Pagers and beepers are out of date as well. There was some TV show that made fun of it, and I can't remember what it was. I think it was Arrested Developement.
Heh. Try telling
that to the IT guy at the newspaper I worked at last year. That man never slept, because his pager was constantly beckoning him out from his bed and back into the blasted office where he'd always have to fix some crisis or another at the wee hours of the night. The guy had rings under his eyes the color of plums. All the time. So for him, pagers are very much relevant!
[/quote]Yeah, I don't know what to think of it either. Personally, there are 3 reactions to how an old film would be percepted. one is no reaction. The second would be "This film is
old! I can't relate and therefore I don't have any interrest." and the third would be "WOW! An old film. It's interresting to see what things were like years ago."[/quote]
Once I was old enough to understand the concept (perhaps around age 5 or so), that's
exactly how I reacted.
[/quote]I just can't believe kids being confused. 2 year olds maybe, but when I saw something that was old, I
knew it was old, even when I was 3 or so. I just didn't care.
I will say in this day and age, all the filmed footage
does look old, due to the film's graniness. You can imitate film on a digital camera. It looks pretty inorganic, though. The "filmed" inserts of today will hold up better in the future, due to the fact they are digital, and can't really degenerate like film does. That said, I'd rather see film that
looks like film. Even (and especially) in animation. But that's another discussion for another day.[/quote]
I think exactly the way you do about this. I love the look of film, and for some reason all my life I've been fascinated with the graininess and odd color of so much low-budget footage shot between the mid 1960s and the early 1980s. "Sesame Street" is just one of the places where this turns up, but it's like a big flashing sign that blares "70s! 70s!" As a kid in the late 80s and early 90s, I was intrigued that here was a very recent, familiar-looking past, but looking like it was a thousand years old because of the grain and dust. (Same goes for that flat, muffled kind of sound mixing that turned up even in many Hollywood feature films of that era. It sounds incredibly odd, almost like a halluncination.)