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1->''"Look, I don't care when the f Harry Potter is in my version it takes place now."''
2-->-- '''''Fanfic/MyImmortal'''''
3
4This trope occurs when, while making a story set during the recent past, the contemporary culture of the production seeps in where it wouldn't have existed. It varies whether this becomes more obvious or less in the ensuing years. Sure, many period works are {{Anachronism Stew}}s anyway, but it's pretty noticeable when a [[AnyoneRememberPogs fad]] shows up in the wrong time period. One extremely noticeable example would be the [[TheSeventies '70s]] fashions and hairstyles on ''Series/HappyDays''; a relatively minor one is [[Literature/HarryPotter Dudley Dursley]] having a Platform/PlayStation in a scene set in the summer of 1994, when the [=PS1=] wasn't available until the following year.
5
6BellisariosMaxim can sometimes be applied with regard to location shoots and incorrect background details. Sometimes there just isn't time or money to get ''everything'' right. It's also impossible to control everything when working in a public setting; for instance, you might have to put up with pedestrians and other people who aren't part of the film's crew (and therefore aren't in period costume) appearing in the background if you don't have the money or clout to get exclusive use of a public area. And even if you do, changing the street signs, billboards, and ''skyline'' isn't an option for a film made on location. Still, it's fun to spot them...
7
8Of course, much of this assumes that casual viewers will actually ''notice'' the discrepancies. There will always be somebody who does, but [[ViewersAreGeniuses assuming that every person watching will have an encyclopedic knowledge of every past era]] is a bit presumptuous. Most people tend to think of only specific aspects of a given past era – be they technology, entertainment, fashion, businesses, social norms, historical events, or even personal experiences – when they think about one at all. In fact, this trope exists in part because (at least in visual media) getting every detail right is hellaciously and often prohibitively expensive; a production might simply not have the budget or time to assure the provenance of every single prop, or to produce dozens if not hundreds of meticulously-researched, historically-accurate costumes, especially when the local rental outfit can provide “good enough” for one-fiftieth the cost. For similar reasons, this trope is very common in fan fiction – there's no reason that a hobbyist writer should pore over every detail and make sure it is timely if the work is still acceptably "modern-day".
9
10RealityIsUnrealistic may result if this trope is invoked unintentionally, simply because [[OlderThanTheyThink something that is presumed to be contemporary has actually been around for quite a while]].
11
12A SubTrope of AnachronismStew. Often overlaps with HollywoodCostuming and TwentyMinutesIntoThePast. NextSundayAD can sometimes involve [[InvertedTrope inversions]] of this, depending on how rapidly changes come about in the future. (For example, it seems pretty safe to have people using Website/YouTube two years from now, but who knows?) See also LongRunnerTechMarchesOn.
13
14Compare ComicBookTime and RetroUniverse. CreatorsCultureCarryover would be the equivalent trope geographically.
15
16Contrast PopularHistory, TwoDecadesBehind, and UnintentionalPeriodPiece.
17
18----
19!!Examples:
20
21[[foldercontrol]]
22
23[[folder:Anime and Manga]]
24* ''Literature/TheSagaOfDarrenShan'' was first published from 2000-2004. The author seems to not have had any time period in mind when he wrote the first book, which he didn't intend to make into a series, but the series ends up taking place over 18 years, and the ending implies that the last trilogy (which takes place over three years) would take place around the same time that the novels were released. That would set the first book in 1982 or '83, and a reference to the ending of the [[Literature/TheSagaOfLartenCrepsley prequel series]] having taken place 17 years before confirms this, as that scene is set in the late '60's. The anachronism is that in the manga adaptation of the first book, the characters buy their tickets to the circus with Euros.
25[[/folder]]
26
27[[folder:Comic Books]]
28* The 2000s ''Literature/TheBabySittersClub'' graphic novels downplay this. The technology level makes it clear that the books take place in the 1990s--more specifically, the late '90s judging from how characters watch what is most likely the remake of ''Film/{{The Parent Trap|1998}}'' on DVD. (The one exception is a smartphone in book 9.) However, the fashion sense has been made more neutral. In contrast with the books' [[FashionDissonance flashy 1980s/1990s clothes]], the characters dress in clothes that weren't unreasonable for 12 year olds in the 1990s, yet are more appealing to 2000s children.
29* Used by [[Creator/MarxBrothers Groucho Marx]] in ''ComicBook/GiraffesOnHorsebackSalad'' when he shows off his pager (a ghostly page that is used to send messages):
30-->'''Groucho:''' "The pager allows you to have people call you from wherever you, or they, are! The patent is pending, as is the technology, which won't be available to the everyman until the 1980s, so I wouldn't use it if you need a response before Ronald Reagan is president."
31* ''ComicBook/SupermanBirthright'' (2003) was supposed to be the [[RetCon new canonical]] SuperHeroOrigin of the Man of Steel, who in the ongoing books has been Superman for "[[ComicBookTime about ten years]]". It includes instant messaging and the Department of Homeland Security. Of course, ComicBookTime [[Administrivia/TropesAreNotBad can smooth these problems over]]. When John Byrne wrote [[ComicBook/TheManOfSteel the previous origin]], he had Jonathan Kent talking about Sputnik in 1956. By the time it got retconned this had occurred in 1964, so no problem.
32[[/folder]]
33
34[[folder:Fan Works]]
35* This can happen sometimes with ''Series/{{Glee}}'' {{fanfic}}tion written in 2012 or 2013 that takes place during season 1 (which would be late 2009/early 2010). It's in recent enough memory that most fanfic writers can avoid it fairly easily, but sometimes the fics feature technology, movies, or songs that weren't out at that time, or even artists or actors who hadn't made it big yet.
36* This is taken to incredibly ridiculous levels in ''Franchise/HarryPotter'' {{fanfic}}tion. Now, moving the action forward a bit so that Harry starts Hogwarts around the same year the writer turned eleven is one thing; even [[Film/HarryPotter the Warner Bros. films]] have anachronistic London landmarks, technology, and cars despite the gravestone of Harry's parents making this impossible, and in any case there must be some fanfiction writers whose ''parents'' are younger than Harry (born 1980) would be by now, so wanting to WriteWhatYouKnow as far as pop culture references are concerned isn't going to break WillingSuspensionOfDisbelief all by itself. But fics set in the Marauders' era (canonically the 1970s) seeming to take place in the PresentDay so as to accommodate AuthorAppeal, on the other hand, is significantly less forgivable. Even ignoring the timeline, you'd think that ''anyone'' would realize that a movie which came out last year couldn't possibly have been around when Harry's parents were at school... you'd think...
37* [=TheInvertedShadow=]'s ''[[https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLHK43TJoVNRJ85mxMLzWT9bDTViWzNHUM Lyrish]]'' series: Each episode features a RunningGag depicting a television playing anywhere from 3-5 random video clips in a row. The first two episodes take place as far back as three decades before the present day. Why WebVideo/JonTron or the ''Film/TheCatInTheHat'' movie would be turning up on TV at that point is never brought up.
38* ''Fanfic/MyImmortal'', providing the current page quote, has a big case of this. Ebony positively ''breathes'' 2005-2006 emo and scene culture, despite the story being loosely based on a series that takes place in the 90s. Tara's response to these claims is simply "shut up."
39** When Ebony travels back in time to when the Marauders were at Hogwarts, its explicitly said to be set in the 80s (actually the 70s in canon, matching how the entire timescale of the series seems to have been moved forward a decade). An authors note even calls out the anachronism of Hedwig singing "[[Music/MyChemicalRomance Welcome to the Black Parade]]".
40--> "I no dat is not 80s but pretend it is ok!"
41[[/folder]]
42
43[[folder:Films -- Animation]]
44* A fairly minor example, but the ''Franchise/TheIncredibles'' films takes place mostly in the 1960s, but features modern slang, computers, and VHS tapes. Justified in that the film is a deliberate RetroUniverse.
45* ''WesternAnimation/TurningRed'' is set in 2002. However, Mei's stuffed animal collection is decidedly modern-looking, and includes plushes directly inspired by ''Webcomic/PusheenTheCat'' (2010) and ''Toys/{{Squishmallows}}'' (2017). Additionally, Priya is shown reading a book which is a pastiche of ''Literature/Twilight2005''.
