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2000s
- This article is about the decade starting at the beginning of 2000 and ending at the end of 2009. For the century or millennium starting in 2000 (or technically 2001), see the links below.
The decade as a whole
The 2000s decade refers to the years from 2000 to 2009, inclusive. Informally, it can also include a few years at the end of the preceding decade or the beginning of the following decade. Many people feel that the 2000s is no different culturally from the 1990s, or actually began during the late 1990s, most likely around the year 1998 in a pop-cultural sense. Others believe it pop culturally began right on target in 2000 or around 2002-2003.
So far, the 2000s has been marked generally with an escalation of the social issues of the late 1990s, which included the rise of terrorism, the rapid, exponential expansion of economic globalization on an unprecedented scale, the rapid expansion of communications and telecommunications with cell phones and the Internet, international pop culture, and an extraordinary rapid rate of increase of stress for the public in most nations.
The impact of human activities upon the natural world became evident as never before during the decade, as widespread alarm among scientists regarding the effects of climate change due to carbon dioxide, adjustments of the earth's tilt due to the fact of major earthquakes such as the 2004 Tsunami in Indonesia and other emissions brought the issue into the public consciousness. Efforts to curb emissions, however, faced strong opposing trends in most areas of the world due to ongoing economic expansion.
In North America, Europe, and the Middle East, most major political developments in the the 2000s revolved around the War on Terrorism and the conflict in Iraq. Elsewhere, the major theme has been the rapid development of Asia's economic and political potential, with China, experiencing immense ecomonic growth, moving toward the status of a regional power and billion-consumer market. India, along with many other developing countries are also growing rapidly, began integrating itself into the world economy.
Major events relating to the War on Terrorism include the September 11, 2001 Attacks, the Moscow Theatre Siege, the Madrid train bombings, the Beslan school hostage crisis, the 2005 London bombings, and the October 2005 New Delhi bombings. In the news almost daily, the terrorism and Iraq conflicts dominate headlines with controversy regarding their consequences and justifications.
A trend connecting economic and political events in North America, Asia and the Middle East is the rapidly increasing demand for fossil fuels, which, along with fewer new petroleum finds, greater extraction costs (see peak oil), and political turmoil, saw the price of gas and oil soar ~500% between 2000 and 2005.
Names of the decade
In contrast to the decades from 1920 to 1999, which are called "The Twenties", "The Nineties", and the like; the '00s have had no generally-accepted name. The term "The Two Thousands" is fairly common, but many still find its use awkward and incorrect for a number of reasons, notably the fact that formally, the "Two Thousands" will last for a thousand years and not just the ten years of the "00" decade. The terms the "Zeroes" and the "Ohs" seem to be the next most common term for the decade.
It is occasionally termed, in historical contexts, the "turn of the millennium" or "turn of the century" (or "turn of the new century," since most people appear to associate the term "turn of the century" with the year 1900). This terminology would probably seem silly, however, if used in an informal context.
Written in numeral form, the decade can be written either as the "2000s" or as the "'00s". But looking for a name that has the same "feel" as 'The Nineties' or 'The Fifties' has been far more problematic. Several proposals have come forth, but ultimately, none have caught on and achieved anything approaching universal acceptance.
One of the more talked-about names has been "The Naughties"/"noughties".[1], or the "uh-oh's". Often misunderstood to be a referenced to the supposed "naughtiness" of the decade, the name is actually just a play on the word "naught", a somewhat archaic term for the number zero. Along the same line is the suggestion to call the decade "The Naughts", something that might be more easily understood in Britain than in the United States. "The Naughts," much like "The Naughties" would prove a problematic name in the U.S. where the word "naught" is inappropriately associated with naughty. A similar alternative, and one that may have been used in the first decade of the 20th century, is the "Oughts". Time Magazine published a suggestion called "The Ozies", presumably pronounced with a long "o" (/o/) sound. A more easily understood, yet stylistically different, suggestion, was the "Double-O's". The rapper Q-Tip of the rap group A Tribe Called Quest coined the term "The 2000 Decade" on their 1991 song "Verses from the Abstract." Yet other nicknames include the "Zeros" and "Two-Thousands". The "Turbulent Two-Thousands" is also a nickname for the decade; it appears to keep in line with the "Roaring Twenties" and "Greedy Eighties", and is favored by those who wish the 00s to be seen as a decade of economic, political, and social uncertainty around the world. A handful of wisecracks refer to the decade as the "New Nineties" because they perceive the decade as having the same culture as the 1990s. So far (as of 2006), the most common name used is "The 2000s" ("The Two-Thousands"), so it is likely that that is what the decade will be called historically, with the following decade being called "the 2010s" ("The Two-Thousand Tens").
The name 2Ks is also applied, derived from the use of K an abbreviation for the SI prefix kilo, meaning 1000.
The United Nations General Assembly declared the decade of 2000-2009 as the "International Decade for a Culture of Peace and Non-Violence for the Children of the World."
Criticisms of the decade
The 2000s are so far not a highly regarded decade by most people in the world as many find the 1990s to have been a much more prosperous time and look fondly upon earlier decades such as the 1960s and 1980s.
While not a criticism per se as many people still like the culture of the 1990s, some others look down on the decade for upholding so many tired 1990s fads, fashions, and music genres. Many people who are fond of the 1990s dislike the 2000s because they perceive them as similar to the 1980s for various reasons, mostly relating to politics but also to the 1980s nostalgia wave that struck in the decade which started in 2003 and is and hasn't stopped. (see 1980s Retro Movement).
As an example, in the United States, common criticisms of the decade include a bad economy, escalation of the use of technology starting in the '90s, loss of civil liberties, pop music, television, and movies lacking creativity, the Paris Hilton fad, and of course the War on Terror and criticisms of President George W. Bush.
Many people can factor in all of these issues to express disappointment in a decade, and more importantly a century, which much of the world had high hopes for particularly in the 1990s.
Events and trends
Technology
The Apple iPod, a popular digital music player during the 2000s.
- A huge jump in broadband internet usage, from 6% of U.S. internet users in June, 2000 to what one study predicts will be 62% by 2010.
- Boom in music downloading and the use of data compression to quickly transfer music over the Internet, with a corresponding rise of portable digital audio players typified by Apple Computer's iPod.
