NEW YORK – “The 1980s are calling,” a throwback-haired teenager told viewers as “Everybody Wants To Rule The World” by then-rock anthem Tears for Fears played in the background.
The fake montage, entirely generated using artificial intelligence, has garnered more than 600,000 likes on Instagram and is part of an internet trend known as “AI Nostalgia,” which can confuse people who actually lived through the decade.
The Instagram account Maximal Nostalgia, which regularly publishes content like this, is steeped in a highly idealized vision of the 1980s and 1990s.
The soft-focus fantasyland is made possible thanks to generative AI tools such as OpenAI’s Sora, Google’s Veo, and Luma AI’s Ray, which enable the creation of stunningly realistic videos that are difficult to distinguish from actual footage from the past at first glance.
Channels on Instagram, TikTok, and YouTube look back to the past through an AI-tinged lens, depicting how pre-iPhone youth wanted to be more present in their lives, the outdoors, and connect with others in real life.
Among the creators who brought this 1980s vision to life is Tavius Dawson, the 26-year-old entrepreneur behind the account. He was not born near the era in question.
“If you were born in the age of smartphones and social media, you wish you lived in a time when you didn’t have to worry about these things,” Dawson told AFP.
A contemporaneous eye will be able to sniff out some of the anachronisms and subtle absurdities common to AI. Did New York City have bike lanes at the time?
However, this decade has proven to have a particularly strong appeal in the AI nostalgia trend, which is appreciated by young people born long after this era.
Maximal Nostalgia and similar channels such as Purest Nostalgia and utopic.dreamer depict peaceful suburbs and streets reminiscent of feel-good movies from that era.
There are no signs of the growing inequality of the 1980s, the AIDS epidemic, or crack cocaine addiction.
The style captured in the fake video instead pays homage to the big hair, bright clothing, and padded shoulders that this decade was known for.
Anna Boehler, a psychology professor at North Carolina State University, said collective nostalgia “makes people look at the 1950s and 1960s through rose-colored glasses and forget about a lot of the tumultuous things that were going on at the time.”
“Now we have the same thing happening in the ’80s.”
Mr. Dawson was adamant that his videos should not be considered history, but merely a means to make people happy.
Innocuous intentions aside, Professor Boehler noted with concern that the quality of the AI video is so realistic that it could “blur the line” between authentic scenes from the past and fiction.
While AI is a futuristic technology, it draws from the past for a nostalgic vision that brings comfort in lonely times.
“Nostalgia isn’t just a gimmick; it’s emotional survival,” says Simon Parmegiani, creator of Neptunia’s Glitter Ball channel, which mixes 1980s throwbacks with a touch of fantasy.
Ms. Alicia West Fancher, a sales director in the cosmetics industry, recalled the 1980s and found the video deeply moving.
“I was in tears,” Fancher told AFP. “This is by no means a fantasy version. That’s what it was like.”
Dawson is now ready to transition from AI to creating live-action content set in this idealized 1980s or 1990s.
“One thing we can say for sure is that nostalgia never fades,” Dawson said. AFP
