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Post by John Titor on Apr 5, 2019 7:55:24 GMT 10
For me I would say around Jan 2003
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Post by mwalker96 on Apr 5, 2019 12:50:16 GMT 10
Summer 2003
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Post by #Infinity on Apr 5, 2019 13:17:02 GMT 10
June 2003 because the early 2000s were very cleanly defined by my time at a special-ed school. I actually switched from a regular public school to the special-ed school in the middle of 1st grade, right around the beginning of the new millennium. Coming into 5th grade in autumn 2003, I returned to public school, specifically in a seminar program.
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Post by SharksFan99 on Apr 5, 2019 16:55:00 GMT 10
Early 2004. Obviously I didn't have a complete grasp on the cultural changes that were going on at the time (as I was too young), but with getting my PS2 for Christmas in 2003, turning 5 in March 2004 and noticing a string of new pop hits becoming popular around that time (e.g "Toxic", "Milkshake"), 2004 seemed distinct enough for me to consider it different from what 2003 was like. Also, 2004 is notable as being the first year in which I can consciously remember it being the "following/new" year (i.e thinking during the second-half of 2003 that 2004 would be the "next year"), so that's significant as well.
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Post by John Titor on Apr 6, 2019 6:51:34 GMT 10
For me the transition was already starting in Jan, but its interesting to see other peoples takes on it
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Post by mwalker96 on Apr 7, 2019 11:36:07 GMT 10
June 2003 because the early 2000s were very cleanly defined by my time at a special-ed school. I actually switched from a regular public school to the special-ed school in the middle of 1st grade, right around the beginning of the new millennium. Coming into 5th grade in autumn 2003, I returned to public school, specifically in a seminar program. Same for me, 2003 was starting to feel mid 00s around may when Finding Nemo dropped, but June 2003 was when I turned 7, Kane unmasking for the first time. Summer of 2003 was definitely the start of the mid 00s.
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Post by jaydawg89 on Apr 8, 2019 13:00:10 GMT 10
Anywhere between March and August 2003, I'm gonna go with June probably, that was around the time Crunk music was getting really big (despite already being around).
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Post by John Titor on Apr 9, 2019 6:06:17 GMT 10
Anywhere between March and August 2003, I'm gonna go with June probably, that was around the time Crunk music was getting really big (despite already being around). March seems about right
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Post by jaydawg89 on Apr 11, 2019 20:03:41 GMT 10
Anywhere between March and August 2003, I'm gonna go with June probably, that was around the time Crunk music was getting really big (despite already being around). March seems about right Yeah, March was the month when 50 Cent got really big and when the War in Iraq started, I think March 2003 might be the month we entered the core 2000s.
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Post by John Titor on Apr 12, 2019 5:18:44 GMT 10
Yeah, March was the month when 50 Cent got really big and when the War in Iraq started, I think March 2003 might be the month we entered the core 2000s. yupp
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Post by Deleted on Apr 17, 2019 12:02:25 GMT 10
I actually remember the exact moment: it was when I heard Boulevard of Broken Dreams for the first time. This didn't sound like any of the hits I had grown accustomed to from the early '00s, like Linkin Park, Backstreet Boys, or even Fountains of Wayne! Indeed, I remember very much disliking it and not liking the direction the culture seemed to be going in. And most baffling of all, my friends loved it. (I have since gotten over myself.)
Like SF99, I didn't fully grasp the concept of cultural changes then, even though I was broadly aware of fads and changing styles like from the hippies to disco to hair metal to grunge. I guess at the time I figured change like that had to happen on a more gradual timescale.
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Post by John Titor on Apr 18, 2019 3:46:40 GMT 10
I actually remember the exact moment: it was when I heard Boulevard of Broken Dreams for the first time. This didn't sound like any of the hits I had grown accustomed to from the early '00s, like Linkin Park, Backstreet Boys, or even Fountains of Wayne! Indeed, I remember very much disliking it and not liking the direction the culture seemed to be going in. And most baffling of all, my friends loved it. (I have since gotten over myself.) Like SF99, I didn't fully grasp the concept of cultural changes then, even though I was broadly aware of fads and changing styles like from the hippies to disco to hair metal to grunge. I guess at the time I figured change like that had to happen on a more gradual timescale. For me I sense changes faster then people would acknowledge, I liked Boulevard despite it sounding different from anything. Fall 2004 was a changing time tho lots of trends like 2000s EMO culture and Myspace came into their own around this time.
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Post by Deleted on Apr 18, 2019 9:31:34 GMT 10
Ironically, the Midwest, where second-wave emo originated, didn't fully embrace third-wave emo until 2005-2006 or so. First emo kid I met was summer '05, didn't become truly ubiquitous in the local area until the following summer.
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Post by John Titor on Nov 3, 2020 3:14:06 GMT 10
Fall 2003 for me even tho I could argue Early 2003
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Post by Deleted on Nov 3, 2020 4:17:42 GMT 10
End of 2003. Cheaper by the Dozen came out Christmas 2003 and that is the last early 2000s movie in my mind.
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