- Digital cameras become very popular due to rapid decreases in size and cost while photo resolution steadily increases. Sales of film reel cameras diminish greatly as a result.
- Google search engine increases trafficability of the internet and "to Google" becomes a verb.
- Due to an increase in ability to store data, USB flash drives rapidly replace zip disks and 3.5-inch diskettes.
- Graphic cards become powerful enough to render nearly photo-realistic scenes in real time.
- Windows XP and Microsoft Office 2003 become the ubiquitous industry standard in personal computer software. Open source and free software continues to be a notable but minority interest, with versions of Linux gaining in popularity, as well as the Mozilla Firefox web browser.
- Liquid crystal displays begin displacing cathode ray tubes.
- Major advances in Hybrid vehicles such as the Toyota Prius, Escape, and the Honda Insight.
- Greater interest in future energy development due to global warming and the potential exhaustion of crude oil.
- Blogs, portals, and wikis become common electronic dissemination methods for professionals, amateurs, and businesses to conduct knowledge management.
- Wikipedia began and grew rapidly, becoming the largest encyclopedia and most well known wiki in the world.
- DVDs replace VCR technology as the common standard at video stores.
- Due to the major success of broadband Internet connections, Voice over IP begins to gain popularity as a replacement for traditional telephone lines. Major telecommunications carriers begin converting their networks from TDM to VoIP.
- Wireless networks become commonplace in homes, education institutes and urban public spaces.
- LASIK eye surgery becomes popular as costs and potential risk decreases and results further improve.
- OLED (Organic light-emitting diode) technology revolutionizes display technology, making it possible to "print" screens on everyday objects.
- Home automation and home robotics become popular in North America; iRobot's "Roomba" is the most successful domestic robot and has sold 1.2 million units.
- GPS (Global Positioning System) becomes very popular especially in the tracking of items or people, and the use in cars. Games that utilize the system, such as geocaching, emerge and become popular.
- RFID (Radio Frequency ID) becomes widely used in retail giants such as Wal-Mart, as a way to track items and automate stocking and keeping track of items.
- DVRs (Digital Video Recorders), typified by TiVo, allow consumers to modify content they watch on TV, and to record TV programs and watch them later, leading to problems as consumers can fast-forward through commercials, making them useless.
- Self-serve kiosks become very widely available, used for all kinds of shopping, airplane boarding passes, hotel check-ins, fast food, and car rental.
- Internet usage surpasses TV viewing in 2004.
- Emerging use of robotics, especially telerobotics in medicine, particularly for surgery.
- Many more computers and other technologies incorporated into vehicles such as Xenon HID headlights, GPS, DVD players, self-diagnosing systems, advanced pre-collision safety systems, memory systems for car settings, back-up sensors and cameras, in-car media systems, MP3 player compatibility, USB drive compatibility, keyless start and entry, satellite radio, voice-activation, cellphone connectivity, adaptive headlights, HUD (Head-Up-Display), infrared cameras, and Onstar (on GM models).
- Peer-to-peer technology use: internet telephony (Skype), file-sharing.
- Xbox 360 and other next-generation systems revolutionize the videogame industry in 2005-2006 with photo-realistic graphics, a virtual online gaming world, and interoperability with other digital devices.
- The entire videogame industry's profits surpassed the movie industry's in 2004.
- After the bubble burst in 2001, another tech boom came around in the year 2005.
- Videophones are cheap and abundant, yet even by mid-decade, they had not received much attention.
- Most cellphone carriers offer video viewing services, internet services, and some offer full music downloads, such as Sprint in 2005. This leads to an almost saturation of cell phone ownership among the public and a decline in the use and locations of payphones.
- Digital music sales rise, accounting for 6% of all music sales in 2005.
Science
War, peace and politics
The World Trade Center ablaze after two airplanes crash into the towers in a terrorist attack
Saddam Hussein shortly after his capture
- The Israeli-Palestinian conflict continued in the 2000s. The Al-Aqsa Intifada resulted in violence claiming the lives of more than 3,900 people from September 29, 2000 [2]. Peace negotiations between Israelis and Palestinians remained stagnant during this period, although in 2005 the Israeli government enacted its unilateral disengagement plan which removed Israeli settlements from Gaza.
- Major controversy over U. S. presidential election (November 7-December 13, 2000)
- September 11, 2001 terrorist attack on New York's World Trade Center and Virginia's Pentagon killing almost 3000 people. A resultant change in stance towards international terrorism (See New Era and War on Terror) has ripple effects on the USA's foreign policy and military strategy.
- U.S. invasion of Afghanistan to depose the Taliban regime in response to the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks (October 7, 2001 – July 18, 2003).
- Venezuelan coup attempt of 2002 against Hugo Chávez
- The Convention on the Future of Europe proposing first European constitution (i.e., of the EU). The Constitution is rejected by French and Dutch electorate in 2005 leading to political crisis in EU.
- East Timor gains official independence from Indonesia. (May 20, 2002)
- International Criminal Court established, used for judging war crimes, crimes against humanity and genocide (July 1, 2002)
- American and British forces respond to a disputed Iraqi threat with the 2003 invasion of Iraq.
- Darfur conflict in Sudan
- "Orange Revolution" in Ukraine leads to election of Viktor Yushchenko as President after initial election victory of incumbent Prime Minister Viktor Yanukovych is annulled due to vote-rigging
- Revolution in Kyrgyzstan overthrows government of President Askar Akayev
- Beslan school hostage crisis, in which multinational terrorists take a school in Beslan, Russia hostage. 344 people including children die in the ensuing crisis. (September 1, 2004)
- United States expands international influence, in particular in the Middle East. The US also holds a number of war games pertaining to the Strait of Taiwan in preparation for a possible war with the People's Republic of China over a Taiwanese secession. China and Russia display a strategic relationship during a simulated "humanitarian" crisis in the same region during Peace Mission 2005.
- Japanese Prime Minister Koizumi Junichiro and his conservative Liberal Democratic Party are re-elected in a landslide election in September 2005, mainly due to a booming Japanese economy and Junichiro's plans to privatise the Japanese postal service.
