Having reached the end of the first decade of the new millennium, it’s time to look back at all the things that helped shape the cultural heritage of our ever globalizing society. It seems amazing that it was nearly ten years ago when the entire world rang in the new millennium with style. From Tokyo to London, New York to Sydney, Rio De Janeiro to Cairo, the fireworks and celebrations were extraordinary. We’ve come a long way since. Did anyone think they would be holding a powerful phone in their pocket and take that power for granted today, ten years ago? Did anyone really grasp the ability for computers and the internet to permeate every aspect of our day to day lives? And did anyone think the Rolling Stones would still be touring? Well, here are the ten moments, ideas, and innovations which defined the decade. The list is broken into ten different categories, with at least one runner-up listed for each.
Runners-up: The Da Vinci Code, Oprah’s book club.
In 1997 an unknown writer named Joanne Rowling finally got her break upon the publication of a novel she had been working on for seven years, Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone. What followed was nothing short of mania. The series, with seven books planned from the start, became a global phenomenon. By the time the final book was published in 2007, the Harry Potter series had turned Rowling into a billionaire, one of the runners-up for Time’s “Person of the Year”, and easily the most influential children’s writer of her era. An entire generation grew up along with Harry, Ron, and Hermione, reading thousands of pages in a time where most children are watching TV. Harry Potter became famous for its cult-like following, with millions of kids everywhere waiting outside bookstores for midnight parties on release dates. Over 400 million copies of the books have been translated into 67 different languages. Along with tie-in merchandise and movie deals, the franchise is worth an estimated £15 billion. Many groups attempted to ban the books, arguing that Rowling was brain washing kids into practicing magic and believing in the occult. Most of their criticism has been ignored, especially by the college students playing quidditch matches on campus, and Oxford English Dictionary, who in 2003 entered “muggle” into its lexicon.
Runners-up: Lost, The Sopranos, Family Guy.
Perhaps the most annoying of all entries on this list, reality TV has changed the landscape of television over the past decade. While different shows can fit the general description of reality TV, it really began with in the UK with Pop Idol in 2001. The winner of the first season was Will Young, who has had a modest career since. American Idol took off a year later, and every week gains more votes than the US presidential election. Other reality TV shows took off at the same time and have had a huge effect on television, such as, Survivor, Big Brother, The Amazing Race, and The Real World. Jeff Zucker, the Chief Executive of a rival network remarked that, “I think Idol is the most impactful show in the history of television”.
Runners-up: Hotel Rwanda, Brokeback Mountain.
Danny Boyle created a masterpiece in 2008 with his film Slumdog Millionaire. Based on the book “Q&A” by Vikas Swarup, the movie tells the tale of an impoverished young man and his chance to make millions on the Indian version of “Who Wants to be a Millionaire?” He answers question after question based on chance encounters throughout his life, such as how he knows who is on a US 100 dollar bill. We learn that the young man, played by Dev Patel, is not interested in the money, but in finding his lost girlfriend. Slumdog Millionaire took the world by storm, grossing $377 million. It also won 8 Academy Awards, including Best Picture. It has been acclaimed as being a small representative of the future of film, because of its international cast, crew, and audience. Joe Morgenstern called it the “world’s first globalized masterpiece”.
Runners-up: Spain Wins Euro 2008, Zinedine Zidane’s Headbutt, 2008 New York Giants.
Down three games to zero against their fiercest rival, the New York Yankees, in the American League Championship Series, the Red Sox were down to their final inning when the magic began. Even with superstar closer Mariano Rivera on the mound, the Red Sox were not going to be denied. They scored the tying run, and eventually won the game in the 12th inning. Game 5 went to 14 innings, and game 6 was decided by just two runs. In game 7 however, the Red Sox cut the Yankees loose with a 7 run victory to become the first team to ever come back from a 3-0 series deficit and win. But, their job was not done yet. The Red Sox had gone 86 years without a World Series title, and were not going to go home empty handed. In fact, they swept the Cardinals in 4 games to win the championship, in what analysts would later call “the greatest story baseball ever told”.
