'X' Man

Newsweek, May, 2002 by Adam Rogers

When "The X-Files" premiered in 1993, a slick little horror show tucked into a Friday evening time slot, the geeks found it and claimed it as their own. But in the tech-boom 1990s, who wasn't a geek?

The program became a cult favorite, with hundreds of fan-created Web sites, and its audience grew to a respectable 20 million viewers at its peak. The heroes, FBI agents Mulder (the believer) and Scully (the skeptic) played back our own millennial anxieties about the future, technology and the unknown, managing to stay wry and dry in the process. The best episodes often combined the spooky and the goofy-remember the giant fluke-man, or the alien robot cockroaches? But now the fat mutant lady from space has finally sung ... and just when we were this close to figuring out the...

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