The 1980s were a strange time. This was the decade of oversized shoulder pads, blockbuster movies, and technology that would soon change the world. The ’80s witnessed some truly world-altering events that left everyone in disbelief.
From home computers to MJ’s legendary moonwalk performance, this decade gave many things to be proud of or ashamed of.
The Chornobyl Disaster
On April 26, 1986, reactor No. 4 at the Chornobyl NPP in Ukraine exploded during a badly handled safety test. The disaster released radioactive material across parts of Europe and became the worst nuclear power accident in history. Two workers died the night of the explosion, and 28 more died in the following weeks from acute radiation sickness, while many others faced long-term health risks.
But it wasn’t just about the numbers. Chornobyl became a blood-soaked symbol of secrecy and government failure. The Soviets tried to keep the bad news from breaking out, which only made things worse for everyone, as outside help could have prevented it all. This disastrous event made the world realize that nuclear energy and inadequate management can lead to devastating results.
John Lennon was killed
On December 8, 1980, right outside his apartment building in New York, John Lennon was killed by Mark David Chapman. The legendary musician was only 40 years old. His death hit far beyond Beatles fans.
At that point, Lennon was a full-fledged icon and a cultural landmark. The Beatles had already changed pop music as a genre, and Lennon’s “Imagine” is still being used as an anthem whenever people talk about peace and politics. His murder also ruined the idea that if you are someone famous and in tune with modern culture, you’d be safe wherever you go, when in reality, every step you take, someone could be watching you.
MTV Makes Music Visual
When MTV launched in 1981, it kicked things off with the Buggles’ “Video Killed the Radio Star,” which was the most dramatic and on-the-nose song they could’ve picked. Suddenly, just listening to your favorite bangers wasn’t enough.
At first, MTV had a limited supply of videos to play, but artists quickly realized this was the way into the future of music. Michael Jackson, Madonna, Duran Duran, Prince, and countless others used music videos to build entire visual worlds. Of course, you had to have a great song, but now you also had to think about the outfit, choreography, and even a potential video.
Jane Fonda Gets Everyone Moving
In 1982, Jane Fonda’s Workout VHS tape revolutionized the world, sparking a sudden surge in aerobics enthusiasm. The tape was a grand slam for home-fitness enthusiasts, proving that people would absolutely sweat in front of their TVs if a celebrity in a leotard yelled a bunch of commands at them.
Before you could count to 10, the trend went far beyond being about Jane Fonda herself. We got various workout classes, so many new gyms, colorful spandex suits, and leg warmers for days. Despite half the customers being confused by the instructions, it became part of mainstream culture, and people loved it. That’s how you turn a niche hobby into a lifestyle.
IBM’s Personal Computer Craze
Personal computers, or PCs in short, existed before the 1980s, but IBM’s 5150 Personal Computer was the one that went truly viral. IBM introduced the PC on August 12, 1981, with a starting price of a whopping $1,565 (about $6k in 2026 dollars). It came with 16 KB of RAM and no disk drive in the base model. Today, this sounds like a joke and a total rip-off, considering even your smart fridge is 50 times more powerful.
The IBM PC became a major industry standard. The open architecture of the IBM PC relied on outside parts and software, allowing other companies to build compatible peripherals and programs for upgrades. Thanks to its flexibility, this iconic PC helped shape the market for decades.
HIV/AIDS Becomes a National Crisis
One of the darkest stories of the 1980s was the AIDS crisis. The first U.S. cases of what later became known as AIDS were reported by the CDC in 1981, and the term AIDS was established in 1982. Early cases were often reported among gay men, but researchers soon confirmed HIV could also be transmitted through blood, shared needles, and from mother to child.
Fear and misinformation spread quickly. Many people mistakenly believed that casual contact could transmit HIV, resulting in cruel stigma against those living with the virus. By the end of 1990, more than 100,000 AIDS-related deaths had been reported in the United States.
Michael Jackson Debuts the Moonwalk
On May 16, 1983, Michael Jackson performed his legendary hit “Billie Jean” on NBC, where the whole world saw what later became his iconic move—the moonwalk.
The move lasted only a few seconds, but it became one of the decade’s defining moments. Suddenly, everyone was sliding backward across kitchen floors, school gyms, and wedding receptions. Jackson’s Thriller era helped break racial barriers on MTV and turned him into the biggest pop star on the planet.
The Berlin Wall Falls
Built in 1961, the Berlin Wall had been separating East and West Berlin for decades, and represented the larger split between communist Eastern Europe and the democratic West. Then, on November 9, 1989, East Germany opened the border, and people flooded through.
The images of people climbing the Wall, hugging strangers, dancing, crying, and dismantling the wall with their bare hands became iconic. This did not solve every problem in Germany, but it sure helped make things better, signaling that the old order was collapsing fast.
Soviet Communism Starts to Crack
The death of Leonid Brezhnev in 1982 marked the beginning of the end of the Soviet era. Just like with the Berlin Wall, the change did not happen overnight. Mikhail Gorbachev eventually came to power in 1985 and introduced reforms such as the infamous glasnost and perestroika, loosening censorship and seeking to restructure the struggling Soviet system.
Rather than serving as the Soviet Union’s salvation, those reforms essentially led to the demise of communism. By the end of the decade, the Soviet Union was only a few years away from fully collapsing.
