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Word: 80s (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1980-1989
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Usage:

Both, too, were profoundly out of fashion for most of the 1970s and '80s, during the era of ferocious antimodernist reaction. But now the pendulum is swinging back again, which may account for this week's eleventh-hour attempt to rehabilitate two modernist reputations at once. Neither prizewinner is interested in making a pretense of mellowness. In the acceptance speech he prepared for his daughter to read, Niemeyer disparaged a "minor architecture made with a ruler and square" and, a bit self-servingly, endorsed the "search for the spectacular." The more plainspoken Bunshaft dismisses apostates and revels in his sense...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Design: A Boost for Good Old Modernism | 5/30/1988 | See Source »

Eric Fischl has become the painter laureate of American anxiety in the '80s. From the moment he exhibited Sleepwalker, 1979, his image of a teenage boy resentfully masturbating in a suburban wading pool, Fischl has zeroed in with unblinking curiosity on the discontents of the White Tribe whose territory stretches from Scarsdale to Anaheim: unreachable kids, grotesque parents, small convulsions of voyeurism and barely concealed incestuous longing...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Discontents of The White Tribe | 5/30/1988 | See Source »

Want to follow the ups and downs of cable television? Just watch Ted Turner, Atlanta's brash cable mogul and America's most entertaining businessman. In the go-go years of the 1970s and early '80s, Turner was the cable industry's chief cheerleader, creating the nation's first satellite-beamed superstation, WTBS, and confounding skeptics by successfully launching TV's first 24-hour news channel, the Cable News Network. In the mid-'80s, however, the cable industry hit a slump, and so did Turner. His 1984 attempt to start a music- video channel died after just a month...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Video: Heady Days Again for Cable | 5/30/1988 | See Source »

Indeed, Congress and federal regulators are already taking some hard looks at cable's newfound muscle. During the 1970s and early '80s, a number of regulatory benefits were given to cable in an effort to encourage the fledgling industry. Now competitors complain that cable enjoys several unfair advantages in the marketplace. One of them was removed last week, when the Federal Communications Commission voted to reimpose the so-called syndicated exclusivity rules. Broadcasters have long argued that local stations that buy exclusive rights to syndicated programming are being hurt by cable channels airing the same shows (typically, reruns...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Video: Heady Days Again for Cable | 5/30/1988 | See Source »

...generation for its heroes, the rich and famous and superficial headed the list: Clint Eastwood and Eddie Murphy, celebrities standing in for real heroes. But the current wave of nostalgia for Bobby Kennedy may be a signal that the generation that retreated to self-absorption in the '70s and '80s may be ready to feel passion again. That Kennedy is a hero to them could be more than nostalgia; it may suggest a yearning, once again, to re-engage...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Robert Kennedy: The Last Hero | 5/9/1988 | See Source »

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