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1[[quoteright:350:[[Film/BackToTheFuture1 https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/hillvalley55.png]]]]
2[[caption-width-right:350:[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kesfyzSl7ZU Cue the music!]]]]
3
4->''"Let's take a look back at the year 1928. The year when you might have seen UsefulNotes/AlCapone dancing the Charleston on top of a flagpole."''
5-->-- '''Kent Brockman''', ''WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons''
6
7A scene in a PeriodPiece that hits the viewer with as many period signifiers as possible. The scene exists to quickly establish the "feel" of the time period and will almost always feature a period song (typically [[NothingButHits one that is still popular in the present]]) playing on the film's soundtrack. More or less, it's PopularHistory condensed into a sequence usually less than two minutes long.
8
9These are most commonly and generally best utilized by films and TV shows about TimeTravel (especially when the characters [[ProgressiveEraMontage frequently travel between different eras]], making quickly establishing the time period a necessity).
10
11Compare SpinningPaper and EiffelTowerEffect. When a scene in a work set in the present day becomes this in hindsight, then you've got an UnintentionalPeriodPiece. See also ProgressiveEraMontage. Contrast RightNowMontage, which uses SliceOfLife moments as establishing scenes.
12----
13!!Examples:
14
15[[foldercontrol]]
16
17[[folder:Advertising]]
18* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wSLtBkFHlwk A 2009 Pepsi commercial]] depicts young folks consuming their product [[ProgressiveEraMontage through the decades]], from the turn of the century to the present. Each decade is shown as you'd expect: flappers in the '20s, returning UsefulNotes/WorldWarII soldiers in the '40s, hippie protesters in the '60s, etc. The ad is accompanied by a remixed version of Music/TheWho's "My Generation"; in a nifty touch, the arrangement changes with each scene to reflect that given era.
19* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S4tFzuFGUOI A 2008 Hovis bread advert]] does this, involving a kid [[ProgressiveEraMontage running through recent British history]] with a loaf of bread. As above, each decade is represented by something iconic; suffragettes, both wars, the Coronation, the 66 World Cup squad, immigration, the miners' strike and the millennium celebrations. The kid's outfit also changes, at first subtly, with the cut of his jacket changing from Victorian to Edwardian, and then more obviously, such as the vividly striped jumper and wide collar he's sporting in the Seventies.
20* There was a [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0ITuKHpWKlQ Chevy Volt ad]] that did the same thing, but focusing on one plot of land.
21* Also a [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=88w-BtxZmfs Mercedes-Benz commercial]] called "Timeless." Various model Benzes drive through the '50s, '60s, '70s, '80's and '90s to a version of "Unchained Melody" which seamlessly changes musical style for each decade.
22* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wcNTcBaluuQ&feature=related Langham Hotel's 2007 commercial]] does a backward variation where a butler retrogrades through time from the present day up to the hotel's founding. There, the butler does most of the services to prominent guests such as UsefulNotes/WinstonChurchill, King Edward VIII (then Prince of Wales in the 1920s), Creator/OscarWilde and Emperor Napoleon III of France. And then cue a slight awkward reaction from the butler and the guests while a contemporary phone he kept is ringing on the grand opening in 1865.
23* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=77AHrKNVADo A Polish beer commercial]] utilized this trope with a local twist. Out of four-five time periods shown[[note]]the "pre-War" -- seemingly two periods, one depicting late 19th or early 20th Century, and the other, the interwar period, but they blend into each other to a greater extent than the following; the hippie '70s, which appear influenced by the American pop-cultural memories, though mildly enough not to feel completely misplaced; the '80s, which are described below; and the "now", which doesn't yet feel dated as of 2021[[/note]], one is a dreary wintery mess with men in uniforms standing next to an APC. This specifically recalls the period of martial law in early '80s, not quite the cheesy disco era.
24[[/folder]]
25
26[[folder:Anime and Manga]]
27* Yoshihiro Tatsumi's ''Manga/ADriftingLife'' does several of these sequences to illustrate Japan's recovery from UsefulNotes/WorldWarII.
28* The very first sequence in ''Literature/TaishoBaseballGirls'' establishes the atmosphere of 1920s Japan. It's all in Koume's head, though.
29* ''Young Manga/BlackJack'' starts with a sequence mentioning the political issues Japan was having in the 1960s.
30[[/folder]]
31
32[[folder:Comic Books]]
33* ''ComicBook/ArchieComics'' did a few stories extolling the virtues of TheGayNineties that where essentially this trope on the comics page (so no soundtrack).
34* ''ComicBook/TheLeagueOfExtraordinaryGentlemen'' was positively littered with visual references to the time periods in which its various arcs were set, especially during ''Century''.
35* During their first few minutes in New York circa 1907, the ''ComicBook/{{Runaways}}'' read a newspaper about Typhoid Mary, walk past an Emma Goldman expy, and intervene in a fire in a factory staffed by child labor.
36[[/folder]]
37
38[[folder:Comic Strips]]
39* In Creator/AlisonBechdel's collection of ''ComicStrip/DykesToWatchOutFor'' comics, the introduction where she explains herself and the comic contains flashbacks with a box that name-drops a song for each decade: "that disco mix of the ''Franchise/StarWars'' theme" for [[TheSeventies 1977]], "Physical" by Music/OliviaNewtonJohn for [[TheEighties 1981]], and "She's All I Ever Had" by Music/RickyMartin for [[TheNineties 1999]].
