I Hate Gen-X
How did a whole generation end up with nothing to say? Page 2
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Obvious & Vulgar
Obvious

CLASSIC GEN-X IDIOCY
asking President Clinton if he wears "boxers or briefs?"
taking ecstasy when it is known to cause brain damage
swinging from hooks poked through body flesh
getting a tattoo on the face, hands, or neck
making auto racing popular again
piercing one's tongue
joining a gang
Smoking


Black Gen-X


Gen-X has through their ignorance and indifference imposed upon the world new lower standards of art and living. I Hate GenX seeks to expose their dereliction. Gen-X revels in their political ignorance, utterly clueless that disengaged means disempowered. The majority of their artistic output can be described most charitably as derivative or execrable.


af-fec-ta-tion n
Artificial behavior designed to impress others.



COOL
GenX revels in consumer culture, having been made by the corporatocracy into a malleable captive market: Mindless consumers easily led by the annoited fashion mavens of the moment to the next trend, the next piece or pose of cool. Without intellectual depth or a questioning disposition, they move like lemmings following the directions and merchandizing commands dictated to them by their pop culture gods - fooling themselves that they are oh-so-non-conformist, and arty, and different. When, in fact, they look just like every other Xer and spout the same blank platitudes.

GenX has no sense of history, no connection to nor understanding of their place in the time stream - to pose is an end in itself for them. They think they are cool, yet they lack the basic knowledge that cool is ultimately about dissent, about original ideas - and posing, of course, is anathema to this.

What is so sad is that the mask has become the person, and the uniform of cool is now ... bought off-the-rack. The new aesthetic conformity they've created is constricting to the point of sameness. Pierced tongues, large tattoos over the cracks of girls' asses, the calculated behavior ... when everybody does it, how is it cool? Did we tear down the conformist restrictions of the 50's only to over time construct new conformist restrictions for society based on the tyranny of mass-merchandized cool [albeit with new lower standards]? The Too Cool To Care posture of youth, especially in the 70's when the younger brethren of the children of the 60's decided it was not cool to march in the streets anymore, or be political - to show you actually cared about something, was at first a reaction, then a posture, and now a way of life. Besides, in the 70's it was much more fun to just do the drugs, listen to spacey guitar rock and funk, and drive around in Trans Ams. Thus began the de-evolution into an ever-hardening of the collective heart among the young since the 60's. In the quest to appear cool, people - especially the young people, adopted the pose of indifference. "Whatever" first came into wide use as cultural shorthand to dismiss that thought unworthy of attention. The passivity brought on by so much pot-smoking doubled the effect, and unfortunately the pose of indifference transformed itself into actual callousness over time. People were much more concerned with feathering their hair and the right fit to their bell bottoms. The 70's cynicism and political withdrawal by the young exactly contradicted the idealism and involvement of the late 50's/60's beats and civil rights figthters and free-love flower children and hippies. It became hip to be cynical.

In the 80's it was a decade shift again, away from the 70's long hair, arena rock and passivity of marijuana to the buzzed hair of the punks and mods, the synth-pop of New Wave, GQ and retro geek fashion, cocaine for that high-energy buzz, neoconservatism, reactionary christian movements, and greed and materialism as virtues. Hearts hardened even more, and we learned to love the lies - the phoniness of Reagan and his 1950's worldview, trickle-down economics, and liberal arts were all but abandoned as youth sought to earn MBA's and get into that junk bond get-rich-quick game. The now ubiquitous patterns of cheating at school exploded in this time. Classism reared its ugly head again, and the hardened hearts had no trouble putting people out of work and making the numbers of homeless on the streets explode.

After years of "whatever" and fewer and fewer young people being politically aware or involved, understanding of issues eroded severely and cool was now more than ever about the right posture, the right clothes, the right hair, the right music. References in speech and correct use of slang speech and physical postures became a must. As the Boomers got older and started to have kids, and the Generation Gap faded from the lexicon, the Establishment started to become populated with ex-hippies and the dividing line between young and old for cool seemed to fade. It became ultimately a commodity to be sold. Politicians blatantly appealed to the cool factor, and by the 90's we had Bill Clinton playing a saxaphone on a late night talk show to prove to the young that he wasn't a stuffed shirt. It has ever been thus, but by the 80's marketers finally had a hold of cool with both hands, and it was now packagable, to be sold off-the-rack.

