I showed up fairly late in the 1964 world arena: America was nearly a year into an accidental presidency following a televised, public execution. My parents were both what I always refer to as Camelot-era kids, wed at a time of pillbox hats and elbow-length gloves, both younger than I ever got to see them, faces full of promise and, I will assume, a certain Cold War angst.
If you're an astrological purist, you might consider the time I was conceived to be more important than my actual birth. Was I conceived the night the Beatles first appeared on the Ed Sullivan Show (9 Feb.)? The Beatles (or Elvis, for that matter) were never on the radar for a young couple from East Harlem living in the Bronx. I was exposed to pretty much nothing but Sinatra on the turntable 'til I was old enough to get my own vinyl (the soundtrack to The Sting, but that's another story).
By October, the Summer Olympics were going on in Tokyo. (Yeah, I guess they wouldn't call them the Autumn Olympics, but it does seem a bit strange.); MLK received the Nobel Peace Prize; Khrushchev was dumped in favor of Brezhnev. None of this would have effected my family's world. But, the Yankees were losing the World Series to the Cardinals: that would be the hospital waiting room chatter while my mother was busy in labor.
What we might now call 'Old Time Radio'was still chugging along even though 'the end was near'.
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