40[[/folder]]
41
42[[folder:Films -- Live-Action]]
43* ''Film/{{Air|2023}}'', set in 1984, begins with a montage of clips of news and pop culture from that year set to "Money for Nothing" by Music/DireStraits (which is a bit anachronistic as the song was released in 1985, but the filmmakers thought it worked so well that they had to use it).
44* ''Film/AngelsWithDirtyFaces'' (1938) features the camera [[SpinningPaper lingering on a newspaper]] with a period-distinguishing headline, before panning out at the beginning of a scene. They do this not once but ''twice'', although it's probably less to establish the period itself and more to show how much time Creator/JamesCagney's character spends in prison.
45* The [[http://www.imdb.com/video/imdb/vi2003082265/ trailer]] for ''Film/TheArtist (2011)'' establishes the period with a peppy dance number.
46* A few of these can be found in the ''Film/AustinPowers'' movies. Very much in the AffectionateParody vein.
47* ''Franchise/BackToTheFuture'':
48** Named for the scene in the [[Film/BackToTheFuture1 original film]] when Marty [=McFly=] enters Hill Valley in 1955 to find that the town square is completely decked out to reflect TheFifties. The period song "Mister Sandman," as performed by the Four Aces, plays over this scene.
49** Similar sequences appear for [[TwentyMinutesIntoTheFuture 2015 Hill Valley]], [[BadFuture 1985-A Hill Valley]], and [[TheWildWest 1885 Hill Valley]], the former two in movie [[Film/BackToTheFuturePartII two]], and the latter in movie [[Film/BackToTheFuturePartIII three]] respectively. 1985-A is set to "I Can't Drive 55" by Sammy Hagar, but the other two don't get songs. The 1885 sequence includes a small harmonica bit of the BTTF theme tune, when Marty is looking at the courthouse in construction.
50** The "Power of Love" scene in Part I was initially included to show Marty going about his [[MorningRoutine normal life]] before the adventure begins (and to establish the contrast of time periods between the '50s and '80s), but 30+ years after the release of the film, it now serves to [[UnintentionalPeriodPiece establish the very '80s world he is trying to return to]].
51** "Mr. Sandman" is played once again in Part II, when Marty tails young Biff to retrieve the [[TimelineAlteringMacGuffin Gray's Sports Almanac]], though it's shorter than Marty's first walk into 1955 Hill Valley and doesn't have the same emphasis on 1950s culture. Ditto for the scene after Part III's PreviouslyOn cold opening, which uses the quintessentially-1950s ''Series/HowdyDoody'' on Doc's black and white television to briefly remind viewers that they're still in 1955.
52** Used in Episode 1 and Episode 3 of the Creator/TelltaleGames [[VideoGame/BackToTheFutureTheGame adaptation]], for 1931 and alternate 1986 respectively. Both recreate the moment where Marty almost gets hit by a car while crossing the street to the town square.
53** In the DVD commentary for Part II, it's mentioned that they'd considered using "Papa Loves Mambo" by Perry Como before deciding on "Mister Sandman". So instead, [[DevelopmentGag "Papa Loves Mambo" appears in Part II playing on 1955 Biff's car radio]] as he's driving to the Enchantment Under the Sea Dance.
54* ''Film/BlueVelvet'' is not set in the '50s, but its opening montage of white picket fences, rose gardens, and people watering their lawns - all set to Bobby Vinton's "Blue Velvet, [[TitledAfterTheSong naturally]] - establishes a very retro-'50s tone and SuburbanGothic setting.
55* Inverted in ''[[Film/TheBradyBunch The Brady Bunch Movie]]'': the film opens with a series of snapshots of mid-'90s L.A. (grunge music, cell phones, burnt-out panhandlers, etc.), the better to establish how out of place the [[DiscoDan stuck-in-the-'70s]] Brady clan is. As the years pass, this montage is becoming more and more an inadvertently straight example of the trope (and the film as a whole as much of an UnintentionalPeriodPiece as the show it's mocking).
56* ''Film/TheColorOfFriendship'' makes it known that it's set in the 1977 from the get-go by having L.TD.'s "Back In Love" as the intro song.
57* ''Film/TheDeparted'' has a strange use of one of these: In the opening scene, Music/{{The Rolling Stones|Band}} are on the soundtrack, all the cars look ancient, and Nicholson is doing a voice-over about Kennedy... for a scene that apparently takes place in 1989. You'd think that if they really wanted music to set the scene, they could've had Marky Mark call in a connection there.
58* ''Film/ADogsPurpose'' uses this. For example, you can tell Maya's portion takes place in TheEighties by "[[Music/{{Aha}} Take on Me]]" being used.
59* An odd example comes in the Film/HammerHorror film ''Film/DraculaAD1972.'' The film opens with a prologue set in 1872 and then jumps into an opening title montage of scenery from 1972 UsefulNotes/{{London}} to demonstrate that [[PresentDay this is indeed 1972 now]]. What's weird about it is that the movie was released in 1972, the audience should really know what it looks like.