46[[/folder]]
47
48[[folder:Films -- Live-Action]]
49* ''Film/AlphaDog'', set in 1999, features an Xbox game console (released in 2001), a poster for the game ''Men of Valor'' (2004), and the song "Slither" by Tech N9ne (2002).
50* ''Film/AnimalHouse'': The film is set in 1962, yet several of the extras during the parade scene have late 1970s hairstyles and clothing.
51* ''Film/BackToTheFuturePartII'' (1989): In 1985-A, when Marty finds out that his house is occupied by another family, a poster for ''Film/DirtyDancing'' can be seen on the wall, which wasn't released until 1987.
52* Done deliberately in practically any period piece by AnachronismStew master Creator/BazLuhrmann, who makes these films set in the past feel hip and contemporary by using music and genres from the present.
53* ''Film/BehindEnemyLines'' (2001) is set at the end of the Bosnian War, which was in late 1995. However early in the film there is a reference to wanting to be with Music/BritneySpears, who rose to prominence in 1999, and a character yells out "WILSON!" when a football flies off an aircraft carrier deck, a reference to ''Film/CastAway'' (2000). The main aircraft used in the movie, the Foxtrot model of the F/A-18 Super Hornet[[note]]The E/F models of the Hornet are actually entirely new airplanes that were called an upgrade to convince Congress to buy it[[/note]] also wasn't yet active as of 1995 either. Its first prototype flight was actually the same year as the movie.
54* ''Film/TheBigLebowski'' was made in 1998 but takes place in 1991, mainly so there can be [[FauxSymbolism meaningless allusions to the Gulf War]] like the Dude saying "This aggression will not stand" and having a dream with Saddam Hussein as a bowling alley attendant. There's a minor flaw in this; there's a scene where Jesus Quintana, a registered sex offender, has to identify himself to his neighbors as such. While California did have a sex offender registration at the time, notifying the public of local sex offenders wasn't made a big deal until the passage of various forms of Megan's Law in 1994 onward.
55* ''Film/BlackWidow2021'': The opening scene is set in 1995 and shows that Yelena has a plush toy of Twilight Sparkle from ''WesternAnimation/MyLittlePonyFriendshipIsMagic''. While ''Toys/MyLittlePony'' was a popular brand around this time and started in 1983, Twilight and ''Friendship Is Magic'' first appeared in late 2010. Moreover, that toy depicts Twilight with wings, which she did not have until 2013.
56* ''Film/BloodDiamond'', set in 1999, but features clothes and cars from 2006 or so, while Danny uses a GPS released in 2004 in the climax.
57* ''Film/{{Bloodsport}}'' is set in 1975. The fashions, decor and technology are clearly of 1988. What's more, the flashback sequence with the young Frank, which takes place in the '60s, ''also'' clearly has the fashions, decor and technology of 1988.
58* One Vietnam war protester in ''Film/BornOnTheFourthOfJuly'' is wearing Reeboks, which wouldn't be introduced to the U.S. market until around the time the Vietnam War ended in 1975.
59* ''Film/TheBuddyHollyStory'' (1978) was made during Fender's CBS era (1965-85) and almost every guitar Holly plays is from that era, including a Telecaster (which he never played) and a Bronco (which didn't exist during his lifetime).
60* ''Film/BurningLove'', an Italian {{Mockumentary}} from 2015, is supposedly set between 2004 and 2006, but contains references to ''Series/BreakingBad'' (first aired in 2008), the Ice Bucket Challenge (which was a trend during the summer of 2014) and the Charlie Hebdo shootings (from early 2015). Also, all the NewscasterCameo scenes are clearly set in the then current news studios instead of recreating the ones from the original time period. Due to the ludicrous argoment of the movie, it's probably done on purpose.
61* ''Film/CallasForever'' is about the end of Maria Callas' life in 1977. Yet, we get to see a Renault Vel Satis. That car was launched in 2002.
62* A minor example in ''Film/CoolRunnings'', which was made in 1993 and set in 1988. At one point, the flag of UsefulNotes/TheNewRussia is anachronistically included amongst the flags of the nations competing at the 1988 Winter Olympics. Period-appropriate Soviet flags and insignia are seen elsewhere in the film, however.
63* ''Film/FistOfFury'' is set some time in the early twentieth century (1908 or the 1930s, depending on who you ask), but makes no effort to disguise background occurrences of 1970s clothes and cars. This may have been because of budget limitations.
64* At the end of ''Film/DirtyDancing'' the characters dance to the movie's big hit single, "(I've Had) The Time of My Life", which sounds very contemporary to 1988 for a movie set in 1963, with obvious synthesizers in its arrangement.
65* ''Film/TheDayOfTheJackal'', released in 1973, but set in France in 1963, has many location shots of early-70s Paris, and scenes with several French cars that are a few years too early, such as the 1965 Renault 16, restyled 1967 Citroen DS, and 1969 Peugeot 504, as well as an [[CoolTrain SNCF locomotive]] that was [[JustTrainWrong introduced in 1969]].
66* ''Film/DumbAndDumberer'' is a prequel set in 1986, but right off the bat they use the song "Ice Ice Baby", which was released four years later. It also features the villain bribing a museum worker with a 2000s $5 bill; you can clearly see the large Helvetica-style 5 in the corner.
67* One of the major criticisms about ''Film/EddieAndTheCruisers'' is that the story is about the singer and band that were popular in the '60s, but sound an awful lot like 1980s Music/BruceSpringsteen. Played with in that the reason their lost recording is so sought after is that it's implied to be way ahead of its time and does sound like 1980s (when the movie is set) Springsteen.
68* ''Film/ExtremelyLoudAndIncrediblyClose'' joins the tradition of 9/11 movies forgetting they're supposed to be period pieces, with several too-new cars (a 2008 Ford Escape is prominent) and cabs displaying the new-in-2007 NYC taxi graphics package noticeable in the trailer. Meanwhile, the protagonist's dad films him on super 8 rather than a then-standard VHS-C camcorder.
69* The first ''Film/FearStreet'' movie is set in 1994, yet numerous songs on the soundtrack were released afterwards, the latest being White Town's "Your Woman" from 1997. More egregiously, one of the characters is seen using a computer with Calibri font, even clearly labeled as such. Said font did not exist until 2007, a good thirteen years after the setting.
70* The 2005 version of ''Film/FunWithDickAndJane'', set in 2000, includes a convenience store with a sticker on the door stating that those born before "today's date in 1983" cannot buy either alcohol or tobacco. Problem is, in all US states, the legal age for purchasing alcohol is 21, and the legal age for tobacco purchases was 18 at the time of both the film's release and the time of the film.[[note]](Tobacco was changed to 21 in 2019 by then President Trump.)[[/note]] In 2000, someone born on that date in 1983 would only be turning 17, too young to buy either product.
71* On the DVD commentary for ''Film/TheGodfather'' director Francis Ford Coppola points out two longhaired hippie-looking men in the background inside the hotel when Michael arrives in Las Vegas in what's supposed to be the early Fifties.
72* ''Film/Hairspray1988'' shows features of Baltimore, such as overhead street signs, that would not exist for decades.
73* ''Film/HalloweenNight'', a 2006 film by Creator/TheAsylum is supposed to be set in 1992, but the characters drive cars and use cell phones and computers which were made in the 2000s.
74* ''Film/TheHurtLocker'' was made in 2009, but set in 2004. The movie features, among other things:
75** ''VideoGame/GearsOfWar'' (released in 2006) being played on an Xbox 360 (released in 2005).
76** References to Website/YouTube (which launched late in 2005).
77** Soldiers wearing new digital pattern camouflage uniforms (introduced in 2005, didn't really become standard until 2007).
78* ''Film/{{Grease}}'' has several of examples of this trope, but very noticeably in fashion - Sandy's iconic outfit and perm are 100% TheSeventies and have nothing to do with the styles of TheFifties.
79* ''Film/Grease2'' continues in the same vein - Creator/MichellePfeiffer rocks the kind of big, feathery hair you could only see in TheEighties.
