Kids having kids is not a new phenomenon, but the reality show format about kids having kids is a relatively recent phenomenon that I personally could do without.
"He's the electric horseman, you better back off!" - old sKool making a reference to the culturally relevant 1979 film.
One of my fondest memories during my college years was when I turned 21. I was living in a fraternity house in State College, and since it was a Sunday night, the bars were pretty much closed (and we didn't have money to spend at them anyway). We spent that Sunday night celebrating my 21st by mixing screwdrivers in the fraternity's bar room and watching MTV videos until 6 in the morning. I think Martha Quinn was the VJ that night. We got to see many of the legendary early MTV vids at that time. And since it was still new at that point, we were captivated by the whole novelty of all music video television, so we paid attention to see what was next. A fun night.
J.J. Jackson passed away in 2004. Besides being one of the first MTV veejays, he also was a Los Angeles radio announcer and anchored a few syndicated rock radio programs.
bassist_25 wrote:Kids having kids is not a new phenomenon, but the reality show format about kids having kids is a relatively recent phenomenon that I personally could do without.
I know it's not a recent phenomenon, however, back in the old days we didn't pay for them to have kids.