The yearning for the past, especially among millennials, seems to stretch beyond just misty-eyed remembrances of trips to Blockbuster or binge-watching reruns of classic ’90s TV shows. This nostalgia, strangely enough, finds roots in a deeper longing for a culture from which America, it appears, has drifted. Folks aren’t necessarily pining for the return of clunky VHS rentals or corny sitcom plotlines, but rather the shared cultural experiences these things represented. So why this desperate clutch to relics of yesteryear amid an era teeming with technological advancement?
It comes down to what once was a collective culture. Millennials grew up in a time where cultural landmarks and experiences were shared, where a trip to the video store or watching a sitcom wasn’t just an individual activity but something you talked about with friends at school the next day. Today’s fragmented culture, spliced and diced by algorithms and personal devices, has obliterated this sense of unity. Real, in-the-flesh conversations and interactions have been traded for digital connections, cutting the communal ties that once bound society together.
Much of this transformation can be tied to the monumental shifts that began taking place around the late 2000s. Around this period, pivotal developments such as the inauguration of the smartphone era and the financial recession signaled the death knell for the unified culture. Add to that the deployment of social media algorithms, which transformed platforms from gathering grounds for known acquaintances into echo chambers serving personalized content often disconnected from reality.
Blame it on the algorithm. When social media platforms switched their modus operandi to algorithm-driven feeds, they ceased to be the virtual extension of one’s friend circle. Content offered by these digital curators was no longer about connecting with neighbors or keeping up with classmates but about maximizing screen time by any means necessary. The result? A culture further fractured, a divide deepened, even as the world got more connected in the most peculiar ways.
So that leaves us with a generation, battered by the Great Recession and global crises, yearning for a simpler time when culture seemed more cohesive and dream-worthy before adulthood’s harsh realities settled in. The twist here is that social media, far from being the unifying force it once promised to be, has become a reflection of this divide, fueling the nostalgia not for the objects of the past as much as for the shared simplicity they represented. What we’re witnessing isn’t just longing for the past, but rather a lament for lost community and common cultural touchstones.