60* The mall montage in ''Film/FastTimesAtRidgemontHigh'', set to "We Got The Beat" by Music/TheGoGos is another presumably unintentional, then-present-day example.
61* In ''Film/FieldOfDreams'', Ray is briefly transported back to 1972 so he can talk with Moonlight Graham. The first things he sees are a theater marquee for ''Film/TheGodfather'' and a UsefulNotes/RichardNixon re-election poster.
62* The entire movie ''Film/ForrestGump'' is (and aims to be) one big Mister Sandman Sequence, with the title character blundering his way into nearly every major event and prominent fad of the late 20th century. Of course, both ''Forrest Gump'' and the ''Franchise/BackToTheFuture'' films were directed by Creator/RobertZemeckis.
63* ''Film/GoneWithTheWind'' starts with scenes from the Old South, or leastways Hollywood's [[HollywoodAtlas interpretation]] of it.
64* The AnimatedCreditsOpening to ''Film/{{Grease}}'' includes flashes of numerous iconic '50s pop-culture images.
65* ''Film/HotTubTimeMachine'' has one of these when the four protagonists reach the ski lodge and realize that it's TheEighties. Featuring leg warmers, [[UsefulNotes/RonaldReagan Reagan]], EightiesHair, ''Series/MiamiVice'' T-shirts, cassette players, cell phones the size of bricks, Creator/{{MTV}} [[NetworkDecay playing music videos]], and more to set the mood all with Nu Shooz's "I Can't Wait" blasting in the backdrop.
66-->'''Nick:''' What color is Music/MichaelJackson?
67-->'''Girl:''' Black?
68-->'''Nick:''' <runs screaming>
69* ''Film/IndianaJonesAndTheKingdomOfTheCrystalSkull'' is set in 1957. To firmly establish it, the opening scene is set to Music/ElvisPresley's "Hound Dog." In addition, there are teenagers in sweaters and a guy in a letter jacket with a buzzcut, racing in a hot rod. All possibly in {{Homage}} to ''Film/AmericanGraffiti''.
70* ''Invincible'', the 2006 Vince Papale biopic starring Creator/MarkWahlberg, starts out with a tone-setting credits sequence montage of how economically wrecked 1975 UsefulNotes/{{Philadelphia}} was (abandoned factories, people lining up for unemployment, kids playing in abandoned lots, angry workers protesting lockouts, etc.), accompanied very evocatively by Music/JimCroce's contemporary ballad "I Got a Name".
71* Once ''Film/IronMan3'' cuts to a flashback, "Blue (Da Ba Dee)" starts playing to set up that the year is 1999.
72* ''Film/KingKong2005'' uses this sort of montage to establish it's Depression-era New York.
73* ''Film/MadeOfHonor'' has this in the opening {{flashback}} to a Halloween party in 1998, with the male lead dressed up in a UsefulNotes/BillClinton mask and bumping into people dressed as Monica Lewinsky and UsefulNotes/HillaryRodhamClinton.
74* ''Film/MrHollandsOpus'' follows the eponymous music teacher's life through three decades. After each time skip, a montage and song play out to characterize the cultural climate of the time.
75* Occurs in ''Film/PeggySueGotMarried'', shortly after Peggy Sue wakes up as her teenaged self in 1960. As her friends drive her home, she's treated to shots of her hometown as it used to be, with vintage clothing and cars everywhere, and "Tequila" by the Champs on the radio.
76* In the film adaptation of ''Film/ReadyPlayerOne'' (see below under Literature), the Gunters' interest in '80s culture is established by Music/VanHalen's "Jump" playing at the beginning of the racing scene.
77* An early scene in ''Film/TheRockyHorrorPictureShow'' features Brad and Janet listening to UsefulNotes/RichardNixon's resignation speech on the radio, placing the setting in 1974. Despite Brad and Janet listening to a speech Nixon gave in August on "a late November evening," WordOfGod says that this is not an anachronism, rather that Brad is such a dork that he taped it and listens to it at his leisure.
78* The film version of ''Same Time, Next Year'' accompanies each scene transition with a montage of black-and-white still photos of famous people and events from each decade, to depict the passage of time and subsequent changes in the characters' lives and in the postwar society they inhabit.
79* OlderThanTelevision: Creator/MaeWest's 1933 film ''Film/SheDoneHimWrong'' opens with one of these.
80* A unique variant of this occurs in Creator/StanleyKubrick's [[Film/TheShining 1980 film adaptation]] of ''Literature/TheShining'', in which [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dmnhssxSoLo a recording]] of early 20th century pop staple "Midnight, the Stars and You" by Anglo-South African singer Al Bowlly is used as a musical motif for the ghosts at the Overlook hotel, playing when Jack encounters their masked ball party in the Gold Room and then reappearing for the film's iconic GainaxEnding and credits. What cements it as an example of this trope is the fact that the ghosts are explicitly based on an Independence Day ball held at the Overlook back in 1921, as indicated by the photo prominently shown at the end of the film [[PopularHistory (despite the fact that the song was published and recorded 13 years later)]]. The song later appears again in [[Film/DoctorSleep the 2019 film adaptation]] of ''Literature/DoctorSleep'', where [[spoiler:Abra faintly hears it just moments before the ghosts at the Overlook start coming for ''her'']].
