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Today’s ‘LOL’ is likely to go the way of yesteryear’s ’23 skidoo’
 
The Bookworm Sez By Terri Schlichenmeyer 
 
The Mindset List of the Obscure by Tom McBride and Ron Nief
c.2014, Sourcebooks
$16.99/$19.99 Canada
320 pages
Your father sometimes says really odd things. It’s “in like Flynn” this, or “Julie’s swan song” that, or “Just the facts, ma’am.” He’s been talking that way for as long as you can remember. It’s like living with Richie Cunningham’s dad.
Uh-oh. Would your kids understand that last cultural reference? Did you ever consider that someday, your grandkids may think you’re outdated? Yep – read The Mindset List of the Obscure by Tom McBride and Ron Nief, and get a little perspective.
At least twice a week, you catch your teenager rolling her eyes at something you said because she thinks you’re out of touch. Positively archaic. Dinosaurian, even … which is what you once said about your own parents.
The thing is, each generation has its cultural touchstones – those things or sayings or gadgets that act as social glue. Fortunately, by studying those widespread popular icons from years past, we can understand society a little better today.
Eighty-some years ago, for instance, a couple of guys who were insanely famous on radio, TV and vaudeville did a skit about baseball. It was one of their best-known bits and, in the late 1930s, fans loved hearing Abbott & Costello tell them “Who’s on First?” Today, your kids can see a modern version of that skit on YouTube.
You may not know who owned America’s first “mega-church” (she was also “the second woman in history to get a radio license”), but your grandparents surely did. They also knew about singing telegrams, ballroom dancing (not with The Stars), collect calls, an early “Crime of the Century,” genuine Amateur Hours, a noisily-emptying radio closet and a couple of big dummies.
For you, those things might be almost-somewhat-distant memories – but you can easily recall when music came on 45s or even 8-tracks (things your kids are clueless about). You remember that Captain Kangaroo was mandatory morning TV. You know you wouldn’t live with Festus Curtis if they paid you to do it, and that nobody LOLZ @ L.S.M.F.T.
So what will make your children’s children roll their eyes?
“The important thing,” say the authors, “is to stay tuned to the question.”
And how could you not? In a time when memes fly around the world in seconds and water coolers aren’t the only place for buzz, The Mindset List of the Obscure proves how much we love our pop-culture touchstones.
What’s fun about this book, I think, is that authors Tom McBride and Ron Nief fill it with entries that are not only great memory-nudgers for readers, but that can also be used for sparking conversation between generations. There are enough factoids here to make fierce trivia lovers happy, there’s plenty of history for your historian and it’s good gift for any Boomer or senior with a sense of humor.
If you’ve ever wondered what people will remember about Miley Cyrus in 50 years – or if you wonder what they’ll remember at all – this is a fun book to read and share. For you, The Mindset List of the Obscure is oddly addictive.

Terri Schlichenmeyer has been reading since she was three years old and never goes anywhere without a book. She lives on a hill in Wisconsin with two dogs and 11,000 books.
Readers with questions or comments may write to Terri in care of this publication.
9/11/2014