The Years 1994 - Reeling In

In America, Bill Clinton was in the White House, and the "Republican Revolution" was building. But the image that froze the globe was the handshake: Yasser Arafat and Yitzhak Rabin on the White House lawn, with Bill Clinton standing between them, forcing a smile. The Oslo Accords were signed. We know now it didn't last, but for a moment in September 1994, peace in the Middle East felt physically tangible. No Reeling in the Years segment on 1994 is complete without two sporting clips.

On the British and Irish charts, Wet Wet Wet’s cover of Love Is All Around from the film Four Weddings and a Funeral refused to leave the number one spot. It felt like it played for the entire summer. But below the surface, rebellion was brewing. Ireland’s own The Cranberries released No Need to Argue , featuring the haunting anti-war anthem Zombie , a direct response to the IRA bombings in Warrington. Meanwhile, Portishead’s Dummy invented trip-hop for late-night listens, and Lisa Loeb scored the first number-one single as an unsigned artist with Stay (I Missed You) . reeling in the years 1994

But the movie that truly reels in the years is The Lion King . It wasn’t just a film; it was a ritual. Every child born in the late 80s knows every word to Circle of Life . On TV, Friends premiered on NBC. "I’ll be there for you" became the anthem of Gen X slackers suddenly becoming Gen X adults. Meanwhile, ER debuted, inventing the modern medical drama with its shaky cameras and high-octane chaos. Finally, the quietest but most important event of 1994 happened on a computer screen. On April 12, 1994, Netscape Navigator 1.0 was released. It wasn't the first browser, but it was the first for ordinary people. In 1994, the World Wide Web went from a grey text box used by physicists to a blue hyperlink you could click with a mouse. In America, Bill Clinton was in the White

The news footage is grainy: a nervous looking John Major in London, a cautious Albert Reynolds in Dublin, and the stunned faces of people in Belfast and Derry who had known violence for 25 years. The peace would be fragile (the Docklands bombing in 1996 proved that), but the ceasefire of 1994 changed the island of Ireland forever. It allowed for the economic boom of the Celtic Tiger. It allowed parents to stop flinching at the sound of a van backfiring. The British monarchy had a terrible, horrible, no good, very bad year. In the Reeling in the Years archive, the footage of Prince Charles sits uncomfortably. It was the year he effectively admitted to adultery on national television in Jonathan Dimbleby’s documentary. He confessed to being "faithful and honorable" only until his marriage to Princess Diana became "irretrievably broken down." We know now it didn't last, but for

So, put on the kettle. Queue up Zombie by The Cranberries. Watch the news reel of Nelson Mandela walking free. And remember: 1994 wasn't that long ago, but it is a different country now. What a year to reel through.

But the real drama came in the spring. While the world watched the anniversary of D-Day, the tabloids published the "Camillagate" tapes—a transcript of a deeply intimate phone call between Charles and Camilla Parker-Bowles. For the British public, 1994 was the year the fairy tale died, setting the stage for Diana’s devastating Panorama interview a year later. Globally, 1994 was a moral test that humanity arguably failed. While the world was distracted by O.J. Simpson’s white Ford Bronco (June 17), a genocide was unfolding in Rwanda. Between April and July, an estimated 800,000 Tutsis and moderate Hutus were slaughtered. The Reeling in the Years clips from that summer are almost unwatchable: bodies floating down the Kagera River, machetes stacked like firewood, and Western officials refusing to use the word "genocide."