80* ''Film/InAmerica'' is ostensibly set in the '80s, but in order to create a "timeless feel," the director deliberately left in anachronisms like shots of Jessica Alba's L'oreal billboard in Times Square.
81* ''Film/IntoTheWild'' is another film that doesn't seem to be aware that the early '90s were any different than the present. It includes what appears to be a digital camera (used by a main character) and a delivery truck labeled "ups.com".
82* Bollywood film ''Film/JabTakHaiJaan'' has a shot which was filmed in London (a major part of the film's setting) showing the Olympic rings. The problem? The scene is in part of the narrative which is set in 2002, when the Olympics would not arrive in London until 2012 when the film was made. There are also several other anachronisms concerning certain models of cars and an advertisement for an Intel Ultrabook (not launched until 2011) during the 2002 part of the story.
83* ''Film/LymeLife'' is a case where it's clear the director had more of a general period than specific time in mind. The film's mention of the Iranian hostage crisis clearly sets it in 1979, but it contains references to ''Film/TheEmpireStrikesBack'' which wasn't released until 1980, and the Falklands War, which didn't occur until 1982.
84* The movie ''Film/MeganIsMissing'' is set in 2007, but features technology more common now: most glaring is that the characters have video chats on their phones. While smartphones with this feature did exist in 2007, it seems unlikely that the characters would have such a phone at 13/14 years old at that time. It was probably done for ease of storytelling, and possibly slightly justified as the characters are mentioned as living in a relatively wealthy area of California.
85* Whit Stillman's ''Film/{{Metropolitan}}'' is meant to be set [[TheSeventies circa-1974]], but the hairstyles of the characters, clothing, cars, and background music are clearly of an era no earlier than [[TheEighties 1989]]. Stillman said he wanted to do the film as a period piece, but couldn't.
86** In one scene you can see a Music/{{The Cure|Band}} poster on one character's wall ... the band didn't form until 1978.
87* ''Film/MyNameIsKhan'' has one of the child character introduced with a PSP. Except that scene is quite far before the [[WhamLine 9/11 attacks]].
88* ''Film/NoCountryForOldMen'' set in 1980 contains many instances of modern day brand names and logos appearing, such as a of a Carl's Jr. in El Paso (Carl's Jr. had not expanded to El Paso in 1980), many car alarms are heard going off after a car explodes (car alarms of the type were not prevalent until the mid 80s), and there are several [[http://www.imfdb.org/wiki/No_Country_for_Old_Men firearms used in the film that would not be developed for another few years.]]
89* ''Film/TheOmen1976'' is retconned by ''Film/OmenIIITheFinalConflict'' as having taken place in 1956, despite clearly having fashions and vehicles from around its release in 1976.
90* Several of the diegetic songs in ''Film/OurLadies2019'', such as "Truly Madly Deeply" by Music/SavageGarden and "Tubthumping" by Music/{{Chumbawamba}} are from 1997, despite the film being set in 1996.
91* ''Film/TheQueen'', set in 1997, features a Nokia 6210 mobile phone and lots of cars that postdate the film's setting.
92* ''Film/TheRoaringTwenties1939'' starring James Cagney came out in the late 30s. They didn't even try. Literally, it was a conscious decision not to recreate the actual look of the actual 20s. The two female leads sport some fashion elements of the '20s, but overall still look like they're from the '30s.
93* ''Film/SidAndNancy'', made in the mid-eighties, but set in the late-seventies ([[Music/SexPistols of course]]), has some rather obvious 'eighties cars, including an '80-82 Cadillac limo in 1975, a facelifted MkIII Escort van and an '84-'85 Honda Civic. Strangely the latter does have correctly lettered number plates for the year ('old' P-reg in British car parlance).
94* ''Film/TheSocialNetwork'':
95** The movie takes place in late 2003 and 2004, yet many of the visible laptops clearly are from the modern day. Somewhat ironically in a bit of an inversion they mostly appear to be Windows 98, even though XP had been out for several years at that time and would no doubt be more standard among such a tech-savvy crowd.
96** In one scene, students are shown clearly playing ''VideoGame/{{Fallout 3}}'', which in 2003 was trapped in DevelopmentHell and was widely believed to have been canceled, and ultimately wasn't released until 2008.
97** Mountain Dew cans are shown with a design introduced in 2005.
98* ''Film/TheSquidAndTheWhale'':
99** The film is set in 1986 but contains a shot of an ambulance with a 9/11 memorial on the back, a poster for Wrestling/{{WWE}} wrestler [[Wrestling/GregoryHelms The Hurricane]] whose gimmick debuted in 2001, and many cars that post-date the setting.
100** The [[UsefulNotes/NewYorkCitySubway subway trip]] depicted in the film is also anachronistic. In 1986, the trains would have been covered in graffiti, and the service depicted didn't exist until 2004.
101%%* The original version of ''Film/{{Sybill}}''.
102* The trope name is taken almost literally in ''Film/TwentyFourHourPartyPeople'', a film set from 1976 to 1992 but where the makers seemingly made no effort to disguise outdoor location shots. The main characters drive around what is obviously Manchester circa-2001 in period costume and cars, past satellite dishes, anachronistic cars, buildings and billboards. Given the irreverent self-referential style, it was probably a deliberate decision not to get too detailed.
103* ''Film/United93'', set on 9/11, includes a billboard advertising the film ''WesternAnimation/ChickenLittle'', UPS' 2003 logo and a 2004 Embraer Jet.
104* Drew Barrymore's character in ''Film/TheWeddingSinger'' was one of the few in that movie without stereotypical EightiesHair, makeup, or clothing. This was likely done to be less a target of audience ridicule than the other characters, though ironically her 'Nineties hair' has itself since become sufficiently dated that modern audiences may not notice the discrepancy.
105* ''Franchise/StarWars'' toys also pop up in movies set before their release in the background, like a 2002 released 12-inch Tauntaun in ''Film/{{Fanboys}}'' set before the release of ''Film/ThePhantomMenace''. Most prominently are the Master Replica lightsabers produced in the mid-2000s that appear nearly everywhere when someone has a lightsaber, but stand out in the German comedy ''[[Film/{{Friendship}} Friendship!]]'' that is set directly after the Cold War and are noticeably different to the cheaper looking toys that were available at the time.
106** Fanboys also had a lot of issues with the dressing of the comic book store, as several post-1999 books are shown on the racks in the distance. One particularly jarring bit is a copy of the final Tag & Bink comic, which satirizes the entire Prequel Trilogy.
107* ''Film/WallStreet'', released in late 1987, has an opening title saying the movie takes place in 1985. This was added in after most of the film had been completed, as a way of setting it before a number of insider-trading scandals that had unfolded over the time the film was made. Since stock regulations were significantly tightened between 1985 and 1987 in response to the scandals, most of Gordon Gecko's actions in the film, while illegal at the time of filming, were not illegal in 1985. And within minutes of the film, a character makes a reference to the ''Challenger'' disaster, which happened in early 1986.
108* ''Film/WeSummonTheDarkness'': The $100 bill on the top of the stack that Bev picks up is the large-portrait design introduced in 1996, though the film is set in 1988. Strangely, the bill on top of the stack she leaves in the tray is period appropriate.
109* Creator/WhitStillman's first two movies, ''Film/{{Metropolitan}}'' (1990) and ''Film/{{Barcelona}}'' (1994), take place in the early '70s and 1982 respectively, but the costume, hair, and make up departments make no attempt to conceal their early 90s production date.
110* ''Film/XMenFirstClass'':
111** Charles Xavier uses the word "groovy" when chatting up a girl at a bar early on; a term which wouldn't become popular until the final couple of years of the decade.
112** When frustrated, Havok is heard to mutter, "Whatever..."
113** [[spoiler:The MacrossMissileMassacre fired at the end of the movie includes Harpoon and Tomahawk missiles, which entered service in 1977 and 1983 respectively.]]
114** Moira and Raven are often seen in miniskirts, which weren't designed until 1965, i.e. three years in film's future. To name just a few hairstyle and clothing anachronisms.
