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Post by dudewitdausername on Jan 23, 2022 3:16:46 GMT 10
2017 and 2020...
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Post by nightmarefarm on Jan 23, 2022 3:38:43 GMT 10
2008 and 2011
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Post by bestmvp29 on Jan 23, 2022 4:23:37 GMT 10
2008 and 2011, or 2009 and 2012 for sure.
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Post by crystalmetheny0428 on Jan 25, 2022 16:01:02 GMT 10
2014 to 2017 felt pretty big
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Post by John Titor on Jan 25, 2022 16:07:33 GMT 10
2014 to 2017 felt pretty big I get what u mean
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Post by pumpkin14 on Jan 26, 2022 18:20:32 GMT 10
2014 to 2017 felt pretty big yeah. both core 2010s but have different vibes. just like 2004 & 2007. 2014 is classic 10s and 2017 is modern 10s but both are still cery stereotypical 2010s
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Post by pumpkin14 on Jan 26, 2022 18:41:42 GMT 10
2011-2014: -2011 was before instagram, vine and snapchat blew up while they are all regularly used by 2014 - obamas first term vs obama’s second term - occupy wall street was one of the earliest movements of the 10s and was regularly mocked in 2011, while in 2014 blm became known and was supported by major celebrities - hashtags were still kind of “low key” in 2011 while 2014 (along with 2013 and maybe 2015) was peak “hashtag-mania” - strictly 7th gen gaming in 2011, while a good amount of people moved onto 8th gen in 2014 - still some 00s fashion holdovers in 2011, but by 2014 the typical 2010s “uniform” was established already with no 00s holdovers - skeuomorphism vs flat design and minimalism
2018-2021: - of course covid is the biggest divider. masks, vaccines, health awareness etc. - trump vs biden - in 2021 after trump left office we became fairly removed from the trump era as we now only hear very little about him. he can no longer tweet crazy things and promote problematic behavior. in 2018 we were deep into the trump era which i define as 2016-2020. 2015 was the prequel to that era and the start of the transition towards it
- 2018 was the peak year for trap and the typical trap sound is everywhere, even outside of hip hop. it seemed like the go-to sound of music at the time or the “them” of the late 10s. in 2021 trap still has some life but is not that dominant or omnipresent. the theme of the early 20s is throwback pop and pop punk (or some variation) as far as we know rn. honorable mention to melodic rap. also there are no more mumble rappers in 2021 that are relevant (maybe young thug and lil baby but thugger is always popular and lil baby doesn’t mumble in the same style as he did when he first came out in 2018 at least)
- many long running and decade defining 2010s shows are still on air in 2018 and we were still in the infinity saga of the mcu. in 2021 plenty of staple 10s shows have ended by now (GoT, Modern Family, Adventure Time, Keeping Up With the Kardashians, Broad City, etc.) and the infinity saga has been over. mcu movies, besides the spider-man ones predictably, haven’t been hyped or talked about much, or at least as much as they were even in 2019. it’s clear the mcu is past is prime but the marvel disney+ series, especially wandavison, are doing good and are popular
- typical minimalistic 2010s fashion was still the go-to in 2018, while gen z fashion became solidified in 2021, although some people still dress late 10s
- 8th gen gaming vs 9th gen gaming. although there are shortages, 9th gen gaming made a dent in 2021 and appear in multiple shows, movies, music videos, and commercials now
- in 2018 the kardashians were still in their prime. in 2021 kim and kanye divorced, the kardashians show ended, and the kardashians don’t seem as omnipresent
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Post by Deleted on Jan 27, 2022 3:23:57 GMT 10
If you mean in the last little while then definitely 2019 - 2022.
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Post by dudewitdausername on Jan 27, 2022 5:09:27 GMT 10
If you mean in the last little while then definitely 2019 - 2022. 2018-2021 even moreso tho. But then again it's only the beginning of the year, 2022 could become even more different from 2019 than 2021 was from 2018.
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Post by astropoug on Mar 30, 2022 4:26:26 GMT 10
2012-2015 2017-2020 1989-1992 2008-2011 I don’t think 2012-2015 was a big gap. 2015 IMO actually has a lot more in common with 2012 than it does with 2018. And despite the pandemic, I don’t think 2017-2020 was that big of a gap either. I actually made a post suggesting 2012-2015 was the SMALLEST difference between a three-year gap of the 21st century. Just so much of the culture and technology of that timespan was so fucking similar. It wasn't like, say, 2009-2012 where we went from scene kids, BlackBerries, and Harry Potter, to Avengers, iPhones, and hipsters. Now THAT is a real gap in my opinion.
