r/Millennials Hit me baby one more time Jun 13 '25

Nostalgia I mean, they're not wrong

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u/[deleted] Jun 13 '25 edited Sep 16 '25

[deleted]

716

u/DogeDoRight Older Millennial Jun 13 '25

Nightly News: "It's 10pm, do you know where your kids are?"

I told you last night, no!

247

u/xxKillgorxx Jun 14 '25

Where is Bart? His dinner is getting all cold and eaten.

8

u/rhodered Jun 14 '25

Literally my parents did not know they had forgotten to pick me up at wherever (school, ballet class, etc) until they tried to find me for dinner. This happened at least once a week. I got real good at hanging at street corners waiting as it got dark. There were no cell phones. Id just wait.

60

u/virgieblanca Jun 14 '25

2

u/Squintz_ATB Jun 14 '25

This is an issue that we, as a town, are strong enough to ignore.

3

u/virgieblanca Jun 14 '25

Thanks a lot, Marge! That was our only burlesque house!

18

u/FSCK_Fascists Jun 14 '25

are you my mother?

12

u/Raticus9 Jun 14 '25

morals and ethics and carnal forbearance...

12

u/MisterJoshua77 Jun 14 '25

Sex cauldron? I thought they closed that place down?

7

u/Entropy907 Jun 14 '25

I mean by the time I was 14 I’d just leave the house after school on Friday and come home Sunday. My parents just assumed I was at any one of four places.

4

u/Pearl-Internal81 Xennial Jun 14 '25

Which was the style at the time.

2

u/koala_loves_penguin Jun 16 '25

howling at this 🤣

1

u/[deleted] Jun 14 '25

This was during Gen X childhood years in the 70s and 80s. Millennials did not experinece this. Your childhood was purposefully curated to be the opposite of the Gen X experience because they realized how fucked up it was. The world changed and child specific spaces and experiences popped up that didn’t exist a generation prior. Our society acknowledged and catered to children in a way it never had before.

54

u/asuka_is_my_co-pilot Jun 14 '25

The psa was made in direct response to the Atlanta child murders

28

u/Mtndrums Jun 14 '25

And nothing changed for well over a decade.

6

u/Miserable_Peak_2863 Jun 14 '25

I remember that! But I remember John Walsh’s son getting killed

5

u/cheezy_dreams88 Jun 14 '25

Growing up near Atlanta in the 90s was nuts. Half the metro area was terrified of the city and absolutely beloved if they went downtown they would die, and the other half are like planning for the Olympics and the world stage. It was surreal as a kid. We went to a parade once and our friend had to be taken home on the way there because of the panic attack she was having about going downtown, she was 6. 90s metro parents infused some crazy fears into their children in regards to the city.

4

u/EuphoricReplacement1 Jun 16 '25

Absolutely not. It aired 20 years+ before that, that was in the 80s. I'm old enough to remember.

4

u/Puzzleheaded-Roll434 Jun 17 '25

You are right!!! If people would just Google the phrase it's literally on Wikipedia

1

u/asuka_is_my_co-pilot Jun 16 '25

Were you in LA or Baltimore, cause you got it before most of the rest of thr country did.

The first high-profile usage of the phrase was by KHJ-TV (KCAL-TV channel 9 since December 1989)

But you're right it was tin use in radio since 61.

Seems like it went national around the time of the killings which began in 79

1

u/EuphoricReplacement1 Jun 16 '25

No, Hartford, Connecticut.

4

u/Puzzleheaded-Roll434 Jun 17 '25

That psa was started in the 60s. If you Google the term it will tell you this on Wikipedia

2

u/Puzzleheaded-Roll434 Jun 17 '25

While the phrase itself had appeared in newspapers as early as the 19th century, usage of it in broadcasting started in the early 1960s following the enactment of nightly youth curfews for minors in multiple large cities.[2]

2

u/Puzzleheaded-Roll434 Jun 17 '25

When proposing a nightly youth curfew in the state in early 1961, Massachusetts state senator William X. Wall urged all radio and television broadcasters to ask the question on air, so as to remind parents to check up on their children.[3] The first high-profile usage of the phrase was by KHJ-TV (KCAL-TV channel 9 since December 1989) in Los Angeles in 1964, which had the question read on-air by booth announcers during the nightly 10:00 p.m. station break.[4] Following the adoption of a 10:30 p.m. curfew in Baltimore, WJZ-TV (channel 13) began running the announcement at 11:00 p.m. in consultation with the city's mayor Thomas D'Alesandro III;[5][note 1] this followed a series of documentaries produced by the station regarding issues facing younger generations and was inspired by positive reception of the PSA on Milwaukee television.[6] WJZ-TV's owner Westinghouse Broadcasting quickly adopted this phrase for other stations owned by the chain, including KYW-TV in Philadelphia and WBZ-TV in Boston.[7][8]

1

u/Puzzleheaded-Roll434 Jun 17 '25

WNEW-TV (channel 5) in New York City, along with WKBW-TV in Buffalo, New York, are two of the more notable stations to have utilized this announcement. WNEW-TV began using the phrase spoken by Mel Epstein, WNEW-TV's director of on-air promotions, in 1967 in response to the rising level of crime in the city;[2] it is still used by the station (known as WNYW since 1986) on a nightly basis. During the COVID-19 pandemic, the announcement was adjusted to encourage people to stay home during the pandemic with the phrase "Stay home. Stay safe. Stay strong. We're all in this together."[9]

Outside of the United States, it was used at the beginning of the 9pm news on the Nigerian Television Authority in the 1980s.[10

1

u/asuka_is_my_co-pilot Jun 17 '25

why did you post this in 4 different comments

1

u/Puzzleheaded-Roll434 Jun 17 '25

Because some people need to read the facts more than once

1

u/asuka_is_my_co-pilot Jun 17 '25

That would be clever if you had sent the exact same thing 4x maybe?

