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[[quoteright:350:[[ComicStrip/FoxTrot https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/what_are_records.jpg]]]]
[[caption-width-right:350: If you want to feel even older, this appeared in newspapers in 1998.[[note]]What's a newspaper?[[/note]]]]
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->'''Wayne:''' How do ya' like that? Your dad's invention is gonna be in the Smithsonian alongside the gramophone!\\
'''Adam:''' What's a gramophone?\\
'''Wayne:''' An early record player.\\
'''Adam:''' What's a record player?\\
'''Wayne:''' An early CD player.
-->-- ''Film/HoneyWeShrunkOurselves''

An adult digs up their old record collection out of the attic and their kid asks what they are. The parent nostalgically names all the singers of their day whose works have been put to their vinyl discs. Then the kids says, "No, I mean, what are records?"

A subtrope of TechnologyMarchesOn, initially fueled by the novelty of the notion that a format of media could actually become obsolete. It bears mentioning that it started cropping up in fiction before 1990, and the characters unfamiliar with records were full-grown adults, meaning that in its earliest form the trope ran on shameless hyperbole. Even in the 21st century, though, [[RealityIsUnrealistic its realism is dubious]]. Most young people do indeed know what a vinyl record is (from more recent media depictions if nothing else), even if they never listened to or owned one themselves and don't know whether a "seven inch" was an album or a single, or whether 45 rpm came before or after 33 1/3. Modern [=DJs=] still use them, for instance, and their appearance in pop culture is almost ubiquitous. They've also been [[http://www.wired.com/entertainment/music/commentary/listeningpost/2007/10/listeningpost_1029 undergoing a resurgence of popularity]] among audiophiles, {{hipster}}s, indie music fans and even teenagers since 2007 (Sony is even pressing records again), thanks to their [[PopularityPolynomial retro appeal]] and their exemption from the abuses of the LoudnessWar, and even outsold [=CDs=] for the first time in over 30 years in 2019. Consequently, while they still haven't overtaken streaming in terms of revenue, their renewed semi-popularity started to be acknowledged in mainstream media at the end of the 2010s, making this a DiscreditedTrope with regards to records themselves.

This trope can also be used for 8-track tapes, of course (arguably more understandable, since many people know ''of'' 8-track but don't know what the actual cartridge looks like). It likely already applies at least to some degree for both cassette tapes and videocassettes, as both are no longer being made en-masse and generally only appeal to niche markets. Wikipedia reports that whereas 442 million cassette tapes were sold in the U.S. in 1990, by 2016, the number was just 129,000. The last major Hollywood film to be released on VHS in the United States, ''WesternAnimation/Cars1'', was in 2006.[[note]]If you want to get technical, the format persisted for slightly longer in other countries, with the last VHS release in the world being a South Korean release of ''Film/{{Inception}}'' in 2010.[[/note]]

In this age of legal streaming and downloading of music, movies, video games, and other software, sooner or later the whole notion of going into a store and buying a physical object with stored data will be part of the history books (well, the history e-books if paper books also become obsolete due to e-readers). Basically, what BeforeMyTime is to cultural references, this trope is to technology.

Ironically, this trope may be responsible for more people knowing just what records and other stuff are, if they saw this being used in media and wanted to know just what the joke was. Also, the fact that something is not in active use anymore doesn't mean people will have no idea what it is. Papyrus hasn't been used for centuries, and people still know what it looks like and what it was used for.

[[JustForFun/IThoughtItMeant Not to be confused with]] the record label of the same name, owned by Music/DavidWilcox. Contrast TechnologicallyBlindElders, the inverse. See also PopularityPolynomial, when a trend is popular in one generation, becomes neglected, and later is rediscovered as nostalgic by the next generation.

----
!!Examples:

[[foldercontrol]]

[[folder:Advertising]]
* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lkoNKrBHWOo This 1984 ad]] for Atari word processor software features a variation of this. Pitchman Creator/AlanAlda extols the program's [[TechnologyMarchesOn then-astounding features]] to a little girl, then states, "Atari may make the typewriter obsolete." "What's a typewriter?" the kid asks in response.
* In an ad for a contraceptive, a little boy is shown standing on his parents' record collection which he scattered on the floor, and his plastic dinosaur is going round and round on the record player. %% Needs clarification on which brand of contraceptive.
* An old Creator/CartoonNetwork bumper references this.
-->"Don't touch that dial, ''[[WesternAnimation/LooneyTunes Bugs & Daffy]]'' are back! Remember dials?
* The [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3S5BLs51yDQ "What's a computer?"]] ad for Apple's iPad Pro implied that it was so advanced it would cause children to wonder what a computer was.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Anime & Manga]]
* In the ''Anime/CowboyBebop'' episode "[[Recap/CowboyBebopSession18SpeakLikeAChild Speak Like a Child]]", Spike and Jet receive a Betamax tape for Faye in the mail. They are initially stumped as to what it is. Even when they are told to find a VCR to play it, they go through the ruins of Tokyo to find the electronics museum and return with one for VHS. What's particularly funny is that Ed, who is younger than either Jet or Spike, is the only one familiar with such archaic tech.
* Conversed and defied in the first episode of ''Anime/OddTaxi''. During a doctor's visit, Odokawa mentions listening to cassette tapes to fall asleep, which perplexes Shirakawa who's over a decade younger than him. Goriki tries to joke that her surprise is because her generation doesn't know what cassettes are, but Odokawa flatly points out that media depictions of the format means she likely at least knows about them despite never using them, just like how he and Goriki know about phonographs and telephone magnetos.
--> '''Odokawa''': So drop the generation gap BS.
* Downplayed in ''Anime/OjamajoDoremi''. In the eighth episode of ''Sharp'', when traveling back in time about 20 years, Doremi is familiar with phone booths, since they still exist in the 2000s. However, she is thrown off that there's no slot for phone cards and that they instead require you to deposit coins.
* An episode of ''Anime/PokemonJourneysTheSeries'' has Goh stumble upon one of the old phone booths that used to be everywhere in early seasons, and doesn't realize what it's used for until Team Rocket tells him, as the series has since moved on to characters using smartphones (or rather, [[HauntedTechnology Rotom Phones]]).
-->'''Meowth:''' Hold the phone, you mean to say this kid doesn't know what a phone booth is? We're not THAT old, are we?!
* Lampshaded in [[https://twitter.com/lindevi/status/1474179461688008711 a footnote]] for ''Manga/SailorMoon'''s 2018 rerelease, when characters discuss stuff in a video rental store. In the more than 25 years since the original release, younger fans would have grown up in the age of [=DVDs=] and Blu-Rays by then, and rental stores like that have all but disappeared since now you can do the same thing online.
* ''Manga/SchoolLive'':
** Yuki doesn't know what a radio or Polaroid camera is despite being a high school student old enough to have seen them in their heyday. Her friends know what they are and Yuki isn't the smartest kid on the block anyway.
