Every generation has a different ways of telling a story. We had a great run in the early '90s, into the mid-'90s, and we became a little more executive-driven as we got into the 2000s.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
There's a new television generation coming in every five or 10 years, and the classic stories stand up to being redone.
I graduated in '91, so the '90s for me were very much the first years out of school, so I can't really look at that decade as independent of my own experience of my 20s, really.
The way we experience history and time in all its forms shifted quite massively between 1989 and 2001 - to the point where contrivances like decades are now kind of silly.
The 1990s felt like the 1990s in a real and good way.
Times were changing. Clothes were changing. Morals were changing. We went from romantic loves songs like I used to do to rock 'n roll. Now that has changed to rap. So, there's always a new generation with new music.
The '90s were extremely diverse, almost like a laboratory of the new century. There was much experimenting around, in politics, economics, gender and family structures, and also in fashion. There was a cloud of possibilities which kept us all dizzy.
The '90s will be looked back on as ushering in an era of comfort.
I tend to write about more than one generation because as a child I had contact with more than one generation; it was normal to be around older people.
I had gone to all the big stories of the '80s, which was one of the most fertile times in American journalism, around the world and here as well.
Every generation is obsessed with the decade before they were born.