Posted on 12/23/2019 9:00:15 AM PST by Textide
Michele Saunders, The Raptures Luke Jenner, and more recall the parties, anxieties, and lessons learned on the eve of the new millennium.
One of the most commonly used tags on the Gen Z-dominated clothing reseller Depop is Y2K, a reference to a cultural phenomenon that happened while its users were in their infancy. Nostalgia for the early aughts seems appropriate for a generation who never knew a world without Instagram. As the first two decades of the new millennium come to a close, Document has asked our friends and contributors to think back to the time before camera phones and social media to the very night of the computer glitch that never happened, for which a clothing genre has been named. There were raging celebrations, artistic reckonings, and a cocktail of anxiety, loneliness, and personal renewalbut no sign of technological Armageddon.
Paul Soulellis
We had a damn good party that night, so wild it would take another two years to fully understand what happened. We would never try to party like that again. Im still not sure who was there or what I was doing past 2AM at a brownstone on South Portland Ave in Brooklyn. I blacked out that night, so my first memory of the new millennium is standing on the roof, watching the sunrise. Someone went out and found a New York Times, and we all stared at it to see if everything was ok. The papers 96pt headline simply displayed the date: 1/1/00. A bit reassuring but also kind of terrifying. No social media, no texting. Maybe thats the last memory I have of a major event before 9/11.
Twenty years later, Im looking at that same front page again, Google search results in my Google browser, just to see if this image beamed to me from the past might trigger anything else. I see that it was unusually warm that day, sunny, high 50, in NYC. The price of the paper was 75 cents. Yeltsin resigned; Putin took power. Revelers in Times Square. Everything was okay, on paper. Im trying to find myself back there on the roof, at 31 years old, and its dim. I can barely see.
Farther down the page, the headline Computers Prevail in First Hours of 00 seems to mock us now. Theyre still prevailing, arent they. A few paragraphs in: the day arrived without the kind of catastrophic problems once feared, of widespread power failures or planes crashing. So much clarity, so little vision of the terrible future(s) we were inheriting in the moment. Im thinking of everything thats become visible in the last twenty years, unfathomable headlines and suffering and complexity. The 1/1/00 New York Times is an odd artifact now, the first souvenir of this millennium but really a leftover joke from the last. In comparison, we have so much vision today. What do we have the capacity to see right now?
Justine D.
My memory is definitely a bit spotty when it comes to recalling any news stories of this time. I was so caught up in living life as a young person in New York. The news, good or bad, never phased me. I think I lived in my own kind of downtown bubble. I had just started DJing that year and was fully immersed in nightlife. I was very focused on making it my career at this point in time and at times the outside world barely existed.
No one I knew believed the world would change or end. I certainly thought it was a bit of a technological hoax made up to instill fear in the hearts of impressionable people. Maybe it was our age, being so young, but I and my group of friends went about our usual daily routine of living and NOT preparing for the worst.
I went to Barmacy with a girlfriend to hear one of my favorite soul DJs (Georgie Goodtimes) and then jumped in a cab to Brooklyn for a very small house party. A guy I had just started to date was DJing in his parents living room. [January 1, 2000 felt] like any other wonderful morning in New York. Great!
Michele Saunders
I remember a lot of media fear around Y2K of major meltdowns, but I did not participate and was not taken by it. The build up for me was more around the momentum of a new millenniumI remember wondering how civilizations celebrated the new millennium one thousand years ago and how they will be in a thousand years from now. At the time, I lived in South Beach, Miami in an apartment right on the beach on Ocean Drive. I always referred to it as my beach cabana. That night, a lot of people were gathered at the beach and were throwing flowers into the ocean, making wishes. Many people were from Brazil or different South American countries. They were all having fires and dancing and storytelling right there on the beach. The beach was magical; everyone stayed out the celebrate all night.
