identified the period between 1993 and 2001 as one of the two best eras in American history, more or less tying with 1980 to 1991. Make America great again? Just make it 1995, and Bob's your uncle, apparently. That poll, though, doesn't make clear who the 1,139 Americans were who actually voted. We know they were 'adults', but that could mean anything: individuals who lived through the Nineties — and by that I mean really lived — or people like me, 1992 babies with vivid memories of only the last hurrah of the decade. If we're being totally honest, they could also be people with absolutely no tangible sense of the Nineties outside of Throwback Thursday Instagram posts. Eighteen-year-olds, basically.
But why do the Nineties still hold such allure? They were, in lots of ways, a decade of abundance, of every creative field firing on all cylinders. Of Nirvana, Tupac, Blur and the Spice Girls, of Quentin Tarantino, Jurassic Park and Richard Curtis. Think Gianni Versace, Calvin Klein and Empire Records. The Simpsons, Twin Peaks and Father Ted. There was money and time being thrown at artists of all stripes, allowing each and every person to discover something of value and significance in the decade's cultural wares. Real investment was put into Caroline Aherne and Larry David, into the Gallagher brothers and Britney Spears. It was easy to find your stuff because there was simply so much of it. Not keen on Alanis? Try Kim Gordon. Repelled by Men Behaving Badly? Try Absolutely Fabulous. In a random week in June 1999, the top 10 singles in the UK included 'Hey Boy Hey Girl' by The Chemical Brothers, 'That Don't Impress Me Much' by Shania Twain, 'Sweet Like Chocolate' by Shanks & Bigfoot, and Sixpence None the Richer's treacly classic 'Kiss Me'. At No 1? Baz Luhrmann's misty-eyed, spoken-word oddity 'Everybody's Free (to Wear Sunscreen)'. There was range. The internet, inevitably, ruined it. Popularised by hippies and geeks around 1993 and 1994, it created even more abundance, but going backwards in time: increasingly the entire history of culture was available at our disposal, shrinking the necessity for the new and innovative.

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How TV and video content reflect and shape societal trends

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Great clothes, no Instagram — was this last ‘best decade ever'?
Great clothes, no Instagram — was this last ‘best decade ever'?

Gulf Today

time5 days ago

  • Gulf Today

Great clothes, no Instagram — was this last ‘best decade ever'?

One of the stranger trends on the discussion platform Reddit highlights just how many variations there are on this one question: why did the Nineties look like that? Most of the time the people posing them are too young to remember 9/11, let alone the years immediately preceding it. But they share a fascination with the photographs taken of that decade, and the clothes, and the makeup. Sometimes the question is about the era's cars, or its architecture, or its films and television. What was up with how good everything looked? Why did light seem that much kinder? Why do street scenes in the original Sex and the City hold so much colour and vibrance, yet the street scenes in And Just Like That look as if you're watching Sarah Jessica Parker skip around an Apple store? Why, the children ask, do the Nineties just seem... better? It's a tiny microcosm of what is increasingly accepted as a fact of modern life: that the Nineties were better than whatever we're dealing with currently. Think of all the music and the filmmaking! Put aside the Gulf war, Aids, the Rodney King riots, OJ Simpson, Bill Clinton and Monica Lewinsky, Bosnia, mad cow disease, increased globalisation and corporate fiefdom, and the dawn of focus-on-the-family conservatism, and it was practically a blissful utopia of good vibes! And you, dear reader, may be one of those pining nostalgia-heads, sitting in your cramped, hopeless, still-traumatised-by-Covid flatshare and wishing you could go back. Monica Lewinsky Others echo that view, at least. A few years ago, a YouGov poll found that the Nineties were the UK's most fondly remembered decade. A similar poll, published earlier this month, identified the period between 1993 and 2001 as one of the two best eras in American history, more or less tying with 1980 to 1991. Make America great again? Just make it 1995, and Bob's your uncle, apparently. That poll, though, doesn't make clear who the 1,139 Americans were who actually voted. We know they were 'adults', but that could mean anything: individuals who lived through the Nineties — and by that I mean really lived — or people like me, 1992 babies with vivid memories of only the last hurrah of the decade. If we're being totally honest, they could also be people with absolutely no tangible sense of the Nineties outside of Throwback Thursday Instagram posts. Eighteen-year-olds, basically. But why do the Nineties still hold such allure? They were, in lots of ways, a decade of abundance, of every creative field firing on all cylinders. Of Nirvana, Tupac, Blur and the Spice Girls, of Quentin Tarantino, Jurassic Park and Richard Curtis. Think Gianni Versace, Calvin Klein and Empire Records. The Simpsons, Twin Peaks and Father Ted. There was money and time being thrown at artists of all stripes, allowing each and every person to discover something of value and significance in the decade's cultural wares. Real investment was put into Caroline Aherne and Larry David, into the Gallagher brothers and Britney Spears. It was easy to find your stuff because there was simply so much of it. Not keen on Alanis? Try Kim Gordon. Repelled by Men Behaving Badly? Try Absolutely Fabulous. In a random week in June 1999, the top 10 singles in the UK included 'Hey Boy Hey Girl' by The Chemical Brothers, 'That Don't Impress Me Much' by Shania Twain, 'Sweet Like Chocolate' by Shanks & Bigfoot, and Sixpence None the Richer's treacly classic 'Kiss Me'. At No 1? Baz Luhrmann's misty-eyed, spoken-word oddity 'Everybody's Free (to Wear Sunscreen)'. There was range. The internet, inevitably, ruined it. Popularised by hippies and geeks around 1993 and 1994, it created even more abundance, but going backwards in time: increasingly the entire history of culture was available at our disposal, shrinking the necessity for the new and innovative.

