When I was a tween, they had a concert hall around the corner where they used to hold dances for minors. They sold you glow sticks and you could dance. They didn't have a problem with 12 year old girls reggae twerking on guy dicks but you couldn't wear UFO pants or dance hard style
it's probably geographical. a lot of the hubs for it in europe are places like rotterdam, very blue-collar ex-industrial areas. people pile into these giant like stadium-sized concrete arenas. the music gets incredibly fast. like there's no sex or feeling in it. just 190bpm 'terror core' or whatever they call it. it sounds like a panic attack, to me.SuperJail Warden wrote:
It's funny that that sort of music I guess has a Nazi element to it in Europe? American Nazis are deep into metal and punk. The music I linked is 100% associated with millennial and Gen Z urban culture.uziq wrote:
that's more like the music i associate with the low countries. speed heads and truck drivers and people in tracksuits. it's why i laughed when larssen made out he had some sort of high-pedigree taste because he's 'spent time in the netherlands and belgium'. the most popular forms of electronic music there are like gabber techno and hardcore, full of skinheads slowly chewing off their own faces.
places like amsterdam have very good scenes, very international, great clubs, great radio stations, great local record stores/labels. but it's very much a minority affair. i doubt larssen has even heard of rush hour *snorts*
in general the dutch are pretty much white trash. note why larssen keeps trying to emphasise that his second great-aunt twice removed was born in jutland when it belonged to germany, or whatever. they all know they are truckdrivers and stevedores.
Last edited by uziq (2020-05-27 16:48:41)
A long and storied tradition:uziq wrote:
it's probably geographical. a lot of the hubs for it in europe are places like rotterdam, very blue-collar ex-industrial areas. people pile into these giant like stadium-sized concrete arenas. the music gets incredibly fast. like there's no sex or feeling in it. just 190bpm 'terror core' or whatever they call it. it sounds like a panic attack, to me.SuperJail Warden wrote:
It's funny that that sort of music I guess has a Nazi element to it in Europe? American Nazis are deep into metal and punk. The music I linked is 100% associated with millennial and Gen Z urban culture.uziq wrote:
that's more like the music i associate with the low countries. speed heads and truck drivers and people in tracksuits. it's why i laughed when larssen made out he had some sort of high-pedigree taste because he's 'spent time in the netherlands and belgium'. the most popular forms of electronic music there are like gabber techno and hardcore, full of skinheads slowly chewing off their own faces.
places like amsterdam have very good scenes, very international, great clubs, great radio stations, great local record stores/labels. but it's very much a minority affair. i doubt larssen has even heard of rush hour *snorts*
in general the dutch are pretty much white trash. note why larssen keeps trying to emphasise that his second great-aunt twice removed was born in jutland when it belonged to germany, or whatever. they all know they are truckdrivers and stevedores.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w58BPcLeGt4
EDIT - Check out the dude at 3:40. He's grinding so hard his spine is damaged.
Last edited by Pochsy (2020-05-27 16:54:35)
The shape of an eye in front of the ocean, digging for stones and throwing them against its window pane. Take it down dreamer, take it down deep. - Other Families
i love watching rave videos from the 90s. the early acid house stuff especially. so much joy and promise and good feeling. football hooligans next to sensitive the smiths fans. it was like this great release of tension and coming together after the extremely aggressive and adversarial thatcher-reagan years. huge libidinal energies. so great.
the thunder dome stuff looks like a corruption of that seed. hahaha
the thunder dome stuff looks like a corruption of that seed. hahaha
That doesn't look too bad when you consider Americans were setting their concerts on fire around the same time.Pochsy wrote:
A long and storied tradition:uziq wrote:
it's probably geographical. a lot of the hubs for it in europe are places like rotterdam, very blue-collar ex-industrial areas. people pile into these giant like stadium-sized concrete arenas. the music gets incredibly fast. like there's no sex or feeling in it. just 190bpm 'terror core' or whatever they call it. it sounds like a panic attack, to me.SuperJail Warden wrote:
It's funny that that sort of music I guess has a Nazi element to it in Europe? American Nazis are deep into metal and punk. The music I linked is 100% associated with millennial and Gen Z urban culture.
places like amsterdam have very good scenes, very international, great clubs, great radio stations, great local record stores/labels. but it's very much a minority affair. i doubt larssen has even heard of rush hour *snorts*
in general the dutch are pretty much white trash. note why larssen keeps trying to emphasise that his second great-aunt twice removed was born in jutland when it belonged to germany, or whatever. they all know they are truckdrivers and stevedores.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w58BPcLeGt4
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZclaXQWVRCg
EDIT - Check out the dude at 3:40. He's grinding so hard his spine is damaged.
we never had a 'disco sucks' thing in europe. the whole burning records on a baseball field thing. jay is very much of that lineage of blue-collar sports fan who thinks music with funk and dancing is 'gay'.
american society really is uniquely insecure about masculinity, isn't it?
american society really is uniquely insecure about masculinity, isn't it?