** Played for drama in the anime. Yuki took a picture with Megu-nee and the others, but blocked out the memory [[spoiler:as Megu-nee died just afterwards]]. A few weeks later and she doesn't know what a Polaroid camera is anymore.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Comic Books]]
* ''WesternAnimation/{{Animaniacs}}'': In a story from Issue #32, Dot invites some girls for a slumber party and tries to offer records for entertainment but her guests, not being cartoon characters from 1930s like [[OlderThanTheyLook her]], don't know what records are.
* ''ComicBook/ScoobyDooTeamUp'': Subverted in "Scooby Doo, When Are You?", a prehistoric TimeMachine brings the gang to WesternAnimation/TheFlintstones' time. In some aspects, the stone age is more modern than the gang expected but the record player makes Shaggy comment to Scooby that they must be really prehistoric.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Comic Strips]]
* ''ComicStrip/BigNate'': [[EnforcedTrope Enforced]] as a result of the strip's FloatingTimeline. In the [[https://www.gocomics.com/bignate/1991/01/15 1991/01/15 strip]], Nate and Ellen are seen handling records, with the comic giving the implication that they are about to play them. However, in the [[https://www.gocomics.com/bignate/2008/12/25 2008/12/25 strip]], when Uncle Ted gives Nate a Neil Diamond record for Christmas, Nate is confused about the gift and has to ask what it is.
* ''ComicStrip/BloomCounty'':
** Opus took it to a large extreme, where a person wearing a brown outfit seemed to be completely unfamiliar with what a newspaper was, even when Opus tried explaining what it was ''three times'' when selling the Bloom County local newspaper. The guy, when Opus could give the simplest explanation he could give (paper), also mentions that it "feels like Kleenex."
** Another strip had Binkley asking his father what he meant by "winding" a watch.
* One ''ComicStrip/TheBornLoser'' strip dared to take this trope to the next level:
-->'''Brutus:''' To put it in terms you'll relate to, it's like an oversized CD!\\
'''Wilberforce:''' What's a CD?
* A series in ''ComicStrip/{{Crankshaft}}'' revolved around Ed trying to replace his copy of ''Rhapsody in Blue''. The clerk at the store, who is at least in her 20s, had never heard of a record before. This was in 1988.
* The comic strip ''ComicStrip/FoxTrot'' did this once. In fact, the example in the trope description exactly matches the dialogue of the strip in question. Also seen in ''ComicStrip/{{Zits}}'', ''ComicStrip/Blondie1930'', and ''ComicStrip/DennisTheMenaceUS''.
* ComicStrip/{{Garfield}}'s nightmare of being old [[http://www.gocomics.com/garfield/2013/6/14 materializes]] as him being old enough to remember records.
** [[https://www.gocomics.com/garfield/2017/06/12 One strip has a mouse asking Garfield this about a photo album.]]
-->'''Garfield:''' It's where we old folks used to post our selfies.
** [[https://www.gocomics.com/garfield/2017/10/03 A TV example.]]
-->'''TV:''' Don't touch that dial.
-->'''Garfield:''' Okay, I won't. And what's a dial?
* Related: A ''ComicStrip/MyCage'' strip involved Norm getting weird looks for having a portable CD player with him at the gym instead of an [=MP3=] player.
* This [[https://www.offthemark.com/cartoon/technology-computers/telecommunication-phone/2012-03-05 Off the Mark panel cartoon]] shows two anthropomorphic smartphones looking through a house window at an old corded landline phone, saying, "They say she never leaves the house."
* [[http://www.gocomics.com/peanuts/1953/03/01 This]] old ''ComicStrip/{{Peanuts}}'' strip would be a DoubleSubversion of this trope [[UnbuiltTrope had it existed then]]. It's from 1953, so records are still quite relevant, the joke is that the song ''on'' the record references rocking chairs but Charlie Brown and Patty are in a living room filled with that was at the time modern living room furniture: a butterfly chair, a lounger, and an armless swivel chair. They don't know what a rocking chair is.
* In ''ComicStrip/PhoebeAndHerUnicorn'', Marigold (a centuries-old unicorn) offers to take Phoebe (a little girl) to a record store. "What's a record?" In a different strip, Phoebe isn't sure what a "radio" is. Marigold's reaction in both cases: "I'm old."
* Subverted in one ''ComicStrip/{{Retail}}'' strip, where a customer asks a worker if there's a music store, with the worker responding there's a store that sells vinyl records nearby. The customer then asks if they sell [=CDs=], with the worker asking why they would sell an outdated media format like that (Around the time the strip ran, vinyl records were experiencing a resurgence in popularity).
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Fan Works]]
* {{Inverted}} in ''Fanfic/{{Anthropology}}''. When Lyra is shown some music [=CDs=], she doesn't know what they are, as in Equestria they only have vinyl records. Audrey's father points out how unusual it is for a teenager.
* Also inverted in ''Blog/AskKingSombra'', though this is kind of justified.
-->'''Coffee Talk''': Splitting up is a bad idea anyway. Haven't you ''seen'' what happens in horror movies?\\
'''Sombra''': No, I don't know what "movies" is.
* In the ''WesternAnimation/MyLittlePonyFriendshipIsMagic'' fan-animation ''WebAnimation/ButtonsAdventures'', Button's mother gives him an old ''VideoGame/{{Pong}}'' toy she used to play. Despite being a huge gamer, Button is completely stumped about such a simple game.
* Briefly discussed in ''WebVideo/DragonBallZAbridged''. Future Trunks has [[ItMakesSenseInContext never heard country music before]] and doesn't know what a fax machine is. Pretty much everyone raises their eyebrows at the former, while Krillin comments that the latter at least makes sense. It turns out that in his BadFuture, the Androids went out of their way to wipe out all country music out.
* Played for laughs in [[http://www.deviantart.com/art/G1-Pony-Misc-378312580 this]] ''Franchise/MyLittlePony'' comic. G1 pony Twirler had records as her symbol. A random baby pony mistakes them for [=CDs=], which she implies are something of the past as well.
* ''Fanfic/MikePines'': In chapter 9 of Falling Through The Breach Showtime, when Mike asks Gregory if he touched anything he wasn’t supposed to, Gregory answered that he only took the security badge and some weird thing. Dipper seeing that the weird thing was, in fact, a CD, was shocked that Gregory did not know what a CD was and felt old. Mike, who was from the 80s but aged down to a young adult, again commented that if Dipper was old, then he was ancient.
-->'''Mike''': "Gregory!" Mike shouted as he and Dipper jumped back from the computer they had been working on. "Did you touch something you weren't supposed to?"
-->'''Gregory''': "I uh… took the security badge!" Gregory replied, showing the others what he had found. "And also this weird old thing!"
-->'''Dipper''': "You don't know what a CD is?" Dipper said in disbelief. "I feel old…
-->'''Mike''': "If you're old then I'm ancient," Mike joked before focusing back on their current situation.
* In a sidestory of ''Fanfic/PokemonResetBloodlines'', Gary Oak meets a retired trainer named Casey Snagem, who talks [[NoodleIncident about having been beaten once by a Jigglypuff in a princess dress]]. When Gary gives him a funny look, it leads to the following:
--> '''Casey Snagem''': [[NotMakingThisUpDisclaimer I am not kidding. I actually have it on VCR.]]
--> '''Gary''': VC what?
