Judy,
I laughed! :P
To comment on earlier posts, I was born in 1975, so I do remember some things about disco when it was really happening, like my mom playing the SNF album while vacuuming the living room, buying Gloria Gaynor's "Love Tracks" and Peaches & Herb's "2 Hot!" albums because my aunt had bought them (my mom had bought Village People's "Macho Man" album earlier on), Donna Summer's "On The Radio" album on 8-track, and the "A Night At Studio 54" album. I knew who Chic was, having seen their commercials for their albums on TV. Growing up in the city (Queens, NY) in those days, even as young as 3-4 years old, I was exposed to these things.
I never liked the whole "retro" approach to disco and the '70s pop culture when it arrived in the '90s. I always felt like there was a thinly-veiled ostracization regarding it in the fold, with regards to the clothes, hairstyles and attitudes and whatnot. As time went on, I realized that the actual footage from that time period was the ONLY source and that no re-creation could match it. That is why I never bothered to watch the "54" movie because I figured it would be just a '90s interpretation of what had gone on there, pretending it was the late 1970's again. Those days will NEVER come back, but the memories and the music will always remain.
"Everyone knows the real reason why you got that part it was the time you spent on that casting couch"--Antoine Merriwether
"Excuse me, Miss Thing, but both of us spent time on that couch"--Blaine Edwards
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