Blade listens to NORMAL emo. You listen to "WHY DID THIS HAPPEN TO MEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!? ???????"
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Fuck, you took the words right out of my mouth.
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Ahh kids these days, they are wonderful. All insta-goth now, think if they just add enough Nightmare Before Christmas gear then they'll get there.
Yeah, that is annoying. But it's even more annoying when their music sucks at the same time. If I wanted to hear that whiney shit, I would have stayed in junior high. At least 14 year olds don't sing about it.
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Yeah, that’s something else that’s incredibly irritating; all the things that they assimilate which are now considered emo/gothy. I walk into hot topic to get an Iron Maiden T-shirt, some 14 year old walks out with a rainbow bright shirt. You weren’t even alive during that time! Stop tainting everything that I grew up with and you just found out about yesterday!
Someone I know just made this hilarious little emo animation that I want to get made into an icon or a sig. I’ll have to ask him about it next time I see him.
Oh, as for what I listen to.
Suspyre, bitch!Last edited by Nikovich; 10-24-2005, 02:17 PM.
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On one hand they are looking for some sort of exceptance and self identity so they should be given some leniency but on the other hand it might not do them so much harm to take them outside and kick their head in. I could go either way on any given day.
Must be something about sister that age. Member when Dimebag died and suddenly Sprog couldn't get enough Pantera. And then Nightmare Before Christmas was everywhere. At fourteen your underwear should having nothing which you could possibly want to show someone on it
Wonder what it is about someone dying that makes people pour to listen to them.
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They're not looking for acceptance; just the opposite. Otherwise they’d be wearing clothes reflecting things popular now, not 20 years ago. They’re attempting to make some sort of statement against society’s norms, though in a completely invalid manner. The real concept of nonconformism eludes them. They think it means act in the opposite of the norm. That’s just conforming to another set of rules. Just because they’re the opposite of popular culture rules doesn’t make them a set of their own.Last edited by Nikovich; 10-25-2005, 09:14 PM.
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Originally posted by NikovichThey're not looking for acceptance; just the opposite. Otherwise they’d be wearing clothes reflecting things popular now, not 20 years ago. They’re attempting to make some sort of statement against society’s norms, though in a completely invalid manner. The real concept of nonconformism eludes them. They think it means act in the opposite of the norm. That’s just conforming to another set of rules. Just because they’re the opposite of popular culture rules doesn’t make them a set of their own.
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