- In 2005, Early elections in Germany produce the first Grand Coalition for the country in almost forty years. After weeks of talks, the center-left Social Democrats and center-right Christian Democratic Union/Christian Social Union agree to let conservative Angela Merkel become chancellor. She is first chancellor to be from eastern Germany, as well as the country's first female chancellor.
- In America, as the Baby Boomers get set for retirement, Generation X begins to step up into political power, signified by the election of Illinois senator Barack Obama. Generation X grew in pop culture with the 1980s and 1990s.
- The world's view of the United States changes in the 2000s, particularly due to the interventionist policies of the Bush administration. Other issues such as Hurricane Katrina, NSA warrantless surveillance controversy, and the Iraq War cause a polarisation in many American's views of George Bush's presidency. In late 2005 and early 2006, some Democrat politicians begin to consider calling for an impeachment inquiry into Bush's actions.
- Extreme political polarization in the United States leads to a rigid geopolitical divide between Red States and Blue States. Families are often bitterly split over political issues, and the youth are more invested in politics than at almost any other time in American history. Animosity reaches such levels that that in some quarters there is somewhat-serious discussion of secession and even the possibility of a civil war. (http://www.pointlesswasteoftime.com/civilwar.html)
Economics
- Globalization: Transnational companies become more pervasive, and anti-globalization protests occur frequently during meetings of IMF and WTO, especially in the early 2000s.
- The euro becomes legal tender in twelve European Union countries in 2002. It's the largest monetary union in history. The euro eases trade in the Eurozone.
- The NASDAQ, the American Stock Exchange and the New York Stock Exchange closed for six days after the September 11th, 2001 attacks the longest close since the Great Depression in 1929.
- Major downturn in the value of dot-com shares, with occasional exceptions (Google's IPO on August 13, 2004)
- The US dominance over the world economy continues, but economically rising nations like China, show signs of becoming contending world powers.
- Significant oil price rises. Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline opens on 25 May 2005, potentially removing the dependence of the United States and other Western nations on Middle Eastern oil.
- Enron and other major accounting and corporate governance scandals prompt reviews of corporate government legislation worldwide (eg Sarbanes-Oxley Act)
- The 1990s stock market boom ends in Mid-March to Early September of 2000-2001, due to 9/11 and the tech-bubble burst.
- Post-9/11 Recession from 2001-early 2003.
- Energy crisis in California and energy prices contributes to the economic downturn.
- Economy recovers in late 2003-2005 to steady growth as the unemployment rate drops to 5%, .4% above the rate seen in the booming heydays of the late '90s.
- Interest in technology companies remains steady, with IT spending fore-casted at 6% for 2006.
- Box-office returns fall drastically, as consumers turn instead to low-cost home theater systems and low-cost big screen HDTV's.
- Real estate market is seen as being the smaller version of the tech boom of the nineties, resulting in the highest ever housing market peak ever recorded in the US in July '05 .
Culture and religion
Other
- 2002–2003: SARS virus outbreak, most notably in Hong Kong, China, Taiwan, Singapore and Toronto.
- February 1, 2003: The Space Shuttle Columbia disintegrates over Texas upon reentry, killing all seven astronauts onboard, prompting investigation into NASA communication abilities and safety. Space shuttle flight resumes in late 2005, only to be suspended again.
- Major earthquake rocks the ancient city of Bam, in Iran. Cost over 50,000 lives.
- On December 26, 2004, a major earthquake and ensuing tsunami causes devastation in Sri Lanka, India, Indonesia, Thailand, Malaysia, The Maldives and many other areas around the rim of the Indian Ocean. As of January 2005 the death toll is estimated to be nearly 290,000, prompting the largest humanitarian response for a natural disaster in history.
- Methamphetamine use skyrockets while crime rates in the U.S. reach the lowest rate in 40 years as of 2005 and use of most other drugs drops.
- Extended alcohol sales becomes popular public policy in US and UK.
- Underage consumption of alcohol under supervision of a parent or legal guardian is legalized in many states in the US in early 2005.
- Bird flu spreads through South East Asia; countries begin preparing for a potential bird flu epidemic, fearing that it could mutate into a form that could transfer easily from person to person and kill millions of people. Bird flu spreads rapidly into Europe in October 2005.
- Criticism of Vladimir Putin's governmental policies and reforms mount and a backlash of Soviet-nostalgia occurs in Russia.
- On August 29, 2005 Hurricane Katrina strikes southeastern Louisiana, U.S., killing more than 1,400 people and devastating the city New Orleans and the Mississippi coast. People and life later return to New Orleans, but many analysts expect that New Orleans will never return to its prior state.
- A major earthquake in Kashmir kills close to 80,000 people on October 8, 2005, devastating Kashmir and forcing the mass evacuation of mountain towns as winter approaches.
- Arctic sea ice cover reaches record lows; global warming continues to be a major concern. (see environmentalism)
- National Social Norms Resource Center established in U.S.
- DWI Courts introduced in U.S.
- The 2005 Atlantic Basin Hurricane Season becomes the most active on record. First use of the Greek naming system after traditional names exhausted.
Trends and Fashion
United States and Canada
- the Beanie babies fad peaks in the early 2000's and all but disappears.
- Fashion becomes less grungy and more excessive as the wearing of flannel by people under 30 declines and tighter fitting jeans and longer hair styles become again commonplace for boys and men. The "Baggy Jean" craze of the 90's begins to fade in mid 2005. For girls and women hoop earrings, originally popular in the 1980s and early 1990s, return to style circa 2002. Upturned collars on tennis shirts become popular among the youth as well.
- Urban/Gangsta/Thug and Punk/Goth/Emo are the major fashion and music trends in 2000's fashion although are fading fast as the decade goes on. Individualist and Drama geek falls into fashion by early 2006.
- Wearing baseball caps backwards peacefully falls out of style until about 2005 in favor of wearing them sideways or forwards. Sunglasses begin to become less widespread as a fashion statement, until 2005-2006 when large sunglasses were made popular by such celebrities as Nicole Richie and Paris Hilton.
