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Its interesting, this basically a relic from the past, I never would have known they had lights like this in the 80s. But I do remember that older lights were more colorful and dimmer before they changed the lights. Some things were more colorful, like television was for example, as a result I used to like watching older shows because it seemed like they had more feeling to them. Now everything seems sort of washed out.
But I am just replying to what someone said about the 90s being like the 50s had widespread conformity and uniformity, and was quite homogenous. (I won't go into complete detail of course I'll only touch on a few basics) but the 1950s was like one of the most prosperous periods in American history, the 90s were not.
The 50s and even more so the 60s were a lot more colorful and warm, and then the 70s wasn't as much for some reason, it's when they first started neoliberalism. But then the 80s was warm and colorful too, so it came back, until the 90s again and the 90s was more spiritual or religious or something, that's when they essentially started lightening everything, that's kind of when what I talked about really started. And then the 2000s happened, I'm actually not sure about this decade, I remember the first pirates of the Caribbean and first new batman movie and first lord of the rings movie, were all different, but the sequels became a lot more generic and lightened. I wasn't able to watch that many movies because we just had a small shitty movie store so I missed out on a lot of things, also there wasn't Netflix. I saw a lot of 80s and some 90s movies on TV though.
The 2010s seemed to go on forever for me, when it first started going it didn't seem like it was just going to be another decade but what people were seemingly trying to seriously change things and make lasting change. That's when I think they tried to bring uniformity and conformity back, and it's still going on in the 2020s, like 2019