Last edited by uziq (2020-05-27 17:03:25)
Disco Sucks was an late 70's and 80's thing. Jay was still in high school around in '99. Disco was already extinct by then.
Here's the single performance that is credited with really inciting the riot. I always thought of it as blue collar aggression, and not some grander appeal to the quiddity of manliness.
The shape of an eye in front of the ocean, digging for stones and throwing them against its window pane. Take it down dreamer, take it down deep. - Other Families
yes but it was also the death of a very popular trend. rock music was mainstream again after that. and it stayed that way until ... well, EDM, basically. so jay was still definitely on the wave. there's a reason why everyone in his high-school listened to dropkick murphys instead of detroit radio.SuperJail Warden wrote:
Disco Sucks was an late 70's and 80's thing. Jay was still in high school around in '99. Disco was already extinct by then.
Rock music is not in a good place right now among young people from what I understand. Less and less people learning to play the guitar. More people rather play DJ with computer software. And rap music. Kids love rap music even more than back in the day.
juppp. i actually have no idea what under 20s listen to. that goth emo girl?
I asked my cousin's 9 year old daughter what she wanted to be when she grew up and she said a Youtuber. We got bigger generational gaps to deal with than the type of music we listened to.
The shape of an eye in front of the ocean, digging for stones and throwing them against its window pane. Take it down dreamer, take it down deep. - Other Families
Should at least have the goddamn foresight to aspire to TikTok. Jesus.
SHE usually brings treats, pastries, etc. Lots of phyllo dough and sugar. They are really fucking good.SuperJail Warden wrote:
What does he bring you? I adore Arabic food.
I was there, and I was at one the first bonfires. We started with the mountains of pizza box trash and then tore down the plywood around the sound stages and started fire jumping. Was fun!SuperJail Warden wrote:
That doesn't look too bad when you consider Americans were setting their concerts on fire around the same time.Pochsy wrote:
A long and storied tradition:uziq wrote:
it's probably geographical. a lot of the hubs for it in europe are places like rotterdam, very blue-collar ex-industrial areas. people pile into these giant like stadium-sized concrete arenas. the music gets incredibly fast. like there's no sex or feeling in it. just 190bpm 'terror core' or whatever they call it. it sounds like a panic attack, to me.
places like amsterdam have very good scenes, very international, great clubs, great radio stations, great local record stores/labels. but it's very much a minority affair. i doubt larssen has even heard of rush hour *snorts*
in general the dutch are pretty much white trash. note why larssen keeps trying to emphasise that his second great-aunt twice removed was born in jutland when it belonged to germany, or whatever. they all know they are truckdrivers and stevedores.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w58BPcLeGt4
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZclaXQWVRCg
EDIT - Check out the dude at 3:40. He's grinding so hard his spine is damaged.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W0Uhr5r6sUM
"Ah, you miserable creatures! You who think that you are so great! You who judge humanity to be so small! You who wish to reform everything! Why don't you reform yourselves? That task would be sufficient enough."
-Frederick Bastiat
-Frederick Bastiat
uziq wrote:
we never had a 'disco sucks' thing in europe. the whole burning records on a baseball field thing. jay is very much of that lineage of blue-collar sports fan who thinks music with funk and dancing is 'gay'.
american society really is uniquely insecure about masculinity, isn't it?
"Ah, you miserable creatures! You who think that you are so great! You who judge humanity to be so small! You who wish to reform everything! Why don't you reform yourselves? That task would be sufficient enough."
-Frederick Bastiat
-Frederick Bastiat
Why did you destroy all of that property?Jay wrote:
I was there, and I was at one the first bonfires. We started with the mountains of pizza box trash and then tore down the plywood around the sound stages and started fire jumping. Was fun!SuperJail Warden wrote:
That doesn't look too bad when you consider Americans were setting their concerts on fire around the same time.Pochsy wrote:
A long and storied tradition:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZclaXQWVRCg
EDIT - Check out the dude at 3:40. He's grinding so hard his spine is damaged.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W0Uhr5r6sUM
No, limp bizkit was long gone. Red Hot Chili Peppers were on stage at the time.Pochsy wrote:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nwBjhgC139I
Here's the single performance that is credited with really inciting the riot. I always thought of it as blue collar aggression, and not some grander appeal to the quiddity of manliness.
