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Post by rainbow on May 6, 2022 11:10:24 GMT 10
Yeah I’m on 10slover with this one. TikTok started getting attention in late 2018. I remember people were already making TikToks in 2018/2019.
The only real difference I noticed is that TikTok back then had less older users. I don’t think it was until COVID that more millennials and older people started using it too, but it was definitely well-known in 2019, which is why I consider the 2017-18 school year to be the last cultural core 2010’s school year.
astropoug likes this
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Post by astropoug on May 6, 2022 11:18:47 GMT 10
Yeah I’m on 10slover with this one. TikTok started getting attention in late 2018. I remember people were already making TikToks in 2018/2019. The only real difference I noticed is that TikTok back then had less older users. I don’t think it was until COVID that more millennials and older people started using it too, but it was definitely well-known in 2019, which is why I consider the 2017-18 school year to be the last cultural core 2010’s school year. I don't even know if 2017-2018 is core 2010s, but 2018-2019 undoubtedly is not. By then, it felt very far removed from the hipsters, EDM, and Vine days. To me, core 2010s is 2013-2014 to 2016-2017.
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Post by mc98 on May 6, 2022 11:35:04 GMT 10
Yeah I’m on 10slover with this one. TikTok started getting attention in late 2018. I remember people were already making TikToks in 2018/2019. The only real difference I noticed is that TikTok back then had less older users. I don’t think it was until COVID that more millennials and older people started using it too, but it was definitely well-known in 2019, which is why I consider the 2017-18 school year to be the last cultural core 2010’s school year. I don't even know if 2017-2018 is core 2010s, but 2018-2019 undoubtedly is not. By then, it felt very far removed from the hipsters, EDM, and Vine days. To me, core 2010s is 2013-2014 to 2016-2017. 2017-18 is kinda core 10s but you can tell that it was moving away from it. 2018-19 was purely late 2010s, it's definitely not part of core 10s anymore despite leftovers.
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Post by Deleted on May 6, 2022 13:01:51 GMT 10
Thank you for making this thread OP. So happy that someone else appreciates 2017. 2017 was unique since it was a 100% late 2010s year but actually the last core year of the 2010s (core and mid are different). I liked the year. The pop culture was very vibrant, especially the first half and the summer. And it was nice in my personal life too. The Chainsmokers were huge that year. 2017 was also a really good year for music in its first half. It didn't last long but the first half of 2017 had awesome music If 2017 is core 10s than how is 2018 not? Both are almost the same besides fortnite. I don't agree.
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Post by Deleted on May 6, 2022 13:04:43 GMT 10
The 2016 - 2017 school year was the last core 2010s school year I would say. And summer 2017 was the finale.
2016 - 2017 is still 100% late 2010s though. Late 2010s started in early 2016 I would say.
I don't know maybe it's all subjective.
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Post by John Titor on May 7, 2022 1:02:57 GMT 10
I don't even know if 2017-2018 is core 2010s, but 2018-2019 undoubtedly is not. By then, it felt very far removed from the hipsters, EDM, and Vine days. To me, core 2010s is 2013-2014 to 2016-2017. 2017-18 is kinda core 10s but you can tell that it was moving away from it. 2018-19 was purely late 2010s, it's definitely not part of core 10s anymore despite leftovers. yeah you could feel a shift in Fall 2018, by then almost every article was "gen z" In the 2016-2017 year could see more articles pop up but it was at tug of war with Gen Y
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