I slept on my balcony and woke up to ensure I would see the first daybreak of 2000; the first light came around 5am. I was obsessed with the idea that I needed to catch that first gleam of light in the new millennium, and I got it. It was the purest light, rising from the ocean, illuminating all of Miami. That was my mission. It was a gorgeous sunrise. And that was exactly how I wanted to ring in the new millennium.
Luke Jenner
Well our band is called The Rapture, so there were a lot of Rapture jokes. We even considered playing at a Mayan pyramid or something. If we would have had social media we could have had a field day.
I guess my general level of anxiety and depression was way higher then. I probably didnt actually think the world would end. You can tell someones general emotional health by asking them what they think the state of the world is. If they answer its totally messed up and we are all going to hell, they are generally talking about how they feel day to day without really knowing it.
[On New Years Eve,] I went to Times Square with my friend Zach who was The Rapture roadie, and we almost got trampled by a horse. I hadnt met my wife yet, but I was trying to dream her up, and I felt really lonely. I guess all I wanted for Christmas and New Years my whole life was for someone to love me and stick by me. Im glad that came true. [The next morning] I was kinda disappointed I wasnt dead and probably went about my dream of being famous all the same.
Nancy Burson
In late 1998 I received a commission to produce what became the first version of the Human Race Machine for the London Millennium Dome, Londons rather bizarre homage to the turn of the century. The idea to show viewers what theyd look like as a different race was a collaboration with Zaha Hadid, who had been selected as the architect of the Domes gigantic Mind Zone. The grand opening was scheduled to premiere January 1st, 2000, or Y2K zero hour.
It wasnt so much that I was concerned about the possible end of the world, but I certainly had friends who were experiencing visions of mankinds doom beginning at midnight that New Years Eve. By early December 99, we were just finishing up the work when Zahas office invited us to the soft opening of the Dome in late December. My feeling was to avoid being in London for the actual Dome opening on New Years Day. Better to go sooner and focus on perfecting the installation itself rather than to add more angst to the general unease that permeated conversations. And besides, I wanted to meet the legendary Zaha and knew that would never happen at the grand opening.
My son (age 10 years) and I traveled to London, and after two days of testing to assure hardware/software compatibility and camera angles in alignment with monitors, the displays were complete. The massive amounts of exposed electrical wiring had magically disappeared into discreet hiding places under the flooring.
Meeting Zaha felt as surreal as the Dome itself. What she had already achieved in the form of architecture served as a role model for all of us doing our best to make it in the new, emerging fields of technology dominated by maleness. All I remember saying was thank you.
Back in NYC, friends alarmed by Y2K were still certain there would be plenty of trouble in major cities at New Years. I took my son to Texas where one friend owned a retreat center. Together, we were a cheerful gathering, focusing on hope for a peaceful transition to the year 2000. Looking back, maybe that was our training ground for all the prayers were still sending today.
Eva and Franco Mattes
I will always remember the date December 31, 1999 because it was my very first suicide. My second suicide would have been about 10 years later, in 2010, when I pretended to hang myself in front of a webcam, in our studio in Brooklyn, and filmed viewers reactions. We called the work No Fun.
But back in 1999 we were living in Bologna, Italy, and we were not Eva & Franco Mattes yet. We were called Luther Blissett: a multiple-use name, an open pop star, informally adopted by hundreds of artists and activists all over Europe. The pseudonym first appeared in Bologna in 1994, when a number of individuals began using it to stage a series of urban and media pranks and to experiment with new forms of authorship and identity.
But after having been Luther Blissett for five years, all the people who had launched the project decided to discontinue usage of the name by committing symbolic ritual suicide, or seppuku, the night of December 31, 1999. After that date, none of us ever used the name again. And maybe even more interestingly, none of us claimed what we had done under that identity. All the works had been done by Luther, and Luther committed suicide.