For summer outfit inspiration, check out 'And Just Like That'
For summer outfit inspiration, check out 'And Just Like That'

Khaleej Times

time7 days ago

  • Khaleej Times

For summer outfit inspiration, check out 'And Just Like That'

'Yes‭,‬'‭ ‬I exclaimed‭, ‬sitting bolt upright in bed‭, ‬startling my husband as an image of Sarah Jessica Parker‭ (‬SJP‭) ‬wearing a midnight blue‭, ‬long-sleeved gown appeared on my feed last week‭. (‬I am fully cognisant that pre-sleep scrolling is a terrible idea‭, ‬but fashion has callous disregard for circadian rhythms‭.) ‬Obviously‭, ‬Vivienne Westwood‭, ‬not obviously this season‭, ‬the dress in question‭ ‬turns out to be a vintage piece once owned by the late designer herself and now worn by SJP to the premiere of‭ ‬ And Just Like That‮…‬‭ ‬Season 3‭. ‬ Streaming this weekend on OSN‭+, ‬the third instalment of the‭ ‬Sex and the City‭ (‬SATC‭) ‬spinoff is set to bring a much-needed jolt of life to my style mojo this summer‭. ‬Is it just me‭, ‬or has all that greige‭, ‬oversized suiting we've been exposed to for so long gotten a bit‭, ‬well‭, ‬greige‭? ‬I am old enough to remember the time that Prada did grey in the late‭ ‬'90s and the entire high street followed suit‭; ‬Marks‭ & ‬Spencer looked like its school uniform department had overrun the entire store‭. ‬After a few seasons of ubiquitous restrained V-neck woollen sweaters‭, ‬it's no wonder sense went out of the window and brightly coloured‭, ‬bedazzled Juicy Couture tracksuits came rushing in‭. ‬ Since then‭, ‬fashion has done its cyclical thing‭; ‬sometimes OTT and shouty‭, ‬sometimes restrained and whispering‭. ‬In the 2010s‭, ‬the birth of Instagram inevitably went hand-in-iPhone-clutching-hand with the kind of exuberant street style best exemplified by then Italian‭ ‬Vogue‭ ‬fashion editor Anna Dello Russo‭ (‬ADR‭). ‬Peacocking became an actual job‭ ‬–‭ ‬influencing‭ ‬–‭ ‬and no one did it like ADR‭. ‬Not since Carrie Bradshaw had completely bonkers style choices been so celebrated‭. ‬ By this decade‭, ‬macro trends‭ ‬–‭ ‬minimal‭, ‬maximal‭, ‬and everything in-between‭ ‬–‭ ‬have been rendered obsolete by the takeover of the algorithm‭, ‬which feeds us increasing amounts of what we already like‭ (‬in my‭ ‬case‭, ‬Taylor Swift‭). ‬But that hasn't stopped a pervasive desaturation of fun in pursuit of cool from dampening the fashion outlook‭. ‬Even ADR has hung up her Dolce‭ ‬‭& ‬Gabbana cherry hat for a life of meditation and yoga‭. ‬Thank the fashion deities then‭, ‬for SJP and her alter ego‭, ‬Carrie‭, ‬showing us that we can still find joy in fashion‭, ‬that smiling is allowed‭, ‬and that bow-adorned hot pink shoes are never a bad idea‭. ‬Even in a rat-infested New York summer‭. ‬ We are now two decades on from the conclusion of‭ ‬ SATC‭. ‬Parker turned 60‭ ‬this year‭, ‬and I am delighted that she refuses to let the advancement of time dull her style sparkle‭. ‬That medieval corseted navy Westwood dress was inspired‭; ‬nodding as it does to Bradshaw's iconic wedding gown‭, ‬which the character re-wore to the Met Gala in Season 2‭ ‬of‭ ‬And Just Like That‮…‬‭ ‬Personal style doesn't have an expiry date‭. ‬Neither should it have rules‭. ‬One day we can be Carrie in layers of tulle‭, ‬the next we can be Miuccia in a minimalist Prada re-edition from the 2000s‭. ‬I have to confess my own inclinations tend to fall on the Carrie side of the fence‭. ‬In a fashion-off between saccharine-shaded lashings of tulle and androgynous griege suiting‭, ‬99‭ ‬per cent of the time I'll side with the tulle‭. ‬ There's something so life-affirming about going full Patricia Field‭, ‬whose original costumes for‭ ‬ SATC‭ ‬were as much a cast member as Carrie‭, ‬Samantha‭, ‬Miranda‭, ‬Charlotte and‭, ‬of course‭, ‬NYC herself‭. ‬So yes‭, ‬I'll be tuning in for the fashion this weekend‭, ‬just as much as the narrative thread that as Elie Habib‭, ‬CEO of OSN‭+ & ‬Anghami‭, ‬says‭, ‬'Not only celebrate timeless friendships that transcend cultures‭, ‬especially in our part of the world where close-knit social and‭ ‬family ties are deeply valued‭, ‬but also reflect the evolving journeys we all experience‭, ‬beyond the bounds of age‭.‬'

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