• niktemadur@lemmy.world
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    2 hours ago

    When this song came out, I was a teenager, and our world was divided into two basic factions:

    1. Those clinging to 70s-style rock like Queen, The Who, Dire Straits, Supertramp, Pink Floyd, Van Halen, etc.
    2. Those who embraced the strange new sounds coming from the UK, like The Cure, Depeche Mode, Siouxsie & The Banshees, etc.

    Seldom did both of these worlds meet. Maybe with bands like Blondie and The Cars, music with some of this new sensibility which had made it to mainstream radio.

    “Mad World” sounded like some sort of clarion call for those on camp 2, like nothing else like it before. Here we were, taking in all these new sounds, a whole ontology of them, and out pops this thing that still managed to sound completely fresh, to surprise and dazzle us.

    This was all amplified by the video, in which Orzabal dances like no one we’d ever seen before. For a minute there, right after The Hurting but before Songs From The Big Chair, the Tears For Fears duo was the hottest thing in the zeitgeist.

  • Snot Flickerman@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    18 hours ago

    This is fucking gold on way too many levels.

    I would have been a lazy memer, but every opportunity this person had to increase the absurdity they did.

    • BeardedGingerWonder@feddit.uk
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      2 hours ago

      Because it’s nocap bussin when we yeet out those terms and the kids think we’re being serious. It’s extra when we do it slightly wrong. Skibidi

    • Cadenza@lemmy.world
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      7 hours ago

      I’ve been thinking about this lately. I’m almost 40 something and I think I really wouldn’t like to imperson younger generations lingo for the sake of it being “trendy”.

      But there are two exceptions for me :

      1. It genuinely made me laugh and “weaves well” with my own way of talking. I mean, were not supposed to stop incorporating new words in our language as far as it’s not forced, right? My slang comes from the 90s. Certain (small) parts of the newer gens slang fit so well into my own repertoire! I think that’s mostly the part which isn’t “word building” but “word archeology”, like slang from my gen being reinterpreted/reappropriated, which is actually pretty cool.

      2. Another funny case. Its happening a lot lately, but some words from my mother’s language (she comes from an African country) are surprisingly becoming popular. I never used them before even though I think and talk to myself with them since being a child. I’m hesitating a lot to use them now. It would be easier for me but could really look like “playing cool” which I don’t want at all. For additional complexity, add that some of those words, in my mother’s/family language have slight differences (like language differences across same-language speaking countries), and when I do use those words, I’m getting corrected by youngsters for slang misuse. I mean it’s fair, I don’t take it personally, but it’s weird.

      Ex :

      Miskina, in Arab

      Maskine, in the weird variant of swahili my mother speaks.

    • Bad Jojo@lemmy.blahaj.zoneOPM
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      9 hours ago

      I don’t judge “sus” because to me it isn’t as much generational as it is a marker of someone who survived going insane during the COVID lockdown by watching a lot of Mr. Fruit playing Among Us or just playing games with others online.