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Post by astropoug on Mar 30, 2022 4:36:37 GMT 10
2003 and 2006 might be one. 2003 - mostly early 2000s with slight mid 2000s influences that became more clear in 2004. 2006 - mid 2000s with late 2000s influences that became more clear in the Fall of the same year. THIS. In 2003 YouTube didn't even exist yet, MySpace was something nobody cared about, many still had dial-up, VHS and film cameras were still common, CRTs were the norm with plasmas owned by the rich, we had shows like Malcolm in the Middle and pre-movie SpongeBob, it was still common to see PCs running Windows 98 or 2000, video games looked cartoonish, handheld gaming was still 2D, nu metal bands like Linkin Park were still popular. By 2006, YouTube was blowing up, MySpace was huge, dial-up was a laughing stock, VHS was dead, everybody had a digital camera, LCDs were rapidly taking over, Malcolm in the Middle ended, SpongeBob wasn't in its prime, we had shows like The Office, Lost, and Desperate Housewives, just to name a few. People were obsessing over Naruto rather than Yu-Gi-Oh, nobody was using Windows 98 or 2000 anymore, video games were all gritty and we were already moving into the 7th gen, cellphones and handheld gaming had a BIG leap, FFS you already had smartphones like the T-Mobile Sidekick and Blackberry already having prominence, which they didn't in 2003. And emo was huge and nu metal was dead. I don't get why people think 2003 and 2006 are similar. They are not at all. The internet, technology, TV, music, youth culture, that all changed dramatically between the two years. The only thing that was really similar is that Bush was president in both years, and even then, people liked Bush in 2003 and thought the wars were justified, whereas everybody in 2006 was talking shit about him, so it's really not that similar even in politics.
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Post by astropoug on Jul 8, 2022 13:31:15 GMT 10
What three year gap do you guys think had the biggest difference? IMO 2007-2010 is pretty big. Pop Culturally: Very different for a number of reasons. Socially/Politically/Economy: A pretty drastic change there. Technology: Not really tbh as 2007 was already going in 2010's direction. 2004 to 2007 was a huge jump for tech but, the problem there, is that 2004 and 2007 were quite similar in everything else apart from technology.The thing is that nobody had touchscreen smartphones in 2007, or really, touchscreen devices in general. Most people were using flip phones in 2007. By 2010, it was all about sliders and early smartphones. Also, we were all using MySpace in 2007, but it was dead in 2010. Pretty big shift IMO.
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Post by Telso on Jul 9, 2022 9:29:24 GMT 10
I actually made a post suggesting 2012-2015 was the SMALLEST difference between a three-year gap of the 21st century. Strongly disagree. If anything one of the biggest media shifts of the century happened in this 3 years gap. We went from MP3s being a commodity, iTunes being a dominant market, DVDs still selling big and cable TV being unmatched in its dominance to MP3s being irrelevant, streaming completely obliterating the digital download market, Netflix binge watching culture being popularized and physical video media becoming critically endangered. 2012 from a media standpoint is far closer to 2009 than 2015. Just look at these graphs:
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Post by astropoug on Jul 9, 2022 9:35:51 GMT 10
I actually made a post suggesting 2012-2015 was the SMALLEST difference between a three-year gap of the 21st century. Strongly disagree. If anything one of the biggest media shifts of the century happened in this 3 years gap. We went from MP3s being a commodity, iTunes being a dominant market, DVDs still selling big and cable TV being unmatched in its dominance to MP3s being irrelevant, streaming completely obliterating the digital download market, Netflix binge watching culture being popularized and physical video media becoming critically endangered. 2012 from a media standpoint is far closer to 2009 than 2015. Just look at these graphs: Do note that I no longer agree with my original take. I have to agree the shift in media consumption and entertainment between 2012 and 2015 was a major gap. In fact, I’ve changed my mind in general about it being a small gap. In fact in fact, I think people really underestimate how changeful the 2010s actually was in so many ways, particularly in a technological and political sense.
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Post by mc98 on Jul 9, 2022 11:15:56 GMT 10
Strongly disagree. If anything one of the biggest media shifts of the century happened in this 3 years gap. We went from MP3s being a commodity, iTunes being a dominant market, DVDs still selling big and cable TV being unmatched in its dominance to MP3s being irrelevant, streaming completely obliterating the digital download market, Netflix binge watching culture being popularized and physical video media becoming critically endangered. 2012 from a media standpoint is far closer to 2009 than 2015. Just look at these graphs: Do note that I no longer agree with my original take. I have to agree the shift in media consumption and entertainment between 2012 and 2015 was a major gap. In fact, I’ve changed my mind in general about it being a small gap. In fact in fact, I think people really underestimate how changeful the 2010s actually was in so many ways, particularly in a technological and political sense. Even though 2012 and 2015 might share some similarities, there are tons of differences between the two years.
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