
...but it has been completely untouched since 1996.
'96 was the year I first got Internet Access, which makes the Space Jam site a nostalgia bomb that drops me right back into the days of surfing the information superhighway on a dial-up connection at 28.8 KBPS. It's a perfect storm of early Internet design elements, including frames, tables, awesomely garish animated gifs...






...and of course, the ol' standby of bright red Times New Roman text on a black-and-white background of stars:

But as much as this looks like any random Ultimate Hootie & The Blowfish Shrine, keep in mind that this wasn't a fan-created page on GeoCities or Angelfire. This was a professionally created site put up by a major movie studio to promote one of their biggest releases of the year.
Promotion that involved offering high-resolution photos:

Up to the minute movie news:

And of course, the jamminest downloads:

For younger readers, there was a time when 7.5 MB was considered a pretty huge file that would take an entire evening -- as measured in games of Minesweeper and Solitaire -- and not just the average size of the pictures you can take with your phone.
Also, "it's 7 and a half megs, it's Quicktime, and it's worth it" was quite possibly the best possible pick-up line for computer programmers in the mid-'90s.
Considering that the explosion of attention is likely getting the Space Jam site more hits today than it's gotten in the past 14 years combined, it's only a matter of time before someone at Warner Bros. notices that this artifact of Web 1.0 is still lingering. But while it might be tempting to take it down -- especially in the face of 21st Century Internet loudmouths making fun of it for being exactly like the rest of the web was at the time -- I sincerely hope they resist the urge. This is a genuine (and genuinely garish) piece of Internet history, and it should be left preserved, so that future generations can better understand that dim and distant time when wild ball-eating Mr. Ts roamed the web, their dominance only challenged only by rotating wireframe skulls.























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