- Tattoos continue to become more common
- Fad diets such as Atkins and low carb diets are popular; "less is more" a common statement in 1990s and 2000s
- Slang words and catch phrases used often in 2000s America include "Sweet", "Retarded", "Gay", "Crunk", "Wanksta", "Awesome", "Rad", "Whateva", "Totally", "Metro", "Tight", "Ditty", "Git-R-Done, "Sick", "Pure", and "Werd up" Many of them have roots from the 1980s and early 1990s, such as the word "totally" and "rad".
- Cell phones become a necessity to teenagers and often a fashion statement as opposed to a preppie toy. As the phones can also be potentially used as a "tracking device", many teenagers and young adults try to avoid having worrisome or over-protective parents (and even employers) know they have one. Personalized cell phone rings become available in a wide variety of forms, especially in the genre of popular song and dance, and as well as highly ornate and ostentatious ones. Cell phone ringing interruptions at concerts, plays, schools, religious services, speeches, and movie theaters becomes a problem. Payphone use and locations decline dramatically.
- MP3 players such as the Ipod and Napster to Go become very common as they become more powerful and easier to use.
- Generation Y supplants Gen X as current youth generation.
- Interracial dating and relationships become more common in the US. Interracial couples on television and movies in all manner of gender and racial scenarios become fairly common. It also becomes more (though not yet universally) accepted, helped by the emergence of famous children from interracial marriages, such as Mariah Carey, Derek Jeter, Lenny Kravitz and Johnny Damon (Amer-Asian).
- Strong cultural similarities with the 1990s as the pop culture of that decade continues to be trendy and cherished by the 2000s youth as exampled by the success of Mariah Carey and Green Day in the mid-2000s and by the fact that the Nineties receive only minimal backlash among current youth. Also, with this continuing trend, post grunge and country start to find it's way again.
- A very strong nostalgia for the 1980s emerges, and as a result many things from the 80s are "brought back" and certain aspects of the decade become cool again such as Techno and New Wave music. Nontheless, the 2000s' kinship with the 1990s prevents a complete acceptance of the '80s, as the culture of the '90s is generally much more positively accepted by Generation Y.
- Many current youth show absolutely no interest in the mainstream music of the era (except for the more preppy bunch); listening to other genres such as indie and oldies and sometimes even jazz and classical.
- Poker becomes a craze, as many Americans are enticed by online poker rooms and games with their friends and neighbors. The World Series of Poker aired on ESPN becomes a huge success.
- Emo goes from being a small subculture in the 1980s and 1990s to becoming mainstream and fusing with pop-punk and Post-Hardcore, beginning in 1998 but especially later in the decade.
- A slight late 1960s-early 1970s nostalgia occured around 2004-2005 with the comeback of mini skirts and long hair, especially with preteen girls, although the comeback faded fast.
- Teens and young adults become political with the rise of Air America Radio and the popularity of "America (the book)" by Jon Stewart.
- Cyberpunk culture becomes more relevant, as the culture of the 2000s is in itself post apocalyptic due to the September 11 2001, attacks.
- 1940s music and fashion comes in around 2005-2006, especially with urban culture such as black and white music video craze and the increase of jazz in rap and pop.
Europe
- In Eastern Germany and other ex-Communist countries, there is a growth in nostalgia for former Communist times (Ostalgie).
- Growing anti-Americanism, especially in Western Europe.
- From early in the decade, mobile phones are a necessary accessory, even for the majority of children as young as 10 years old. Ownership approaches 100% of the population in most Western European countries.
- Fashion and cosmetic surgery become more mainstream; an increase in interest is most notable in men, influenced by fashion-conscious "celebrities" such as David Beckham.
- Chav culture in the United Kingdom becomes a predominant fashion/lifestyle choice, especially amongst those in the working class.
Music
United States and Canada
- Rap music, especially Crunk, and post-gangsta largely overtakes rock and roll as the main music of the youth. Popular and definitive artists include Usher Eminem, Jay Z, Nelly, 50 Cent, Ja Rule, DMX, OutKast, Method Man, Ludacris, Chingy, Snoop Dogg, Will Smith, and Kanye West.
- Most styles of the 1990s remain strong and even trendy, except for a few such as Grunge that declined in popularity around the turn of the millenium.
- Nu metal, a genre of modern rock with metal and hip hop influences popular, especially during first half of decade. Definitive and popular bands include Linkin Park, Limp Bizkit, Korn, P.O.D. and Papa Roach. Metalcore, a fusion genre of metal and hardcore punk and the subgenre of Swede-core featuring bands such as Atreyu, Killswitch Engage, Lamb of God, and Shadows Fall influeced by earlier acts such as At the Gates and In Flames begins to replace Nu Metal as the dominant metal genre around 2003 and 2004.
- Pop-punk and emo, come popular genres, especially during the middle and latter part of the decade. In the mid-to-late 2000s, bands such as Fall Out Boy and Panic! At The Disco fuse the two genres together, while around 2002 Good Charlotte and Simple Plan combined emo and pop-punk with pop.
- Pop R&B continues to be popular, fueled further by combination with Rap.
- Crunk becomes a household word in 2003 when Lil' Jon popularizes the genre.
- Pop country slips in mainstream popularity in the mid-2000s, due partly to the public retirement of Garth Brooks. In 2005 as singers like Faith Hill and Shania Twain no longer top the charts, but it maintains a niche in Middle America and still continues to produce international stars. Kenny Chesney's world tour in 2005 grosses more than that of rock band U2. It's popularity further grows with American Idol winner Carrie Underwood, who becomes the show's first winner to enter country music instead of pop or R&B. Garth Brooks also briefly comes out of retirement in late 2005/ early 2006 and during this time sells more than 4 million albums in the United States alone.
- Teen pop of the late 90s variety rises and falls in popularity between 1999 and 2002 although maintains a strong media presence afterward and morphes into more adult-oriented music such as Kelly Clarkson. "Disney" and "Nickelodeon" artists such as Hilary Duff, Lindsay Lohan, Aly & AJ, Hope Partlow and Jesse McCartney are also popular. Throughout the decade, even after the teen pop era ended the genre was widely ridiculed and may gradually come back as the decade moves along.
- Rock bands begin to ditch the Grunge image in favor of more avant-garde and traditional forms of rock music while keeping so-called "Alternative Rock" ethos, beginning around 2002. (see Emo)
- Fall of dance music from pop charts in United States, although around 2005 Madonna, DHT, and Cascada began to bring the 1990s genre back.