115** Some of the US sailors are wielding M16s, which were not officially adopted until the following year.
116** At the strip club, Angel takes Erik and Charles into a separate room for a "bed dance" (as evidenced by the fact the two men are shown reclining on a bed). Bed dances (a somewhat rare variant of lap dancing) weren't introduced until at least the 1990s.
117** {{Pinball}} geeks will note that Havok and Darwin are playing Creator/{{Gottlieb}}'s ''Fun Land'', which came out six years after the movie's events.
118* ''C. a k. polní maršálek'' (Imperial and Royal Field Marshal): This 1930 Czechoslovak comedy is set in the Austro-Hungarian monarchy, which ended in 1918. However, the appearance of especially the female characters reflects contemporary fashion still under 1920s influence, (bobbed hair, short skirts, etc.), styles which are ''very'' different from the standard look in the days of old Austria. At least the uniforms of the Austro-Hungarian Army are pretty faithfully recreated.
119* ''Film/HarryPotter'': The films clearly reflect their 2000s production years, in spite of being set in the 1990s (the gravestones of Tom Riddle Sr. and Harry's parents indicate this), as the books are.
120** The sixth movie features the destruction of London's Millennium Bridge, which was completed in 2000.
121** The fifth movie, when Harry is taking Dudley home, clearly shows the car numberplate "MA 06 KBH" in the background, and the "06" means it's part of the February 2006 issue ("56" would have meant August 2006). A little later, flying to his trial at the Ministry of Magic, Harry passes a completed Canary Wharf development (in the book's year of 1995), and the London Eye (not erected until autumn 1999). Oyster Cards (2003) also featured briefly. According to which fans you believe, these are either glaring anachronisms which detract from the film, or evidence that the film has been updated to our time.
122** The movies are also filled with noughties fashion since 2004, or what the characters wear when dressed as Muggles -- it's not glaring, and hard to describe, but an obvious example would be the wide-horizontal-stripes jumpers that Hermione and Ron kept wearing in the sixth one: hot at the time of filming, not really around in the nineties.
123*** Watching ''Goblet of Fire'' creates a weird sort of nostalgic dissonance for those who grew up reading both the books and seeing the films in theaters. The entire male student cast has "emo boy band" style shaggy haircuts, which were very in vogue in 2005 when the film was released, but nothing at all like the hairstyles teenage boys would have worn in 1994, when the film is set. These haircuts are largely absent from the next film, as they would have, strangely, looked ''dated'' in 2007, despite the film being set in 1995, but the hair styles still aren't 90's hairstyles.
124*** Lavender Brown also wears 2000s clothing, seeing how not only the movies but the books as well take place in the '90s.
125* ''Film/{{Vice|2018}}'': In the 1970s, Donald Rumsfeld makes a poker analogy about missing his flush draw while everyone else thinks that he's got pocket kings. This is a Texas Hold'em reference, which did not become mainstream until the poker craze of the 2000s. In the 1970s, draw poker variants were still the standard form of poker.
126* ''Film/Shazam2019'' opens on a flashback to young Thaddeus Sivana in 1974 traveling to the family's cabin in his father's Cadillac, which was a 1980 model at the earliest.
127* ''Film/WonderWoman2017'':
128** Cyanide Pills were first used during World War II, not World War I.
129** When the party lands in Belgium, one can see a river boat named "Music/EdithPiaf". The singer was three years old in 1918, and thus not a celebrity at that time.
130[[/folder]]
131
132[[folder:Literature]]
133* Silvia Avallone in her best-selling (in Italy at least) debut novel ''[[http://it.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acciaio_(romanzo)-link Acciaio]]'' ("Steel" -- about two girls growing up in a decaying industrial town) does this constantly, forgetting that the events take place in 2001, and the book is thick with annoying anachronisms (which could have been averted with some simple internet checks) like the presence of [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Porsche_Cayenne-link Porsche Cayenne]] (distributed only since 2003), a famous (real) steel company that was not sold to Russian investors till 2004 and many others.
134* The novel ''Literature/BratFarrar'' by Creator/JosephineTey was published in 1949, and mentions British characters going on holiday to France eight years earlier -- which, if the novel is also ''set'' in 1949, would be [[UsefulNotes/WorldWarII very bad timing]]. This is part of what inspired Creator/JoWalton to create her ''Literature/SmallChange'' AlternateUniverse where UsefulNotes/WorldWarII went differently.
135* Creator/CharlesDickens:
136** ''Literature/ThePickwickPapers'' was set in 1827-28, but was written in 1836-37. Dickens seemed to forget this at times. (At one point Mr. Jingle mentions he has written an epic poem about the July Revolution in France; in the next edition of the novel Dickens added a footnote to the effect that Jingle must be a prophet, since the Revolution happened in ''1830''.)
137** Likewise ''Literature/TheOldCuriosityShop'' is set around 1824-26 and was written 1840-41. At one point a lawyer is described as "one of Her Majesty's attornies", but UsefulNotes/QueenVictoria wasn't crowned until 1837; it should have been "His Majesty", referring to George IV.
138* As pointed out by Creator/KimNewman in the afterword to ''Literature/AnnoDracula'', Creator/BramStoker's ''Literature/{{Dracula}}'' (1897) is an EpistolaryNovel set seven years before Harker's coda ("Seven years ago, we all went through the flames"), and yet uses 1890s terms like "New Woman", and has a somewhat anachronistic phonograph (they existed, but weren't common, and most still used tinfoil cylinders rather than wax).
139* In the ''Literature/HarryPotter'' books, the internal chronology dates the events of Harry's time at Hogwarts to the 1990s. The only notable anachronism in the books is a mention of Dudley owning a Platform/PlayStation in what should be August 1994, when the system was not yet available -- and this only because [[WritersCannotDoMath J.K. Rowling can't do math]] and didn't realize the anachronism until fans pointed it out.
140* ''Literature/TheHouseOfNight'' provides an example that applies to what's supposed to be contemporary fiction, likely caused by the fact the books were written and published between 2007 and 2014 but the writer and/or editor forgot the books themselves take place over the course of only about a year: Zoey is 16 in Book 1 (''Marked'') and turns 17 in Book 3 (''Chosen''); the first spin-off book (''Loved'') is set a year after ''Redeemed'' and features Zoey's 18th birthday (which falls on December 24th). ''Marked'' is presumably set in 2007, the year of publication, which would mean most of the books take place in 2007 or 2008, while ''Loved'' takes place around 2009 (the use of flip-phones and so on in the earlier books make the time period obvious). Yet the later books feature things like [=iPads=] (first one was launched in 2010) and references to ''Series/GameOfThrones'' (first aired in 2011), as if it's the 2010s rather than the late 2000s.
141* In ''Marilyn Monroe: Her Shoe and Me'' by Howard G. Allen in which Creator/MarilynMonroe explains how she has affairs with other men and her husband Arthur Miller has affairs with other women. She then goes on to say "We have a [[EthicalSlut very open marriage]].". She was married to Arthur Miller from 1956-1959 and the term "open marriage" wasn't used until TheSeventies.
142[[/folder]]
143
144[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
145* A fairly common trope in the reconstruction scenes in true crime documentary shows (lower budget admittedly), especially with obviously out-of-place cars. In line with the trope the authenticity of the vehicles, and police cars especially, will usually be related to how far back in time the scene shows, and how many major styling eras it passes.
146** ''[[Series/HomicideHunter Homicide Hunter: Lt. Joe Kenda]]'', since it covers cases from all through Kenda's career, frequently runs into this in the recreations. All the vehicles are contemporary to when the show was produced (2011 - on), and thus you see may a case set in the late 1980s where police cars not only have modern styling but LED lightbars and a supposedly low-income hotel has a 42" LCD flatscreen TV in the lobby.
147** ''On the Case With Paula Zahn'' and several other ''Creator/InvestigationDiscovery'' shows featuring 70's, 80's and 90's cases are guilty of this as well. Period series such as ''A Crime To Remember'' and ''1980s: The Deadliest Decade'' strive to avert it but small things like hairstyles and vernacular still fall through the cracks.
