What are your "JFK" moments?
Posted: Mon Apr 13, 2015 5:51 pm
JFK's assassination is probably one of the most famous "moments" in history, the one that spawned the "do you remember where you were when..." meme. But what are your moments, the things that stand out to you?
I was born in 1969, so for me...
Thatcher being elected. The first time I really noticed something going on in the world of politics. At the time, I remember thinking that it would be quite cool to see a woman being elected PM for the first time.
The Falklands war. This had a HUGE impact on me, and it's still something I read about to this day. One of the most famous phrases of the war, from a BBC journalist aboard one of the carriers after a Harrier raid - "I am not allowed to say how many planes joined the raid... but I counted them all out, and I counted them all back."
The Miner's Strike. This won't mean too much for non-Brits, but back in the early 80s this country saw every coal miner in the country go on strike. It was a huge political battle - unions had great political power in the UK in the late 70s, and one thing Thatcher aimed to do was curb that power. On the other side, the strike was deliberately aimed at toppling her government. It dominated the news every night, including scenes of rioting, massed police in riot gear, mounted police chasing down strikers. One or two people even died along the way. Images like this...
The Berlin Wall coming down. It had existed since before I was born, and I'd never been all that aware of it, but watching the people hacking it down themselves was pretty awesome.
Hillsborough. At the time I was a student in Sheffield, and my home team Liverpool came to town to play a big game. I was thinking of going, told my folks that I might. I didn't have a ticket, so the plan was to just go down there and mill around trying to find a scalper. But a bunch of friends were going to drive off to an amusement park that day, and I decided to go with them. Wasn't till late that night that I got home and found that a crowd milling around outside without tickets had been allowed to rush into an already full section of the stadium - crushing almost a hundred people to death. If I hadn't changed my mind, I'd have been in that crowd.
Challenger disaster. At the time, my folks were thinking of buying a shop. We drove off down south, spent all day looking around shops for sale, and came back. As we got hom an "Extended news" report was just finishing. I knew something must have happened, and went to another TV to find out - and that's how I saw it for the first time.
9/11. I was home watching TV when this came on, saw the whole thing unfold on the screen.
Other things I remember, not really events as such, but just gradual changes... the first home computers... the first floppy disc drives... the first Hard Disc drives... colour TV. TV remote controls. Microwave ovens. Satellite TV - most of my childhood there were three TV channels, period. I saw the very first program on the 4th channel (An episode of quiz show called Countdown). Then channel 5, then satellite TV and hundreds of channels.
So what are your big memories? What were you doing when....?
I was born in 1969, so for me...
Thatcher being elected. The first time I really noticed something going on in the world of politics. At the time, I remember thinking that it would be quite cool to see a woman being elected PM for the first time.
The Falklands war. This had a HUGE impact on me, and it's still something I read about to this day. One of the most famous phrases of the war, from a BBC journalist aboard one of the carriers after a Harrier raid - "I am not allowed to say how many planes joined the raid... but I counted them all out, and I counted them all back."
The Miner's Strike. This won't mean too much for non-Brits, but back in the early 80s this country saw every coal miner in the country go on strike. It was a huge political battle - unions had great political power in the UK in the late 70s, and one thing Thatcher aimed to do was curb that power. On the other side, the strike was deliberately aimed at toppling her government. It dominated the news every night, including scenes of rioting, massed police in riot gear, mounted police chasing down strikers. One or two people even died along the way. Images like this...
The Berlin Wall coming down. It had existed since before I was born, and I'd never been all that aware of it, but watching the people hacking it down themselves was pretty awesome.
Hillsborough. At the time I was a student in Sheffield, and my home team Liverpool came to town to play a big game. I was thinking of going, told my folks that I might. I didn't have a ticket, so the plan was to just go down there and mill around trying to find a scalper. But a bunch of friends were going to drive off to an amusement park that day, and I decided to go with them. Wasn't till late that night that I got home and found that a crowd milling around outside without tickets had been allowed to rush into an already full section of the stadium - crushing almost a hundred people to death. If I hadn't changed my mind, I'd have been in that crowd.
Challenger disaster. At the time, my folks were thinking of buying a shop. We drove off down south, spent all day looking around shops for sale, and came back. As we got hom an "Extended news" report was just finishing. I knew something must have happened, and went to another TV to find out - and that's how I saw it for the first time.
9/11. I was home watching TV when this came on, saw the whole thing unfold on the screen.
Other things I remember, not really events as such, but just gradual changes... the first home computers... the first floppy disc drives... the first Hard Disc drives... colour TV. TV remote controls. Microwave ovens. Satellite TV - most of my childhood there were three TV channels, period. I saw the very first program on the 4th channel (An episode of quiz show called Countdown). Then channel 5, then satellite TV and hundreds of channels.
So what are your big memories? What were you doing when....?