* Some ''Franchise/TouhouProject'' fanart uses this as the premise of a joke by having Sanae (who was in high school when she crossed over to Gensokyo) explain modern technology to other residents... and be a victim of it herself on occasion when confronted by more recent arrivals. (Case in point, [[https://safebooru.donmai.us/posts/5215835 a 2022 picture where she considers the 16-year-old Wii to be recent.)]]
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Film -- Live Action]]
* Inverted in ''Film/AustinPowersInternationalManOfMystery'', when Powers attempts to play a CD on a portable turntable. An early script of the second film had Felicity doing the same thing at the very end.
* In ''Film/HoneyWeShrunkOurselves'' (a straight-to-video sequel to ''Film/HoneyIShrunkTheKids''), Wayne Szalinski describes the gramophone to his son as "an early record player". He then has to clarify that the record player was "an early CD player".
* In ''Film/NightworldLostSouls'', Victor and his son Jesse discover an old device in a disused room. Victor comments, "Looks like an old phonograph." Jesse says, "What's that?" Victor says, "An old record player." Jesse says, "What's that?" Victor says, "Never mind."
* A phonograph is one of the many things Creator/WoodyAllen's character is tasked with identifying in the FutureImperfect setting of ''{{Film/Sleeper}}''.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Literature]]
* In ''[[Literature/RiversOfLondon False Value]]'', the otherwise tech-savvy Peter has no clue what Wicked is talking about when the old funfair showman says that the music "books" for his antique mechanical organ work like ''computer punch cards''. A more archaic technology than most examples, but given Peter's usual interest in both computers and history, it's an embarrassing blind spot in his knowledge.
* In ''Literature/TheManyHalfLivedLivesOfSamSylvester'', Sam's dad finds a TimeCapsule containing cassette tapes, which Shep has never heard of. She says dubiously, "That really plays music?"
* ''Literature/OneThirdNerd'': When Dodge mentions magazines and newspapers, Izzy asks, "What are they?" Dakota explains, "Newspapers are how people used to find out things before cars but after dinosaurs." Mom explains that newspapers still exist and she reads one online, causing Dakota to grumble that they shouldn't be called news''paper''s if they're digital.
* In the ''Literature/PilgrennonsChildren'' novel ''Pilgrennon's Beacon'', which is set TwentyMinutesIntoTheFuture, Pilgrennon shows Dana an old computer with a mouse, and she doesn't know what it is. She's used to using touchscreens with a stylus.
* In ''[[Literature/SmokeAndShadows Smoke and Mirrors]]'', while trapped in a HauntedHouse, an irritable TV actor makes a reference to putting another record on. Which leads to this exchange between the sound guy and the producer's two pre-teen daughters:
-->'''Brianna:''' What's a record?
-->'''Zev:''' It's like a great big CD.
-->'''Brianna:''' No one cool uses [=CDs=] anymore.
-->'''Ashley:''' They're like from another time.
* ''Literature/WildOrchid'': In ''Waiting for No One'', Sadie tells Taylor about buying records. Taylor doesn't know what records are, so Sadie explains that they're large [=CDs=].
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
* ''Series/{{Acapulco}}'': Maximo has to explain to his Gen-Z nephew what a payphone is. He describes it as a smartphone glued to the wall that you have to put coins in.
* In ''Series/AgentsOfSHIELD'', while Coulson is explaining a [[GroundhogDayLoop time loop]] the team is trapped in:
-->'''Coulson:''' The time-drive is stuck. It keeps looping back on itself over and over again.
-->'''Daisy:''' Like feedback.
-->'''Coulson:''' I've been thinking about it like a record skipping.
-->''[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lShTjR8NybQ&t=91 (Daisy gives him a condescending head tilt)]]''
-->'''Coulson:''' Every time I say that, you give me the same look. Vinyl's back! You're supposed to know records again.
-->''(the loop restarts again)''
* ''Series/TheColbertReport'':
** One episode had Creator/{{Stephen|Colbert}} interviewing an NYU art history major. The conversation went something like this:
-->'''Stephen:''' Music/TedNugent has condemned your generation as lazy and apathetic. Your response?
-->'''NYU Major:''' Who's Ted Nugent?
-->'''Stephen:''' Well, uh, he made a bunch of hit records in the 70s.
-->'''NYU Major:''' What's a record?
-->'''Stephen:''' Okay, uh, it's the way we used to buy music.
-->'''NYU Major:''' ''Buy'' music!?
** In another episode, he explains that "for you young, hip kids", a gramophone was a type of record player, which is like a CD player, which is like an iPod, which, "for you young, ''extremely'' hip kids", is [[SubvertedTrope kind of like a record player]].
* Cliff Huxtable in ''Series/TheCosbyShow'' does a variation on this. Cliff has a huge collection of old jazz records that he keeps in his basement as a form of "offspring repellent". If the kids come down there, he invites them to listen to his jazz records. They always refuse and run away.
* ''Series/CowboyBebop2021''. Faye Valentine looks in her Identikit, which stores any records of her past, finds only a VHS tape, and says: "What the fuck are you?" Fortunately, unlike the anime, Spike and Jet appear to have no problem getting hold of a machine that can play it.
* The week of Valentine's Day in 2012 had an 80s themed week for the UK ''Series/DealOrNoDeal''. It featured an interesting twist involving a cassette necklace. According to Noel Edmonds, this could have been a problem to younger viewers who wouldn't know what cassettes were.
* ''Series/DoctorWho'' pulls it quite often in the new series, as most people born sometime in the '80s or later have little to no frame of reference for [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Police_call_box Police Boxes]] (other than from the cultural impact of ''Doctor Who''); improved communications technology, such as personal radios for police officers and the wider availability of home telephones [[note]]''Not'' mobile phones, as is sometimes suggested; they were already on their way out when cellphones were still the size of bricks and cost several hundred pounds[[/note]] and the shift away from foot patrols made them largely redundant.
* In the ''Series/HenryDanger'' episode "Indestructible Henry, Part 1", Ray gives Henry and Charlotte an old VCR tape to watch, and both of them try to find the on button on the tape until realizing they can't even find a screen. Henry then believes that the reels are what you look into.
* ''Series/HomeImprovement'':
** In an episode Jill offers the boys "her old 45s" for a party, to which one of them responds; "You're giving us guns?"
** In another episode: Brad calls a record player a "machine that plays the black round things that spin", Tim corrects him and later Mark tells Tim that he read about record players in his history class.
* Inverted in an episode of ''Series/{{House}}'' where a man has just awoken from a vegetative state after ten years and asks what an "Ip-odd" is.
* This comes up in the episode "Purple Panther, Part 1" on ''Series/LazyTown'' when the kids start a [=LazyTown=] Museum. Stingy brings in the mayor's old record player that he found lying around and none of the kids have any idea what it is, asking where you put the CD or connect the USB.
* ''Series/LockeAndKey2020'': In season 2, Duncan and Bode come upon Rendell's old cassette tape collection.
-->'''Bode''': What are they?\\
'''Duncan''': Seriously? These are what cavemen like your dad and me used to listen to music on.\\
'''Bode''': Oh, are they... what did you call them... iPods?