148* ''Series/{{Being Human|UK}}'' hit a similar musical snag. The final episode of series 1 (which aired in March 2009) had a flashback that took place "two years earlier" (making it early 2007), but then had the song "Mercy" by Duffy playing on the radio in the diner (released in February 2008). When fans told director Colin Teague about his, he tried to explain it away by saying that it was a local late night radio show which was playing up-and-coming artists.
149* Jimmy's [[TheAllegedCar Suzuki Esteem]] in ''Series/BetterCallSaul'' is far too beat-up and junky for what would've been a five-year-old car at most in 2002. There are also numerous instances where cars from the late 2000's or early 2010's pop up in the background even though most of the series takes place in 2002-2004.
150* ''Series/ColdCase'' was often criticized for this. They went through a lot of effort to strive for historical accuracy, but occasionally would push it aside for the sake of RuleOfCool or RuleOfDrama. The most common complaint was that the songs they used were a year or two off (for example, a story took place in 1984, but they used a song that was released in 1987).
151* The episode of ''Series/CoronationStreet'' aired on 19 April 2022 had a character find some money hidden away by someone who was murdered in June 2019. But that money is in the form of £20 notes of a design that first appeared in February 2020, so the notes should've been of the old design.
152* In the [[TheEighties 1987]] MadeForTVMovie ''Deadly Care'' (set in the [[TheSixties the '60s]]), Creator/CherylLadd's character mentions her distaste for [[CarpetOfVirility hairy men]] and acknowledges that a guy "has a great butt". [[CarpetOfVirility Hairy men]] didn't fall out of favor until the [[TheSeventies the late seventies]] and [[EstrogenBrigade girls and women]] didn't start fixating on men's butts until [[TheEighties the early eighties]].
153* ''The Deal'' has scenes set between 1983 and 1994. Absolutely no attempt has been made to disguise any outdoor or non-studio-set scenes. Particular jarring are scenes set outside the Houses of Parliament, where the actors are dressed for 1983, but the cars, pedestrians, buildings and street signs are all 2003.
154* ''Series/DoctorWho'':
155** In the William Hartnell-era story "[[Recap/DoctorWhoS2E8TheChase The Chase]]", Ian is shown singing along to the chorus of Music/TheBeatles' "Ticket to Ride", showing he already knows the lyrics. His [[AlienAbduction abduction by the Doctor]] was in November 1963, and "Ticket to Ride" wasn't released until February 1965 (when "The Chase" was made). However, the time travel aspect of the series means the possibility that Ian may have heard the song somewhere down the line cannot be ruled out.
156** The Jon Pertwee era has a lot of notorious present-day future — it's presumably set TwentyMinutesIntoTheFuture but the fashions, technology, cars, phones, social politics and zeitgeist are just 1971. It's so bad that there's an ongoing FanWank about whether this era happens in the '80s or the '70s, that the revival series chucks huge amounts of deliberately contradictory information into, just for laughs.
157** An example of present-day ''future'' — in "[[Recap/DoctorWhoS29E2TheShakespeareCode The Shakespeare Code]]", the Doctor babbles happily about ''Literature/HarryPotter'', telling Martha that she's going to love getting to read the last book (which had not been released at that point and was at the time being heavily hyped). Problem is, ''[[Literature/HarryPotterAndTheDeathlyHallows Deathly Hallows]]'' was released in July 2007 in real life, and Martha's "home" time period is early 2008.[[note]]Martha's home time isn't specifically stated — which is why the writers forgot — but following the episode "[[Recap/DoctorWhoS27E4AliensOfLondon Aliens of London]]", in which the Doctor tried to return Rose to the time she left and was a year out, all "present day" episodes must still be that year out, at least until "[[Recap/DoctorWhoS30E15PlanetOfTheDead Planet of the Dead]]". There isn't a point where you can reverse this and say maybe a season took ''less'' than a year, because all the Christmas episodes from "[[Recap/DoctorWho2005CSTheChristmasInvasion The Christmas Invasion]]" to "[[Recap/DoctorWho2007CSVoyageOfTheDamned Voyage of the Damned]]" take place on successive Christmases.[[/note]]
158** "[[Recap/DoctorWhoS31E1TheEleventhHour The Eleventh Hour]]": At the beginning, as the out-of-control TARDIS is tumbling over London, the Millennium Dome and London Eye are clearly visible, in what is later revealed to be 1996. It could also be assumed that the TARDIS crashes through the sky in 2005 (the year of the last scene in [[Recap/DoctorWhoS30E17E18TheEndOfTime the previous episode]]), then time-travels to/crash-lands in 1996.
159* The German series Eldorado [=KaDeWe=] / [=KaDeWe=] Our Time is Now is intentionally egregious. Set in the time period between 1918 and 1932-ish, only the main characters, those who they interact with and a few extras wear clothing and ride in vehicles (roughly) appropriate to the period. Street scenes and the interior of the titular store are filmed in the 2020s. In one shot Bin men in period attire shovel useless Paper Marks into modern dumpsters, in another Fritzi has an emotional breakdown riding a modern U-Bahn, in yet another the stores' pin-up Hedi walks into the store straight past one of those giant iPhone-like LED screens showing (historically real) film of the (historically real) Hedi Kron, whether it is an actual advert for the store or set dressing we do not know.
160** The two most likely explanations are: the filmmakers wanted to show the rise of the far-right could happen here today, in modern liberal Berlin (it is certainly happenning elsewhere); or filming such a show was already so complicated with distancing and bubbling measures due to COVID-19 that full set dressing was unaffordable / impractical and the streets were mostly empty anyways. (Note that nobody mentions UsefulNotes/TheSpanishFlu). Except for the fact low-floor articulated buses and modern sanitation vehicles pass ''in the foreground''.
161** Or maybe all the characters are [[DeadAllAlong ghosts haunting modern - day Berlin]], repeating their doomed lives in an endless loop, supported by the fact they don't age any despite the show racing through a 15-year period featuring lean times, poverty and one characters' heroic substance abuse, which tend to put age on you.
162** The GDR-era U-Bahn trains and 1980s vehicles are most likely still in service however.
163* ''Series/FreaksAndGeeks'':
164** In the WildTeenParty episode (set in 1980, filmed in 1999), several of the male extras have obvious '90s bowl haircuts. In the DVD extras, Judd Apatow recalls having told the main character actors; "You got the part- don't cut your hair".
165** Some of the settings, such as the fast food restaurant Sam and Cindy visit in "Girlfriends and Boyfriends" look unusually hip and modern for 1980-1981. Justified, since (to preserve realism) the show generally used real-life locations for filming rather than studio sets.
166** Daniel's rusty, beat-up Firebird is a model that would've been new at the time.
167** In "Kim Kelly Is My Friend", Nick eats Fruit Roll-Ups, which wouldn't be introduced to the market until 1983.
168** When Sam dresses up as Luke Skywalker for the sci-fi convention, he's holding a toy lightsaber with a green blade, despite the fact that the first green-bladed lightsaber wouldn't be seen for another 2-3 years. Also, the toy itself is a more modern design that appeared in the late 1990's.
169* Done on purpose in one episode of ''Series/GetSmart''. TheUnseen baddie of the week had used a de-aging ray on some scientists, reverting their brains to when they were children. One scientist talks about watching ''Series/CaptainKangaroo'', but that show wasn't on when the scientist in question was a child, [[ConvictionByContradiction proving that]] she's not really under the effects of the ray and that she's the bad guy.
170* ''Series/HappyDays'' is a borderline case. It never quite forgot that it was set in TheFifties, (and had made it into the early [[TheSixties Sixties]] by the end) but they got ''really'' lazy about not letting TheSeventies seep in.
171** ''Series/HappyDays'' spin-off ''Series/LaverneAndShirley'' freely let modern styles seep into its period setting.
172** So did ''Joanie Loves Chachi''.
173* The '50s-set BBC series ''Series/TheHour'' has beautifully researched clothing, but the younger women's hairstyles aren't authentically 50s, presumably because [[TheCoconutEffect 50s-style perms look rather like 80s hair.]] Mrs Madden's gorgeous New Look outfits are also not quite contemporary with the other women's outfits.
