Not only did we have to set the time, but: our first VCR (a front-loader) had a little panel on top that popped off. Underneath was a set of switches and dials, one for each channel. You’d set each one to VHF or UHF, then use the tiny plastic screwdriver to adjust the tuning dial so that your chosen channel would come in nice and strong. You had to do that for every channel your antenna could receive, at least the ones you wanted to record from.
“Setting the time.” Those millennials are so cute sometimes.
Among the exhibits at the local aviation museum where I volunteer, is an office set up with 1940s-era equipment, including a rotary-dial phone. That little phone is far and away one of the most popular attractions for kids visiting the museum, and yes, most of them have no clue how it is supposed to operate.
Then there are the typewriter, adding machine and Dictaphone, but I’ll leave those for another time.
I don’t believe it is staged. My 12 and 16 year old daughters wouldn’t have a clue how to use one because they have probably never seen a rotary dial phone. Picking up the handset before you dial isn’t intuitive to new generations and the dialing itself even less so. They can probably eventually figure it out but it would take time. I know how to use them because I grew up with them and they didn’t.
OTOH, they are stars on their iPhones and outclass me, an IT professional, because that is all they have ever known and they live on it. I just use mine to take calls and send texts. Old people as a general rule are the ones that have trouble learning new technology. I still know how to program a VCR just fine but I would be lost if you gave me a very old crank phone that required a switchboard operator, characters instead of numbers and party lines that were shared among the neighborhood.
Definitively answered by myself back in 2011, way before Xennials became a thing (and they are a thing, because I’m one of them!). Xennials basically correspond to what I class as the later cohort of Gen X/cusp Xers/what was starting to be called Generation XY at that time.
The later cohort of Generation Y has of course now been dubbed Generation Z. But they were still too young to matter to marketing executives back then.
If everyone went off my generational definitions, all generational problematics would be solved.