81* The scene in ''Film/StarTrekIVTheVoyageHome'' in which the ''Enterprise'' crew crosses a street in 1986 UsefulNotes/SanFrancisco and Kirk is called a "dumbass" by an angry taxi driver. The background music seems to be a standard '80s rock tune. It was a jazz/fusion tune that was created for the movie by the group Yellowjackets which was accurate of music adults listened to in the '80's. Also, an unlucky hoodlum is shown jamming on a boombox with music that fit the style of 80's era punk. The song was written specifically for that scene, and performed by the actor that played the punk. The film's take on this trope is an interesting version, seeing as it was applied to what was then the real-life present day.
82* ''Film/TheTimeMachine2002'' had a scene playing with this motif as a kind of TimeCompressionMontage to show how time passes outside the titular machine, in which dresses on a shop's exhibition get shorter and shorter. This is copied from [[Film/TheTimeMachine1960 the 1960 version]]. It wasn't in the novel, since Creator/HGWells obviously didn't know how the world would change after his time.
83* ''Film/LesVisiteurs'' has one when the two medieval protagonists, Godefroy and Jacquouille, flee in separate directions following an incident they caused at a highway restaurant after they TimeTravel to the 20th century by mistake. Godefroy rides on horseback on a road and a truck almost runs over him. He then passes by a train and a jet airliner flies over him. He then shouts "MONTJOIE!", confused as he is lost in another century far in time from his own. The sequence starts with a guitar riff before switching to Music/{{Era}}'s "Enae Volare".
84* ''Film/{{Watchmen}}'' starts with a montage of superhero history, to the sound of "The Times They Are a-Changin'" by Music/BobDylan.
85* ''Every'' scene in ''Film/TheWeddingSinger'' has enough '80s signifiers to be one of these, but only the opening scene fulfills the purpose of the trope.
86[[/folder]]
87
88[[folder:Literature]]
89* Creator/IsaacAsimov and Creator/MartinHGreenberg's ''Literature/TheGreatSFStories'': The primary purpose of the introduction is to help the reader get into the mindset of that volume's year. It starts with major RealLife events, shifts to describing the English-speaking culture milestones of the year, and ends more specific details about major events in the ScienceFiction subculture.
90* Creator/IainBanks's ''Dead Air'': The novel starts at a party in London. One of the guests asks the host if he's flying to UsefulNotes/NewYorkCity on Concorde, which turns out hasn't started flying again yet. So sometime between July 2000 and November 2001. The narrator notes the host's [=PS2=], so we've narrowed down the scene to a single year - 2001. By the end of the chapter we know ''exactly'' when the party was when people's cellphones start ringing.
91--> What?\
92''What?''\
93New York?\
94The what?\
95Where?\
96The World Trade Center? Isn't that--?\
97A plane? What, a big plane, like a Jumbo or something?\
98You mean, like, the two big, um, skyscrapers?\
99....
100* Creator/VictorHugo gave us an ur-example in ''Literature/LesMiserables'' with a chapter called "The Year 1817" that sets the scene for France as a whole in exhausting detail before the focus finally shrinks back down again to four young men and their girlfriends- one of whom will become one of the novel's main characters.
101* Creator/ErnestCline's ''Literature/ReadyPlayerOne'': Within seconds of Wade[=/=]Parzival teleporting to Middleton, James Halliday's virtual recreation of his mid-'80s childhood hometown within [[TheMetaverse the OASIS]], he immediately notices "A woman with [[EightiesHair a giant, ozone-depleting hairdo]] bobbing her head to an oversize Walkman. A kid in a gray Members Only jacket leaning against a wall, working on a Rubik's Cube. A [[TheQuincyPunk Mohawked punk rocker]] sitting in a plastic chair, watching a ''Series/{{Riptide|1984}}'' rerun on a coin-operated television."
102* The Novelette ''Literature/ElInquisidorDeMexico'' sets the mood of a small town in TheCavalierYears [[{{UsefulNotes/Mexico}} New Spain]] by describing people and goods from all over the Spanish empire (Asia, America, Europe) coming together to have a good time without distinction of class or race, eating and drinking and watching stereotypically colonial entertainment like cockfights, dice games and reenactments of Conquista battles and scenes. Of course, the biggest element of Viceregal Mexico is the main focus: UsefulNotes/TheSpanishInquisition.
103[[/folder]]
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105[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
106* In ''Series/AshVsEvilDead'', after the team ends up in 1982 to stop the younger Ash from ever getting his hands on the Necronomicon, the older Ash first decides to cruise around his hometown of Elk Grove, set to the tone of Music/{{Journey|Band}}'s "Don't Stop Believing".
107* Subverted by ''Series/BetterOffTed''. Phil and Lem reminisce about Phil's first day on the job, and a flashback shows Phil wearing tie-dye and Lem with an afro. Then Lem says, "It's a shame your first day had to be during Sixties Week."
108* ''Series/BlackMirror''
109** The episode "[[Recap/BlackMirrorSanJunipero San Junipero]]" opens with Yorkie down a street lousy with [[TheEighties Eighties]] signifiers: TotallyRadical fashions and hairdos, ''Series/MaxHeadroom'' playing on CRT televisions, the radio explicitly announcing "the biggest hits of 1987". [[spoiler: This appears to be deliberate, because it's designed as a nostalgic reconstruction, and all the other eras she 'visits' have similarly exaggerated environments.]]