- Underground hip hop thrives on Internet with the likes of Atmosphere and Aesop Rock.
- "Contemporary Christian music," popular with the mainstream between the mid-1980s and the late 1990s, heavily declines in popularity with secular audiences as former pop chart-toppers of the genre as Amy Grant and Michael W. Smith have their popularity confined to Christian music. Many artists within the genre, however, continue to top the Christian charts and set sales records. Christian Rock artists gain mainstream popularity in the mid-2000s with popular albums from Switchfoot, Relient K, and Thousand Foot Krutch.
- A revival in popularity of the Great American Songbook is witnessed, preëmpted by Robbie Williams, and the subsequent 'Rat Pack' fascination.
- The rise in popularity of more extreme variations of metal in the underground, most notably black metal,death metal, and Viking Metal.
- Classic rock comes back into style, causing many older artists to become mainstream.
- Ethnic music is mainstream for most of the early to mid-2000's, especially in the rise of Reggaeton in late 2005-early 2006.
- CD-USA, the new so-called "American Bandstand powered by Myspace and DirecTV become widely popular in early 2006, causing manynew artists to gain (or lose) their popularity.
- Due to the populatiry of "Grand Theft Auto: Vice City" 80s music becomes popular again (with teens) for a brief time (due to the soundtrack being sold on CD and containing multiple discs of different genres of music from the 1980s)
Europe
- Electronica of 1990s style, such as Trance and drum 'n' bass, quintessential
- Electro, as well as music that combines it with House becomes mainstream in the dance music scene in the middle of the decade, replacing the mainstream of more jazzy and latin influenced sounds from the beginning of the decade
- Return of indie rock groups evoking the late 1970s, such as Franz Ferdinand and the Kaiser Chiefs.
- Teen pop such as Backstreet Boys continues to be popular, although US-influenced R&B and hip hop music is popular until the middle of the decade.
Latin America/Caribbean
Film
- In the USA:
- Movie remakes and sequels hit an all-time high, in contrast to purely original scripts. Also, many movies based on old TV shows and novels become more popular in Hollywood.
- Depressed ticket sales throughout the decade due to general lack of quality films and decline of the general moviegoing experience, as movie theaters keep ticket prices high and increase the duration of advertisements before movies, in some cases going as long as 30 minutes. Other trends emerge, such as the decreasing cost and increasing size of quality home theater displays along with the availability mail-based movie rental services, most notably Netflix, which offered an unlimited number of DVD rentals for a fixed price per month. Movie executives attempted to place some of the blame on online piracy due to the advent of BitTorrent, however its effect has been disputed, as some claim that those who download these movies would not have paid to see them in the first place.
- Lord of the Rings, Harry Potter, comic book movies, and the new Star Wars movie sagas dominate the box office. The high profitability of these films arguably has much to do with the lack of investment and quality in newer and more original films in the 2000s as opposed to decades like the 1980s and 1990s.
- The Matrix very influential on special effect styles (ie: 'bullet-time', dramatic effects in slow motion).
- "R" rated films are released at their lowest prevalence since the 1960s, reflecting a post-Columbine American society which increasingly lacks tolerance of violent films. While certain exceptions such as Kill Bill are made in protest of this development and in tribute to the overly violent kung-fu and action films of the 1970s, most action films of the 2000s are largely bloodless.
- East Hollywood High School becomes the first public film-oriented charter high school in the world.
- X-men distibuted by 20th Century Fox sparks the "Comic Book Movie Age." Many big-budget adaptions of various comic book characters are being made, primarily by Marvel Comics and DC comics. Some of these comic-book movies: Spider-man, The Fantastic Four and V for Vendetta.
- Pixar makes hits such as as Finding Nemo, The Incredibles, and Monsters Inc., continuing a trend started in 1995 with Toy Story. Both Finding Nemo and The Incredibles win the Academy Award for Best Animated Feature.
- DreamWorks Animation has hits with Shrek, Madagascar, and Shark Tale
- Disney abandons traditional 2D animation altogether in 2005, with Home on the Range being the last Disney movie with any 2D animation. Also, in 2006 Pixar became a part of Disney, furthering the company's transition into the 3D era.
- Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl and The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe become huge hits for Disney live-action movies. Both spawning sequels in the near future.
- Brokeback Mountain, a movie about two gay shepherds, is considered controversial by some conservative Americans. Director Lee Ang receives Academy Award in 2006.
- Several documentaries are given widespread cinema release: examples are Farenheit 9/11, Supersize Me and March of the Penguins.
Internet
- The Internet becomes a major source of all types of media, from music to movies, thanks to file-sharing P2P programs such as KaZaA and Grokster. The debate continues over the ethics of file-sharing.
- The diverse and spontaneous nature of the internet allows an internet culture to form. Online projects such as hamsterdance, EBaum's World and Homestar Runner become international trends within short periods of time due to word of mouth on and off the web, with little or no promotion required from their creators.
- Legal music download services such as iTunes and the re-designed Napster open up a new market of digital downloading and becomes the number 1 music swapping program of all time.
- Popular video shorts of the 2000s include Star Wars Gangsta Rap, D.R.A.F.T., and the SNL skit Lazy Sunday, which was controversially removed from YouTube.com in early 2006.
- Television and Internet begin to merge as networks start streaming shows online.
- Social networking and blogging sites such as Myspace.com (created in early 1999, and recreated in 2003), Facebook LiveJournal, and MyYearbook becomes popular among Generation Y, and is criticized for exposing teens and young adults to sex offenders via the Internet.
- Craigslist.org, a popular online classified site, saps over 50 million dollars a year from newspaper revenues, with a staff of only 16 people in San Francisco.
- Cell phones gain the ability to access the Internet.
- Voice-Over-Internet-Protocol(VoIP) telephones and the Internet slowly begin to merge: Examples are Vonage and Skype.
- Webcomics by amateur cartoonists begin to surpass the popularity of traditional print comic books and newspaper strips. Flash movies also become popular.
- Re-cut trailers become popular in the mid-2000s, largely due to the many parody trailers of Brokeback Mountain during the 2005-2006 winter. Popular examples include "Brokeback to the Future", Lazy Brokeback, and the Sleepless in Seattle trailer cut into a horror movie.