"Ah, you miserable creatures! You who think that you are so great! You who judge humanity to be so small! You who wish to reform everything! Why don't you reform yourselves? That task would be sufficient enough."
-Frederick Bastiat
-Frederick Bastiat
Oh man, there was a lot of anger built up over 3 days. It was scorching hot, into the high 90s on a hot ass airfield, and water was $5/bottle. Pizza was like $15 for a 10 inch personal pie. Just relentlessly hot, relentlessly overpriced, the porta potties were all overflowing. The music was awesome, but the overwhelming feeling is that we were all being turned over and having every penny shook from our pockets by the promoters. I left when people started looting and robbing ATMs and stuff though.SuperJail Warden wrote:
Why did you destroy all of that property?Jay wrote:
I was there, and I was at one the first bonfires. We started with the mountains of pizza box trash and then tore down the plywood around the sound stages and started fire jumping. Was fun!SuperJail Warden wrote:
That doesn't look too bad when you consider Americans were setting their concerts on fire around the same time.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W0Uhr5r6sUM
"Ah, you miserable creatures! You who think that you are so great! You who judge humanity to be so small! You who wish to reform everything! Why don't you reform yourselves? That task would be sufficient enough."
-Frederick Bastiat
-Frederick Bastiat
How do you feel about the anti-police riots taking place right now?Jay wrote:
Oh man, there was a lot of anger built up over 3 days. It was scorching hot, into the high 90s on a hot ass airfield, and water was $5/bottle. Pizza was like $15 for a 10 inch personal pie. Just relentlessly hot, relentlessly overpriced, the porta potties were all overflowing. The music was awesome, but the overwhelming feeling is that we were all being turned over and having every penny shook from our pockets by the promoters. I left when people started looting and robbing ATMs and stuff though.SuperJail Warden wrote:
Why did you destroy all of that property?Jay wrote:
I was there, and I was at one the first bonfires. We started with the mountains of pizza box trash and then tore down the plywood around the sound stages and started fire jumping. Was fun!
I think they have some serious grievances that need to be addressed. It doesn't mean pulling back from the community, which is what cops always threaten to do whenever they get their peepee slapped, but it does mean retraining and getting rid of the racist bullies. Our police forces as a whole need to stop with the us vs them mentality they've built up and start being members of the community again. One way is to return to elected sheriffs. They seem to do a better job balancing public relations with enforcement than appointed cops do.SuperJail Warden wrote:
How do you feel about the anti-police riots taking place right now?Jay wrote:
Oh man, there was a lot of anger built up over 3 days. It was scorching hot, into the high 90s on a hot ass airfield, and water was $5/bottle. Pizza was like $15 for a 10 inch personal pie. Just relentlessly hot, relentlessly overpriced, the porta potties were all overflowing. The music was awesome, but the overwhelming feeling is that we were all being turned over and having every penny shook from our pockets by the promoters. I left when people started looting and robbing ATMs and stuff though.SuperJail Warden wrote:
Why did you destroy all of that property?
"Ah, you miserable creatures! You who think that you are so great! You who judge humanity to be so small! You who wish to reform everything! Why don't you reform yourselves? That task would be sufficient enough."
-Frederick Bastiat
-Frederick Bastiat
Thank you for your responses. That's all the information I need. You will be contacted by detectives Dilbert and Uzique shortly.Jay wrote:
I think they have some serious grievances that need to be addressed. It doesn't mean pulling back from the community, which is what cops always threaten to do whenever they get their peepee slapped, but it does mean retraining and getting rid of the racist bullies. Our police forces as a whole need to stop with the us vs them mentality they've built up and start being members of the community again. One way is to return to elected sheriffs. They seem to do a better job balancing public relations with enforcement than appointed cops do.SuperJail Warden wrote:
How do you feel about the anti-police riots taking place right now?Jay wrote:
Oh man, there was a lot of anger built up over 3 days. It was scorching hot, into the high 90s on a hot ass airfield, and water was $5/bottle. Pizza was like $15 for a 10 inch personal pie. Just relentlessly hot, relentlessly overpriced, the porta potties were all overflowing. The music was awesome, but the overwhelming feeling is that we were all being turned over and having every penny shook from our pockets by the promoters. I left when people started looting and robbing ATMs and stuff though.
My cousin was filming the protests tonight. A lot of looting.
"Ah, you miserable creatures! You who think that you are so great! You who judge humanity to be so small! You who wish to reform everything! Why don't you reform yourselves? That task would be sufficient enough."
-Frederick Bastiat
-Frederick Bastiat
Scavenging for supplies. Would I scavenge for supplies at a comic book store during a riot? Of course not. I would suggest someone go do it for me and compensate them? Yes. Yes, I would.