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Post by 10slover on Mar 24, 2022 4:49:28 GMT 10
Yeah, i guess it's still popular, but the novelty wore off. Although I don't think it's nearly as popular as emo in the 2000s/early 10s emo wasn't popular in the early 2010s It definitely was, people still talked about it, it was still in and i saw emo kids everywhere It fell off in 2012
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Post by John Titor on Mar 24, 2022 4:54:05 GMT 10
emo wasn't popular in the early 2010s It definitely was, people still talked about it, it was still in and i saw emo kids everywhere It fell off in 2012 Emo was not popular in 2010 2011 or even 2012, nor was it on the radio or had charting success. That just shows me you are reading reading a paragraph on Wikipedia or something because that is not how it played out at all. Myspace was also dead in 2010,2011 and 2012. Regular Pop Punk and Emo died before we even hit 2009. Scene ( a sub culture started in 2006 and ending around 2009) was popular as well as Neon Pop Punk ( a sub genre of pop punk) from around 2007 to 2009. Emo aesthetic had declined rapidly from 2006 to 2007. As Scene was declining, Hipster started taking the market share to the point where it became the defacto standard by 2011/2012 but Scene was already gone by then. You are confusing 2 separate sub genres ( Emo & Scene). And yes I know there were some people on Tumblr as scene in the early 2010s but it was not in the pop culture zeitgeist or in counter culture zeitgeist. It would be the equivalent of someone playing with Fidget spinners in 2022.
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Post by nightmarefarm on Mar 24, 2022 4:56:17 GMT 10
yes, anyone that says no does not go on tik tok nightmarefarm says tiktok is a massive database of cringe but from the sounds of it he probably has never even been on it I wouldn't be caught dead on tiktok.
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Post by crystalmetheny0428 on Mar 24, 2022 5:14:52 GMT 10
nightmarefarm says tiktok is a massive database of cringe but from the sounds of it he probably has never even been on it I wouldn't be caught dead on tiktok. cant talk shit if you've never been on it
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Post by nightmarefarm on Mar 24, 2022 5:26:59 GMT 10
I wouldn't be caught dead on tiktok. cant talk shit if you've never been on it I've seen a lot of tiktoks on youtube which are cringeworthy as fuck and I know about how the algorithm work(favors attractive people and rich people and holds back people with disabilities or ethnic minorities) and the fact that it's literal spyware. there's lots of pedophilia and other degenerate shit on there. it's a complete shithole if you ask me.
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Post by 10slover on Mar 24, 2022 6:06:14 GMT 10
It definitely was, people still talked about it, it was still in and i saw emo kids everywhere It fell off in 2012 Emo was not popular in 2010 2011 or even 2012, nor was it on the radio or had charting success. That just shows me you are reading reading a paragraph on Wikipedia or something because that is not how it played out at all. Myspace was also dead in 2010,2011 and 2012. Regular Pop Punk and Emo died before we even hit 2009. Scene ( a sub culture started in 2006 and ending around 2009) was popular as well as Neon Pop Punk ( a sub genre of pop punk) from around 2007 to 2009. Emo aesthetic had declined rapidly from 2006 to 2007. As Scene was declining, Hipster started taking the market share to the point where it became the defacto standard by 2011/2012 but Scene was already gone by then. You are confusing 2 separate sub genres ( Emo & Scene). And yes I know there were some people on Tumblr as scene in the early 2010s but it was not in the pop culture zeitgeist or in counter culture zeitgeist. It would be the equivalent of someone playing with Fidget spinners in 2022. I literally remember those times, what are you talking about I literally remember seeing emo kids everywhere I literally remember people making fun of emos in 2011 I literally remember people talking about emos in 2011 LITERALLY
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Post by John Titor on Mar 24, 2022 6:19:45 GMT 10
Emo was not popular in 2010 2011 or even 2012, nor was it on the radio or had charting success. That just shows me you are reading reading a paragraph on Wikipedia or something because that is not how it played out at all. Myspace was also dead in 2010,2011 and 2012. Regular Pop Punk and Emo died before we even hit 2009. Scene ( a sub culture started in 2006 and ending around 2009) was popular as well as Neon Pop Punk ( a sub genre of pop punk) from around 2007 to 2009. Emo aesthetic had declined rapidly from 2006 to 2007. As Scene was declining, Hipster started taking the market share to the point where it became the defacto standard by 2011/2012 but Scene was already gone by then. You are confusing 2 separate sub genres ( Emo & Scene). And yes I know there were some people on Tumblr as scene in the early 2010s but it was not in the pop culture zeitgeist or in counter culture zeitgeist. It would be the equivalent of someone playing with Fidget spinners in 2022. I literally remember those times, what are you talking about I literally remember seeing emo kids everywhere I literally remember people making fun of emos in 2011 I literally remember people talking about emos in 2011 LITERALLY You were mostly likely living in a state that is slow to lose trends, tv shows and movies stopped talking about emo after 2007 ( with Spider-Man 3) being the very last big one. If you are living in a state that is not New York, New Jersey, California then I can see why you would still see it. But in reality there was no emo songs on the radio or any emo songs charting in 2011. Infact many emo bands had broken up before 2009. Scene ( a whole different sub culture) was around in 2006,2007,2008 and 2009 but it didn't really make it past 2009 on a mainstream level. It is quite possible the area you were in was just slow to catching up to current pop culture. To further back up my claim and experience, here is some evidence from Vice.com i-d.vice.com/en_uk/article/59bwj5/emo-was-the-last-true-subculture
