10 episodes

An audio essay collection about the most important year of all time.

1999 FOREVER Dahlia Balcazar

    • Society & Culture
    • 5.0 • 29 Ratings

An audio essay collection about the most important year of all time.

    Millennial

    Millennial

    This is episode 9 of 1999 FOREVER
    “Remember: Turn your computer off before midnight on 12/31/99” read a Best Buy sticker that was given to every computer customer for months leading up to the new year. An entire catalog of Y2K prep manuals appeared. Suddenly it did seem possible that ATMs would freeze, elevators might plummet, planes might crash, and nuclear missiles would erroneously fire. So many things were controlled by computers. On “The Simpsons,” Homer messed up and personally caused Y2K chaos and the end of the world. 
    President Clinton called Y2K “the first challenge of the 21st century successfully met.” What’s unclear–and in the words of Alanis Morissette, isn’t it ironic that we’ll never really know–whether the Y2K bug wasn’t actually a big deal at all, or whether it only seems that way now.
    "Run Lola Run" director Tom Tykwer says the 1999 movie is about “the energy of my generation which is too often kept bottled up inside.” Lola, a Manic-Panic redhead with tattoos and Doc Martens, does cut a striking heroine for the twenty-first century.
     
    1999 FOREVER’S theme song is “In the Freezer” by Sophie Strauss
    To support 1999 FOREVER, you can subscribe, leave a rating and a review, and tell all your friends how much you like it. To see episode moodboards, behind-the-scenes photos, videos, and more, follow me on Instagram @dahliabalcazar. 
     
    SOURCES
    Brian Raftery, “Best. Movie. Year. Ever.,” 2019. Perry Chen, “Computers in Crisis,” 2014.

    • 28 min
    Reality Goes Viral

    Reality Goes Viral

    1999 was a year of viral memes, even though we didn’t know what those were yet. “I see dead people.” “One time at band camp.” The Budweiser Wassup commercial.  
    In the late ‘90s, the Texas-based radio show host Alex Jones looked around and saw “The X-Files,” “The Blair Witch Project,” “Eyes Wide Shut,” “The Matrix,” and the barrage of ‘90s pop culture about government cover-ups, and started a radio show about conspiracy theories. He called it InfoWars. By 1999, it was being carried on 50 small stations and Jones took his show online, to an even bigger audience. 
     
    1999 FOREVER’S theme song is “In the Freezer” by Sophie Strauss
    To support 1999 FOREVER, you can subscribe, leave a rating and a review, and tell all your friends how much you like it. To see episode moodboards, behind-the-scenes photos, videos, and more, follow me on Instagram @dahliabalcazar. 
     
    SOURCES
    Elizabeth Williamson, “Sandy Hook: An American Tragedy and the Battle for Truth,” 2022.

    • 24 min
    Party Like It's 1999

    Party Like It's 1999

    There’s a deep nihilism to “partying like it’s 1999.” Is the world ending? Maybe, so let’s party until it does.
    Imagine 400,000 people crowded onto the grounds of an airforce base. It’s summer and the high peaks above 100 degrees. It’s a hot wasteland of bodies and debris as far as the eye can see. Everyone is drunk, overheated, and sunburned. Scores of people are sent to the hospital. And then the fires start. 
    This is Woodstock ‘99, otherwise known as the Day the Nineties died. 
     
    1999 FOREVER’S theme song is “In the Freezer” by Sophie Strauss
    To support 1999 FOREVER, you can subscribe, leave a rating and a review, and tell all your friends how much you like it. To see episode moodboards, behind-the-scenes photos, videos, and more, follow me on Instagram @dahliabalcazar. 
     
    SOURCES
    Jamie Crawford, “Trainwreck: Woodstock ‘99,”  2022.  Vera Papisova, “Sexual Harassment was Rampant at Coachella,” Teen Vogue, 2018.  Garret Price, “Woodstock ‘99: Peace, Love, and Rage,” 2021. “Our Live Report from Woodstock ‘99,” SPIN, 1999. 

    • 29 min
    Bang Bang

    Bang Bang

    In 1999, the stories of three horrific acts of violence haunted the country: the murder of Amadou Diallo in New York City, the murder of Brandon Teena in Nebraska, and the Columbine school shooting in Colorado. These murders were all perpetrated by groups of white men and presaged the violence that would become a part of daily life for Americans: epidemics of police violence, violence against LGBTQ people, and mass shootings. 
    It’s easy to forget it wasn’t always like this. 
     
