Super!
Wow, that was exciting.
Wow, that was exciting.
Today is the Feast of St. Blaise.
It’s also the birtdate of Pretty Boy Floyd, born on February 3, 1904.
Fran Tarkenton is 68 today; Bob Griese is 63.
Blythe Danner is 65.
Melanie is 61, Morgan Fairchild 58, Nathan Lane 52.
James Michener was born on this date in 1907.
From an article in the Christian Science Monitor:
Not so long ago it seemed as if we all spoke the same pop-culture language. But in an era of 500 TV channels, billions of Web pages, unlimited Netflix rentals, and iPods with music libraries of Smithsonian proportions, popular entertainment has suddenly become mind-bogglingly vast. As the overlap between what we all watch, read, and listen to steadily erodes, the water cooler has become a modern-day tower of Babel, where conversations sound like the jumbled voices emanating from the jungle in “Lost.” (If that reference is lost on you then, well, Q.E.D.)
In decades past, major pop-culture moments - the ones that everybody experienced at the same time - acted as an intangible glue that bound us together. “There’s a ‘we’ in all of those; the unum of the pluribus,” says Tim Burke, a cultural historian at Swarthmore College in Pennsylvania. “It’s harder to get those things as the media fragments.”
Which makes Sunday’s Super Bowl all the more remarkable.
“It’s the largest national event, at least in terms of people doing a common thing at one time in American culture,” says Mark Dyreson, a Pennsylvania State University professor who co-wrote the chapter “Super Bowl Sunday: A New American Holiday?” for the forthcoming Encyclopedia of American Holidays.
That got us thinking: Which other pop-culture phenomena still bind us together? After days of argument, research, fact-checking, and multiple rounds of voting - a process as rigorous as a “CSI” forensics test - the staff here at Weekend came up with a highly subjective, nonscientific list of 10 things that act as common denominators.
[Reposted from 2006.]
One day in early February 1959, a 13-year-old in New Rochelle, New York, cut open the stack of newspapers he was about to deliver and read that three rock ’n’ roll stars, Buddy Holly, J. P. “The Big Bopper” Richardson, and Ritchie Valens, had died in a plane crash in Iowa. The boy later said he felt “like someone had punched me in the face.” It was a feeling shared by many in America and around the world. Years later, in 1971, that paperboy, Don McLean, would write the song “American Pie,” which gave an enduring name to the event: the Day the Music Died.
Right up there with other “where were you when you heard” events for those of us of a certain age. Read all about it at AmericanHeritage.com.