My visual memory of 1995 is grainy, slightly over-saturated, and framed in 4:3. It was the year of the O.J. Simpson trial—faces glued to the TV in every waiting room. It was the year of Clueless , where the clothes were plastic and the wit was sharp.
We didn’t have Google. We had encyclopedias, library cards, and the vague advice of a friend’s older brother. Information was earned, not searched. And somehow, that made knowing things feel like treasure. memories -1995-
Before the internet ate the world, the mall was the social motherboard. In 1995, the arcade still smelled of popcorn and ozone. Blockbuster Video was a Friday night pilgrimage—the smell of plastic cases and carpet cleaner, the agony of choosing between Toy Story (new magic) and Braveheart (too long for a rental). My visual memory of 1995 is grainy, slightly
Looking back, 1995 was the last year of the old world’s innocence. The Cold War was a fading echo. 9/11 was a distant, impossible future. We were optimistic, cynical, and bored—a potent combination. It was the year of Clueless , where
But my personal reels are quieter: the sound of a lawn sprinkler in July, the feel of a magazine’s glossy pages, the smell of a freshly printed TV Guide . We wrote notes on folded paper. We memorized phone numbers. We got lost on purpose, because without GPS, getting lost was just part of the adventure.