The iPod video era: when we watched Lost on a two-inch screen
Description
Rewind to 9 October 2005 to 15 October 2005
đ China goes full space cowboy
Chinaâs Shenzhou 6 mission blasts off, sending two taikonauts into orbit for nearly five days â a major flex in the global space race. Itâs their first two-man crew, the first time anyoneâs used the orbital module as living space and a huge leap toward their future space station plans.Â
đ Harold Pinter gets the Nobel nod
Britainâs master of awkward pauses and passive-aggressive menace finally gets his due. Harold Pinter wins the Nobel Prize in Literature âfor uncovering the precipice under everyday prattle.â Translation: he made small talk terrifying. His acceptance video lecture goes nuclear on the Iraq War, proving you can drop a political bomb even while clutching a Nobel medal.
đ Bathurst: Holden hearts soar
On 9 October, Mark Skaife and Todd Kelly steer their Commodore to victory at Mount Panorama, bagging Holdenâs sixth Bathurst 1000 win. Itâs Skaifeâs fifth, Kellyâs first and Ford fansâ collective heartbreak. The trackâs hot, the tyres melt and the Holden-Ford rivalry burns brighter than ever.Â
đ§ Appleâs âOne More Thingâ goes video
Steve Jobs slides another gadget flex into 2005 history with the iPod Video â the first iPod that lets you watch TV shows like Lost on a 2.5-inch screen. The crowd goes wild, even if theyâll later admit it was like watching Desperate Housewives through a peephole. Itâs also the debut of iTunes 6, where buying a $1.99 music video feels like the future.
đ„ Aardmanâs hot potato week
Just days after Wallace & Gromit: The Curse of the Were-Rabbit tops the US box office, a fire destroys Aardman Animationsâ Bristol warehouse â wiping out 20 years of clay sets, models and history. Nick Park calls it âcruel irony.â Fans call it devastating. Gromit, as usual, says nothing but looks deeply unimpressed.
đž Dolly covers the world
Dolly Parton drops Those Were the Days, turning 60s folk and protest anthems into mountain magic. She ropes in everyone from Norah Jones to Keith Urban and somehow makes âCrimson and Cloverâ sound like it was born in Tennessee. Critics swoon, purists squint â Dolly just keeps winning.
đ» The Fog rolls in â badly
Tom Welling and Selma Blair front the remake of The Fog, where ghosts seek revenge and audiences seek refunds. Critics torch it (4 percent on Rotten Tomatoes), but it still hauls in box office cash because 2005 was peak horror-remake season. Carpenterâs original remains king; this one just⊠drifts.
đș Runâs House blesses MTV
Rev Run of Run-D.M.C. swaps turntables for family tables as Runâs House premieres on MTV. Itâs part hip-hop legacy, part wholesome parenting sitcom and somehow ends each episode with bathtub wisdom via BlackBerry. It becomes one of MTVâs few reality shows your mum didnât hate.
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