The Robotech Tapes

March 1985. I was in the sixth grade. I had just moved schools because my mother had an issue with the teachers at my old school. I wasn’t happy about it. My friends and my life as I knew it was there at that school. I wasn’t really that outgoing back then. Today, you’d call that introverted. So I didn’t make friends at my new school. Why? because I was going to be here only 4 months then it was summer break. After summer break, it would be another new school – this one called Middle School.

I think back on this time and I believe I felt the affects of anxiety. When I was 12 years old, I just thought it was fear– fear of things, people and places I didn’t know. Recently, I’ve had lots of experiences with anxiety. Growing older, I found that my body sometimes reacts in a manner I don’t believe I feel. It wasn’t until my 40s that I experienced an anxiety attack when I was on a exciting adventure with my family. I thought it was the early symptoms of the flu and I was mad as I didn’t want to be sick while on vacation. Oh how times have changed and now I have an understanding of that feeling. Yet, when you’re a little kid, you just force your way through. I relate this to how dogs deal with new environments or when they find themselves at the veterinarian. Yet, that’s a tale for another time.

So, during that time, at a new school, and no friends, I raced home on my bike after that 3 o’clock bell as fast I could. I found comfort in cartoons. The cartoons of afternoons on channel 13– KCOP 13 Los Angeles. (and no I didn’t live in L.A. Instead it was a hole in New Mexico but the cable company beamed those channels in.) Every afternoon it was Flintstones, Jetsons, Thundercats, He-Man, and now Robotech!

Robotech debuted in a 90-minute premier episode called Codename: Robotech. When I watched it that first day, I will admit I didn’t have a clue what was going on. I was downright confused. But I didn’t care. The show was freaking awesome. It had planes that transformed into robots. Yeah, it was like Transformers but it was better. These weren’t sentient and intelligent alien robots but a “mechanical” or “mecha” that humans controlled. Not sure if it will make sense but I felt this very akin to the worlds of Star Wars, Battlestar Galactica and Buck Rogers. I completely found myself addicted to this show. And I couldn’t get enough. The commercials informed me the new show would be on daily starting Monday starting at 4:30pm. I had learned that time meant it would be an hour later for me. I knew where I’d be everyday at 5:30 and nothing was going to deter me.

There was a few other shows that Robotech reminded me of. Notably Voltron. Votron was my favorite show at the time. And a show that I watched many years earlier called Battle of the Planets. The animation was very similar to both these shows. (as this long story will eventually describe, I had no idea that the shows were Japanese and redubbed for American audiences.) Perhaps this is why I immediately took to Robotech. It had a style that I was familiar with and naturally enjoyed. It was different than He-Man (a Filmation product) and Scooby-Doo (a Hanna-Barbera Animation). It was so detailed. The closest I had seen before that was the G.I.Joe A Real American Hero (1983 and its sequel 1984) mini-series.

So as I travel down this journey known as “The Robotech Tapes” I will explore the history and impact on my life. How this show and other shows forged my idea of storytelling and creativity.

to be continued. and I hope this succeeds….

The Definition of a True 80s Kid….

I was an 80s kid.

I was not born in 1988. That does not count. Doesn’t.

I was born in 1972. I was 8 when the 80s started and 18 when they ended. To be an 80s kid, you needed to be alive for the entire decade. More than that. You have to be able to remember the entire decade. You have to have been present for all the 80s greatness. Including but not limited to: seeing E.T. and Raiders of the Lost Ark in the movie theater, as well as both 80s Star Wars movies! Buying your favorite album on vinyl, cassette and CD. Working on an Apple II in your classroom. Begging your parents for an Atari 2600 and then do it again at the end of the decade for a Nintendo!

I hear the “I’m an 80s kid!” all the time. Then I inquire about their life. I hear they say they were born in 1982. I quickly respond, “you’re not an 80s kid but a 90s one!” Some seem offended. Many realize my point. If you were born in 1982, you were only 8 when the decade ended. There’s no way you ran home from school to watch He-Man, Thundercats, Voltron, Inspector Gadget. You didn’t get up early on Saturday to watch Saturday Morning Cartoons – Smurfs, Spider-man and his Amazing Friends, Carebears, Pac-man, Super Friends.

One doesn’t just have to be born in 1972 to be considered an 80s kid. But I do think the best range of birth years is 1970 through 1975. This allows you to be as young as 5 and as old as 10 when the greatest decade starts. But to be honest, I really think I had the perfect age range to enjoy the 1980s.

So, if you say you’re an 80s kid, make sure this simple definition defines you. If you were a kid and your earliest memories is watching Batman: The Animated Series, unfortunately, you just missed the 80s. You’re all 90s. Not to say I miss that decade from time to time.

Were you an 80s kid? Wasn’t it great?

Of course it was!