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The '80s: The Decade That Wouldn't End
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Of course I know you know that designs on plates with chocolate syrup are
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very late '80s. And the fact, as you note, that they haven't gone away supports
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another of my theories--that the '80s themselves haven't gone away either. Just
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as 1960-63 was the end of the '50s, and 1970-73 was the end of the '60s, we are
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now a record-breaking 17 years into the present decade, culturally speaking.
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These may be the end of the '80s we're now living through, but I would argue
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that the '90s as a culturally distinct decade (the Internet aside) does not
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exist.
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Cornish game hens, drizzled chocolate syrup, friends sleeping with friends'
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husbands--food plus adultery! I am honored to be the vessel for such a
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thrilling outburst of classic Ephronism. So ... How come this leitmotif informs
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your fiction and now your public e-mails, but not your movies (except the one
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based on your novel)? On the other hand, I guess You've Got Mail
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involved quasi-adultery, and it did have the great Hanks-scooping-up-the-caviar
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scene. And Mixed Nuts had a food title.
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I like Mark Green. I've donated money to Mark Green. Even though I guess
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he's a notch or two to my left, I'd vote for him happily against Hillary or
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Rudy for practically any office--because he has a sense of humor and seems like
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a vital, mentally healthy person of strong character. So don't make me out to
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be some kind of right-winger just because I voted for Giuliani and never much
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liked Bill Clinton and don't live on the Upper West Side.
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Back to hurricane readiness before I sign off for the day. (Civil defense!
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Yet again, I'm seeing all news through some '40s/'50s/early-'60s prism. Maybe I
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should have a doctor check this out.) Anyhow, I have an impolitic question:
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Have any of the big disasters we've been serially warned about for the last 20
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years (multiple hurricanes, one or two comets, mobs of starving children
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post-welfare-reform, etc.) actually occurred in New York? The media-boy cries
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wolf an awful lot.
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OK, maybe I'm a conservative after all.
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And indeed, I'm afraid I do think most cops in New York ticketing the
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double-parked car of a courteous black man carrying cats would speak exactly
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the way my cop spoke to me on Court Street in Brooklyn. In fact, it was his
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stern, ridiculous policemanese--"Step away from the vehicle!"--that surprised
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me, since I'm, you know, white, and middle-aged, and wear glasses.
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I too like Bill Bradley, and expect to vote for him in the primary. A friend
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of mine who's a theater director recently told me that I should tell another
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friend of mine who's a speechwriter for Bradley that he, the director, would
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like to help coach the candidate in big-audience performing skills. Which I
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think would be a good idea. And which I also think is a very rich premise for a
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comedy sketch.
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But my problem with politics these days (which I suppose can come across as
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conservatism--and may well be, in the old-fashioned sense) is that politics
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don't and really can't matter all that much in this country right now. There
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are rough, large consensuses on all the big issues--economics, social welfare,
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civil rights, women's rights, war and peace, even abortion. And they will
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continue as long as the economy chugs along like this and we stay out of wars
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any longer than a mini-series. Sure, there's a biggish, scary lunatic
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right--the Gary Bauerite creationist anti-gay regiments--but they're not going
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to be running the country or amending the Constitution anytime soon. In fact,
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Pat Buchanan is right about the virtual indistinguishability of the Democrats
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and Republicans. I sympathize with both Buchanan and Warren Beatty viscerally,
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if not ideologically. I really think national politics kind of needs to be
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blown up and rebuilt. For the couple of weeks seven years ago before he
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revealed himself to be a horrible, crazy gnome, Ross Perot seemed to me like a
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great idea. And if next November the candidates are George Bush, Al Gore, and
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Jesse Ventura, it isn't inconceivable that I would pull the lever for Ventura.
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And I certainly wouldn't be very upset if Bush won, even if he can't name a
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single book he's ever read. (One final theory of mine: In presidential
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elections, the candidate who wins is the one who seems 1) most convincingly
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like a sportsman and 2) happiest. I think the only clear exception to the rule
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from FDR-Hoover through Clinton-Dole is 1968, but that one was very close, and
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it was 1968, when all bets were off.)
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Have a safe trip to Los Angeles.
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