* An early example: ''Series/MarriedWithChildren''. When Kelly asks "What's a record?" Bud's response is, "For you? [[ReallyGetsAround The second date]]."
%%* Used in ''Series/MyFamily''.
* Joey in ''Series/MyTwoDads'' is trying to show the kids at a party thrown for his daughter that he's still cool. He refers to his Beatles album, to which two of the kids at the party reply with "Beatles?" and "''Album''?" as if they'd never heard either term before. CD's were still freshly popular at the time, not to mention that "album" usually means "collection of songs", and not "vinyl recording." Kids were still calling them "albums" even after CD's became popular. Not to mention that there probably has never been a time since the late 60's that the Beatles ''weren't'' considered one of the greatest bands of all time, even by those who have never listened to them. The idea of teenagers in the 80's who had never heard of the Beatles is laughable.
* In ''Series/MyWifeAndKids'' the children are genuinely stunned and amazed that Michael was able to turn on the TV by pressing buttons on it rather than use the remote, even asking how he did it.
* ''Series/TheNanny'' had this little tidbit:
-->'''Brighton:''' Hey, is it true back then people used to listen to their music on some sort of primitive large black vinyl disc?\\
'''Fran:''' Only when we weren't enjoying our favorite pastime, child hurling!
* In the ''Series/{{NCIS}}'' episode "Power Down", a blackout forces the team to work with less advanced technology than they're used to. This includes a device called a mimeograph (not stated in dialogue), an old-style photocopier that only Gibbs knows how to use.
* An UnbuiltTrope variant: there was a ''Series/NotTheNineOClockNews'' sketch, back in the days when everyone knew what records were, that had the staff in an electronics store laughing at a man who wanted to buy a gramophone.
* This is Apollo's reaction in "A Present for Mom" on ''Series/ThePajanimals'' when Mr. Happy Birthday offers him a jazz record as a present for the Pajanimals mom's birthday.
* ''Series/PaperGirls'' has an inversion: The eponymous girls are from the 1980s, but were transported into 2019. Accordingly, they are simultaneously confused and amazed by modern technology. In one notable scene, Mac ridicules her now-adult brother's car for lacking a tape deck before staring in wonder when he demonstrates the voice-activated sound system.
* This is starting to be a RunningGag on ''Series/{{Revolution}}'', since the younger generation is almost wholly ignorant of pre-Blackout culture. When [[DeadpanSnarker Miles]] comments on Jason's "boyband face", Jason asks what a boyband is. Later on in the second season, Charlie is baffled to learn that granola bars were considered food.
* ''Series/Runaways2017'': Molly's parents, who died when she was very young, left a videotape for her to find once she was old enough to seek more information about them. The problem? She's only 14 and when she finds the tape, she has no idea what it is.
* In ''Series/TheSarahJaneAdventures'' serial "The Man Who Never Was", Sarah Jane's old editor tells her kids he still uses a typewriter. Sky's response is an innocent "What's a typewriter?" {{Justified|Trope}} because Sky was born circa 2011 and aged up by phlebotinum.
* ''Series/TedLasso'': After Ted learns that [[spoiler:Roy and Keeley have broken up]], he asks the team's young kit manager Will to run to Ted's apartment and retrieve his breakup mixtape CD. Will asks Ted what a CD is, so Coach Beard decides to retrieve it himself.
* ''Series/TowerPrep'' showed where this trend might be going. When they find a record, CJ and Suki ask what it is. Gabe responds that "it's kind of like a hard copy of a [=MP3.=]" Never once were [=CDs=] mentioned, showing that [=CDs=] might quickly become the new records.
* In "not slow not bad" from ''Series/UtopiaUS'', Grant discovers an old Ameritech telephone directory book and, most likely having looked up phone numbers entirely using the Internet, mutters to himself asking what it is.
* In an episode of ''Series/VeronicaMars'' that aired in 2006, Veronica expresses surprise that "they still make vinyl". Piz tells her that they still put out dance music on vinyl, but being a record collector, he should know that vinyl was and is more extensive than that. In a previous episode he was seen with a copy of ''Music/LondonCalling'' by Music/TheClash, which he said was unscratched and cost him 99c, which implies it's an original pressing, but the cover is a little ''too'' pristine not to be new, which means the writers didn't have an excuse for their ignorance either.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Music]]
* Music/SteveAlbini, musician and producer (or "recording engineer" as he prefers to be credited, if at all) of many, many obscure and semi-obscure albums, as well as better known albums by Music/{{Nirvana}}, Music/PJHarvey, Music/{{Bush}} and Music/CheapTrick, declared an inversion in the liner notes of the ''CD version'' of his own band Music/BigBlack's album ''Music/SongsAboutFucking'': "The future belongs to analog loyalists. Fuck digital". He later re-iterated his [[SarcasmMode vague, non-committal stance on the issue]], releasing two Big Black [=EPs=] on a single CD which he titled ''The Rich Man's 8-Track Tape''.
* The Blues Brothers album ''Briefcase Full of Blues'' invokes this trope by opening with Elwood telling the audience that "so much of the music we listen to today is pre-programmed electronic disco that by the year 2006, the music known as the blues will exist only in the Classical Music section of your local public library."
* Kerri Chandler's "Mommy What's a Record" has an OpeningNarration that describes how a woman's son asks her this question after seeing the records he just bought.
* "The Vinyl Countdown" by Music/RelientK is a song lamenting how kids these days don't know what records are. Naturally, it was a vinyl-exclusive single.
* Fred Schneider of Music/TheB52s grew up in a time when the word "album" was used as a shorthand for long-playing vinyl and not the collection of tracks itself. As a result, he will often refer to one of the group's early albums and correct himself to say 'oh, it's a CD now'.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Podcast]]
* In ''Film/TheRocketeer'' episode of ''Podcast/EscapeFromVaultDisney'', Ryan has an aside where he explains to younger viewers what a cassette tape is.
--> '''Ryan:''' It's like Spotify, except it sucks. And now, back to the AARP podcast!
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Radio]]
* British teens and young adults have rather less excuse to play this trope straight than in most countries. John Peel, TheLastDJ on [[Creator/TheBBC BBC]] Radio 1,[[note]]the pop music[=/=]"youth"'[=/=]LowestCommonDenominator crap station[[/note]] would frequently bring in and play old vinyl records from his personal collection. "I'm sorry, I seem to have played that at the wrong speed" was one of his many {{Catch Phrase}}s, although on at least one occasion he played a 33 at 45 by mistake but decided it sounded better that way.
* Invoked but averted in an episode of ''Making History'', when Iszi Lawrence says young people she's spoken to ''do'' know what records are -- they're something hipsters buy.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Theater]]
* Invoked in ''Radio/CarTalk: The Musical'', in the form of a joke designed to fly right by anyone under 40. A man is lamenting that, at age 45, he's too young to have a heart attack. His boss tells him, "Hey, 45 is the new 78." Anyone in the audience who laughs has gray hair.
* Used briefly in the opening monologue of ''Theatre/TheDrowsyChaperone'', when the Man in the Chair says that when he feels blue, he likes to listen to his records - [[ExactWords yes, records]].