Generation X, so ill-informed, so distracted with cheap electronic entertainments, aiming so low in their cultural goals, were too clueless to notice the shift. Tired bands like ZZTop and Aerosmith got whole new careers thanks to the merchandizing power of MTV - the music network which would get head-shots of aspiring actors so as to pack the stage area for their broadcast shows with the beautiful people, totally polluting the process of celebrating a musical act by allowing true fans to get near. This merchandizing mentality did not go unnoticed, and GenX adopted it whole hog. They never even questioned it. Xers do it in so many ways in their daily lives, almost without knowing they do it, that the line between what they really feel and believe has become dangerously blurred with the poses they adopt, to the point that many probably don't know what they really feel or don't feel at all. As long as the hair, clothes, and piercings are right, and they know the lyrics to the currently popular gangsta rap tune, and can do the vacuous stare as they light up their cigarettes....

One can witness this in action at the movies. The GenX audience is quick to murmer or talk or in some way indicate - so others notice - that they "get it." Often comedy films are not funny, but GenX wants to indicate that they get where the joke was planted so they nervously laugh - as soon as possible after the punchline delivery, when what was said was simply not funny. And the characterizations in often self-absorbed and pretentious GenX films are less than a sketch most of the time. We are given a stereotype, or an outline of a character, and GenX as an audience accepts the draft as the final form. Again they indicate that they get it and can't be bothered with character development. "Oh that's the tough cop, frigid housewife, drug-dealer, hitman, closet homosexual..." GenX wants to go right to the action, to the conflict - the murder, the rape, the fight, etc. This has had a withering effect on storytelling, to the point that film comedies are simple gross-out fests and dramatic actors vamp and vacantly stare in place of acting out a character's feelings. GenX wants cartoon characters on-screen because they don't want to have an actual emotional reaction to fully developed characters, or they want the visceral goings on so extreme that it can cut through their hard emotional exteriors and generate some kind of reaction (witness the ear cutting scene in Quentin Tarantino's Reservior Dogs....this stagey and pretentious gangster film conveyed such menace and such realism in its depictions of sadism and violence that it took the genre to the next level...the question is, why even go to that level? In what way does it serve art? Rather it becomes a sort of twisted eroticism related to violence).

In society, as the GenX pose of indifference hardened hearts over time to callousness, the 60's teenagers putting daisies in rifle barrels devolved into almost a collective sociopathy whereby now we have a situation where gansta rappers can disrespect women by grabbing their breasts or dumping beer on them at parties/picnics and carrying weapons and flashing gang signs is portrayed as cool [see: Dr. Dre's "Ain't Nuthin' But A G Thang" music video]. Art reflects life with GenX or GenX copies artforms. I wonder what the women assaulted in Central Park would think of Dre's video?

Youth, as part of the pose of cool, now has to appear strong. Weakness is simply not acceptable, and the most blatant and vulgar displays of strength and power are most celebrated - being in a gang, carrying a gun, tattoos and piercings, ostentatious gold and diamond jewelry, tough-looking clothes and adornments. GenX is rarely allowed by their peer group to appear overly, or even perceptibly, emotional. So over time a debilitating de-sensitizing of the young has taken place (particularly since the late 80's), and the omnipresent media have spread the messages and images far and wide which now totally glorify violence and materialism. Is it any wonder then why a 13-year-old can stare into a news camera and vacantly state that their best friend just got shot without a trace of emotion? And then go on to say with a self-aware pose of toughness, "That's just how it is." Nearly 70% of sales for gangsta rap music is done by whites, who have copied the affected street lingo and mannerisms of black and latino criminal sub-cultures (and created their own gangs too) for so long that now middle and upper class kids (of all races) speaking in that style may actually not know how to do otherwise.

Tough poses. Not caring. Not feeling. Pushing the limits until no one can be shocked anymore....this is the legacy of Generation X to Cool.



