Bookended by ads for Trojan condoms and Malibu Ultra Light cigarettes, the lengthy interview in Playboy magazine is a remarkably prophetic document. Twenty-six years ago this month, Donald J. Trump sat down with Glenn Plaskin, a celebrity columnist, and, over a glass of chilled Coke, offered a grievance-filled economic agenda, a searing denunciation of weak-kneed American leadership and a keen understanding of his appeal to blue-collar Americans that uncannily resembled the White House campaign he is waging today — without Twitter, which didn’t yet exist.

A glossy time capsule, the interview is testament to consistency, stubbornness or stuntedness, depending on your view.

Below are excerpts from the original interview, along with an analysis of how they stack up against his 2016 message.

On which Americans would support a hypothetical Trump bid for the White House:

1990 “The working guy would elect me. He likes me. When I walk down the street, those cabbies start yelling out their windows.”