- Tue Oct 05, 2021 8:59 am
#11292
I've just finished reading "Inside the Dream Factory" by Dominic Sandbrook - a history of British pop culture. Something he wrote stood out - that appeals to nostalgia have been a common currency in British politics for a long time. And understandably so, given that writers, whatever their medium, typically write about their youth. So basically the news paradigm is always about 20 years behind reality*.
The other thing to stress is that there's still a strong case for winning over the older vote on the grounds that they're the ones most likely to vote. And a tried and tested way is to appeal to them by implying that anyone younger than them has it easy, doesn't know what real work is, and spends too much time on that Interweb thing anyway.
*Brilliantly expressed in a Viz photo-story set in a dotcom startup, which featured a stereotypically evil soap opera boss shouting at workers to "Get those internets packed and on the truck!".
As the actress said to the bishop, rabbi, imam and priest
"My eyes have seen the glory, I'm a born again Atheist!"