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Video Games]]
* ''VideoGame/AnotherCode'': In ''Journey into Lost Memories'', Ashley and Matthew find a floppy disk when investigating the disappearance of the latter's father. 16-year-old Ashley is familiar with the storage format, while 13-year-old Matthew isn't, prompting Ashley to describe it being similar to a USB stick. Though given the time period of the story (2007), it's likely this has more to do with his affluent upbringing rather than his age.
* ''VideoGame/{{Fallout 3}}'' - Three Dog says "I'm your friendly neighborhood disc jockey. What's a disc? Hell if I know, but I'm gonna keep talking anyway." But ''VideoGame/{{Fallout}}'' is very {{Zeerust}}, so records were not replaced with tapes, [=CDs=], and [=MP3s=], but with holo-based cassette tapes the size of 45s.
** [[JustifiedTrope There's also the fact that Three-Dog]] [[FutureImperfect hails from a post-apocalyptic Washington, DC]].
* In ''VideoGame/GravityFallsLegendOfTheGnomeGemulets'', various [=NPCs=] [[TwentyBearAsses want you to get several of some kind of item]] [[FetchQuest for them]] because they lost these things one way or another. Soos lost some floppy disks, and when he asks you to look for them, he explains they're an old form of data storage and that they're really good for keeping things secret since most computers don't have a way to read them any more. Wendy wants cassette tapes that her dad apparently threw out the car window on a road trip, but she doesn't feel the need to explain what they are, though she does make it clear through context (specifically mentioning that her dad "doesn't appreciate good music").
* One of the things Ellie... [[KleptomaniacHero borrows]] from Bill in ''VideoGame/TheLastOfUs'' is a music tape, which she hands to Joel:
-->'''Ellie:''' Here. This make you all nostalgic?
-->'''Joel:''' (chuckling) Y'know, that is actually [[BeforeMyTime before my time]]. That is a winner, though.
* More than one streamer/let's player has found themselves stuck in one particular optional puzzle in ''[[VideoGame/TheRoomMobileGame The Room 3]]'' due to said puzzle requiring dialing a number on a rotary dial, which the vast majority of younger generations have never had to do.
* Spider-Man 2099 in ''VideoGame/SpiderManEdgeOfTime''. Apparently there aren't even ''toasters'' in the future.
* In ''[[VideoGame/AFinalUnity Star Trek: A Final Unity]]'', Picard and his Away Team are on an alien planet when they find a paper clip. Being from a society that has never used paper documents, they are completely mystified by its purpose. They then end up using it for a purpose that [[TechnologyMarchesOn used to exist at the time the game was made]] but has rapidly faded out from use even in our time: manually ejecting a device out of a computer, a-la [=CD-ROM=] drives.
--> '''Picard:''' It looks similar to an ancient earth artifact I've seen, but I can't remember its purpose.
** Data, being the smartest of the bunch, does seem to figure it out (if he's present at all) - but still doesn't seem to know that it's called a paperclip.
--> '''Data:''' [[ExpospeakGag This object appears to be an implement for holding sheets of flexible material together]].
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Visual Novels]]
* Averted in ''VisualNovel/{{Melody}}''. The title character loves old music, but neither she nor the protagonist has anything on vinyl.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Web Animation]]
* In the [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HIi624cLr48 first episode]] of "The Marshmallow Money Show" (a Flash series that was once on the old Creator/CartoonNetwork website), Science notes that record stores nowadays only sell [=CDs=] and tapes, yet they are still called "''record'' stores", to which Trey responds "What's a record?"
* Mikayla from ''WebAnimation/TheMostPopularGirlsInSchool'' is constantly called a Film/{{Gremlin|s}}. Her reply in one episode is "I was born in 2003. I have no idea what a 'Gremlin' is."
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Webcomics]]
* ''Webcomic/BatmanWayneFamilyAdventures'': In "Newsflash", [[Characters/RobinDamianWayne Damian]] and [[Characters/SupermanJonathanSamuelKent Jon]] are confused when [[ComicBook/{{Superman}} Clark]] mentions [[PhoneBoothChangingRoom changing in phone booths]] to save the day, which has largely become a DiscreditedTrope thanks to the rise of cellphones.
-->'''Jon:''' What's a phone booth?
-->'''Damian:''' Whatever they are, I am certain they are not appropriate places to change clothes.
-->'''Clark:''' ''[rubbing his face]'' I'm so old.
* Inverted in ''Webcomic/{{Homestuck}}'' when [[https://www.homestuck.com/story/3730 Terezi places a record-themed CD on a gramophone,]] causing it to scratch.
* ''Webcomic/{{Housepets}}'':
** [[http://www.housepetscomic.com/comic/2018/10/19/forbidden-format/ Grape]] has trouble understanding how a video rental store works, and doesn't recognize a VHS tape when she picks one up, though at least she knows what a DVD is.
** Grape is later on the other end of the when [[https://www.housepetscomic.com/comic/2020/05/15/i-can-show-you-the-jurassic-world/ Olive asks her what a Laserdisc is.]]
--->'''Sabrina:''' So you don't know what a VHS is but you ''do'' know what a Laserdisc is?
* ''Webcomic/PracticeMakesPerfect'': Happens [[https://pmp.kemono.cafe/comic/title-017/ here]] when Jess finds her grandmother's phone is attached to a wall and connected with a cord. As it is unlike mobile phones, she thinks that phone has a cord to keep it from being stolen!
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Web Original]]
* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=26eQ3QpNB6Q This]] [=BuzzFeed=] video explains the concept of VHS and brick-and-mortar video stores in a way that assumes that today's kids only know about Netflix and other streaming services.
* Happens with LetsPlay/TheCreatures in one of their game nights. While playing a video game version of ''Series/FamilyFeud'', one of the questions was "Name something someone would plug in." [[LetsPlay/UberHaxorNova Nova]] enters "VCR" and is annoyed when he receives zero points for that answer, claiming that people still own VCR's even if they're not popular anymore.
* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B53b2umtysc "Generational Divide,"]] courtesy of WebVideo/FiveSecondFilms.
* In Brazilian website Charges.com.br, the character Fimose wanted to be a DJ and bought a record player (or a ''big black CD'' like a friend of his called records) and played it like it was a guitar.
* ''WebVideo/JoueurDuGrenier'' had a gag where Fred explains what a newspaper is to the younger members of the audience, with Seb asking if he could possibly make it any more condescending.
* [[WebVideo/{{React}} Kids React To...]] (and occasionally ''Teens React'') demonstrates this trope with things like [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0pCp8g-VjOs the first Gameboy,]] [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Uk_vV-JRZ6E Walkmans]] and [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vfxRfkZdiAQ Typewriters,]] among other things. This noticeably subverts the trope fairly often, as many of the kids and teens (even as young as 6 years old) recognize the items and their function through PopCultureOsmosis or having them in their families and just need some coaxing to figure out the details of using them.
* The Music/NewOrder documentary podcast ''Transmissions'' takes a detour during the "Blue Monday" episode to quite patronisingly explain what a 12" single is, to people sufficiently interested in New Order to actively seek out a podcast about their most famous 12" record - exactly the sort of audience who do ''not'' need it explained. Despite several references, they ''don't'' do the same for floppy disks, a technology it's more plausible to suppose listeners might be unfamiliar with.