    1999 FOREVER’S theme song is “In the Freezer” by Sophie Strauss
    To support 1999 FOREVER, you can subscribe, leave a rating and a review, and tell all your friends how much you like it. To see episode moodboards, behind-the-scenes photos, videos, and more, follow me on Instagram @dahliabalcazar. 
     
    SOURCES
    Sam Feder, “Disclosure,” 2020. Gun Violence Archive Mapping Police Violence Donna Minkowitz, “How I Broke, and Botched, the Brandon Teena Story,” The Village Voice, 2018. Rachel Monroe, “Savage Appetites,” 2019.

    • 17 min
    Let Me See That Thong

    Let Me See That Thong

    Thongs are a uniquely American obsession, born out of our paradoxical legacy of both prudishness and thirstiness. The thong is a paradox in itself–an item of clothing introduced to a country by women taking their clothes off. 
    This episode’s themes have been percolating for a long time, simmering, slowly trickling into our consciousness until we were ready for the most important song of 1999: "The Thong Song."
     
    1999 FOREVER’S theme song is “In the Freezer” by Sophie Strauss
    To support 1999 FOREVER, you can subscribe, leave a rating and a review, and tell all your friends how much you like it. To see episode moodboards, behind-the-scenes photos, videos, and more, follow me on Instagram @dahliabalcazar. 
     
    Sources:
    Monica Lewinsky, “Emerging from ‘The House of Gaslight’ in the Age of #MeToo,” Vanity Fair, 2018. Rose McGowan, Brave, 2018. Heather Radke, Butts: A Backstory, 2022.  @sexworkerstyle Kara Swisher, “Monica Lewinsky Has Some Things to Say About Cancel Culture,” The New York Times, 2021. “The Story of ‘Thong Song’ by Sisqó,” Vice, 2021.

    • 31 min
    Work Sucks

    Work Sucks

    We’re living in a period some have called The Great Resignation. Or are we quiet quitting now? While this hostility toward work feels radical, we’ve been here before. As Blink-182 said in their 1999 song "All the Small Things": Work sucks.

    Several movies of 1999 follow almost the same character with the same problem: A mid-level, white-collar, white man is bored and dissatisfied with his corporate life; only a radical jolt to his system can force him to wake up and see everything with new eyes. 
    In "Fight Club," that shock comes in the form of a soap-selling maniac named Tyler Durden. For "American Beauty’s" middle-aged, married protagonist, it’s feeling sexual desire for his teenage daughter’s best friend. And in "The Matrix," a programmer-by-day, hacker-by-night named Thomas Anderson takes a little red pill. 
     
    1999 FOREVER’S theme song is “In the Freezer” by Sophie Strauss
    To support 1999 FOREVER, you can subscribe, leave a rating and a review, and tell all your friends how much you like it. To see episode moodboards, behind-the-scenes photos, videos and more, follow me on Instagram @dahliabalcazar. 
     
    Sources:
    Alan Ball, American Beauty, 1999.
    Eula Biss, Having and Being Had, 2020.  Anne Helen Peterson, Can’t Even: How Millennials Became the Burnout Generation, 2020.  Brian Raftery, Best. Movie. Year. Ever.: How 1999 Blew Up the Big Screen, 2019.  Miya Tokumitsu, Do What You Love And Other Lies About Success and Happiness, 2015. Vauhini Vara, “Amazon Has Transformed the Geography of Wealth and Power,” The Atlantic, 2021.

    • 26 min

Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5
29 Ratings

29 Ratings

Gill K. ,

Thank you, Dahlia!

Dahlia is incredibly smart, thoughtful, funny, and talented. So excited to have her back in my earbuds after Backtalk ended. Crossing my fingers for a surprise guest appearance from Amy sometime!

rockpdx ,

Gold

What time travel, what sweet insights and juxtapositions; what a beautiful voice.

o.zahzah ,

Great podcast!

The writing is really poignant and the creator successfully balances millennial nostalgia with a retrospective analysis of what the cultural phenomena of 1999 can tell us about our current reality. A must-listen for fans of pop cultural analysis but also, as more episodes develop, I have a good feeling that there will be something for the film critics, the politicos, and the history-buffs as well. After all, a good part of what seems to have made 1999 so pivotal, according to the show’s framing, was how all-encompassing and unprecedented its myriad developments would prove to be. Definitely coming back for more!

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