CREATIVE DRECK
UGLY AS FASHION
UNFUNNY COMICS
SNIVELLY ROCK STARS
BAD MOVIES
truly annoying actors
*polyester pants
*unwashed hair look
*piercings
*monochrome
*blue shadow
*bellbottoms
*leisure suits
*orange
*brown
*platforms
*PuffDaddy's furs
*wearing gramma's old crocheted afghan as a shawl (worse, they paid for it)


Jeanine Garofalo

Dennis Leary

Adam Sandler

Dennis Miller

Craig Kilborn


Sarah Silverman

Kathy Griffin
Staind singer

Korn singer

Chris Cornell

Adam Duritz

Sheryl Crow

Billy Corgan

Michael Stipe

Kurt Cobain

Trent Reznor

Jewel

Joan Osborne

ah, WHERE to begin...
Clerks
Leaving Las Vegas
Bottle Rocket
Gummo
Kids
Totally ****ed Up
Pump Up the Volume
Dogma
Pulp Fiction
Safe
Reservoir Dogs
Buffalo 66
...of course,
Boogie Nights,
Slackers,
Blair Witch Project
jeaninegarofalo
juliette lewis
juddnelson
vincentgallo
giovani ribisi
nicolascage
iceT
stanleytucci
minniedriver
ginagershon
lorendean
emelioestevez
christianslater
davidarquette
sandrabullock
keanureeves
icecube
ethanhawke


FASHION: Ugly is the de-facto goal for Gen-Xers. That single word sums up their aesthetic. Of course their fashion is derivative, all fashion is, but Xers lift things directly from other eras - their designers simply raid thrift stores for inspiration and add no new interpretation to the design. Xers look dirty and messy because they are.


ex-treme adj. 1. Outermost or farthest; most remote. 2. Very great; intense. 3. To the utmost degree; radical. 4. Drastic; severe. -n. 1. The greatest or utmost degree. 2. A drastic expedient. [extremus.]
-ex-treme'ly adv. -ex-treme'ness n.



What is it with Extreme?
GenX's contribution is to simply push the limits on everything....well beyond the bounds of safety . . . and good taste. Whether it is pushing music to gangsterism, vulgar misogeny and ostentatious displays of wealth - as well as violence; or sports - where snowboarders jump over moving trains and skateboarders and trick-riders on bicycles risk sterility, brain damage, and worse with bad falls; to piercing nuts and sideshow freaks swinging from hooks in their flesh to installing titanium horns in their scalp; to athletes spitting on umpires, to bungee-jumping, to trendoids tattooing and piercing their bodies merely as fashion; to moshing at concerts where the singers merely scream, to using drugs that are meant for horses, the dead, or cause brain damage; to pointless rioting at outdoor concerts/sporting events/rap awards shows; to political protest which destroys property and does little else; to oversize cars and SUVs that harm the environment; to cigarettes and cigars which harm their lungs and mouths; to rude inappropriate-location and overly loud talking on cell phones; to music videos and films featuring cockroaches, toilets, and excrement; to hideous contrived retro 60s/70s fashion and design knockoffs; to inartful, obvious and gross affectations of behavior all to perceive themselves as cool....they've taken us to the nadir of cultural and artistic expression. . .and have no clue they've done so.



stu-pid adj. 1. Slow to apprehend; dull; obtuse. 2. Showing a lack of sense or intelligence. 3. Uninteresting; trite. [< L stupere, to be stunned.]
- stu-pid-i-ty n. -stu-pid-ly adv.



FILM: Gen-X film is self-indulgent, tedious, devoid of ideas, weak in its storytelling, pretentiously focused on weird unrealistic characters, celebrates ugliness, and is often crass and vulgar. Again, because they have no politics, their film art lacks a point of view. Overall, it is so much stylistic and intellectual masturbation.

SOCIAL DISCOURSE / CONDUCT: A celebration of the vulgar and a blithe disregard for common courtesy and basic manners are the hallmark of Gen-X. Just watch one flick their cigarette butt on the ground, engage in rude and overly loud and inappropriate location conversation on a cell phone, park their car blocking others, and use the dumbed-down stupid fake brutha handshake and "yo, whassup?"


GENERATIONS

People are born every second of every minute of every hour of every day. Some social scientists take this stuff very seriously - assigning specific years for the beginnings and endings of generations - usually they say that cultural markers, such as identifying with JFK's assassination rather than Kurt Cobain's suicide, determine which generation one belongs to. Then there are pop culture analysts who claim that there are Inbetweeners who come after the Baby Boomers and before Gen-Xers, and one guy selling a book claims there are Jonesers who are slightly different than Inbetweeners. Click here for a huge list of links to the serious scholarship [note: most of the links are dead, which I suppose says something about the interest level of scholars for Gen-X]. This site has an expAnsive view of Xers - those who are after the Boomers yet are not Gen-Y (and from the email I get clearly those born in 1979 or later do not want to be called Gen-X, thus they are Gen-Y). ~ author





