Narz
keeping it real
When I hear the word "hipster" I think of someone who is more concerned with image than substance or depth & more considered with what others think than who they are.
The book and blog "Stuff white people like" describe hipsters pretty well.
I don't know if I'd say there's a perfect alignment there.
I would like you elaborate.
When I hear the word "hipster" I think of someone who is more concerned with image than substance or depth & more considered with what others think than who they are.
^^ rofl TF.
Adding to what Lord Joakin said, I remember some guy who turned up to College with no shoes on and a bongo drum and the classic long braided hair. He would sit down anywhere and just start hitting this decrepid looking drum and sometimes singing. Now he is the very worst of teh worst![]()
No one argues that. If I tell you that my vacuum cleaner is broken, I am not telling you that there is no way to have a functioning vacuum cleaner.I don't get why people are trying to argue that there's no way to really use hipster as a labe
Come to UCSC and you'll understand. They are everywhere.
Basically hipsters are people whose defining characteristic is being unique. Their common stereotypical phrase is "I liked x before they were y" (the y generally being "cool" or "popular") This often also applies to clothing, where they strive to be bizarre or "ironic". Generally they wear extremely tight pants and some kind of ironic t-shirt (something extremely retro, things like that). They often sport some variation of eccentric facial hair, such as curled mustaches, handlebar mustaches, things like that. They best way to identify if someone is a hipster is to ask them if they are one; if they fervently deny it, they are surely a hipster.
No one argues that. If I tell you that my vacuum cleaner is broken, I am not telling you that there is no way to have a functioning vacuum cleaner.
No, that's exactly what it is. Hence the discussion.But it's not as if the term hipster is really vague or unclear...
The Asian nerds may have obligatory glasses, but they usually neither large nor empty frame. In the case of the Asians the glasses actually serve a function.
I don't follow; why does the fact that some labels have clear (if imprecise) meanings imply that any other label must have a clear meaning?
But it's not as if the term hipster is really vague or unclear, so it's not broken at all, it's very clear what a fixed vacuum is and what the hipster label identifies.
Just because almost everyone in downtown's cartoon was slightly different, all of them except the first two can be called hipsters, just like everyone who embrace several elements of the punk subculture, however different they are, or goth, etc. can easily fit under those labels. Now i'm not saying labels or generalizations are a good or bad thing, they just are what they are.