Luther Blissett was so popular that we were given a TV show. We had produced 3 episodes, and the last one was about Y2K. It was a very well produced, absolutely believable piece of TV news where we basically spread Y2K paranoia, with computer scientists and economics experts predicting how the bug would create a catastrophe of unprecedented scale. We used to call it cultural terrorism (consider that 9/11 hadnt happen yet). Then the show was canceled.
But the strange thing is that I was just trying to reconstruct what happened on that night, and I just cant, I have no photos, documents, emails or messages to look at, I didnt even have an agenda, let alone mobile phone and social media. Its probably the last New Years day that got undocumented, and will only live in peoples memories
The corporation I worked for must have spent 10s of millions of dollars in upgrades and consultants. They were genuinely freaking out. The overtime the IT Dept put in was unbelievable, 12-14 hours/day and 7 days a week in that final 2-3 weeks.
WE’re still eating some dried soup but the Spam is all gone...
Then it was Y2K. Today it’s global warming. Tomorrow it will be another version of “REPENT! THE END OF THE WORLD IS NIGH!”
in 2017 Trump shutdown the Y2K preparedness. I guess that if the Feds were not ready by 2017 then they never would be ready.
People still feared everything would come crashing down on Jan. 1, 2000 (planes falling from the sky, etc.).
It was almost like thousands of years ago when people feared solar eclipses...
I was a COBOL programmer at the time. My main function between 1997 and 2000 was Y2K remediation. I did it for a LOT of companies. I even created a word macro that would spot potential code. I’d bring it from the mainframe into word and it would highlight the potential problem code in red or yellow depending on the risk.
I’m convinced that it really would have been a catastrophe had we done nothing.
I worked for a software company - the same one where I still work.
We had three divisions of the company. One division did federal and military software, another division did city, county and state, and the third did process plant and ship design. Between the three divisions there were probably 200 software titles.
Each current version and a couple of previous versions had to be fully tested and certified.
Many thousands of hours of testing. I got very tired of resetting my system clock and then watching it flip over to January 1, 2000.
It was a big deal for us, and I was glad to see the new millennium arrive without any issues.
I made a lot of money at that time. :)
One firm I worked for was bringing in as contractors retired COBOL programmers for $55 an hour, sight unseen. They’d give them two weeks and either keep them or let them go depending on their ability.
The "global warming" crap may involve humans to an extremely slight degree that doesn't matter, 99.999999999% of any "warming" or cooling is caused by the sun, nothing we can do.
Please post your memories of Y2K.
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I remember all those airplanes falling out of the sky. It was awful. Dreadful.
Globull warming happened instead.
A few individuals thought that there would be a catastrophic meltdown of civilization as computers all crashed and refused to work at all. The media loves disaster stories, and turned this into The Sky Is Falling. The sky was never going to fall. There was going to be no disaster.
It was mostly those old Cobol programs that were a problem. They used two digits for the year, so “00” (1900) was equal to “00” (2000). And other anomalies. Companies spent a lot of money to locate and fix problem programs. They got almost all of them, and there was no meltdown of Life as We Know it.
I was watching TV at midnight end 1999 beginning 2000 as the cameras showed Times Square and the commentator mentioned that everything seemed to be OK.
The world didn’t end, and the ones who peddled survival equipment during the scare didn’t offer a refund on the merchandise.
I remember getting a few hundred in cash just in case, and then watching the ball drop on TV.
The hospital I worked at didn’t allow us to leave town and provided head flashlights. LOL. One part of our yearly education in October was taking us into a room and shutting lights. I thought it was ridiculous. I lived on Long Island during the east coast blackout of 1965.
We can’t forget how the FBI in cooperation with the ADL and SPLC pushed their Project Meggido nonsense about how violent white gangs would come sweeping out of the woods and hills and start a race war in the US.
https://www.cesnur.org/testi/FBI_004.htm
Was very disappointed at 12:01 when all the computers kept working.
I had (and have) several computers, work and personal. Didn’t do anything and all of them survived without a hiccup. Slept right through New Years Eve, like I always do.
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