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- Generation X Gains an Icon
- Copyright (c) 1994, L. Shawn Aiken
- All rights reserved
-
-
- So have you heard that Kurt Cobain died? If you haven't, you must
- have been living under a rock for the last month. Had you heard of Kurt
- Cobain before he killed himself? No need to crawl back under the rock. If
- you hadn't heard of him, don't feel bad. It was a Generation X thing.
- It has been all over the news. It's been flashed over the front pages
- of major newspapers. Kurt Cobain, 27 year old lead singer of the Seattle
- 'grunge' band Nirvana, took a shotgun to his head and pulled the trigger on
- April 8, 1994. Hordes of fans stood in stone cold shock. Lead anchormen on
- major nightly news shows said "Who was this guy?"
- "He was the greatest musician of all time," some said. Others said,
- "He was an unwashed, suicidal, long-haired freak." Both of these views miss
- the point. He was a music star, and with his death he became an icon.
- Strangely enough, it was just what they needed. Generation X.
- Twentysomething. The Lost Generation. These people had little of thier own.
- Half of them were missing a parent by their high school years due to the
- attrition of divorce. The most interesting thing to happen in their formative
- years was to hear the screeching of Axel Rose. They looked back at the 60s
- and pine with misty eyes. There are no legends from the 80s. There was no
- cultural revolution. The 80s didn't have any really eresting clothes. Mix
- AIDS into the pot, and they didn't really have a very good time at all. It
- was just like the 50s, except in color rather than black and white.
- The discontentment grew. They had no cause. They had
- no parents. They experimented with 60s clothes, then 70s clothes, but that
- was just a fad. All they had was Nintendos, VCRs, and MTV. Hardly anything
- to write home about. Just electronic babysitters, really. Then it happened.
- Nirvana came out of the Northwest, spurring on not only good music,
- but a new clothes style. THEIR clothes. The grunge style. The grunge look.
- They latched on tight. And the songs. Oh the songs. Kurt Cobain
- wrote songs for THEM. He understood their pain. He knew their loneliness.
- After all, he was a latch-key kid himself.
- But he was strangely moody. He had stomach problems. He used drugs.
- Cobain couldn't handle his success. To put it more concisely - he couldn't
- stand it. Was he typical of the generation? Are they not bred for success?
- To paraphrase a young comic "My mother worked hard so I wouldn't have to
- work so hard. And guess what? I DON'T!"
- Are the Japanese right? Are we fat and lazy? Is Generation X
- destined to work at Burger King for the rest of their lives? Well, the
- parent's of the hippies of the 60s looked in horror at thier own children. Or
- at least the next door neighbor's kid.
- Generation X is having an identity crisis. Few things that came from
- the 80s were valuable enough to keep. Not even the promise of free sex they
- were given while they grew up in the 70s was paid up in full. If they have
- nothing, how can they be anything? Kurt Cobain's death was something that
- Generation X needed. An icon, something to call their own. But this
- morbibdity will not last long. Generation X will turn out okay in the end.
- It's just a phase.
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