Posturing and Posing
We've all seen it, the unique way Gen-X postures and poses. Gen-X likes to convey an "I'm so important/I can't be bothered" composure when they wish to display their unique interpretation of cool behavior. And they are so self-aware, it is a display. Basic consideration and courtesy are deliberately ignored in nearly all social situations because Gen-X will force you to notice them rather than earning your notice. Like a homeless person whe defecates on busy streetcorner, Gen-X will force you to watch them, even though they have nothing to show you worth watching - and especially if it's something horrible or gross. They are desperate for attention since they know they have no talent and have not earned an audience. Stupid Gen-X girls will do a shrill high-pitched negative laugh in public when they want attention and Gen-X guys will scratch their crotch, even reaching inside their pants, as if they have crabs or something - in full view of whomever is around. Gen-X will whip out a cell phone and take or place a call anytime anywhere, no matter how inappropriate the time and place. When Gen-X gets something out of their car they invariably leave the car door open, interfering with traffic going by, and they take their sweet ass time about it because, dammit, they are so cool you need to notice. They will pull their giant SUV into a parking lot taking up more than one space or crowding another with utter disregard to other drivers who need to park, and pretend they didn't notice they did it. When they drive their giant SUVs on the roadways they invariably have a cell phone glued to their ear and a distracted look about them, so when they cut you off and you want to get their attention to let them know what you thought of that they are so engrossed in that irrelevant conversation (or faking it) they won't look or acknowledge what they've done. Gen-X comedians scream and use gross-out humor, thinking that if they raise the volume or go for the cheap laugh that it somehow equates with talent. Gen-X actors seem to mistake a self-important pout with acting, believing that if they focus inward it somehow translates into good acting on the outside - that the "I'm so tortured," or "I have a lot on my mind," look means good acting. Gen-X fashion designers have created nothing new and their knock-offs don't even try for wit or cleverness. Homeless people literally look better than much of the crap coming down the fashion runways by Gen-X designers, who shamelessly rip of 60s and 70s designs (and now 80s) and junk it up. Gen-X filmmakers have not written any meaningful stories about the major issues of our time: loss of privacy due to technology, cloning, other genetic manipulation of living things, global warming, the widening gap between the haves and have-nots, rather they have given us trite tv-movie-of-the-week films such as Boys 'n the Hood and Brothers McMullin, or weird twisted journeys as in Pi, or stupid nothing movies like Bottle Rocket, and and when they do try to comment on issues of importance it is in crap like Dogma or Kids. Gen-X posing is interesting to watch in restaurants, particularly nice restaurants, where they are underdressed and behave is if they are acting out a scene for an editorial shoot for a magazine. Most cannot properly manipulate their dining utensils and stuff their mouths with too much food, and are often pretentious when ordering wine - not fooling anyone about their lack of knowledge. Girls will continually touch that dirty-looking hair while at the dinner table. Gen-X guys will go to a nice restaurant in that ubiquitous plain t-shirt that looks like they slept in it. Gen-X uses the latest trendy vernacular, "that's the bomb," was one that was stupid but caught on anyway, "whassup," and "I'm down," are two borrowed from black culture which are also ubiquitous now. Black Gen-Xers, of the hip-hop variety, have gone whole-hog for vulgar displays of wealth, with the offensive term "ice," used to describe tacky, ostentatious diamond-encrusted jewelry. Big gold jewelry and lots of diamonds and the whole glorification of the street-pimp look have been legitimized by black (and white) Gen-X as some kind of legitimate "street" look, when it is such artifice 90% of the time.




Gen-Y
- Born after 1979? Relax, Y is not X [exactly] -

Gen-Y teen smoking down by some 30% BUT Partnership For a Drug-Free America
said teen Ecstasy use rose 20 percent last year and has increased 71 percent since 1999.





Black GenX
Let's face it, in the United States since at least the late 40's youth have looked to black culture for clues to what is cool. This has been consistent for decades, and most specifically in terms of street fashion, affected mannerisms and word expressions, and music. This society-wide focus on black culture as a raw material source for cool behaviors and presentations is a rich vein indeed in the larger social fabric of America....