Runners-up: Janet Jackson’s Super Bowl Show, Live 8, Napster, death of Michael Jackson
Steve Jobs didn’t invent the mp3 player, but he did revolutionize it. In October of 2001, Apple introduced the world to the iPod, and perhaps they didn’t even realize what they were doing. Previously, mp3 players were unpopular because they were fragile, had short battery life, or were simply not sexy and fashionable. Apple saw the flaws of these products and attempted to fix them all. Eight years later, it’s hard to find a teenager or young adult without an iPod. Over 220,000,000 iPods have been sold throughout the world, making them the highest selling digital audio player. It has also changed the music industry itself. Any small musician, looking to make it big, can get his music in the iTunes store, and theoretically propel himself to stardom. Interestingly, there are studies being done that argue iPods are making kids more anti-social, because they can turn on their music instead of socializing. Even if you “are a PC”, you must admit that Apple was doing something right when they introduced the iPod.
Runners-up: HD TV, high speed internet, Wikipedia.
It was called just a fad, but others insist that social networking sites have become one of the biggest shifts in human interaction since the invention of the telephone. Social media has overtaken pornography as the #1 activity on the internet. Consider that it took the radio 38 years to reach 50 million users, but it took facebook less than 9 months to reach 100 million users. Twitter played a pivotal role in the 2009 Iranian elections, and yet all the popular news feeds were over taken on the day Michael Jackson died. With nearly 93% of college students using facebook or another form of social networking, these sites are already having a massive effect on human interaction. Social networking is fundamentally changing the way the world communicates.
Runners-up: Dotcom bust, real estate collapse.
The second most widely used currency in the world was formally introduced in 2002. The euro, primarily used by members of the European Union, is also used by millions of people on other continents. 16 members of the EU are obliged to adopt the euro eventually, with the United Kingdom and Denmark exempt. Many African counties have also adopted it unofficially and some countries have negotiated usage. There are now 23 countries using currencies directly pegged to the euro. Behind the US dollar, the euro has become the second largest reserve currency and the euro also has the more value in circulation than any other currency. With close to 500 million people worldwide using the euro, its use and expanding use will help shape our future and hopefully lead us into a stage of macroeconomic stability.
Runners-up: Darfur Genocide, Benazir Bhutto assassination, London train bombings.
On September 11, 2001, four airplanes in the United States were hijacked by Muslim extremists and crashed into various locations. Two were crashed into the Twin Towers of the World Trade Center in New York City, one was flown into the Pentagon Building in Washington DC, and in the fourth plane, civilians overtook the terrorists and the plane crashed into a field in Shanksville, Pennsylvania. Nearly three thousand people were killed in the attacks. Al-Qaeda, a terrorist group centered in the Middle East, and its leader Osama Bin Laden were blamed for the attack. The New York Stock Exchange, which makes its home only blocks away from the WTC, had its largest one day drop in history when it re-opened. Following the attack, President George W. Bush started his War on Terror, which has led to major conflicts in Afghanistan and Iraq. The long term effects of the attacks are still being felt today, and will continue to shape the world for years to come.
Runners-up: Hurricane Katrina, Victorian Bushfire, Climate Change
The second largest recorded earthquake in history occurred on December 26, 2005, in the middle of the Indian Ocean. The resulting tsunami killed nearly 230,000 people and displaced over one million. Deaths occurred in fourteen different countries, and Indonesia suffered the worst fatalities. Tourists, mostly from Europe, were also killed during this peak travel time, with over 9,000 deaths. The tsunami is believed to have been the deadliest natural disaster since the 1976 Tangshan earthquake. In the aftermath, entire cities had been destroyed. Rural areas had been completely wiped out. The rest of the world responded with relief aid estimated at over ten billion US dollars. Despite the efforts, the countries most affected are still in the process of rebuilding, and many may never be the same.
Runners-up: 2000 Bush/Gore Florida election, 2009 Iranian Elections.
In a nation still bearing the scars of its Jim Crow past, the people of the United States made a huge move toward true racial equality in 2008 by electing Barack Obama, the nation’s first black president. President Obama won the Electoral College by a staggering 192 votes over his opponent Senator John McCain. The triumph of “change” was approved all around the world. An international poll showed an average of 49% worldwide in favor of Obama, while McCain only garnered 12%. President Obama had some strong ideas and plans for the future, and only time will tell if he can truly come through with them.






