* ''WebVideo/TheNostalgiaChick'' explains books in this fashion.
* ''Website/TheOnion'':
** ''The Onion'' has a video satire called [[http://www.theonion.com/video/historic-blockbuster-store-offers-glimpse-of-how-m,14233 "Historic ‘Blockbuster’ Store Offers Glimpse Of How Movies Were Rented In The Past"]] with all the actors playing out this trope.
** Lampshaded in a profile of the year's incoming freshman college students: "Chalkboards, paper books, and VHS tapes are all items they’ve been told they don’t remember or recognize."
* ''WebVideo/TheSpoonyExperiment'' occasionally reviews old computer games, prompting Spoony to explain to the youngsters what things like floppy disks and [=BBSs=] were.
* ''WebVideo/ToddInTheShadows'' takes this line of reasoning with his review of Music/Maroon5's "Payphone".
* One Internet meme has people explaining that they [[RapidAging aged so rapidly as to turn to dust]] during a conversation with a younger person, usually in response to a WhatAreRecords question like "What's a brony?", "What's teabagging mean?", learning ''VideoGame/MassEffect'' is now a retro game, etc.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Western Animation]]
%%* Used in ''WesternAnimation/AllGrownUp'', with Suzie Carmichael.
* ''WesternAnimation/TheAmazingWorldOfGumball'': In "The Ghouls", Alan and Leslie find a videotape at a park and pick it up, reading "It could be the last thing you ever watch"; Alan is more concerned because of littering. They initially mistake it for a book made of plastic ribbon, and try to use it as a yo-yo, until a [[Literature/TheRing Samara]] {{Expy}} has to explain everything for them, and leads them to their school's art room which has a VCR. This ignorance is [[RuleOfFunny purely for this sake of this one scene]], as video tapes have been shown being used regularly in their class and a whole previous episode was based on the kids recording things with a tape-based camera.
* In the ''WesternAnimation/{{Amphibia}}'' episdoe "Fort in the Road", after the Planters finds some sort of hidden factory, the ancient computer there keeps asking them to "insert disk", which confuses everyone there.
-->'''Computer:''' INSERT DISK. INSERT DISK...
-->'''Sprig:''' Anne, what the heck is a disk!?
-->'''Anne:''' I don't know! [[TrappedInAnotherWorld I'm from another dimension,]] not the 90s!
* ''WesternAnimation/{{Arthur}}'':
** Played straight in "Francine Frensky, Superstar". (Note: This was one of the earliest episodes of the show, the first season of a program that [[LongRunner would run into the 2020s]].) The kids shoot blank looks at Mr. Ratburn when he talks about Thomas Edison's invention, the phonograph, and prompts the following exchange:
--->'''Ratburn:''' It was before [=CDs=]. It played music, with a needle.\\
'''Binky:''' Is that a joke?
** This may explain why, in the later episode "Popular Girls" (Season 3), during a spring break day camp, one group of Arthur's classmates brings in vintage/antique things, and when Jenna demonstrates a record player, the kids all "Oooh" in awe.
** In "Unfinished" (Season 10), Arthur is looking for a replacement copy of the long out-of-print book ''93 Million Miles in a Balloon''. When his mother does an online search for anything relating to the book, she finds out a movie adaptation was produced and can be rented on 16 millimeter. Arthur asks "What's 16 millimeter?" The scene then changes to Arthur and his friends about to watch the movie on a noisy old 16mm film projector...
--->'''Dad:''' It's been 25 years since I've used this old 16mm projector. Hope it makes it!
* An episode of ''WesternAnimation/BatmanBeyond'' has Terry going to the home of a ScienceFiction writer, and finding a typewriter. He pokes at it and asks, "What is this? Some kind of word processor?"
* In an episode of ''WesternAnimation/TheClevelandShow'', Cleveland takes Rallo to a record store ("it's where insufferable people come to find obscure music no one likes") and Rallo asks "where do they keep the [=MP3s=]?" Cleveland tells him that records have a warm sound you can't reproduce digitally, then puts on a hissing, skipping record. "Takes me back".
* Inverted in an episode of ''WesternAnimation/{{Daria}}'' where [[BabysittingEpisode Daria is saddled with a babysitting gig.]] In one scene, the kids are listening to an old record about bouncing on the bed and singing along. [[note]]This episode aired in 1997 and the kids aren't even ten yet.[[/note]] Daria notes how badly scratched the record is and asks why their parents don't just buy them the [=CD=].
-->'''Tad Gupty:''' Compact discs were forced upon consumers so that record companies could increase their profit margins.\\
'''Daria:''' [[SarcasmMode That's important for a six-year-old to know.]]
* In the ''WesternAnimation/DarkwingDuck'' episode "Paraducks", Darkwing and Gosalyn are trying to find a villain in a record store, and Gosalyn asks, "What are records? Are they big [=CDs=]?"
* ''WesternAnimation/EdEddNEddy'':
** In "Quick Shot Ed": The Eds are rummaging through Eddy's attic, Ed finds a 7-inch 45rpm record and says: "I found a donut!" Eddy corrects him and says: "That's a record, chowderhead."
** Eddy has a turntable in his bedroom and is frequently seen playing records. His knowledge of everything is a bit... off.
* ''WesternAnimation/FamilyGuy'':
** Brian tries to impress a girl in a club.
-->'''Brian''': You know, I wrote a book.\\
'''Girl''': What's that?\\
'''Brian''': It's like a really long magazine.\\
'''Girl''': What?\\
'''Brian''': It's like the internet made out of a tree.\\
'''Girl''': Weird...
** Inverted on a cutaway featuring Music/TheBeatles:
-->'''Paul''': Well, lads, what do you think of [[Music/SgtPeppersLonelyHeartsClubBand the new album cover]]?\\
'''Ringo''': Great, but it won't look good when it's shrunk down for a CD.\\
'''Paul''': CD? What's a CD?\\
'''Ringo''': A digital compact disc.\\
'''John''': Ringo, are you from the future?
* Used liberally in ''WesternAnimation/{{Futurama}}'' pretty much anytime old technology is mentioned or found.
-->'''Professor Farnsworth:''' Show us this... "The Wheel".
* ''WesternAnimation/GarfieldAndFriends'':
** One of the earliest uses of this trope was an episode entitled "The Record Breakers". Jon was trying to impress a potential date with his record collection but Garfield and Odie inadvertently broke his player. [[SerialEscalation She didn't know what records were; unfortunately, neither did the clerk at the electronics store. The antiques dealer needed a hint.]] Note: Said dealer was an old man who was a kid the last time he listened to a record and he only listened because his ''grandfather'' introduced him to them.
** Exaggerated even more in another episode, where people acted like they were ''already'' in a NoPaperFuture. When Jon cut up all his credit cards after Garfield had abused them one time too many, he tried to buy a new wastebasket with cash. The clerk had no idea what paper money was... and, as it turns out, ''no one'' would accept cash as legal tender. Even the ''police'' had to take the money to a lab to verify that it was, in fact, money.