- Myspace, Xanga, Facebook, and MyYearbook become extremely popular to teen-internet users, inspiring others to share and trade personal information via online.
Video games
- Next Generation Consoles: The first batch of "next-generation" home consoles are released at the turn of the new century featuring larger production values, more realistic graphics, and consoles with built-in multimedia such as DVD and a hard drive. Sony Playstation 2 (2000), Nintendo Gamecube (2001), and the Microsoft Xbox (2001) are the three main contenders in the ever raging console wars.
- The Sims, released in fall of 2000 for PC, along with its expansions become the best selling video game of all time.
- Sega in 2001 drops out the home console market after the Dreamcast (1999) fails to regain lost marketshare from the 1990s.
- Nintendo releases the Game Boy Advance (GBA) in 2001, a 32-bit handheld system. A redesign of the GBA dubbed Game Boy Advance SP (GBASP) was released in 2003 introducing flip-top design and a frontlit screen. Another even smaller version of the GBA was released as the Game Boy micro in 2005. The GBA line is still the best selling handheld system today.
- Gamers who were kids in the 1980s and 1990s are now adults. The average age for video game players rises into the mid to late 20s as videogames become mainstream global entertainment.
- Grand Theft Auto series sparks a fad of Mature rated videogames based on including gang warfare, drug use, senseless violence and pornography into the gameplay or more commonly just the storyline. The controversy is followed by mothers, lawmakers and activists (such as Jack Thompson) pushing an agenda to ban the sale of Mature rated games to minors.
- Console gaming hits the Internet with Xbox Live. Introducing widespread use of voice-chat via headset and requiring broadband Internet connection for "no-lag" gameplay.
- Sequels become the more prominent as popular franchises begin releasing new versions every year along with spin-offs. This flooding of the market is similar to what was happening before the video game crash of 1983.
- Nintendo releases the Nintendo DS in late 2004 featuring dual screens, a touch screen, built-in mic and Wi-fi, and flip top design. The system's innovation allowed for new gameplay strengthening many genres such as simulation, platform, and puzzle games.
- Sony releases the PSP (PlayStation Portable) in early 2005, a handheld gaming console with many multimedia features and sharp graphics to compete with the Nintendo DS and the still popular GameBoy Advance.
- New Wave of Consoles: Nintendo chooses to focus on innovation with new controller design for their 5th home console, code-named Nintendo Revolution (expected 2006), while the Microsoft Xbox 360 (2005) and the Sony Playstation 3 (expected 2006) have sharper HDTV ready graphics, multi-media and more integrated online features.
- Video Games like Halo and Half-Life 2 with its Source engine are said to revolutionize gameplay. They pave the way for other hit first-person shooters such as FEAR and Doom 3.
- Video chat devices are released for the Xbox 360.
Television and radio
- In the USA:
- Reality TV shows, such as The Apprentice, Survivor, and The Amazing Race have become extremely popular, beginning in the year 2000. Big Brother began the craze in Europe a year earlier in the fall of 1999. The rise of "Reality" to the main networks was one of the first trends that differentiated 2000s television from that of the 1990s. As early as the second season (2001-2002) of Reality TV some fans of the genre began to tire of the trend.
- Popular and definitive TV shows include Lost (2004-), Chappelle's Show (2003-), Survivor (2000-), South Park (1997-), Family Guy (1999-2002, 2005-), 24 (2001-), Spongebob Squarepants (1999-), Who Wants To Be A Millionaire(1999-2003) CSI (1998-), [The O.C]] (2004+) Desperate Housewives (2004-). 1990s TV shows The Simpsons(1989-), The Man Show (1998-2003) Friends (1994-2004), Law & Order (1990-) and The Real World (1992-) remain varyingly definitive into the 2000s.
- The popular series Lost spawns many copycats in the mid-2000s, including Ghost Whisperer and Invasion.
- Continued trend of animated sitcoms as traditional sitcoms such as Family Matters and 3rd Rock from the Sun decline in number until approxiamately 2005.
- Medical TV shows, which rose to popularity in the mid-1990s with ER, are in vogue, along with crime shows.
- Rise of media violence, sex, and language decreases with the 2004 Janet Jackson incident at the Super Bowl. The FCC made their censorship rules more conservative at this point.
- The animation show South Park is popular among a large minority, especially around the opening of the decade. Its major attraction, a blatant disregard for political correctness, is also a repulsion for many.
- The Nineties sitcom Friends ends in 2004 in a similar fashion to the end of Cheers in 1993.
- Nickelodeon nearly abandons the live-action shows it had in the 1980s and 1990s in favor of Nicktoons. This ends towards the middle of the decade, as the network adds live-action fare such as Drake & Josh (2004-), Unfabulous (2004-), and Zoey 101 (2005-). In addition, the network begins to skew to a younger audience than in previous years, cancelling programs popular among teenagers, such as Invader Zim and As Told By Ginger, in favor of programs for younger adolescents, such as All Grown Up, Unfabulous, and Zoey 101.
- Disney Channel shifts from classic Disney programming to live-action shows in late 1990s and early 2000s (see Zoog Disney), while turning towards original cartoons beginning in 2000 with The Proud Family(2001-2005), The Weekenders (2000-2004) and later Kim Possible (2002-2005).
- Japanimation becomes focus of Cartoon Network and a staple of children's programming, along with more adult-oriented material (see Animatrix and Adult Swim).
- The Simpsons remains incredibly popular throughout the 2000s along with several other animated sitcoms and Family Guy returns with new episodes in May of 2005 after a 3-year cancellation.
- Talk radio shows such as Al Franken, Coast to Coast AM and Rush Limbaugh keep people on the AM dial.
- Prank-based comedy shows such as Punk'd (2002-), Da Ali G Show (2003-2004), Jackass (2001-2003), Trigger Happy TV (2002-2003), and Crank Yankers (2003-) became popular.
- A proliferation (and to some extent, revival) of "million-dollar" primetime quizzes toward the earliest parts of the decade, particularly Who Wants to be a Millionaire. Although most such shows generally died out by 2002, Deal or No Deal has proven to be successful three years later (although technically not a quiz).
