'Stranger Things' helps us confront past's demons, real and imagined
As we near the end of the show "Stranger Things," it’s worth wondering why the retro-nerdy, satanic panic, sci-fi/horror mashup has such a huge appeal. When the show debuted in 2016, my Generation X friends and I fell instantly in love.
Perhaps there was some fan service, we judged, but that was no fault in a show so filled with invention and heart and thrills. And yet the show quickly became a cross-generational smash. There’s even a float in the upcoming Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade.
It’s not just those of us reared in the 1970s and ‘80s who love watching teens in Little League T-shirts ride banana bikes, use walkie-talkies and play role-playing games. (Remember Dungeons & Dragons?)
Even leaving age brackets aside, there’s a pronounced fascination with the 1980s at the moment. On college campuses, for example, you can spot Reagan/Bush campaign shirts, jeans jackets with band patches and bare-shouldered "Flashdance" tops.
Since a good amount of 1980s culture was defined by 1950s and 1960s........© USA TODAY





















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