* ''WesternAnimation/TheGhostAndMollyMcGee'': In "The Unhaunting of Brighton Video", Molly and her friends Libby and Ollie investigate a ghost at an abandoned video rental store. Molly confidently offers to explain how video tapes work to a confused Libby and Ollie, only to attempt operating one like a tablet and giving up when it doesn't work. Ollie soon after mistakes a VCR for some kind of toaster, to the disgust of the store's resident ghost.
* Subverted in an episode of ''WesternAnimation/KimPossible'', where the grandmother gave Kim's younger brothers a collection of vinyl records. They've never ''seen'' records before, but know what they are, which made them excited to receive them.
-->'''First twin:''' Wow, vinyl records! The legends were true!\\
'''Second twin:''' C'mon, let's burn them into [=MP3s=]!
* In the ''WesternAnimation/KingOfTheHill'' episode "Just Another Manic-Kahn Day", Bobby and Joseph find a box of Hank's old record albums. Bobby knows what they are but Joseph picks up a record and says: "The computer these things go into must be huge!"
* On ''Literature/LlamaLlama'', when the band cancels for Grams's birthday party in "Band Together" due to having the flu, Mama Llama tells Llama Llama that they'll play Grams's favorite song on an old-school vinyl or a CD. Llama asks what those are; she chuckles and describes them as "ancient technology, but they'll play the kind of music we're looking for."
* ''WesternAnimation/MickeyMouseClubhouse'': One episode has Mickey and his friends discover a cave that holds a giant golden record inside, thus making the cave "a big old record player". When Goofy asks what a record player is, Mickey describes it as an "ancient machine".
* ''WesternAnimation/MollyOfDenali'': In "Turn On the Northern Lights," Trini is astonished that Grandpa Nat's rotary phone is a phone at all, since it doesn't text.
* ''WesternAnimation/MoonGirlAndDevilDinosaur2023'': Lunella may be a scientific genius, but when her mom loans her a cassette player in the pilot, she has no idea what it is.
* In an episode of ''WesternAnimation/TheMrPeabodyAndShermanShow'', Peabody tries to do a show about his vinyl record collection, but Sherman has no idea what he's talking about and assumed the episode was about world records instead.
-->'''Sherman''': What's a vinyl record?\\
'''Peabody''': It's like a CD!\\
'''Sherman''': What's a CD?
* ''WesternAnimation/{{Ninjago}}'': Played with. Lloyd (the youngest of the group) didn't know what a VCR was when first mentioned in discussion, but ends up recognizing one on sight as "That thing Master Wu watches old ninja movies on" and knows how to work it.
* ''WesternAnimation/OKKOLetsBeHeroes'':
** In "Know Your Mom", the [[VagueAge 6-11 year old]] KO runs into a phone booth to make a call. He says "What the heck is this thing?" towards the phone then pulls out his smartphone.
** Later on in "Lord Cowboy Darrel", he asks Rad what a newspaper is when he sees Enid reading one. Except he knew what it was, and just liked messing with "old people".
* In "Olivia Makes Memories" from ''WesternAnimation/{{Olivia}}'', Olivia and her brother Ian find their Grandma's time capsule. Grandma discovers that the camera in it still has film in it and tells Olivia as much, and Olivia asks her "What's film?" She is then shocked when Grandma tells her that she has to wait two minutes for it to develop.
* Averted on ''WesternAnimation/PeppaPig''. When Peppa and her little brother George find a record player in Granny and Grandpa's attic, both seem to immediately recognize it for what it is and Peppa asks them to play the record they found with it.
* ''WesternAnimation/PhineasAndFerb'':
** Lampshaded (like [[BetterThanABareBulb so many other things]]) in episode "Phineas and Ferb's Clip-Tastic Countdown", when Dr. Doofenshmirtz complains about a MonkeysOnATypewriter joke by pointing out how unlikely it is that any of the kids watching at home will know what a typewriter is.
** Also, Linda seems to be the ''only'' person in the entire Tri-State Area who remembers analog and disposable still cameras.
* Inverted by Mayor on ''WesternAnimation/ThePowerpuffGirls'', who tries to play a CD on an old-fashioned record player (and proceeds to mistake the horrible scratching noises that ensue for "techno music").
* ''WesternAnimation/RegularShow'': Done in a ChristmasEpisode when the Park Crew have to make their way through some caverns and get past the challenges. At one point they come across an old pinball table that they need to play to continue. Oddly, Mordecai and Rigby don't know what it is despite being avid gamers and arcade goers, but Benson says it was "something before their time" and takes up the challenge.
* ''{{WesternAnimation/Rugrats}}'' averted this, as Chuckie could sometimes be seen playing records (like in "Down the Drain" and "Chuckie's Bachelor Pad"), and Angelica was seen [[VinylShatters breaking Chuckie's records for kicks]] in "Give and Take." Then again the series takes place in the early to late 1990s, not too long after records began being displaced.
* ''WesternAnimation/ScoobyDooAndGuessWho'': In "The Internet on Haunted House Hill!", when Velma says the titular house is haunted by the ghost of a guy who used to run a newspaper, Scooby asks what newspapers are.
* ''WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons''
** Also in Season 13 episode "Gump Roast", at Homer Simpson's roast, Krusty begins reading telegrams from people who couldn't be there:
--->'''Krusty:''' Now I'd like to read some telegrams from people who couldn't make it. First, we have Mark Spitz.\\
'''Lisa:''' Who's Mark Spitz?\\
'''Bart:''' What's a telegram?
** In a Season 27 episode, Bart and Lisa find a pile of old cathode tube television sets and say that "they're like [=TVs=], but they seem to go on forever." Ironically, they're like the TV the Simpsons used to have in earlier seasons.
** In "The Sound of Bleeding Gums" (Season 33), Lisa learns that her late mentor, Bleeding Gums Murphy, has a son she never knew about, and his spirit advises her to look him up in the phone book.
--->'''Lisa:''' What's a phone book?
--->'''Bleeding Gums:''' I ''have'' been dead a long time.
* From ''WesternAnimation/SouthPark,'' when Stan is trying to convince the Goth Kids to buy their Platform/PlayStation4 early instead of waiting until they're cheaper:
-->'''Stan:''' [[SeriousBusiness Battle lines are being drawn]]! If you wait it out, but everyone else has already decided to go with [[Platform/XBoxOne XBox]], then that will become the standard! The [=PS4=] would be like Betamax was to VHS.\\
'''Henrietta:''' What's Betamax?\\
'''Stan:''' ''[[AppealToObscurity Exactly]]!''\\
'''Pete:''' [[AnalogyBackfire What's VHS?]]
* ''WesternAnimation/StarVsTheForcesOfEvil'': Marco once called a typewriter a "vintage laptop".
* Parodied in ''WesternAnimation/StevenUniverse'': Teenager Sadie mistakes Steven asking what is ''on'' a specific VHS [[AmbiguousSyntax for him asking]] what ''is'' a VHS. She explains that it's basically a box-shaped DVD. Steven actually owns a VCR and a decent collection of tapes.