174* ''Series/JeevesAndWooster'' takes place in a GenteelInterbellumSetting as it is, but the episodes where Bertie vacations in New York have a particularly jarring example -- the World Trade Center is clearly visible in establishing shots of the city. (Also HarsherInHindsight.)
175* The video game-themed ''Series/KamenRiderExAid'' normally averts PacManFever, but there's a noticeable exception that crosses with this trope: a FlashBack to 2010 shows the main character playing ''VideoGame/Tekken7: Fated Retribution'', a game which didn't come out until 2016[[note]]This is more than likely [[{{Dualvertisement}} intentional]], since Bandai Namco is the ''Franchise/KamenRider'' franchise's biggest sponsor and the home release of ''Tekken 7'' was on the horizon when that episode aired[[/note]].
176* ''Series/{{Life on Mars|2006}}'' (the UK version, that is) has a glaring error only noticeable to roadgeeks -- a WRTL 2600 streetlight [[http://www.leedsstreetlight.co.uk/LEEDS36.jpg like this one]] was seen in one shot -- and it wasn't even around in 1973. More noticeable anachronisms that the production team forgot to cover up in post include cable TV junction boxes at the roadside and modern air conditioning units on the side of buildings.
177* ''Series/{{MASH}}'':
178** The show contained frequent references to popular culture that didn't exist until after UsefulNotes/TheKoreanWar.
179** EternalSexualFreedom, anti-war and post-women's-lib attitudes, which would have been quite out of place in the early 1950s, were portrayed as commonplace. While the male characters may well have been womanizers, the female characters would have been far more circumspect about it being widely known.
180** Haircuts and styles that were in style in the 1970s and 1980s appear in the show, but these haircuts would not have been acceptable for anyone in the Army at any point in the twentieth century.
181** A 1969 issue of ''The Avengers'' shows up in one episode.
182** This perhaps [[LampshadeHanging lampshades]] the fact the war the show's makers ''really'' wanted to portray was Vietnam - but TV producers vetoed this as being too soon. American viewers in the early 1970s would have had no doubt ''which'' controversial Asian war was being satirized with extremely black humor, which added to its popularity.
183* ''Series/{{Mayday}}'':
184** Count the number of times that they had episodes covering plane crashes in the 1960s, 1970s, and 1980s where you can see cars from the 2000s. One particularly egregious case is the Pan Am Flight 103 episode, as the opening segment documenting a German police bust on two terrorists working for the PFLP that happened two months before the Lockerbie bombing shows 21st century cars.
185** In the episode about the Tenerife jumbo jet collision, which takes place in 1977, the air traffic controllers have, of all things, a modern personal computer in their office.
186*** Also one of the jets taxiing is a Cessna 525, while a plane shown taking off is a narrow-body with winglets - a 737 [=NextGen=] or an Embraer E-Jet. Cessna 525 first flew in 1991, 737 [=NextGen=] in 1997 and E-Jet in 2002. (This is in the regular ep, not the 90-minute special.)
187** In many episodes, the passengers tend to be shown in generic modern clothes and hair rather than in obvious contemporary fashions. May be somewhat justified in that given that this is an ongoing show with a limited budget that requires many actors and extras, they would not only need to provide a lot of period clothing but also do many contemporary hairstyles/wigs. Notably averted in a few episodes, such as "Munich Air Disaster" and "Grand Canyon Disaster", as the clothing is of the appropriate era (which is the 1950s).
188** A subtle one occurs in the Grand Canyon episode: in 1956, the controller uses a modern "taxi into position and hold" command. Moreover, the first officer repeats his command as he heard it; this was introduced after the Tenerife disaster. In the 1950s, the ATC commands were acknowledged with simply "OK" or "Roger". A more obvious one in the same episode is where, despite it being 1956, the ATC tower has a functional computer monitor in the tower, similar to the anachronism found in the Tenerife episode.
189** In the Garuda Flight 421 episode, during the waterborne evacuation, one of the cabin walls near the exit doors displays the Garuda Indonesia logo. However, the logo displayed is incorrect, since it is the current one, [[http://vignette2.wikia.nocookie.net/logopedia/images/d/d2/Logo_Garuda_Indonesia.jpg/revision/latest?cb=20150813112548 distinguishable by its unique font]]. In 2002 (the year Flight 421 actually crashed), Garuda Indonesia were using [[https://s-media-cache-ak0.pinimg.com/originals/fc/4d/23/fc4d234a73163bca2fd7acaa034fd76f.gif a different logo]] that was adopted in the mid-1980s, and only transferred to the current logo in 2009 as part of a re-branding. This error also appears in the Garuda Flight 152 episode.
190** The same type of logo error happens in the Air Canada 797 episode, as although the plane is in the 1965-1993 livery, the logo on the headrest covers in the cabin are of the 2005-2017 variant.
191** A common anachronism in the series is the "airliner placeholder", where either defunct airlines or airlines that did not exist until later are used to fill out the background at airports.
192*** In "Titanic in the Sky", when Qantas Flight 32 was backing away from the gate at Singapore Changi Airport, several aircraft can be seen parked at the gates around the Airbus A380. However, the aircraft parked range from airlines that fly to Changi in real life but with a completely wrong aircraft type (three Air France aircraft are seen in the scene, one of which is an Airbus A320; in reality, Air France operates only one flight to Singapore from Paris, not with an Airbus A320 but with a Boeing 777) and airlines that never flew from Singapore and went out of existence way before the date of the accident (multiple Pacific Southwest Airlines aircraft, mostly Boeing 737-200s are seen; FYI, PSA never even flew out of the continental United States during its operational life span and the airline went out of service in ''1988''.)
193*** This also happens in "Speed Trap", where when Flight 706 is on the ground, out of the cockpit window you could see a plane's tail with the Air China logo on it. This is a very obvious anachronism since back in 1971 (a year the episode explicitly stated the accident occurred), Air China didn't even exist as it was founded in 1988.
194*** Yet again, also appears in "Fatal Delay", as when Spanair 5022 was taxing on the apron, you can see a PSA 737 and a [=AirWest=] DC-9 in the background.
195** A minor anachronism, but many of the Boeing documentation in the past (such as repair manuals, logbooks, documents and such), especially in episodes set before 1997, display the post-1997 Boeing logo which included the sphere and ring logo of [=McDonnell=] Douglas after the latter merged with the former.
196** In the Swissair Flight 111 episode, a passenger is shown watching ''WesternAnimation/{{Tarzan}}'' on the in-flight entertainment system. The accident happened on September 2, 1998, while the movie wouldn't be released until the following year.
197* The 1999 TV movie ''Michael Jordan: An American Hero'' shows its title character wearing current (for the time) Air Jordans in scenes that were meant to take place a decade earlier.
198* ''Series/OliverBeene'' was nominally set in TheSixties, but characters had attitudes and fashions more at place in the 2000s.
199* In ''Series/QuantumLeap'', Sam leaps all around the timeline of his own life.
200** At times, he would end up in New York in a time before the World Trade Center was built, but in any establishing shots of the city, the towers would be there.
201** In the pilot episode, he's supposed to be in the '50s, but a modern vehicle can be seen in the background.
202** "What Price Gloria?" was set in 1961 but filmed in 1989, and it shows. The women do look early-Sixties, but the boss' office and suit are MUCH closer to ''Film/WallStreet'' than ''Series/MadMen''.
203** Zig-zagged in the 1991 episode "Glitter Rock", set in 1974. The fictional rock band King Thunder ''looks'' plausibly like a GlamRock group from 1974, but ''sounds'' more like a Music/{{Whitesnake}} knockoff from a full decade later.
204* Creator/StephenKing's ''Series/StormOfTheCentury'', set in 1988, nonetheless has a prominent ProductPlacement scene involving a late '90s Mac laptop.
205* ''Series/StrangerThings'':
206** Flashlights used in various nighttime searches produce very modern blue-white beams of light. Ironically, they'd have been a lot less noticeable if they hadn't been in use next to period-correct devices which produce beams of light in a visibly much redder spectrum. The boys' bike headlights used orange gels to correct this. They were left in place for daylight scenes and can be plainly seen behind the lenses throughout.