110** "[[Recap/BlackMirrorMazeyDay Mazey Day]]"'s setting of 2006 is established by a radio station talking about the birth of Suri Cruise. The opening minutes feature Windows XP on a thick laptop, an iPod Shuffle playing Music/{{Amerie}}, and news about [[UsefulNotes/TheWarOnTerror the Iraq War]].
111* In ''Series/BreakingBad'', a flashback to the Cousins' childhood features an early closeup of an '80s "brick" portable phone.
112* Seen in ''Series/{{Charmed|1998}}'' when the sisters travel through time (although it's arguably justified that they should end up around a bunch of hippies when going back to the 1960s, the setting being San Francisco) and when, in another episode, flashbacks display scenes from TheRoaringTwenties.
113* The entire hook of ''Series/ColdCase'', combined with the LyricalDissonance musical outros.
114* Used too many times to list in ''Series/DoctorWho'' -- often with the added twist that the Doctor and his companion have judged the time period of his destination incorrectly, and disembark the TARDIS dressed inappropriately (disco attire in 1870s Scotland, or leather jackets and jeans at QEII's coronation.)
115* Subverted on an episode of ''Series/FamilyTies''. Could be a coincidence, could be an ActorAllusion. Alex takes over as manager of Jennifer's GirlGroup band, the Permanent Waves. He makes them wear 50s-style hairdos and dresses, and they sing "Mister Sandman." The montage, in black and white, shows them singing, as Jennifer gets more and more disgruntled, because she wants to wear fashionable clothes and play contemporary TheEighties songs.
116* Parodied on ''Series/GetALife'' in an episode where Chris time-travels to the 1970s to right some wrong - you can tell it's the '70s because his old dad and all his codger friends are boogieing down to disco music.
117* In another rare present-day case, in ''Series/GoodnightSweetheart'', when [[spoiler:Gary arrives in 2016 (having last been in his 'present' in 1999, his last seventeen years being 1945-1962). He's pretty much sprayed with pure undiluted 2010s as soon as he arrives, running into hipster cafes, man-buns, openly gay couples in public and smartphones]].
118* In the second episode of ''Series/{{Journeyman}}'', the lead character finds himself on an airplane in UsefulNotes/TheSeventies. He sees, in the span of about thirty seconds, [[SexyStewardess flirtatious stewardesses]] in orange uniforms, [[EverybodySmokes people smoking]], a kid [[ValuesDissonance playing with]] [[UsefulNotes/TheWarOnTerror a toy gun]], the film ''[[Franchise/PlanetOfTheApes Conquest of the Planet of the Apes]]'' being screened, and a newspaper that mentions the [[UsefulNotes/GeraldFord Ford]] administration, all while [[NothingButHits K.C. and the Sunshine Band's "Get Down Tonight" plays in the background]].
119* When Creator/ConanOBrien hosted ''Series/LateNight'' Brian Stack had a recurring character who was a traveling salesman straight out of TheFifties. He'd usually make some sort of period reference soon after he arrived.
120* Naturally, the pilot episodes of ''Series/{{Life on Mars|2006}}'' and ''Series/AshesToAshes2008'' both featured these, although the music in both cases was organic to the scene (from Sam's car's 8-track player and the sound system at Alex's boat party, respectively). Even the ''titles'' are [[Music/DavidBowie in on it]].
121* The American ''Series/LifeOnMars2008'' has a variation, with the protagonist looking about him and seeing an intact World Trade Center, [[ThisCannotBe to his astonishment]].
122* Both played straight and subverted by ''Series/{{Lost}}'':
123** Played straight: The beginning of "Cabin Fever" contains a number of signifiers that the flashback is to the 1950s. "Every Day" by Music/BuddyHolly plays as a girl in a classic 50s outfit dances and applies bright-red lipstick.
124** Subverted: "Man of Science, Man of Faith" begins with a man with long hair playing Mama Cass music on a vinyl record and using an old monochrome computer. The audience tries to figure out which character is flashing back to the 1970s, only to find out it is happening in the present.
125* Way overdone on ''Series/MalcolmInTheMiddle'': a flashback to the 1980's shows the parents decked out in big hair and bright clothes in a room covered in checkerboard patterns while Music/TearsForFears plays in the background and Hal mentions "the Us Festival."
126* ''Series/TheNanny'': In "Fran's Roots", a flashback to Fran Fine's childhood in the early 1970s starts with Fran's mother Sylvia ([[TimeShiftedActor played by]] Creator/FranDrescher) singing the theme to ''Series/{{Maude}}''.
127* ''Series/NewGirl'' features this trope whenever there's a "Fat Schmidt" flashback to their late 90's/early 2000's college years. A bulbous iMac monitor and a Napster poster are in nearly every shot.
128* Used frequently in ''Series/QuantumLeap'' and its [[Series/QuantumLeap2022 sequel series]], which usually features the leaper leaping in and experiencing a cavalcade of fashions and music from whenever they end up.