Poor Joanne, if she'd sticked to the usual no. of school years ,she mighta tipped Gates to become the world's richest person. Though it might have hit her bonce later.
No wonder why she made the later ones more plumper, a burden to read.
The final book was like a bundle o' confetti between two dollar notes.
The things people do for money!
@BravehisTickle (23):
Re Eminem…The defining moment about it was that he didn't take it! Eminem forever!
Burden to read? Really?
Sorry to latch on to your reply here, but wasn’t the first reality tv show The Real World? That was out in the early 90s…
In 1973, America was introduced to the concept of reality television with a twelve week program: The Louds: An American Family.
From http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2011/04/19/an-american-family-the-louds-and-cinema-verite.html :
On Thursday, January 11, 1973, the first broadcast of An American Family changed television history forever. A 12-hour documentary series on PBS, An American Family chronicled seven months in the day-to-day lives of the William C. Loud family of Santa Barbara, California. An audience of ten million viewers watched in fascination the unfolding real-life drama of Bill and Pat Loud, and their five children, Lance, Kevin, Grant, Delilah and Michele.
The series challenged conventional views of middle class American family life with its depiction of marital tensions that led to divorce, an elder son’s gay lifestyle and the changing values of American families. Prior to An American Family, the staples of television family programs such as The Brady Bunch profiled a model of the perfectly happy family that seldom faced any crisis. The broadcast of An American Family in 1973 proved to be a groundbreaking watershed that forever changed American television programming and led the way to more complex family portraits such as Roseanne, One Day At A Time and even The Simpsons.
I, like many other commenters on this list, do not agree with the Slumdog Millionaire choice. There were many films that were better than Slumdog and redefined how we look at film (Oldboy, WALL-E and Memento come to mind) and it definitely isn't the first movie to win 8 Academy Awards, or to have an international cast, crew and audience- Roman Polanski and Lars von Trier have been doing it for quite some time.
What would I say was the defining moment of film? I would say the amount of Best Picture nominees for the Oscars being increased from 5 to 10. It was spurred on by the controversial exclusion of both The Dark Knight and WALL-E, and it will give a chance for the equal treatment of animation, summer blockbusters, and smaller/independent films at the Oscars which was definitely more influential than Slumdog Millionaire was.
I swear, WALL-E was one of the most boring movies I have ever seen.
9/11 should be #1, Obama's election really should be somewhere around #5-#8.
also, you really *****ted up the music thing… Napster is by FAR the most impactful thing to happen to music this decade. iTunes is simply the mainstreams only attempt at bandaging the wounds from all the filesharing napster introduced.
This list is not listed based on importance. There are different categories.
nice list… like it… but i don’t understand why everyone was so over-awed by Slumdog millionaire.
Agreed.. It was a pathetic film.. I inspite of being an Indian am sayin this..!!
It got those oscars because there was no competition that year..!!
Great list
@lala i thought i was the only one who thought that it wasn’t that good
Fantastic list – a really good read and so interesting. A nice one to start the year with.
you know this is going to be a controvesy.
@Human?
well well my friend, you are definitely not alone… the book was definitely better than the movie… its like any bollywood movie. according to me, the movie of the decade has to be one among LOTR trilogy, memento and Dark Knight.
AWESOME LIST HAPPY NEW YEAR EVERYONE ON LISTVERSE !!!
Good list. A few great highlights.
Of course this is going to be a controversy, but I mean, come on! It’s not like a list writer can know what all list verse followers want on a list.
I think some great highlights were mentioned.
Happy New Year everyone!
Sorry but these highlights show too much useless minor culture and not enough about what really happened this last decade.
Obama before 9/11??
You serious about that being the defining moment of the last ten years?
There’s no way Obama is more important than 9/11. 9/11 could be the defining moment of the century for all we know. An election, even one as important as Obama’s, does not overshadow an event that has shaped world politics for over eight years and counting.
Other than that, solid list. Except for the Family Guy mention.