207** Many cars seen in the background of scenes came out well after 1983; a 1988 Volvo 240 can be seen in a parking lot in Episode 4, and behind it a 1997–2002 Subaru Forester is parked. The government cars are 1983–1986 LTD Crown Victorias, and the Hawkins Power vans have 1986 and 1992 Chevy Van models alongside the period-appropriate 1983 vans.
208** Jonathan, in a flashback scene, has put Music/TheSmiths on a mixtape for Will. An American living in the sticks in 1983 would likely not have heard of them until they released their first album the following year. But more to the point, during the time of the flashback, they wouldn't even have released their first single. This is also true of his liking Music/JoyDivision: that's more plausible as their albums had been issued stateside and the band was a critical favorite, but they never made an impact outside of UK and Europe.
209** The kids are in possession of posters for ''Film/TheThing1982''. While contemporary reception to the movie views it as a beloved classic, it was commercially and critically massacred upon release and almost cratered the career of Creator/JohnCarpenter. Given how immensely unpopular the movie was among even dedicated sci-fi and horror fans at the time, it's extremely unlikely that genre-savvy teens would proudly hold onto this memorabilia in 1983.
210** The Military Police officers stationed at Hawkins National Laboratory carry the Beretta 92FS as their sidearm. The Beretta first entered into service in 1985 (though the 92 series was first developed in 1975), whereas the show is set in 1983. However, the government agents carry the Colt M1911, which was standard issue for the military at the time.
211** When the kids learn that Eleven can tune a walkie-talkie to a frequency that lets them hear Will, Lucas says that the walkie is just picking up a baby monitor's noise. Baby monitors weren't commonly used at that time; the first Fisher-Price baby monitor came out in 1985.
212** The periodic table shown in the science classroom contains elements that would not be synthesized, let alone named, until ten or more years after the show's setting. Livermorium (Lv, atomic number 116) would not be synthesized until 2006, while its name was only officially approved in ''2012''.
213** The government agents' weapon of choice appears to be the Heckler & Koch [=MP5k=], which is period-accurate, as that gun came out in 1976. What isn't are the [=MP5k-PDWs=] (the ones with folding stocks), which didn't come out until 1991. Some [=MP5Ks=] even have stocks from the Heckler & Koch [=UMP45=]; the [=UMP45=] didn't come out until 1999.
214** In Season 2, Hopper goes hunting the Demodogs with an M4 carbine, introduced in 1994. His rifle also has a quad rail forend attachment, which wasn't introduced until around 2000.
215** Although they cut it very close, the Demogorgon figurine used in the first episode was first sold only one month after the beginning of the series.
216** Max labels the party as "stalkers," for following her around. This use of the word wouldn't come about until the early 1990s.
217** The school buses have white tops. This practice (which keeps the interior much cooler) didn't start until the early 1990s, and didn't become common until the 2000s. 1980s school buses were yellow all over.
218** Planck's constant (to six digits) is given as 6.62607, which is the modern value established in 2014. In 1985, scientists had set the value at 6.62617.
219** When Billy is introduced in "MADMAX", Music/{{Scorpions|Band}}' "Rock You Like a Hurricane" plays in the background. Though this is historically accurate (the song was released in 1984, the same year the season was set), the version used in the show is a 2011 re-recording, possibly due to licensing issues.
220* ''Series/UpstairsDownstairs'' often uses patterns and colours in the clothing and sets that belong more in the late 60s and early 70s than Edwardian England. Particularly obvious examples appear in some of Lady Marjorie's dresses in the first season.
221* ''Franchise/TheWalkingDeadTelevisionUniverse'':
222** Society ended in the show's universe in 2010, but starting in 2021-released episodes of the franchise, some slang from the late 2010's/early 2020's begins leaking into the writing.
223** In a 2014 episode, Beth plays "Be Good" by Waxahatchee, which came out in 2012.
224** During the early seasons which were sponsored by Hyundai, the characters always drove the latest real world model.
225* The school bus scenes in ''Series/TheWonderYears''. Look out the bus windows and play "Spot TheEighties Car".
226[[/folder]]
227
228[[folder:Music]]
229* For the Music/TheSmashingPumpkins in their [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4aeETEoNfOg ''1979'' music video]], if you look closely at the pinball machine in the window of the front of the convenience store, you'll notice it's a Gottlieb Pinball/TeedOff, which wasn't built until 1993.
230[[/folder]]
231
232[[folder:Roleplay]]
233* On one occasion in ''Roleplay/SurvivalOfTheFittest'' a character directly quoted ''Film/TheDarkKnight''. The problem with this? [=SOTF=] v3 is set in 2007, a year before the film even came out.
234[[/folder]]
235
236[[folder:Theatre]]
237* A hallmark of Creator/WilliamShakespeare's plays as well as the plays of his contemporaries, as they deliberately did not concern themselves with what would now be known as "historical realism". Notable examples include [[Theatre/AntonyAndCleopatra Cleopatra]] playing billiards, a game not invented until over a thousand years after her death, and several characters in ''Theatre/JuliusCaesar'' referring to chiming clocks almost a millennium and a half too early. A more subtle example is that Theatre/{{Hamlet}}'s caution around accepting the ghost's story is partly due to the ghost espousing Catholic ideas to the Protestant Hamlet, despite the play being set around 200 years before the Reformation.
238[[/folder]]
239
240[[folder:Video Games]]
241* Despite ''VideoGame/GrowingUp'' being set in TheNineties, there are a few anachronisms referencing contemporary history:
242** The school world map shows South Sudan, which didn't secede from Sudan until 2011.
243** The animation of the protagonist studying the Periodic Table shows elements 113-118 with their new symbols[[note]]Nh - nihonium, Fl - flerovium, Mc - moscovium, Lv - livermorium, Ts - tennessine, and Og - oganesson[[/note]], but they wouldn't be formally named until 2011 for elements 114 and 116 and 2016 for the rest.
244* Referred to in-universe in ''VideoGame/JadeEmpire'', where the PlayerCharacter has to play a part in a play. The play is set hundreds of years ago, during the foundation of the [[FarEast Jade Empire]], but it's got some satirical digs at [[StateSec the Lotus Assassins]], who were only formed two decades ago.
245* The ''Franchise/ToyStory'' segment of ''VideoGame/KingdomHeartsIII'' is set around the TurnOfTheMillennium (as evidenced both by the release date of the movie and by video game boxes like "Amazing Jam 2001"), but Rex is into 2010s-style [=JRPGs=] and some enemy toys are pastiches of popular 2010s toylines.
246* ''VideoGame/MetalGear'':
247** In ''VideoGame/MetalGearSolid3SnakeEater'', [[EightiesHair Snake's mullet won't be a thing for another twenty years]]. There is no explanation for modern-looking Japanese instant ramen or the modern day biscuit Calorie Mate showing up in the game either.
248** ''VideoGame/MetalGearSolidPeaceWalker'' is set in 1974, but:
249*** There is a pop song in the game, sung by one of the characters, which is a modern J-Pop production complete with digital synthesisers and AutoTune. This can be handwaved as non-diagetic, especially because an alternate version of the song exists in the story which uses a lush 70s-style soft-pop production with a dense string arrangement.
250*** Several of the guns didn't come out for a few years after the setting. A lot of this can be handwaved as being MSF developed tech.
251*** The ProductPlacement items have a modern appearance, even for the consumer products that ''did'' exist in the 1970s.
252** ''VideoGame/MetalGearSolidVThePhantomPain'':
253*** Set a year (Ground Zeroes) and ten year (The Phantom Pain) after Peace Walker, has Snake and his operatives equipped with an [=iDroid=], a smartphone-esque device with projection instead of screen (the name of which is an obvious {{Portmanteau}} of "iPhone"/"iOS" and "Android", to boot), with user interface that more like 2015 instead of 1984. This is jarring because the immediate chronological game, the first Metal Gear, has basically contemporary technology, with Solid Snake simply equipped with a radio transceiver.