* One episode of ''WesternAnimation/TeenageMutantNinjaTurtles1987'' had the Turtles take cover behind a stack of boxes. Raphael looks into the boxes and the following conversation takes place:
-->'''Raphael:''' Donatello, what are these?
-->'''Donatello:''' They're records. They're what people used to listen to before they had compact discs.
-->'''Michaelangelo:''' Whoa! Someone really burned these pizzas!
* ''WesternAnimation/TeenTitansGo'' has Cyborg tell the other Titans they couldn't program a VCR...and being the ''Teen'' Titans, none of the others have any idea what a VCR is. Starfire (being an alien) and Beast Boy (being the youngest) have excuses but Robin at least seems old enough that he should know what they are. RuleOfFunny is obviously the reason why.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Real Life]]
* Music/FrankZappa was once the victim of an [[InvokedTrope invoked version]] of this trope. During a legal battle for payment for some music he composed and conducted in Britain, the judge asked what a "record" was. As noted in our article on UsefulNotes/BritishCourts, however, this was probably intentional on the part of the judge. British judges -- particularly old-school ones -- generally presume ignorance on the part of everyone in court, and ask questions like "what is a record?" [[AsYouKnow just in case a member of the jury or someone reading the court transcripts later on does not know what a record is]]. The judge most likely knew ''exactly'' what a record was and probably had a collection of them at home. Considering British lawyers can, when pressed, turn to court decisions from the age of Richard I to bolster their case, the judge's actions were very much justified.
** Clarity of definition may also have been a necessary formality under the circumstances: in ''most'' court cases, any references to "records" would be concerned with ''documents'', not audio-playback media. So, once again, it's necessary context for the court transcripts and everyone involved to be as clear as possible regarding which is being referred to.
* This is a question that really cannot be asked of fans of ''[[WesternAnimation/TheLionKing1994 The Lion King]]''. [[Music/TheLionKing1994 Its soundtrack]] has the distinction of being the first album released in the Nielsen [=SoundScan=] era (since 1991) to sell 1 million copies ''in the vinyl format''. It achieved the milestone in 2014.
* At a certain (non-secret) base in the US there is a room that can only be entered by using the phone on the outside of the room to call the people inside of the room to come and open the door. The phone on the outside of the room is a rotary phone and there have been cases where the new, younger people don't know how to operate the phone. Given that the doors and walls may be several feet thick, the phone was installed to let the guards know who was on the other side of the door, but one has to wonder what the purpose of dialing is if you'll only ever use it to call the other side to open the door.
* [[WordOfGod Hasbro has cited]] the target audience of children being unfamiliar with analog media formats as a reason why they're adverse to making new ''Franchise/{{Transformers}}'' media where Soundwave turns into a cassette player. While toys representing [[Franchise/TransformersGenerationOne G1 Soundwave]] typically keep the tape-player mode and toys representing his appearances in shows from the mid 2000s onward have him become a variety of other things, [[FlipFlopOfGod this is not a hard and fast rule]]:
** 2012 saw two separate Soundwave toys hit the market. The one that turns into a tape player released as part of the high-end, collector-oriented "Masterpiece"; the kid-oriented one is based on his armored car form from ''VideoGame/TransformersFallOfCybertron''.
** The ''Titans Return'' subline from 2016 features both Soundwave and his Autobot counterpart Blaster as cassette players. On the other hand, their microcassette minions are reinvented as tablets, of all things.
** Upon its initial release, the Soundwave from the ''WesternAnimation/TransformersWarForCybertronTrilogy'' subline transformed into a hovercraft despite the robot mode being heavily inspired by the original tape deck design. Sure enough, the next release of the toy saw it heavily altered to allow Soundwave to become a cassette player.
* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7v75QpvISUs This video]] shows the children of a mother who grew up in the '80s attempt to use technology from that era. At one point, they're shown having trouble figuring out how to control games on the Platform/Atari2600 despite it only having a joystick and one button. For contrast, [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0FLlxq5LSlo this video]] shows kids trying out a Platform/Commodore64 with considerably more success and appreciation (once they get past the LoadsAndLoadsOfLoading, at least).
* [[http://boingboing.net/2009/06/29/13-year-old-kid-revi.html A 13-year-old boy finds his dad's Sony Walkman.]] It took him, in his own words, ''three days'' to realize that he could take the cassette out, put it in backwards, and get a completely different playlist.
* It is a measure of Music/NeilYoung's continued appeal to people of every age that a fan who was twenty-one years old could and did ask "What's an LP?" on a Neil Young mailing list in 2001.
* [[https://notalwaysright.com/working-against-the-clock/61533/ The teenage employee in this Not Always Working anecdote]] (born c. 1996) had apparently never heard of mechanical watches, despite working in a department store's jewelry department, before attempting to pry the back cover off one, because she thought it needed a battery replacement.
* There's a common anecdote/joke about the floppy disk, which although now very nearly obsolete, continues to see widespread use as the default symbol for "save" in almost every computer application you can think of. These days, kids who see an actual floppy disk lying about may remark that someone's 3D-printed the save icon. Some open-source developers have attempted to look into alternatives, but nobody's hit on anything that's garnered as much appeal or is as instantly recognizable at a small scale yet.
** Relatedly, an online question about [[http://superuser.com/questions/231273/what-are-the-windows-a-and-b-drives-used-for why the default hard disk on a Windows PC is "C"]] led to a lot of "oh my god, I'm an old person" reactions. This is a real life ArtifactTitle, dating to the 1970s: early home computers running CP/M typically had one or two floppy drives, but no hard disk. Later, MS-DOS followed several CP/M conventions for compatibility, which included reserving "A" and "B" for floppy drives.
* In Britain, the warning sign for speed traps is a picture of an antiquated photographic plate camera. Speed cameras being a relatively recent innovation, it seems like a strange glyph to use that would likely confuse people as to what the object actually is.
* An interesting case of this has come about as a result of the UsefulNotes/Covid19Pandemic: As a number of school districts around the world started allowing in-person learning to resume in early 2021, a rather large number of Pre-K through 1st Grade teachers have had to repeatedly explain what Number 2 pencils, hard-copy textbooks, notebook paper, and the like are to their students, who had exclusively been using tablet or laptop computers up to that point. Similarly, some college professors have found themselves in the habit of having to [[https://www.pcgamer.com/students-dont-know-what-files-and-folders-are-professors-say/ explain]] to their students the concept of ''computer files and folders'', since the rise of powerful search functions on desktop [=OSes=] and mobile devices where users have obscured or limited access to the device's file system have removed the need for any file organization.
* {{WebVideo/Techmoan}} once mentioned in a video that he is often asked why the cassette decks he features sometimes have a backwards play button and the fast forward and rewind symbols reversed, and occasionally even had people assume that the buttons had been removed and installed incorrectly and asking how to flip them back. He then explained that the reason those buttons are arrows is because they originally indicated what direction the tape moves in. Some early decks featured the tapes moving the "wrong" way and others flipped the deck upside down so the buttons could sit at the top of the device.
* With the discontinuation of the [=iPod=] Touch in 2022 marking the end of the [=iPod=], some commentators have noted that there are people who regularly listen to podcasts but [[ArtifactTitle have no idea why they're called "podcasts"]].
[[/folder]]

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