In additional to international affairs and politics, I would say that, for many people, 9/11 also defined a religion.
the list is not bad, but i don’t particularly like the sports choice.
as a red sox fan i appreciate the recognition however i think the real sports story of the decade was Michael Phelps shattering all those records in the Olympics.
…and then getting media busted for smoking *****. Imagine, being a pot smoker and STILL being able to break all those records.
Go facebook!
First time writing a comment…. I liked the list but what about the US going to war…
Amazing list. Well done randomprecision24. a great start to a new year. Happy new year to all.
Happy New Year to all listversers!
A nice list, one or two that I don’t agree with, but that’s the nature of Listverse!
I think usain bolt should have been under the sports (/athletics) section. Three gold medals and world records is pretty impressive and more universally recognised and applauded
LIst id cool Happoiuy New Ytear!!
it’s december 2004, not 2005..
Lol @ putting the Boston Red Sox comeback before Zidane’s headbutt. Another America oriented choice. No one except Americans gave a damn about that comeback, and yet millions over the world were staggered by Zizou’s headbutt.
Go figure.
Top 10 Defining Moments of the 2000s reloaded:
No.4
Economics:
The Enron scandal
“America’s Most Innovative Company” for six straight years, the Enron Corporation becomes one of the largest bankruptcies in U.S. history in 2001.
No.6.
Music:
Eminem wins the Oscar award for best song “lose yourself” of the movie 8 mile in 2002.
Eminem fans unite!!
Gimme a break! Not slum dog millionaire again!
And gimme another break! Obama for prez, Obama for Nobel and Obama tops the list again! Come on he is just another prez!
In fact Obama doesn’t deserve to be on the list. And definitely 9/11 should top the list.
I also think that the sports section deserved an event of global outreach, which unquestionably implies that it has to be an Olympic event. It could be Phelps or it could be Bolt.
As for the technology section, social networking wouldn’t have come to existence had it not been for the expanded access to high speed internet connections. And even then I think the evolution of the cell phone into the do-it-all smartphone and its subsequent proliferation are more significant. I mean, in three decades I don’t see myself telling my sons that the 2000s decade was the one that brought us social networking–I see myself telling them that it was then that cell phones became pretty much right-hand men.
In terms of economics, I think this decade will be remembered for the collapse of the global economy in late ’08 than anything else. I mean, it affected more people than the introduction of the Euro. That’s, of course, pretty debatable and I understand your choice.
When it comes to film I think most of us agree that your choice was questionable. Slumdog Millionare is a fantastic movie, don’t get me wrong. It’s probably among my all-time favorites. But there have been fabulous movies since the film industry took off. It is the billion-dollar blockbusters that define decades. The ’90s isn’t remembered for Shawshank Redemption, it is remembered for Titanic. And The Dark Knight will be up there with Titanic, the Godfather, Gone With the Wind, Casablanca, and that handful of movies that define eras. It will not be Slumdog Millionaire.
This was a decade of 9/11. That event should have topped the list. Barack Obama is huge, no doubt about it, but we cannot gauge his impact for now and he certainly hasn’t marked the end of an era like 9/11 did.
Yeah, Slumdog should be replaced by The Dark Knight, The LOTR series, or the movie that just came out, Avatar.
a couple of things are on this list which i can’t quite agree upon.
economics. don’t get me wrong, the introduction of the euro is important but it is gravely overshadowed by the biggest financial crisis since 1929.
on top of that i don’t see how obama ranks as the most important thing on this list. sure, he’s the first black president and seems to be a really good guy. but in germany, we got the first female president. 9/11 had far more impact on the world than those two politicians ever will have.
and i would not have chosen facebook as the defining technical moment of the decade. they basically only did what other pages have been doing for years and filtered out the best of that to create their own site.in my book, that’s not really groundbreaking stuff.
@erika: the americans went to war – so what? try to think of any decade they didn’t go to war.
#7
Federer’s 15! come on! !!!! !
Do not agree with Slumdog, Harry Potter-though i like it but i think LOTR should be there-, Ipod and Facebook (wtf)??!! And Euro has more value than the US Dollar. Poor list.
