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Post by crystalmetheny0428 on Apr 9, 2022 1:06:23 GMT 10
2018
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Post by John Titor on Apr 9, 2022 1:10:09 GMT 10
By 2018-2019 school year the 2010s were over
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Post by John Titor on Apr 9, 2022 1:10:51 GMT 10
I actually made a thread on here in 2018 saying that the 2018 -2019 school year was going to be over for the core 2010s lol
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Post by 10slover on Apr 9, 2022 2:59:55 GMT 10
Core 10s ended in late 2018
C'mon yall, prior to that TikTok and egirls weren't even a thing
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Post by astropoug on Apr 9, 2022 3:50:04 GMT 10
Core 10s ended in late 2018 C'mon yall, prior to that TikTok and egirls weren't even a thing Not to mention T-Series surpassing PewDiePie to become the #1 YouTuber. It ended earlier for me personally. Late 2016/Early 2017 was when Vine shutdown and Trump became president. Obama was president for most of the decade, and whilst Trump is definitely a 2010s icon, he only represents the second half of the decade. I’ll concede that early/mid 2016 was still indisputably core 2010s though. Many didn’t think Trump would actually win the election. Matt Stone and Trey Parker even wrote the 20th season of South Park around Clinton winning the election. When then ended up not being the case, they had to completely rewrite it. Many thought that we would have our first woman president to follow up on our first black president. To say the vibe shifted dramatically after Trump won would be an understatement. The optimistic vibes of the core 2010s gone and replaced with the Trump Era, which doesn’t even deserve to belong to a decade with how horrible it is. Not only that, but demonetization began on YouTube. Combine this with the rise of internet drama in that year, and this gave internet culture from here on out a very tense vibe rather than the more carefree vibe of the core 2010s. Go back to 2013-2015, and it was a time where the biggest thing people complained about were Minions, website layout changes, and Minecraft songs. Whereas from 2016 onwards, it felt more serious and less cheesy.
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Post by mc98 on Apr 9, 2022 4:20:55 GMT 10
To me, the core 2010s ended in late 2018/early 2019. I disagree that it ended in late 2016/early 2017 despite Trump being elected. Fashion was undeniably 2010s, especially with the athleisure, hipster leftovers, and muted Yeezy colors. EDM was still topping the charts at the time as well.
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Post by nightmarefarm on Apr 9, 2022 4:29:25 GMT 10
the first half of 2019 feels way too 10sish with core 10s stuff like avengers and game of thrones more popular than ever before for me to not consider it core 10s. i would say it was a transition out of core 10s culture though since they were ending and 20s stuff was starting to come in.
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Post by astropoug on Apr 9, 2022 5:07:46 GMT 10
To me, the core 2010s ended in late 2018/early 2019. I disagree that it ended in late 2016/early 2017 despite Trump being elected. Fashion was undeniably 2010s, especially with the athleisure, hipster leftovers, and muted Yeezy colors. EDM was still topping the charts at the time as well. Hipsters weren’t as prominent anymore after Trump won the election. You have a good point about EDM and fashion, but still.
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Post by crystalmetheny0428 on Apr 9, 2022 5:42:04 GMT 10
To me, the core 2010s ended in late 2018/early 2019. I disagree that it ended in late 2016/early 2017 despite Trump being elected. Fashion was undeniably 2010s, especially with the athleisure, hipster leftovers, and muted Yeezy colors. EDM was still topping the charts at the time as well. Hipsters weren’t as prominent anymore after Trump won the election. You have a good point about EDM and fashion, but still. yea at least here in metro detroit hipster was done at that point
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Post by John Titor on Apr 9, 2022 7:09:10 GMT 10
Hipsters weren’t as prominent anymore after Trump won the election. You have a good point about EDM and fashion, but still. yea at least here in metro detroit hipster was done at that point yeah after 2016 the amount of people as hipster aesthetic went down dramatically , here is my chart as how it went down ( this is for the 2010s decade only) astropoug you mind find this interesting Hipsters in the Wild 2010s edition 2010 - 39%2011 - 57% 2012 - 69%2013 - 79%2014 - 99%2015 - 100 %2016 - 70 %2017 - 66%2018 - 49%2019 - 35% When we got to 2019 there were predominantly less hipsters in the wild than there were in 2010, the never ending fad seemed to peak in 2015.
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Post by dudewitdausername on Apr 10, 2022 9:30:21 GMT 10
2019 is way too late. IMO, the peak 2010s vibes really ended after Trump won the election. It was obviously still 2010s after that but a VERY different kind from the 2012-2015 2010s that even on here seem to be forgotten, but IMO, I’d say those were the REAL 2010s nah imo there were two halves to the Core 2010s. 2012-2014 and 2016-2018, 2015 is the middle child lol.
