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re: Why have the last 20 years been less culturally distinct than previous decades?
Posted on 9/18/23 at 3:21 pm to Jimbeaux
Posted on 9/18/23 at 3:21 pm to Jimbeaux
quote:
Cultural Marxism, aka critical theories praxis, is a societal parasite. It destroys without building. It literally is designed to create division.
found the James Lindsay fan
Posted on 9/18/23 at 3:26 pm to secfballfan
quote:
People spend way too much time on message boards the past 20 years..
And some people live in small cocoon communities (Gos bless them), but don’t seem to recognize the cultural changes and the societal instability it’s causing.
Just take a look at the current demographic projections. Marriage rates are projected to be less than 50% of the adult population. That’s a lifetime projection. Imagine less than 50% of all adults in a country never getting married.
Birth rates way below replacement level and FALLING.
These developments are directly connected to radical ideologies being taught in all levels of education.
Posted on 9/18/23 at 5:31 pm to The Easter Bunny
quote:
Dude. Did you have wireless internet everywhere in 2003? Smartphones? Self-driving cars?
We had internet. The fact that internet is better now doesn’t mean we didn’t have it then. Wi-Fi isn’t new tech, it’s an improvement on an established tech.
Also we still don’t really have self driving cars. Every car I see on the road has a driver.
Posted on 9/18/23 at 5:37 pm to Bert Macklin FBI
I'd take a different angle:
Mass storage and consumption mediums.
Let's put it this way:
When you were a kid, if you wanted to listen to your paren't music, you'd need to have a working phonograph, or buy limited supplies of relatively expensive media with shelf-life replayability.
Now, you can purchase/access/consume almost any media for a lifetime, with nearly unlimited selection, for subscription level fees.
That means a greater and wider instantaneous demand for entertainment in any form can be met with greater speed and diversity than ever before.
Americans didn't stop creating culture. They just started having access to all the aspects of created culture that had previously been only accessible in niche communities, or with specialized attention.
Mass storage and consumption mediums.
Let's put it this way:
When you were a kid, if you wanted to listen to your paren't music, you'd need to have a working phonograph, or buy limited supplies of relatively expensive media with shelf-life replayability.
Now, you can purchase/access/consume almost any media for a lifetime, with nearly unlimited selection, for subscription level fees.
That means a greater and wider instantaneous demand for entertainment in any form can be met with greater speed and diversity than ever before.
Americans didn't stop creating culture. They just started having access to all the aspects of created culture that had previously been only accessible in niche communities, or with specialized attention.
Posted on 9/18/23 at 5:42 pm to LSU Grad Alabama Fan
Multifactoral.
- ubiquitous internet merging culture
- our “creative betters” aren’t creative anymore and just rehash old shite
- a little “get off my lawn” effect. you’re getting old.
- ubiquitous internet merging culture
- our “creative betters” aren’t creative anymore and just rehash old shite
- a little “get off my lawn” effect. you’re getting old.
Posted on 9/18/23 at 5:51 pm to LSU Grad Alabama Fan
Maybe we’ve maxed out on the shite we can do or like as a whole?

Posted on 9/18/23 at 6:12 pm to LSU Grad Alabama Fan
Mixed race couple wearing masks is so 2020’s
Posted on 9/18/23 at 6:13 pm to LSU Grad Alabama Fan
Cultural homogenization via corporate risk aversion. Massive consolidation among major cultural producers has amplified this.
This post was edited on 9/18/23 at 6:14 pm
Posted on 9/18/23 at 6:41 pm to A Smoke Break
quote:
Look at popular music, most regional styles are dead. Country, rock, hip hop... it's all blended together in an amalgamation.
We come with the funky style that gets us known for the show.
And we'll mix the hip-hop rock country if we say it is so.
And f*ck the naysayers cause they don't mean a thing
'Cause this is what style we bring
Posted on 9/18/23 at 7:31 pm to LSU Grad Alabama Fan
I saw this exact thing in a video on Twitter or Instagram. Can’t remember. Yesterday. Like word for word.
You should link for us.
You should link for us.
Posted on 9/18/23 at 7:46 pm to Havoc
quote:
Maybe we’ve maxed out on the shite we can do or like as a whole?
I’ve felt this way before but hold out hope that there are greater possibilities.
I’m 42, graduated in 98. There was no slow transition to what the world actually was from childhood to adulthood for me. My view of the world I lived in went from a John Hughes film to columbine and 9/11 pretty quick. Those two things defined the 2000’s.
Posted on 9/18/23 at 8:24 pm to LSU Grad Alabama Fan
Because technology has made it so all you losers just want to do the same thing all the time.
Posted on 9/18/23 at 8:34 pm to LSU Grad Alabama Fan
Or it just seems that way to you because you've aged out of popular culture
Posted on 9/18/23 at 9:12 pm to LSU Grad Alabama Fan
I propose it has to with the sheer abundance of content, ease of access, and a shrinking globe. Distinct culture is typically defined by art, music, writing, cinema, architecture, sports, cuisine… We live in a time of such abundance and growth that culture is watered down to such a point that it has no central focus. An example may be music, in the 20’s, 50’s or 60’s, there the were just a handful of talented artist, and a very small apparatus to create and disseminate a cultural product. It was expensive, to record, expensive to print a record, expensive to distribute, expensive to run a radio station. As a result, the musical product had to be focused on fewer genres and fewer artist and fewer modes of access, creating a focused and distinct musical culture until the next big thing came along. The same can be applied for other forms of culture.
Now days 1000 of musicians of all variety of genre can reach millions on social media, a film can stream on 100s of different platforms… it’s watered down and overly-accessible.
A shrinking globe, instant global access annd communication, multinational companies and increased global trade has made it easy to share ideas, and culture.
It will continue to get more watered down. No stopping it, unless you want to move to North Korea.
Now days 1000 of musicians of all variety of genre can reach millions on social media, a film can stream on 100s of different platforms… it’s watered down and overly-accessible.
A shrinking globe, instant global access annd communication, multinational companies and increased global trade has made it easy to share ideas, and culture.
It will continue to get more watered down. No stopping it, unless you want to move to North Korea.
Posted on 9/18/23 at 9:14 pm to LSU Grad Alabama Fan
Because we went from stuff happening in a vacuum and then spreading to everything being mass manufactured and astroturfed everywhere all at once.
Posted on 9/18/23 at 9:26 pm to teke184
There is some some delineation amongst the last couple of decades just more subtle. Being an old fogey might also be part of the blur. The proliferation of cell phones/texting in movies/tv is one example.
Posted on 9/18/23 at 9:31 pm to LSU Grad Alabama Fan
The focus has been on virtue more so than anything.
Posted on 9/18/23 at 10:02 pm to LSU Grad Alabama Fan
Bro, the current decade is defined by trans and these bitches with blue and pink hair.
Posted on 9/18/23 at 10:10 pm to LSU Grad Alabama Fan
Feel like you are missing the proliferation of tattoos as defining the current era.. Was always fringe groups in the past and is now mainstream for every young person
Posted on 9/19/23 at 12:04 am to LolStarFishlol
Agree with another of these posts. Great topic OP.
90,91 feel quote a bit like 88,89
Something about 92 and Nirvana really mushroom stamped the 90s as different. Grunge was in
90,91 feel quote a bit like 88,89
Something about 92 and Nirvana really mushroom stamped the 90s as different. Grunge was in
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