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RPG Evolution - True Tales from Stranger Things: Kids on Bikes
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<blockquote data-quote="Ace" data-source="post: 8724629" data-attributes="member: 944"><p>Having lived in that period, given the limitations of media they mostly get stuff right. Heck the Breakfast Club was highly relatable to us in High School . There are things that are obvious "media tropes" but doing the "70's or 80's" right is easy mode. It get harder as things go farther backwards though the 60's is a pretty alien place even to a Gen X like me</p><p></p><p>Why they might seem off is US cities are utterly different now . L.A. for example is predominately Latino whereas in the 70's and early 80's it was the among the Whitest large cities in the US, think Portland demographically these changes along with the Internet have made tremendous differences in the US cultural fabric </p><p></p><p>Also this is just opinion, fertility rates in the US have been low for 5 decades. The Gen X cohort was the last one who usually had siblings and or a lot of kids in the neighborhood . Since 1972 or so the fertility rate has decline which means Millennials would have increasingly fewer multi sibling households and increasingly smaller, subject to where they lived close by friends. </p><p></p><p>Big schools, spread out kids , cultural fears and the Internet mean for many the Kids on Bikes is a fanciful distant past .</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Ace, post: 8724629, member: 944"] Having lived in that period, given the limitations of media they mostly get stuff right. Heck the Breakfast Club was highly relatable to us in High School . There are things that are obvious "media tropes" but doing the "70's or 80's" right is easy mode. It get harder as things go farther backwards though the 60's is a pretty alien place even to a Gen X like me Why they might seem off is US cities are utterly different now . L.A. for example is predominately Latino whereas in the 70's and early 80's it was the among the Whitest large cities in the US, think Portland demographically these changes along with the Internet have made tremendous differences in the US cultural fabric Also this is just opinion, fertility rates in the US have been low for 5 decades. The Gen X cohort was the last one who usually had siblings and or a lot of kids in the neighborhood . Since 1972 or so the fertility rate has decline which means Millennials would have increasingly fewer multi sibling households and increasingly smaller, subject to where they lived close by friends. Big schools, spread out kids , cultural fears and the Internet mean for many the Kids on Bikes is a fanciful distant past . [/QUOTE]
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