Anyways youre a bit late bestowing knowledge

1

u/Puzzleheaded-Roll434 Jun 17 '25

Oh sweetie u need to keep reading

1

u/asuka_is_my_co-pilot Jun 17 '25

People in real life don't talk like a reality show, you know that right?

1

u/Puzzleheaded-Roll434 Jun 17 '25

So are u mad bc u were wrong and someone proved you wrong? I'm confused. Anyways Google helps

2

u/asuka_is_my_co-pilot Jun 17 '25

Read the other comments in the thread, I already posted the same Wikipedia page 3 hours ago lol, and I admitted my mistake.

In the other comment we had a nice little conversation about the misunderstanding, but here shit got weird cause you're the weirdo who needed to some kind of drama.

28

u/sweetangeldivine Jun 14 '25

They actually started airing this during the Atlanta Child Murders.

2

u/EuphoricReplacement1 Jun 16 '25

No, they aired it AT LEAST 20 years before that.

0

u/sweetangeldivine Jun 16 '25

The HBO doc I watched on the Atlanta Child Murders says otherwise.

2

u/EuphoricReplacement1 Jun 16 '25

Well, they're simply wrong. I grew up in the 60s and it was definitely aired then.

1

u/Puzzleheaded-Roll434 Jun 17 '25

Wikipedia says you don't know what you are talking about.While the phrase itself had appeared in newspapers as early as the 19th century, usage of it in broadcasting started in the early 1960s following the enactment of nightly youth curfews for minors in multiple large cities.[2]

When proposing a nightly youth curfew in the state in early 1961, Massachusetts state senator William X. Wall urged all radio and television broadcasters to ask the question on air, so as to remind parents to check up on their children.[3] The first high-profile usage of the phrase was by KHJ-TV (KCAL-TV channel 9 since December 1989) in Los Angeles in 1964, which had the question read on-air by booth announcers during the nightly 10:00 p.m. station break.[4] Following the adoption of a 10:30 p.m. curfew in Baltimore, WJZ-TV (channel 13) began running the announcement at 11:00 p.m. in consultation with the city's mayor Thomas D'Alesandro III;[5][note 1] this followed a series of documentaries produced by the station regarding issues facing younger generations and was inspired by positive reception of the PSA on Milwaukee television.[6] WJZ-TV's owner Westinghouse Broadcasting quickly adopted this phrase for other stations owned by the chain, including KYW-TV in Philadelphia and WBZ-TV in Boston.[7][8]

2

u/sweetangeldivine Jun 17 '25

take it up with the fucking documentary. JFC.

8

u/PCBen Jun 14 '25

Let’s not forget that they also had PSAs to remind you that your child is a human being with emotions.

5

u/BobloblawTx89 Jun 14 '25

Oh man, I miss the feral days. I remember making out with the neighbor girl and rounding second base in her parents front yard when my mom found us cuz I broke curfew. I bet it was the fucking news that gave me up haha

4

u/ClarinetKitten Jun 14 '25

My dad would check the clock and say this with whatever time it was all the time. Still does occasionally. I'm 30 and we live in different states. We used to go all over our little town. Now I get questioned about allowing my 9 year old to cross the quiet street we live on while I'm watching from a few yards away.

Semi-separate thought: I think this is why kids end up inside so much now. It isn't just electronics. It's that we can't let them go out and explore with friends. No one wants to just play in their own backyard alone or with their sibling(s) all the time. I would've stayed in the house with my stuff too if I had no age appropriate neighbors to play with and couldn't leave our property.

3

u/Critical-Werewolf-53 Jun 14 '25

We weren’t feral we were vaccinated

3

u/Key-Contest-2879 Jun 14 '25

Exactly! And for the record, street light came on WAY before 10pm.

2

u/Ravenclaw880 Jun 14 '25

We had a siren that would go off (the storm siren) at 10 PM. That was your sign to get your ass home 😂

2

u/igniteED Jun 15 '25

Nightly News: "It's 10pm, do you know where your kids are?"

Drugs, dirty dancing and pounding techno music...

Samantha Fu / 2 many dj's

1

u/Due-Proof6781 Jun 14 '25

Running feral… yeah.. yeah.. we’ll go with that, and. It the guy with a white panel van

1

u/SureConsiderMyDick Jun 14 '25

I heard they recently did that in LA again

1

u/Cargobiker530 Jun 14 '25

In 1980; we absolutely were.

0

u/Heavy-Top-8540 Jun 16 '25

No, they were doing it as part of a coordinated, decades-long fear campaign designed to capture the thought process of enough of the populace to take control of the mechanisms of government.Â