129* ''Series/StarTrekDeepSpaceNine''. In "Little Green Men", Quark and his family crashland during a trip to Earth and somehow end up in [[RoswellThatEndsWell Roswell]] in July 1947. After Quark revives after the crash, we get a panning shot showing a twentieth century hospital room that includes an oscillating fan. A US Army soldier then [[EverybodySmokes lights up a cigarette]], picks up a rotary dial phone and informs his superiors that one of the "Martians" has just woken up.
130* Parodied in the ''Series/{{Stella|US}}'' short "Birthday," when Michael and David flash back to when they met Michael Showalter in the 80s; the first shot is of a calendar that says "FINAL EXAMS," "SYNTHPOP," and "UsefulNotes/{{RONALD REAGAN}}."
131* ''Series/{{Supernatural}}''. Happens in reverse in "As Time Goes By". A time traveler arrives in the present day from 1958, runs out into a hotel parking lot and is confronted by people talking on mobile phones, a man pushing a baby stroller, and modern cars with 2013 registration. [[MayanDoomsday "I guess the Mayans were wrong."]]
132* Parodied in ''Series/ATouchOfCloth'' when a woman who's being interrogated unveils information about the killer's background to the detectives for something that happened in 1996, but the screen actually shows a litany of pop culture, fashion, events, and people iconic to the 1980s much to the confusion of the cops. It turns out she was watching a nostalgia program on the telly during her flashback.
133* ''Series/TheTwilightZone1959'': In the first scene of "[[Recap/TheTwilightZone1959S3E13OnceUponATime Once Upon a Time]]", Woodrow Mulligan is walking through the Harmony town square on March 10, 1890 and complains about the high prices of sirloin steak (17c per lb) and ladies' hats ($1.95). The speed limit for bicycles is then shown as being eight miles per hour.
134* ''Series/TheTwilightZone1985'': In "The Convict's Piano", there is one whenever Ricky Frost travels back in time after playing a song from that era on the piano that he found in prison:
135** When he plays "Maple Leaf Rag" by Scott Joplin, he finds himself at a bandstand in a park during the middle of a celebration in 1899. The men are wearing flat straw boaters and three-piece suits with matching waistcoats while the women have the Gibson Girl-style bouffant hairdos and [[GorgeousPeriodDress gorgeous dresses]] typical of TheGayNineties.
136** When he plays "Over There" by George M. Cohan, he arrives in the Shamrock Club in 1917. The clientele largely consists of UsefulNotes/WorldWarI-era doughboys who are getting ready to ship out to fight in Europe. Most of the women present having bob cuts or their hair in ringlet curls.
137** When he plays "Something to Watch Over Me" by Music/GeorgeGershwin, he arrives at a private party in UsefulNotes/{{Chicago}} in 1928. It is being held by the gangster Mickey Shaughnessy and the guests are all drinking illegal alcohol. Like every other women at the party, Shaughnessy's girlfriend Ellen is a [[TheFlapper flapper]]. Shaughnessy asks Ricky to play "S' Wonderful", the most popular song of 1928 which was also by Gershwin.
138[[/folder]]
139
140[[folder:Music]]
141* Music/BillyJoel's "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eFTLKWw542g&ob=av2e We Didn't Start the Fire]]" is basically a laundry list of late-20th-century cultural markers rattled off one after the other. He stays in chronological order (at least approximately) until he reaches 1963, after which he starts throwing them out more or less at random... '80s, '60s, '80s again...
142%% * Music/DonMcLean's "Music/AmericanPie".
143* Several Music/EvelynEvelyn songs start out mentioning things that occured that year. For example, "The Tragic Events of September" (which is about the day the twins were born) features the lines "The year is 1985. ''Film/StElmosFire'' is at the top of the charts, the wreckage of the ''[[UsefulNotes/RMSTitanic Titanic]]'' has just been discovered at the bottom of the Atlantic Ocean, and on a small farm on the Kansas-Colorado border a young mother is about to give birth".
144[[/folder]]
145
146[[folder:Theatre]]
147* The Trocadero sequence in ''Theatre/ShowBoat'' (which takes place on New Year's Eve, 1904) uses only period music. The overture to its SpiritualSuccessor, ''Theatre/SweetAdeline'', is a medley of tunes from TheGayNineties.
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149
150[[folder:Video Games]]
151* Subverted in the ''VideoGame/{{Fallout}}'' games. The games always start with music and imagery of 1950s Americana, before panning out to show that the games actually occur in a [[AfterTheEnd post-apocalyptic future]]. In comparison, it's played straight with Vault 112's [[StepfordSuburbia Tranquility Lane]] [[LotusEaterMachine simulation]] in ''VideoGame/Fallout3'', and with the opening of ''VideoGame/Fallout4'' taking place in the suburb of Sanctuary Hills JustBeforeTheEnd.
152* The opening loading screen and title sequence in ''VideoGame/GrandTheftAutoViceCity'' helps establish that it's TheEighties. The loading screen simulates a Commodore 64 loading screen, then the title sequence plays a SuspiciouslySimilarSong of the ''Series/MiamiVice'' theme while showing scenes of life in 1980s UsefulNotes/{{Miami}} -- big hair, boxy cars, etc. Also, the first time you enter a vehicle, its in-game radio is always scripted to be on, and playing [[Music/MichaelJackson Billy Jean]]. Every time.
