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Subj: You make an excellent point about the distribution of media ...Posted: Thu Jan 07, 2010 at 03:59:10 am EST (Viewed 345 times)
| Reply Subj: June 1997 Posted: Wed Jan 06, 2010 at 11:57:00 am EST (Viewed 324 times) |
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Though you're right that Harrymania is more a product of the " Noughties ", and should stand the test of time far better than Twilight.
As for my own opinions about the pop culture of this decade; I don't agree with CSFB!'s assessment that it was increasingly sterile and anti-intellectual. In fact, I think that the Noughties mark an increasing democratization of pop culture. With the internet revolutionizing distribution, and allowing a free form of publishing, there are more opportunities than ever for people to find an audience-- even if it's just a small niche. Webcomics are a good example; downloadable content to mobile devices is another, as are video websites like Youtube and Hulu. It's not a utopia for artists, but it does offer new possibilities of which we've only begun to scratch the surface.
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... Which I mentioned in my original post as one of the decade's points of genuine novelty, but part of the problem is that, with rare exceptions, I don't see the content of those new media channels living up to that potential yet. Indeed, you should take pride in the fact that you're one of the rare webcomics that doesn't revolve around nostalgia for '80s and '90s pop culture ephemera, which almost all of the most well-known ones traffic in to one degree or another.
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