Well The Noughties, (You know it took me ages to work out the name for this decade. Whats this one? The Teenies?)will be remembered for 9/11, Afghanistan and Iraq Wars, Saddam being hanged, Radovan Karadzic being caught, The Tsunami, Hurricane Katrina, Cyclone Nargis, Floods in England, Wars in Lebanon and Gaza and George Bush not catching Osama Bin Laden.. You know, I miss Bush and the mindnumbingly stupid things he said?
Much like yours dumbass.
Great list and I respect the choice to include runners-up. I love Dark Knight as much as anyone, but certainly not a definitive cinematic moment in the 00′s. I question Slumdog as well, though I understand it’s global participation as well as the height of Bollywood. I may disagree and definitely harbor ill feelings toward Al Gore, I think his “Inconvenient Truth” might have been a civil choice (Won a Nobel prize didn’t he?), and more globally impactive than anything by Michael Moore.
Really, will Slumdog or Dark Knight be as respected 50 years from now as “The Godfather”? Even Star Wars is aging less-than-gracefully.
Yeah, that's mostly due to dreadful spinoffs.
#1 America elects its first illegal immigrant dictator-in-training President who happens to be black on his father's side and therefore everyone who criticizes him (black or otherwise) is an evil sewer-scum-sucking racist.
Wow, I agree with a lot of items on this list, but many of the runner-up’s seemed more important than what was picked as the final. Okay list, and yes, its going to be controversial.
Family guy?
Ridiculous list. Pop idol, Harry Potter, Ipod?! Those are probably the worst things that happened in television, literature and music during the last decade. Facebook = Technology? And has anyone outside the USA even heard about Red Sox? 9/11, Euro and the tsunami are rightfully on this list, but I think that the completion of the Human Genome Project should be number one. It is one of the most important achievements in the history of humankind.
What’s with all this “hope” stuff. The top ten Defining moments should defined what the era was, and the era was destruction, debt, unemployment, downfall. It was the Episode 5 of the 21st century. It’s not a time of hope or change (although there has been BAD change). The defining moment of the 2000s was 9/11 because it showcased what the whole decade was going to be. Destruction. Sorry to be so morbid, but in a terrible time such as now, the defining moments of a terrible time are not the election of somebody who has only achieved symbolically (What has Obama done besides being black?), but the moments like 9/11, and, more specifically, the response. The response to 9/11 was “We can be put through hell but we will stick together.”, and that says a lot more about the 2000′s than Obama’s election.
Many on this list are, but 10, 7 and 5 are totaly arbitrary and have much more to do with the author’s choice than with their real importance. I mean come on, the redsocks? Who outside of the usa actualy gives a damn? Facebook – oh great, the monstrosity was born, celebrate! The 7th book of harry potter? If that was the greatest literary achievement then god help us all in the future…
Nice list !
As usual, I’m going to disagree with a few items and propose my own …
Technology – The whole “Google” thing. GMail, Google Videos + Youtube, Picasa, Orkut … well … maybe not Orkut
, Google Books, Google Scholar, Google Patents, Google Earth, Google Maps, Google Reader, Google this, Google that. It started in 1998 but it’s certainly a 200x phenomenon. Facebook is awesome too, but pales in comparison to Google’s range of online services.
Sports – Zidane’s headbutt was the biggest thing since Maradona’s “Hand of God” incident two decades ago. Soccer is way more popular than baseball and the incident sent shockwaves throughout the world. I, for one, was not aware of the “Red Sox” saga.
Film – I found Slumdog very entertaining but I don’t think it is the definitive 200x movie. The craze that followed “Passion of the Christ” or “The Dark Knight” or the LOTR trilogy was much more than SM. Left to my whim, I’d select Kill Bill though
Science – Okay, this category just has to be on the defining moments list and I am very confused about selecting one. Help me out on this one, folks but I tentatively pick the initiation of the LHC experiment as the most significant scientific step taken in the past decade. Of course, climate change is very hot right now but what the LHC reveals will be extremely significant for the future of physics.
Hi, Happy new year to all!!
“Having reached the end of the first decade of the new millennium”, ??? still one year to go isn’t it? if my maths is correct.
