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Post by John Titor on Apr 25, 2020 9:12:20 GMT 10
and if so explain why
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Post by broadstreet223 on Apr 25, 2020 10:35:02 GMT 10
The not so great shift of early 2013 explains it all
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Post by jaydawg89 on Apr 25, 2020 10:51:28 GMT 10
December 18th 2011, when the Iraq War officially ended. It really showed that the 2000s were definitely behind us.
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Post by John Titor on Apr 25, 2020 10:56:12 GMT 10
The not so great shift of early 2013 explains it all 2013 has nothing to do with 2000s culture other then Obama and electropop existing in 2008 and 2009 years no one thinks of when u talk about classic 2000s culture other then the economy
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Post by John Titor on Apr 25, 2020 10:57:28 GMT 10
December 18th 2011, when the Iraq War officially ended. It really showed that the 2000s were definitely behind us. I wouldn't say we were in a 2000s culture or after effects at all in 2011 quite removed actually
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Post by jaydawg89 on Apr 25, 2020 11:02:37 GMT 10
December 18th 2011, when the Iraq War officially ended. It really showed that the 2000s were definitely behind us. I wouldn't say we were in a 2000s culture or after effects at all in 2011 quite removed actually I think the 2010s culturally started around late 2009 but, the 2000s still had its influence as late as 2011. It wasn't until the end of 2011 where it felt that the 2000s were completely dead.
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Post by mc98 on Apr 25, 2020 11:03:44 GMT 10
2009 was when the 00s was long in the tooth and people thought that the culture should be moving towards the 2010s as soon as possible.
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Post by John Titor on Apr 25, 2020 11:05:19 GMT 10
2009 was when the 00s was long in the tooth and people thought that the culture should be moving towards the 2010s as soon as possible. for me I felt it as early as 2008 before the economy crashed, 2009 is a good point as well, I remember 2008 and 2009 feeling very ughhhhhhhhhh alright I think this as gone on long enough feeling
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Post by Deleted on Apr 25, 2020 17:00:38 GMT 10
The (late) 1990s and 2000s were the only decades I knew at that point so I had no concept that things could be different, so I don't think I ever felt it was long in the tooth.
SharksFan99 likes this
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Post by John Titor on Apr 29, 2020 12:43:36 GMT 10
The (late) 1990s and 2000s were the only decades I knew at that point so I had no concept that things could be different, so I don't think I ever felt it was long in the tooth. The base feeling I call it until a shift and then u like whoa
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Post by Deleted on Apr 29, 2020 17:57:41 GMT 10
The (late) 1990s and 2000s were the only decades I knew at that point so I had no concept that things could be different, so I don't think I ever felt it was long in the tooth. The base feeling I call it until a shift and then u like whoa It took me until 2014/2015 or thereabouts when someone made a YouTube video showing the differences between decades, and for the 2000s Avril Lavigne came up and I thought "Wow, that was a different era!"
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Post by John Titor on Apr 30, 2020 4:15:02 GMT 10
The base feeling I call it until a shift and then u like whoa It took me until 2014/2015 or thereabouts when someone made a YouTube video showing the differences between decades, and for the 2000s Avril Lavigne came up and I thought "Wow, that was a different era!" Sometimes it takes longer for u to go whoaaaaaa, I think when we are in the moment we really don't think about it
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Post by Telso on Jun 17, 2020 10:04:03 GMT 10
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Post by Deleted on Jun 17, 2020 10:52:27 GMT 10
There wasn't just a singular moment when the 2000s culture died. There were third-wave emo albums being released by major labels all the way into 2013, and the first recognizably hipster albums were released in 2009. Hell, there were everyday folks still dressed like '00s third-wave emo kids well into the height of the hipsters.
However, as political events go, the Osama Bin Laden assassination mission is one that, for me, marks the end of an era.
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Post by John Titor on Jun 17, 2020 12:29:52 GMT 10
There wasn't just a singular moment when the 2000s culture died. There were third-wave emo albums being released by major labels all the way into 2013, and the first recognizably hipster albums were released in 2009. Hell, there were everyday folks still dressed like '00s third-wave emo kids well into the height of the hipsters. However, as political events go, the Osama Bin Laden assassination mission is one that, for me, marks the end of an era. Emo was DOA by 2009, I know there were emo albums in 2013 coming out but there were so under the radar and got almost no promotion airtime. In New York Hipster was already in a thing in 2007 and by late 2008 you couldn't really ignore it, Id say Scene and Hipster were 60/40 in 2009. It was still split. This depends on where you live as New York and Cali get trends before the mid western states. As for me 2008 is when the 2000s felt long in the tooth to me.
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