Emily Post, Miss Manners, and the Collapse of Common Courtesy
Emily Post taught kindness. Miss Manners taught civility. Both spent decades explaining how to treat people. Looking at today’s culture, they might wonder what happened.
Before smartphones, streaming, social media, and endless notifications, life operated a little differently.
From the Archives explores the television shows, music, technology, military memories, childhood experiences, and cultural moments that shaped earlier generations.
Pull up a chair. We’re taking a trip down memory lane.
Emily Post taught kindness. Miss Manners taught civility. Both spent decades explaining how to treat people. Looking at today’s culture, they might wonder what happened.
Long before GPS guided every turn, Americans relied on paper maps, handwritten directions, and a healthy dose of confidence. Somehow, we still managed to get there.
Long before screens dominated childhood, kids entertained themselves outdoors with bicycles, neighborhood games, roller skates, and imagination. Here’s how childhood looked before batteries became required equipment.
Before on-demand entertainment, Saturday morning cartoons were a weekly event. Kids across America gathered around the television for a shared experience that today’s generation will never fully understand.
Before he became the drummer for The Monkees, Micky Dolenz had never played a drum kit. The former child star of Circus Boy learned on the fly and eventually became a legitimate touring and recording musician.
Before Amazon, America shopped through a giant book called the Sears catalog. It wasn’t just a catalog—it was entertainment, aspiration, and a national wish list.
Before streaming, social media, and endless entertainment choices, America gathered around just three television networks. The result was something we rarely experience today: a shared national culture.
Before caller ID, every phone call was a surprise. You answered first and figured out who it was afterward. Somehow, civilization survived.
Before streaming services gave us a “Skip Intro” button, television theme songs were part of the experience. Here’s why we still remember them decades later.
Before social media, streaming, and online shopping, the mall was where people gathered, wandered, discovered music, saw movies, met friends, and found out what everyone was doing.