254*** The soundtrack uses licensed [=80s=] music to give a feel of that time, but most of the songs are a few years into the future after 1984. The most anachronistic one is Music/{{The Cure|Band}}'s "Friday I'm In Love", which was released in 1992. It's difficult to handwave ''this'', since it's not clear how MSF's advanced tech would have made Robert Smith write the exact same songs when he was eight years younger.
255*** When exploring the Mother Base, there will be posters of Idol Paz occasionally plastered around walls. However the artwork for the poster, rather than the era appropriate art style uses the one that is more in line with the modern day bishojo design.
256* ''VideoGame/TheNamelessMod'': The game is set in September of 2004 and was released in 2009. A few things slipped through however.
257** Many characters have Xbox 360s in their rooms, however, that wouldn't be released until November of 2005. The developers probably realized this, and changed the name of the object to "DVD Player", although it still uses the 360 textures.
258** Articles about ''VideoGame/HalfLife2'' and ''VideoGame/HitmanBloodMoney'' despite the game taking place before either was released.
259** A notepad late in the game has a list of some Deus Ex tropes, despite Website/TVTropes barely existing back then.
260** If you allow [[ProfessionalKiller ZeroPresence]] to aid you when you first raid the [=PDX=] [=HQ=] on a [=WorldCorp=] playthrough, he will call out "Boom Headshot!" when killing a guard, although the episode of ''WebVideo/PurePwnage'' where it was from wouldn't be released until December of that year.
261* In ''VideoGame/ResidentEvil2Remake'' you can find a USB flash drive in the shape of a police badge to unlock the magnum. While [=USBs=] were around since 1995, they were not widely used in 1998 when the game takes place, especially not enough to have novelty designs or to be able to be used on a standard Windows 95 machine.
262* ''VideoGame/{{Shenmue}}'', set in 1986, lets the character win ''Hang-On'' and ''VideoGame/SpaceHarrier'' games that can be used on the character's Platform/SegaSaturn, a system which did not exist in 1986. Almost certainly intentional, though; Shenmue comes from Sega, who would know when their own games came out, and since home systems in 1986 couldn't do arcade-perfect ports of them (the arcade versions of both came out in 1985), it would have had to be done anachronistically (though it must be noted that these games' ports were two of the most important titles for the Platform/SegaMasterSystem in 1986).
263** Similarly, there is the range of Sega-themed toys available from the gashapon (capsule toy) machines, again most certainly intentional.
264** Ryo and Fukuhara both have VideoGame/VirtuaFighter posters in their rooms, seven years before the first game came out.
265** Ryo's watch is explicitly a Timex Indiglo, not available until 1992 at the earliest. The model of Timex Expedition (Timex [=T433914E=]), on which the design of Ryo's watch is based, was not released until 1998.
266* ''VideoGame/TheSims'':
267** ''VideoGame/TheSims3'' takes place two generations before ''VideoGame/TheSims2'', but is still the modern day, even more-so than ''The Sims 2'' was (for example, the game without expansion has the players using Blackberry esque cellphone in contrast of the Nokia esque keypad cellphone, which later in the University Life expansion pack of ''The Sims 3'', replaced with touch screen smartphones). This is especially odd because ''VideoGame/{{The Sims 1}}'', which takes place in between the two games, has a distinct 1970s aesthetic (and still with then-modern technology). ''The Sims 3'' seems to be trying to go for the UsefulNotes/WorldWar2 era feel, but everything is distinctly late 2000s. Considering the world is set in a FantasyCounterpartCulture, we can let it mostly slide.
268** Then ''VideoGame/TheSims4'' simply ignores any continuity or plot introduced by the previous games and its spinoffs, relegating them into MythologyGag.
269* ''VideoGame/YIIKAPostModernRPG'' is supposed to take place around the TurnOfTheMillennium, as its name implies, yet it makes reference to Platform/SuperNES [=JRPGs=] like ''VideoGame/ChronoTrigger'' and ''VideoGame/LufiaIIRiseOfTheSinistrals'' as if they were venerated classics and adult characters wax nostalgic about how important they were to them as kids. In real life, console [=RPGs=] were ''just'' starting to take off internationally with the release of ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyVII'', and the games mentioned would have been about four years old at most, making it impossible for the characters in question to have played them as children and still be young adults. The creator's previous game, ''VideoGame/TwoBrothers'', also gets namedropped in dialogue [[spoiler:and plays a major role in resolving the game's plot]], despite being almost two entire decades away from ''conception'', let along release. The most glaring example though is the protagonist himself, who dresses like a typical hipster, which have several years to go before existing. Also, most infamously, Creator/SatoruIwata has a gravestone stating the real-life date he died.
270[[/folder]]
271
272[[folder:Visual Novels]]
273* In ''VisualNovel/HotelDuskRoom215'', Kyle has a digital pager in 1979, back when pagers weren't generally in use outside of hospitals and fire departments due to their short range and bulk.
274* ''Franchise/WhenTheyCry'':
275** ''VisualNovel/HigurashiWhenTheyCry'' is set in 1983, but nothing except the dates of past events and lack of [[CellphonesAreUseless cellphones]] and internet access really agrees with that. The most blatant example is a reference to the ''Manga/CardcaptorSakura'' anime in the game version of ''Watanagashi'', which didn't premiere until 1998. The American release calls it Card ''Master'' Sakura, using a CaptainErsatz which would not be limited by real-life dates. It's unclear whether this is a deliberate TranslationCorrection, an accidental TranslationCorrection, or whether the original Japanese version already used the CaptainErsatz. Anime-wise, there's a reference to ''Literature/MariaWatchesOverUs'', even though the original novels weren't published until 1998. In ''Watangashi'', in most medias, the doll tends to resemble a ''Manga/RozenMaiden''.
276** The spiritual sequel, ''VisualNovel/UminekoWhenTheyCry'' is, if anything, worse at keeping to its 1986 setting. Not only do they reference ''Manga/CardcaptorSakura'' again, people cosplay as ''Franchise/TouhouProject'' characters, and some of the characters have even played ''Higurashi'' or watched it on a flatscreen TV in the anime.
277[[/folder]]
278
279[[folder:Web Videos]]
280* ''WebVideo/AldriversDevourerOfCos'': In episode 7, Wendy showed a tweet of her roasting where in it, she declared she was the one who orchestrated Film/NineEleven. While the date of her tweet does match the date of the event, Website/{{Twitter}} was only released in 2006, 5 years after the events of 9/11.
281* Narrowly averted in ''WebVideo/MarbleHornets'': the sole video set in 1991 had to be taken down and re-edited because it featured a kid wearing a ''WesternAnimation/SpongeBobSquarePants'' T-shirt (the show came out in 1999).
282[[/folder]]
283
284[[folder:Western Animation]]
285* ''WesternAnimation/HarrietTheSpy'' takes place in the 1960s and is somewhat open about its setting (Harriet is excited about the first woman in space, which occurred in 1963). However, some modern trends are portrayed, such as Harriet treating a pocket radio like an [=iPod=] complete with earbud, and Harriet taking a selfie with a boy.
286* ''WesternAnimation/JakeAndTheNeverLandPirates'' has the season 3 special ''Battle for the Book!'' establish the show as taking place in the 1920's, as the Darlings are the same age as in ''WesternAnimation/PeterPan''. Despite this, some earlier episodes had the characters use items that wouldn't be invented for several more decades, including electric guitars, Telstar footballs, and skateboards.
287* ''WesternAnimation/JorelsBrother'' is supposed to be set during TheEighties or [[TheNineties the early 90's]]. Although it did feature several elements of those eras at first, it's often inconsistent, as some episodes have characters using the internet, computers (albeit only primitive ones), smartphones, and flat-screen televisions. Everytime a year is set on an episode, it's completely different.
288* ''WesternAnimation/SpiritRidingFree'' takes place only a few years after the original ''WesternAnimation/SpiritStallionOfTheCimarron'' film. The new Spirit is Spirit and Rain's son. The girls don't dress anything like the 1800s and no-one [[PoliticallyCorrectHistory acts like it's the 1800s]].
289* ''WesternAnimation/WhatIf2021'': Both the third and seventh episodes have characters using touch screen cell phones, despite them both taking place in 2010, back when they had yet to become a widespread public phenomenon.
290[[/folder]]

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