- In 2005, Star Trek Enterprise became the first Star Trek series since the original series to be cancelled due to low ratings and the first to suffer low popularity even among fans. It also ends almost twenty years of continuous Star Trek shows which started in 1987 with Star Trek: The Next Generation.
- 24-Hour Cable News Channels began to surpass the major broadcast networks as the main source for obtaining news on television. Fox News led the cable market with such programs as The O'Reilly Factor and On the Record with Greta Van Susteren while CNN, with CNN Headline News, and MSNBC attempted to compete with such programs as Anderson Cooper 360, Nancy Grace, Hardball with Chris Matthews, and Countdown with Keith Olbermann. Trends indicated that viewers appear to prefer to get their news from sources that reinforce their opinions rather than seek out information that challenges these opinions. The trend of cable news channels overtaking broadcast networks in news coincided with the retirements of Tom Brokaw and Dan Rather from the anchor desks at the evening news programs of NBC and CBS respectively along with the death of ABC News World News Tonight anchor Peter Jennings in 2005. Cable News anchors and reporters gain fan followings on the Internet though most are due to physical appearance and sex appeal rather than journalistic abilities or delivery of the news. Notable examples of this trend include Rudi Bakhtiar, Laurie Dhue, Robin Meade, and Juliet Huddy spawning such terms as Newsbabe and Infobabe.
- In the United Kingdom
- Much airtime was filled with a proliferation of “celebrity”-based television such as Celebrity Big Brother, Comic Relief Does Fame Academy, I'm A Celebrity, Get Me Out Of Here!, and Strictly Come Dancing.
- Pre-watershed family sitcoms almost disappeared; more mature and specialist comedies were broadcast, such as Little Britain, Tittybangbang, the Mighty Boosh, The IT Crowd and Nathan Barley. Several new sitcoms were made without laugher tracks, such as The Office and The Smoking Room; These latter shows were slow-paced and portrayed a more mundane side of life.
- In place of period dramas, many new drama series were broadcast which were expensively produced and adopted some American styles. Popular shows included Doctor Who, Spooks, Hustle and Waking the Dead.
- Big-budget American dramas became widely-watched, such as Desperate Housewives, Lost, 24 and CSI
- Digital TV became popular with the introduction of Sky Digital, Freeview, and subsequently, the growth of free-to-air TV stations like BBC Three, BBC Four, Sky Three, More4, abc1, ITV3, ITV4 and TMF.
- Digital Television allowed for greater choice when watching major sports events such as the Olympic Games and Wimbledon Tennis.
- Digital Audio Broadcasting (DAB) gained popularity; by 2004 most new radio sets sold in the UK were capable of receiving DAB signals. Many new specialist radio stations are almost exclusively broadcast via DAB.
Sports
- Basketball dips somewhat in popularity with the loss of Michael Jordan and the Kobe Bryant controversy; football continues to become more popular, while professional soccer makes inroads into the United States and Canada.
- Baseball in the United States undergoes controversy due to steroids; stars such as Barry Bonds and Mark McGwire, ranked #1 and #2 in single-season home runs, are suspected to have used steroids, while others such as Jason Giambi and Rafael Palmeiro are confirmed to have been using the drugs.
- Beach volleyball becomes an increasingly popular sport worldwide, establishing its first generation of superstars and branching out into large inland cities.
- Football, particularly British, begins to gain popularity amongst North Americans.
- Many British football clubs are being bought by Eastern European millionaires such as Chelsea by Roman Abramovich, Hearts by Vladimir Romanov and Portsmouth F.C. by Milan Mandarić and Alexandre Gaydamak.
- The IRB Rugby World Cup increases in size and audience to become one of the world's most popular competitions.
- WADA, The World Anti-doping Agency, introduces a standardised anti-doping code for all sports.
- P.R. China's sportsmen make continuous improvements in several sports, in preparation for the Beijing (北京) Olympic Games.
People
World leaders
State leaders by year: 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006...
Entertainers
- *NSYNC
- 50 Cent
- 98 Degrees
- Adam Sandler
- Al Franken
- Aly & AJ
- AJ McLean
- Alkaline Trio
- Anderson Cooper
- Annie Lennox
- Angelina Jolie
- Avril Lavigne
- Ashanti
- Backstreet Boys (Incomplete)
- Ben Stiller
- Black Eyed Peas
- Blossom Dearie
- Beyoncé (Dangerously in Love)
- Brad Pitt
- Britney Spears
- Bruce Willis
- Catherine Zeta Jones (Traffic)
- Christina Aguilera
- Christopher Guest
- Coldplay (Parachutes, A Rush of Blood to the Head, X&Y)
- Conan O'Brien
- Daddy Yankee
- Dee Dee Bridgewater
- Destiny's Child (Survivor, This Is The Remix, Destiny Fulfilled)
- Diana Krall
- Disturbed
- Dream Theater
- Dominic Monaghan (The Lord of the Rings), (Lost)
- Donald Trump (The Apprentice)
- Duran Duran (Astronaut)
- Def Leppard
- Electric Wizard
- Ellen DeGeneres (Finding Nemo, The Ellen DeGeneres Show)
- Emily Browning
- Eminem
- Eva Longoria (Desperate Housewives
