Culture Study Podcast

What's With All The Nostalgia For 2008?

Apr 22, 2026
Xochitl Gonzalez, novelist and Atlantic writer known for Brooklyn-set fiction, joins to unpack 2007–2008 nostalgia. She recalls Fort Greene life, the pre-smartphone serendipity, and how Obama-era hope shaped culture. Conversations range from housing fallout and gentrification to youthful networks, affordable fashion, and the roots of today’s hustle and distrust.
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INSIGHT

Precrisis Work Layers Created Everyday Abundance

  • 2007 felt abundant because jobs had more layers and leisure; Xochitl Gonzalez describes easy roles with expense accounts and time for life.
  • That corporate layering created disposable income and social energy that made young adults feel optimistic and untethered.
INSIGHT

Obama Fueled Possibility More Than The Economy

  • Optimism in 2007–08 came less from the economy and more from political possibility centered on Obama's candidacy and first term.
  • Xochitl links a youth-driven campaign, aspirational first couple, and symbolic progress to a sense that anything could happen.
ANECDOTE

Brooklyn Felt Like Everyday Serendipity

  • Brooklyn's serendipity and proximity let people run into friends and strangers, powering a vibrant public life.
  • Anne Helen Petersen recalls walking neighborhoods, unplanned parties, and photos uploaded later to Facebook, not live-posted.
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