I suppose it would be next to impossible to pinpoint a moment when China overtook the world economically.
Speaking of China, I think Phelps in the Olympics beats out the Red Sox.
Janet Jackson’s boob as a close runner-up?
Standards of the lists declining.
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5/10.
Wow! What a brilliant list! Happy New Year to all Listversers!
(BTW, I loved Slumdog Millionaire. I think it’s rightfully considered best of the noughties)
Top 10 Defining Moments of the 2000 (in America?) duh…
Standards of the graphs declining.
@Wrichik (39): agree 100% I google this. I google that. I google at work. I google my lovelife. I google my destiny. I google my life…. I google, google, google, google all day…. hahahahahahahaha. Now google me.
and red sox… is that the one santa put his gifts on during Christmas? Hahaha. Just joking.
@KG 40 – Yes your math is incorrect – 2000 to 2009 = 10 years, thus the end of 2009 was the end of a decade!
@jordybear (48) and @KG (40):
2000 was the last year of the previous millennium and hence 2001 was the first year of this one. However, conventionally, decades are counted beginning with the “multiple of 10″ year. Thus, 01.01.2000 through 31.12.2009 was a decade.
Excellent list. However like others, I don’t agree with the film choice. In my opinion something like the Shrek series should have been considered. They were the one of the first movies to be made from CGI only, something that hundreds of movies in the following years have also done, I.e Avatar.
As for the sports moment, IMO the Red Sox shouldn’t even be a runner-up never mind the defining sport moment of the decade. Realistically it should have been Michael Phelps or Usain Bolt who rocked the sporting world with their stunning performances at the Olympics and the World Championships. Hell, even Roger Federer’s complete and total dominance over tennis this decade should have at least gotten a runners-up place.
Another vote for “Slumdog Millionaire” isn’t the most important movie of the decade. A good film, but I doubt it will even be remembered by the end of this decade.
If we’re basing it on memorability, international popularity/box office, innovation, influencing pop-culture and most achievements/awards it should clearly go to The Lord of The Rings series
I’d also say that 9/11 has had a much bigger impact on the world than number 2, I actually would have placed it ahead of Obama’s win making it the most defining moment of the past decade by far
Mmh, for the film I was really hoping it would be Avatar.
It absolutely blows Slumdog out of the water.
Besides, it’s not that good. ;/
The sports should’ve been about the Beijing Olympics or something.
Phelps was impressive and so was Usain. And how the hell did the Chinese get all those medals? XD
In case you hadn't noticed, Avatar sssssssssuuuuuuuuuuuuuccccckkkkkkeeeeedddddd
Ooooh, Lord of the Ring is DEFINITELY an amazing movie.
I think you should’ve included that somewhere. xD
A nation still bearing the scars of Jim Crow? Are you serious? You really need to keep the Obamanauts off your lists.
Slumdog Millionaire? How about Lord of the Freaking Rings winning 13 Freaking Oscars?
>> try to think of any decade they didn’t go to war.
The last one was the 1920′s-1930′s. And guess what that led to?
11 oscars
more fuel for the i hate the 2000′s fire i have burning. where’s my time machine? i wanna go back to the 1980′s.
Well movie should definately have been the Dark Night..but a great list thanks!
Interesting list, RandomPrecision24. Loved how you gave a top pick and runners up as well.
I agree with some of the comments that 9/11 should have been higher than Obama, not especially at number one. As for choice of movies…Shrek would have been better.
As for those who rag on Facebook…I’m taking it you don’t have accounts open. I enjoy the games, social interaction and the cultures it brings to my everyday life. It’s neat to have what I want all on one page instead of having to travel to many web pages. In addition, I have interacted with people all over the world. Like one giant pen pal account.
Having said that, I think for this list, Google might have been a better choice but didn’t it start at the end of the last decade? 98 or 99?
@BravehisTickle (23): Eminem? Really? Does anyone know who he is? He’s not important outside of the USA. Most of the world would have heard of the above items (maybe not the Red Sox) but he doesn’t fit for that category.
My opinion.
GREAT LIST !!!
although greece winning euro 2004 eclipses spains win in 2008
This list sux! these moments arent defining at all..