153** In recent versions and updates of the game the song was removed due to licensing issues.
154* In ''VideoGame/MafiaII'', when the protagonist Vito is getting out of a six-year prison sentence, we are treated to sequence full of [[TheFifties '50s]] imagery and music, to signify how the time has passed since the last time he saw the outside world [[TheForties during the final year of World War II]].
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156
157[[folder:Web Comics]]
158* ''Webcomic/CaseyAndAndy'': When Jenn accidentally ends up in TheEighties, stores and signs show off various fads and icons of the decade, such as Betamax players and thin ties.
159* ''Webcomic/JuvenileDiversion'': Alicia is treated to [[http://jdcomic.com/comic/once-more-into-the-breach/ this]] when she wakes up in 2015.
160[[/folder]]
161
162[[folder:Web Original]]
163* WebVideo/TheNostalgiaChick's ''{{WesternAnimation/Anastasia}}'' review notes the unrealistic number of "1920s Paris" things and people shown, as well as the fact that UsefulNotes/SigmundFreud shouldn't be there (Then again, [[ArtisticLicenseHistory neither should the Dowager Empress, nor Anastasia herself for that matter, since she was confirmed to have died along with her entire family in 1918]].)
164* Vanity Fair Magazine's centennial anniversary in 2013 made 10 videos highlighting each decade by its significance, such as
165** [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AZxaHvwPwNo Suffragettes]] in [[TheEdwardianEra the 1910s]],
166** [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bwfeyhYi8No Pole sitting]] in [[TheRoaringTwenties the 1920s]],
167** [[TheGreatDepression The 1939]] [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tTgmN7CfHWY New York World's fair]],
168** Creator/JDSalinger's [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aIzHi8axYEo literary works]] in the form of UsefulNotes/WorldWarII tattoos,
169** [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BI0LBx5S3LI A catchy]] ListSong of [[TheFifties 1950s]] innovations and pop culture,
170** [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eL1hRD4suR0 An interview]] of notable [[TheSixties 1960s]] personalities,
171** An "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UI1P4_nDTUc inside look]]" on the day and the life of [[TheSeventies Studio 54]],
172** A heap of [[TheEighties old issues]] about UsefulNotes/RonaldReagan, crack, and AIDS [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RYVlGSgJrec discovered by two girls]],
173** A [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dq18xEq_cQw humorous talk show]] featuring Creator/JuddApatow and Creator/MariaBamford about [[TheNineties the 1990s]], and
174** The MillenniumBug and [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lNHsy-_vgPs Anti-terrorism issues]] during [[TurnOfTheMillennium the Bush Era]].
175[[/folder]]
176
177[[folder:Western Animation]]
178* The WesternAnimation/{{Classic Disney Short|s}} ''WesternAnimation/TheNiftyNineties'' (set in TheGayNineties, so no [[Music/{{Nirvana}} "Smells Like Teen Spirit"]]) is a protracted Mister Sandman Sequence. Mickey and Minnie have a MeetCute in the park in period clothing, go on a date to a vaudeville show, then go for a ride in an old-fashioned runabout.
179* Parodied in ''WesternAnimation/ClerksTheAnimatedSeries''. When Randall has a flashback back to when they met in the Eighties, not only is everyone in the store they work at (except, notably, Randall and Dante themselves) decked out in '80s fashions, but almost everyone is a notable person from that decade -- including UsefulNotes/RonaldReagan. Then, when Dante remembers that they actually met in the ''Seventies'', the flashback includes a whole load of '70s icons, including UsefulNotes/JimmyCarter and Creator/JohnTravolta ''a la'' ''Film/SaturdayNightFever''.
180* Subverted in the ''WesternAnimation/FamilyGuy'' episode "Stewie and Stu's Excellent Adventure". When Stewie reaches the future, he is excited at first and the scene sets up for one of these before he realizes that everything is pretty much the same as the present.
181-->'''Future Stewie:''' Well, of course, it's only been thirty years.
182* The `60s flashback in ''WesternAnimation/RecessSchoolsOut''.
183* ''WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons'':
184** The Kent Brockman quote at the top of the page (and subsequent CutawayGag) is from "[[Recap/TheSimpsonsS4E6ItchyAndScratchyTheMovie Itchy & Scratchy: The Movie]]".
185** The show's [[WholeEpisodeFlashback flashback episodes]] tend to employ these. In "[[Recap/TheSimpsonsS4E10LisasFirstWord Lisa's First Word]]", for instance, the flashback to 1983 begins with Marge and a neighbor woman discussing the just-aired last episode of ''Series/{{MASH}}'', followed immediately by Homer walking down the street singing "[[Music/CyndiLauper Girls Just Want to Have Fun]]". (Though the effect is somewhat subverted when Homer, narrating, sets the scene with "a young Creator/JoePiscopo was teaching us how to laugh."
186** In "[[Recap/TheSimpsonsS2E12TheWayWeWas The Way We Was]]" when Marge begins telling the story of how her and Homer met in 1974, the scene opens with Homer driving a 60s muscle car through Springfield, graffiti reading "Make love, not war!" and a peace sign are seen on a nearby wall, Homer's radio begins to play "Close to You" by Music/{{Carpenters}} until Homer changes the station to "The Joker" by Music/SteveMillerBand and sings along to it.