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Post by bestmvp29 on Apr 10, 2022 12:59:28 GMT 10
Core 2010s = 2013-2018 in its totality (technically mid/late 2013 to mid 2018, you could make an argument for early/mid 2019 as that was strongly 2010s, and some people include late 2012 although I wouldn't go that early)
Classic core 2010s (the core 2010s that people would consider the apex of the 2010s, pre-Trump): mid/late 2013 to early/mid 2016 (I included mid 2016 as I started to think about it and mid 2016 slightly leans classic 2010s; the 50/50 point is mid-late 2016; all of middle school was classic core 2010s, but 2013-2014 was electropop-esque)
Modern core 2010s (Trump era mostly): late 2016-mid 2018 (the peak Musical.ly, pre-Tiktok era)
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Post by astropoug on Apr 10, 2022 14:58:25 GMT 10
Core 2010s = 2013-2018 in its totality (technically mid/late 2013 to mid 2018, you could make an argument for early/mid 2019 as that was strongly 2010s, and some people include late 2012 although I wouldn't go that early) Classic core 2010s (the core 2010s that people would consider the apex of the 2010s, pre-Trump): mid/late 2013 to early/mid 2016 (I included mid 2016 as I started to think about it and mid 2016 slightly leans classic 2010s; the 50/50 point is mid-late 2016; all of middle school was classic core 2010s, but 2013-2014 was electropop-esque) Modern core 2010s (Trump era mostly): late 2016-mid 2018 (the peak Musical.ly, pre-Tiktok era) I think late 2013 is when it began especially with PewDiePie becoming the #1 YouTuber. It ended in late 2016 with YouTube demonetization, Vine announcing its shutdown, and of course, Trump winning the election. Of course, 2012 and 2017-2018 are part of the 2010s zeitgeist too, but the time period I mentioned is pretty much the crack cocaine purest essence of 2010s culture, the era of Minecraft songs, dystopian teen movies, lets players like Markiplier and VanossGaming, hipsters, EDM, and vine memes.
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Post by nightmarefarm on Apr 10, 2022 15:00:51 GMT 10
Core 2010s = 2013-2018 in its totality (technically mid/late 2013 to mid 2018, you could make an argument for early/mid 2019 as that was strongly 2010s, and some people include late 2012 although I wouldn't go that early) Classic core 2010s (the core 2010s that people would consider the apex of the 2010s, pre-Trump): mid/late 2013 to early/mid 2016 (I included mid 2016 as I started to think about it and mid 2016 slightly leans classic 2010s; the 50/50 point is mid-late 2016; all of middle school was classic core 2010s, but 2013-2014 was electropop-esque) Modern core 2010s (Trump era mostly): late 2016-mid 2018 (the peak Musical.ly, pre-Tiktok era) I think late 2013 is when it began especially with PewDiePie becoming the #1 YouTuber. It ended in late 2016 with YouTube demonetization, Vine announcing its shutdown, and of course, Trump winning the election. Of course, 2012 and 2017-2018 are part of the 2010s zeitgeist too, but the time period I mentioned is pretty much the crack cocaine purest essence of 2010s culture, the era of Minecraft songs, dystopian teen movies, lets players like Markiplier and VanossGaming, hipsters, EDM, and vine memes. There's a difference between mid and core
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Post by pumpkin14 on Apr 10, 2022 15:38:26 GMT 10
Core 2010s = 2013-2018 in its totality (technically mid/late 2013 to mid 2018, you could make an argument for early/mid 2019 as that was strongly 2010s, and some people include late 2012 although I wouldn't go that early) Classic core 2010s (the core 2010s that people would consider the apex of the 2010s, pre-Trump): mid/late 2013 to early/mid 2016 (I included mid 2016 as I started to think about it and mid 2016 slightly leans classic 2010s; the 50/50 point is mid-late 2016; all of middle school was classic core 2010s, but 2013-2014 was electropop-esque) Modern core 2010s (Trump era mostly): late 2016-mid 2018 (the peak Musical.ly, pre-Tiktok era) I agree with this mostly, though I consider all of 2013 to be core 10s. The 2012-13 school year seemed pretty core 10s to me as instagram was popular, gangnam style was a hit, pretty much everyone had a smartphone at that point, taylor swift started to make more pop music, netflix started airing original content, the mcu was in phase 2, the wii u (first 8th gen console) came out, and even things like gun violence were already a topic of discussion (and would become a bigger topic later in the decade) because of sandy hook
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