and I quote "And so, in a way, emo died in the later 00s in the natural way that subcultures always have - by being swallowed by the mainstream. Most central to its breakdown, however, was the mass migration to Facebook."so as you can see, what I am saying is backed up with evidence, Emo died around 06/07 the late 2000s. Vice is not lying and neither am I lol
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Post by mc98 on Mar 24, 2022 6:29:20 GMT 10
Emo was not popular in 2010 2011 or even 2012, nor was it on the radio or had charting success. That just shows me you are reading reading a paragraph on Wikipedia or something because that is not how it played out at all. Myspace was also dead in 2010,2011 and 2012. Regular Pop Punk and Emo died before we even hit 2009. Scene ( a sub culture started in 2006 and ending around 2009) was popular as well as Neon Pop Punk ( a sub genre of pop punk) from around 2007 to 2009. Emo aesthetic had declined rapidly from 2006 to 2007. As Scene was declining, Hipster started taking the market share to the point where it became the defacto standard by 2011/2012 but Scene was already gone by then. You are confusing 2 separate sub genres ( Emo & Scene). And yes I know there were some people on Tumblr as scene in the early 2010s but it was not in the pop culture zeitgeist or in counter culture zeitgeist. It would be the equivalent of someone playing with Fidget spinners in 2022. I literally remember those times, what are you talking about I literally remember seeing emo kids everywhere I literally remember people making fun of emos in 2011 I literally remember people talking about emos in 2011 LITERALLY You live in Brazil right? I think it's one of those countries that are kinda behind on trends. At the US in 2011, emos were considered passé and no longer trendy.
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Post by 10slover on Mar 24, 2022 7:01:53 GMT 10
I literally remember those times, what are you talking about I literally remember seeing emo kids everywhere I literally remember people making fun of emos in 2011 I literally remember people talking about emos in 2011 LITERALLY You live in Brazil right? I think it's one of those countries that are kinda behind on trends. At the US in 2011, emos were considered passé and no longer trendy. Must be it
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Post by astropoug on Mar 24, 2022 7:56:36 GMT 10
Guys, knock it off. This all started due to a debate of where e-boys were a true subculture or not. Now this is turning into a shouting contest about TikTok. This thread has gotten way off topic and could lead to drama.
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Post by crystalmetheny0428 on Mar 24, 2022 8:11:35 GMT 10
Guys, knock it off. This all started due to a debate of where e-boys were a true subculture or not. Now this is turning into a shouting contest about TikTok. This thread has gotten way off topic and could lead to drama. whatever i just deleted my reply to him bc i don’t feel like arguing with him. just know that there’s pedophilia on every social media platform, not just tiktok, so to use that as a reason to bash it when you’ve never even been on the app is just dumb
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Post by mc98 on Mar 24, 2022 8:20:58 GMT 10
Every social media platform has cringe content.
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Post by astropoug on Mar 24, 2022 8:26:10 GMT 10
Every social media platform has cringe content. The hero of this story. Thank you dude. Let’s just be completely fucking honest, social media in general is cringe. If you really want a less cringy era, go back to the early 2000s. But even then there was still cringy stuff.
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Post by 10slover on Mar 25, 2022 0:25:46 GMT 10
Anways, i always felt like eboys and egirls weren't really a subculture
Think about it, all subcultures had a music genre attached to them: Grunge had Grunge Rock, emos had emo music, hipsters had hipster music.
Wtf do eboys and egirls have? And don't say "billie eillish" people keep calling her an egirl but i don't see any "egirl" on her at all. Her 2019 album was mostly just trap infused with bedroom pop and electropop. Nothing new or eboy/egirl about that.
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Post by nightmarefarm on Mar 25, 2022 0:43:23 GMT 10
Anways, i always felt like eboys and egirls weren't really a subculture Think about it, all subcultures had a music genre attached to them: Grunge had Grunge Rock, emos had emo music, hipsters had hipster music. Wtf do eboys and egirls have? And don't say "billie eillish" people keep calling her an egirl but i don't see any "egirl" on her at all. Her 2019 album was mostly just trap infused with bedroom pop and electropop. Nothing new or eboy/egirl about that. E-person(for short) seems like a really forced subculture. I only really see it talked about hand in hand with tiktok. Irl I have never ever seen an e-person and I rarely see it talked about on the internet too. If it was truly an era defining subculture like emo then it would show in music videos and stuff and you'd see it in real life.
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