187** Homer's flashback to 1980 in "[[Recap/TheSimpsonsS3E12IMarriedMarge I Married Marge]]" begins with the first few bars of [[Music/{{Supertramp}} Supertramp's]] "A Logical Song".
188** "[[Recap/TheSimpsonsS19E11That90sShow That 90's Show]]" contains references to Grunge rock, Franchise/SonicTheHedgehog, Toys/BeanieBabies, and a scene where Comic Book Guy finishes explaining why ''Literature/TheLordOfTheRings'' [[ItWillNeverCatchOn can never be made into a movie]].
189** Lampshaded in "[[Recap/TheSimpsonsS15E2MyMotherTheCarjacker My Mother the Carjacker]]". Channel 6 news anchor Kent Brockman shows a montage specifically to show viewers what the '60s were like, set to "All Along the Watchtower." Brockman then calls it a "shrill, pointless decade." Although that was partly his own fault, since his montage included such ludicrous images as Series/{{Batman|1966}} dancing the Batusi and Creator/JohnWayne saying [[Series/RowanAndMartinsLaughIn "You bet your sweet bippy."]]
190** Dr. Hibbert's hairstyle is constantly reflecting the fashion of the time.
191** Simultaneously lampshaded, parodied, and averted in 2015's "[[Recap/TheSimpsonsS26E19TheKidsAreAllFight "The Kids are All Fight]]" flashback episode. "[[ShapedLikeItself The President at the time was The President. Popular music was all the rage.]]"
192* Frequently seen in ''WesternAnimation/GravityFalls'':
193** Although not a time-travel example, the first few moments of the episode "Irrational Treasure," the Pines family is bombarded with covered wagons, butter churns, livestock, old-timey speech mannerisms, and banjo music, because it's Pioneer Day (to Stan's horror). There is also an excessive number of woodpeckers, but that's a historical marker unique to Gravity Falls.
194** When Dipper and Mabel flash through various eras in "The Time Traveler's Pig," one such escapade includes heading to "Ye Old Oregon Trail," as announced by the driver of a covered wagon over a treacherous cavern's edge; he also mentions to his wife "Fertilia" that she must have [[MistakenForCheating produced two children when he wasn't looking]].
195** Played with in "Boyz Crazy," when Grunkle Stan reminisces about his youth -- cut to "The Juke Joint," complete with neon lighting, jukeboxes, corny signs, and cherry-on-top milkshakes, plus a bad boy young Stan dressed to resemble Creator/JamesDean. But it turns out this is not a 1950's diner (Stan isn't old enough for that), but a 1970's diner themed to resemble the 1950's. And Stan dances with his girlfriend, who wears 1970's-style hot pants.
196** Another actual time travel occurred in "Blendin's Game" when Dipper and Mabel accidentally travel to Gravity Falls, year 2002 (ten years in the past). This example is unique in that instead of showcasing the time period, it show cases what the Gravity Falls townsfolk were like ten years ago. [[PrecociousCrush Wendy]] is a five year-old who [[{{Irony}} thinks Dipper looks cute,]] the BadGuyBar bouncer is getting his first tattoos, [[GrumpyOldMan Stan is exactly the same,]] [[EnfantTerrible Gideon]] is just a baby, [[TeensAreMonsters Robbie]] is a BrattyHalfPint, etc.
197* ''WesternAnimation/BoJackHorseman'' has a RunningGag of doing this as over-the-top as possible. One episode has a shot of [=BoJack=] driving down the street in the 1980s, in front of shops selling Rubik's Cubes and 'cocaine mirrors', in a suit, singing along to a song with the lyrics "[[TropeName Generic 80s New Wave beat]]". The exact shot is repeated later in the episode but with inflatable chair shops and teens playing hackey-sack ("Generic 90s {{grunge}} song, everyone in flannel..."), and ''again'' two seasons later but with subprime mortgage sellers and flip-phone shops ("Generic 2007 pop song, {{AutoTune}}d so all the voices sound weird..."). Season 4 [[RunningGagged put an end to the joke]] when [=BoJack=] begins to have a flashback to a scene of him driving in 1999 before Hollyhock interrupts him, and all the billboards and stores just say things like "1999 Store!!!" and "Flashback Joke!" [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wlfK51tN-xo Here's a supercut]].
198* ''WesternAnimation/KingOfTheHill'': The flashbacks to the 1970s are typically scored with classic rock songs from that decade.
199** In "Bills Were Meant To Be Broken", the flashback to Bill's record-setting high school football game is accompanied by Music/BlackSabbath's "Iron Man".
200** In "Tankin' It To The Streets", when Bill recounts his enlistment, Music/TheWho's "Baba O'Riley" accompanies the scene, as he says "[[IWasQuiteALooker When I first enlisted, I had the body of an offensive lineman]], [[HairTodayGoneTomorrow and hair like Roger Daltrey]]...".
201[[/folder]]
202
203[[folder:Real Life]]
204* Every retro-themed diner/restaurant posits that TheFifties were populated entirely by Music/{{Elvis|Presley}}es, Creator/{{Marilyn Monroe}}s, and Creator/{{James Dean}}s.
205[[/folder]]

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