- Evanescence (Fallen)
- Franz Ferdinand
- Frankie J
- Geri Halliwell
- George Clooney (O Brother, Where Art Thou? Ocean's 11 Ocean's 12)
- Gorillaz (Feel Good Inc) (Clint Eastwood) (19-2000)
- Green Day (Warning) (American Idiot) (Bullet In A Bible)
- Gwen Stefani (Love, Angel, Music, Baby)
- Halle Berry (X-Men, Monster's Ball)
- Incubus (Morning View) (A Crow Left of the Murder)
- Jack Black (High Fidelity, Shark Tale, School of Rock, Ice Age) (King Kong)
- Janet Jackson
- Jay-Z
- Jennifer Lopez
- Johnny Depp (Pirates of the Caribbean, Finding Neverland, Charlie and the Chocolate Factory)
- Jon Stewart
- Joss Stone
- Julia Roberts (Ocean's Eleven, Erin Brockovich)
- Kaiser Chiefs (I Predict a Riot)
- Keane
- Keanu Reeves (The Matrix series)
- Keira Knightley
- Kelly Clarkson (American Idol, Thankful, Breakaway)
- Kelly Rowland (Simply Deep)
- Kylie Minogue
- Lindsay Lohan (Mean Girls, Freaky Friday)
- Linkin Park (Hybrid Theory, Meteora)
- M. Night Shyamalan (Signs, The Village)
- Madonna (Music,Confessions On A Dance Floor)
- Mariah Carey (The Emancipation of Mimi)
- Marilyn Manson (The Golden Age of Grotesque)
- Matt Damon (Ocean's 11 Ocean's 12 The Bourne Identity The Bourne Supremacy)
- Melanie C (In Europe - Northern Star, Reason, Beautiful Intentions, First Day of My Life)
- Michelle Williams (Heart To Yours, Do You Know)
- My Chemical Romance (Three Cheers For Sweet Revenge)
- Natalie Portman
- Nicole Kidman
- Nine Inch Nails (With Teeth)
- No Doubt (Return of Saturn, Rock Steady)
- Oasis (Standing on the Shoulder of Giants, Heathen Chemistry, Don't Believe the Truth)
- Owen Wilson (Shanghai Noon, Meet the Parents, Zoolander, The Royal Tenenbaums, Behind Enemy Lines, I Spy, Shanghai Knights, The Big Bounce, Starsky and Hutch, Around the World in 80 Days, The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou, Meet the Fockers, Wedding Crashers
- Peter Jackson (The Lord of the Rings trilogy) (King Kong)
- Radiohead (Kid A, Amnesiac, Hail to the Thief)
- Red Hot Chili Peppers (By the Way) (Arcadium Stadium)
- Reel Big Fish (Cheer Up) (We're Not Happy 'Til You're Not Happy)
- Reese Witherspoon
- Ricky Gervais (The Office)
- Samuel L. Jackson
- Sarah McLachlan (Afterglow (album))
- Shakira
- Steven Spielberg (A.I.) (Minority Report) (Catch Me If You Can) (The Terminal) (War of the Worlds, Munich)
- System of a Down (Toxicity, Steal This Album!, Mezmerize)
- The White Stripes (De Stijl, White Blood Cells,Elephant, Get Behind Me Satan)
- The Killers (Hot Fuss)
- Tom Cruise (Minority Report, Collateral, War of the Worlds)
- Tom Hanks (The Terminal, Castaway, Catch Me If You Can, The Ladykillers), The Da Vinci Code)
- Tony Bennett
- U2 (All That You Can't Leave Behind, How to Dismantle an Atomic Bomb)
- Vince Vaughn (Old School, Dodge Ball. Starsky and Hutch, Zoolander, Anchorman, Mr. and Mrs. Smith, Wedding Crashers)
- Eric West
- Weezer (The Green Album, Maladroit, Make Believe)
- Will Ferrell (Saturday Night Live, Old School, Anchorman, Kicking and Screaming, Wedding Crashers)
- Will Smith (I, Robot film adaptation)(Hitch)
Sports figures
- Athletics
- Kenenisa Bekele
- Justin Gatlin
- Yelena Isinbayeva
- Paula Radcliffe
- Baseball
- Barry Bonds
- Vladimir Guerrero
- Derek Jeter
- Paul Konerko
- David Ortiz
- Albert Pujols
- Mariano Rivera
- Alex Rodriguez
- Curt Schilling
- Basketball
- Kobe Bryant
- Vince Carter
- Dwyane Wade
- Tim Duncan
- Kevin Garnett
- Emanuel ("Manu") Ginobili
- Allen Iverson
- LeBron James
- Tracy McGrady
- Yao Ming
- Steve Nash
- Shaquille O'Neal
- Cricket
- Mahendra Singh Dhoni
- Rahul Dravid
- Andrew Flintoff
- Adam Gilchrist
- Inzamam-ul-Haq
- Jacques Kallis
- Brian Lara
- Glenn McGrath
- Muttiah Muralitharan
- Kevin Pietersen
- Ricky Ponting
- Sachin Tendulkar
- Shane Warne
- Cycling
- Lance Armstrong
- Figure Skating
- Michelle Kwan
- Evgeny Plushenko
- Irina Slutskaya
- Football (American)
- Tiki Barber
- Tom Brady
- Daunte Culpepper
- Brett Favre
- Ray Lewis
- Donovan McNabb
- Steve McNair
- Peyton Manning
- Randy Moss
- Terrell Owens
- Michael Strahan
- Michael Vick
- Kurt Warner
- Football (Association)
- David Beckham
- Luis Figo
- Steven Gerrard
- Thierry Henry
- Zlatan Ibrahimovic
- Oliver Kahn
- Frank Lampard
- Henrik Larsson
- Paolo Maldini
- Robinho
- Ronaldinho
- Ronaldo
- Cristiano Ronaldo
- Ruud Van Nistelrooy
- Patrick Vieira
- Zinedine Zidane
- Golf
- Phil Mickelson
- Annika Sorenstam
- Michelle Wie
- Tiger Woods
- Ice Hockey
- Peter Forsberg
- Jarome Iginla
- Nikolai Khabibulin
- Nicklas Lidstrom
- Markus Näslund
- Chris Pronger
- Joe Sakic
- Martin St. Louis
- Motor Sport
- Fernando Alonso
- Dale Earnhardt Jr.
- Jeff Gordon
- Marcus Grönholm
- Sébastien Loeb
- Juan Pablo Montoya
- Danica Patrick
- Kimi Räikkönen
- Petter Solberg
- Michael Schumacher
- Paralympics
- Tanni Grey-Thompson
- Rugby Union
- George Gregan
- Gavin Henson
- Martin Johnson
- Richie McCaw
- Lote Tuqiri
- Tana Umaga
- Jonny Wilkinson
- Swimming and Diving
- Alexandre Despatie
- Grant Hackett
- Michael Phelps
- Ian Thorpe
- Pieter van den Hoogenband
- Tennis
- Roger Federer
- Andy Roddick
- Maria Sharapova
- Serena Williams
- Triathlon
- Simon Whitfield
- Volleyball
- Misty May
- Kerri Walsh
See also
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