Oct. 21st, 2008 03:35 pm

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textualdeviance: (ASLWTF)
[personal profile] textualdeviance
What the heck is it with knee-jerk contrarians/rebels?

I really, really don't get people who act out against something just because they perceive it as popular or because someone they don't like likes it. I mean, fair enough if the underground band you like gets shitty after they get a contract or if you're opposed to the recording industry on principle. But if they're otherwise still the same band, still doing the same good stuff, wtf?

Likewise with the liking something just because it's non-mainstream. (Especially when said non-mainstream stuff has become mainstream on its own. Hi, Hot Topic? Is not counter-culture. Sheesh.)

Grow the hell up, y'know? Y'know what really IS cool and independent? Liking what you like and disliking what you don't like regardless of how many other people like those things.

And this goes for everything, btw: Pop culture, politics, religion, fashion, w'ev.

Mindless trendoiding is stupid, but so is mindless trend bucking. Assess each thing on its own merits. Learn about it from experts in that field. Find out what's good or not so good about it, using reliable sources for that information. And then make up your own mind based on all that data collection. If it turns out that the thing has merit, go for it. Don't look around you to see whether everyone else is on that train.
Date: 2008-10-22 12:44 am (UTC)

From: [identity profile] van.livejournal.com
All I can say is that in some cases it's disliking the fans who now like what you used to like. I've been turned off many TV shows and things, because when they got "mainstream" they attracted a lot of fan types that gave the fandom a bad name and I didn't want to be lumped in as "one of them." Sadly, they can frequently make me dislike a show too, by talking only about how hot (or not) some celebrity is, or how canon (or not) some pairing it, and so forth. It shouldn't ruin my enjoyment, but it definitely has happened in the past, even if I try to pull away from the fandom.

I also know that in the past if I imported some rare, say, shirt with a character logo on it, it was a symbol of my interest in said show. If someone complimented my shirt they got it and we were sort of friends based on both getting this sort of obscure reference. You had to be a pretty big fan to "Get it." Nowadays, you can buy the same or similar shirt in Hot Topic (or whatever) and have no idea that it's a logo for a band or show or whatever. I've actually gone up to someone before and said, "I like your shirt, I'm a fan of that show too" and the person has had no idea what I was talking about. Just a bit depressing. It took away the... hunt and fun of it, for me, I guess.

I agree people should like what they like for their own reasons, but sometimes I can't help it. People who hate a band when they sell out just because they sold out are morons. But if in the process of selling out, the quiet little private venues they used to enjoy going to and hanging out with the band become huge 5,000+ crowds of mobs and over priced and it loses the fun? I totally understand why they might move on, even if the music stayed similar.
Date: 2008-10-22 01:24 am (UTC)

From: [identity profile] textualdeviance.livejournal.com
I guess I can kind of understand that, but in a way, it seems more like an interest based on a fandom, rather than the other way around.

I'm not sure how increased audience would necessarily dilute the overall quality of a band's music, for instance. If one likes the band primarily because of the experience of seeing them in a small venue, and not because of their music, is one really a fan of the band, or of the surrounding experience?

This is kind of my problem with fandom in general, actually. I grok getting together to enjoy something of mutual interest, but when the getting together trumps the base interest... It's just weird, y'know?

Like with my LOTR fandom experiences, for instance. I certainly like all the friends I met in that fandom, and I definitely still like the source material/people involved in its production. But at some point, LOTR fandom became less about LOTR itself or anyone involved in creating it, and more about intra-fandom politics and bullshittery.

Being my first experience with fandom per se, I found this both bizarre and off-putting and thus that's a large part of why I left when I did. My interest in LOTR hadn't waned, but my interest in participating in the metaculture around it most definitely had.

FWIW, this rant was inspired by something more current events than pop culture (think the Ron Paul freaks) but I've seen the same phenomenon across so many different kinds of interests that it makes me wonder if it's just a personality type--ooh, lookit me, I'm all EDGY and DIFFERENT!--and not something specific to each individual interest.

All that said, you do have an interesting point about dilution. I think a lot of things (bands, politicians, whatever) start off with a core of fans who are actually interested in them as individuals, and then suddenly get a landslide of wannabes who crash the party not because of an actual interest in the subject itself, but because they want to be part of the supposed cool kids who were the first fans.

And it's that group--the first wave of moths to a newly prominent flame--that I really detest. Not the initial group of loyalists, and not the large group that comes after them when the word is out.
Date: 2008-10-22 01:08 am (UTC)

From: [identity profile] rebeccama.livejournal.com
Grow the hell up, y'know? Y'know what really IS cool and independent? Liking what you like and disliking what you don't like regardless of how many other people like those things.

Agreed. Disliking something because it is popular is being as much a tool of popularity as automatically liking something because it is popular.
Date: 2008-10-22 04:41 am (UTC)

From: [identity profile] hawkdancer.livejournal.com
Yup.

PS- awesome Colbert pic

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