That said, black Gen-X has let us all down. Like their more numerous white brethren (and asian, hispanic, pacific-islander, and native-american as well), their sense of aesthetics and social responsibility is sorely lacking compared to that of their predecessors. The parents and grandparents of today's black Gen-X should be as horrified by the slack and ugliness of so much of the output generated by their offspring - from the gansta rap to their ignorance of politics and failure to participate - as the white and other colors of parents should be. But parents of all Xers have let them off the hook. Someone like an Ice Cube - the poet laurete of rap according to some - can tell a reporter that he won't put the positive messages which are on his records into his live shows because the audience shows up to hear the "motherfucker, bitch, boom-boom." Now, do you think for a second that during the 50's and 60's, when the parents of black Gen-X were educating themselves and agitating, at real risk of injury and death, for equal rights under the law, that if given a chance, they would not have infused their statement with their message?!?!? Ice Cube, with this remark (from a long interview in the L.A. Reader, about 1995) is emblematic of the phoniness which permeates so-called hip-hop culture, and the woeful vacuum of political thought among young African-Americans.

.....Younger black kids, say from 9 to 13 are the gestation zone for the new phrases, the new fashion choices, the new poses, which cross-pollinates with older black kids up to their late 20's (along with other races and cultures) to generate the "hip" and "cool" to come for the most part. For fifteen years the young kids have been polluted with gang imagery and lifestyles and influences, and this had made a whole generation inured to the evil and the crime and the degredation of women which comes from gangs. The influence became so ubiquitous that it has been adopted and completely legitimized since 1985. The posture of toughness that one must assume to be cool has lent itself to the creation of callousness, and tough poses have created tough behavior. In the 80's the Reagan revolution with its subtle and not-so-subtle racism (he gave a pre-election speech in a Southern town most famous for a lynching) sent powerful messages, and younger blacks emerging as voices in the arts and society reflected this back, often with, regretfully, with equally harsh observation....the comic Eddie Murphy would sprinkle references to white culture and black-white relations with nearly none of the compassion of the great Richard Pryor, rather he was angry, and he let the anger shape his content and delivery. Intolerance was met with intolerance. Young black artists in other fields also expressed frustration and anger with the new tone set by the Reagan Administration, which lasted throughout the 80's and into the early 90's, yet the high-minded and highly educated responses of the 50's and 60's seemed to missing.
....More to come....

My Op/Ed on 'Barbershop'

Black Gen-X Denigrates Civil Rights Leaders
The new popular film Barbershop has created controversy for its clumsy attempt at humor by denigrating civil rights leaders Rosa Parks, Martin Luther King, Jr., and Jesse Jackson. As has been widely reported by the news media, a sequence in the film uses offensive and disparaging remarks about these three civil rights leaders, and has provoked some measure of outrage among older African-Americans who remember the struggle. Jesse Jackson has called for removal of the offensive lines from the DVD and home-video releases of the film - and he's right, they should be removed.

What is really at issue here is the woeful lack of political knowledge and participation by Generation X (in this case black Gen-X as nearly all of the creative talent involved in the film are African-American) roughly those born between 1957 and 1978, which leads to such ill-informed and crude attempts at creative expression. The fact that people who risked injury and death to fight for equal rights in one of the momentous struggles of this nation's social and legal history can be cast in such disrespectful and negative terms by their descendants bespeaks of the slack and vulgarity of an entire generation.

Generation X is all but disengaged from politics, with twenty-somethings voting in the 20% range and thirty-somethings voting in the 30% range. Posturing and posing are ends to themselves for Gen-X and they'd rather look cool than give a damn about anything or take any real risks artistically or politically. It is easy to go for the cheap laugh and the toilet humor as so much Gen-X film does. One can look back to Eddie Murphy's concert film RAW from the mid-80's for the start of this trend. He was at the time the top comedian and his routine descended into graphic descriptions of defecation. The comedy films of Adam Sandler, the Farrelly brothers and Jim Carrey also helped establish the trend of vulgarity and outright toilet humor.

From that starting point black Gen-X has glamorized gangs, violence and misogyny through gangsta rap music and its accompanying images. Black Gen-X is not solely to blame of course, as all of Gen-X has chosen an aesthetic which is ugly, negative, violent, and celebrates vulgarity. So much of it is simply posturing and posing, however, as the majority of sales for gangsta rap, for example, is to suburban white kids, and although many African-Americans have economically benefited from the growth of this musical form - to what end, if vulgar displays of wealth with diamond-encrusted jewelry, giant mega-polluting SUV Cadillac Escalades, and images of scantily clad bimbos gyrating on yachts has merely made crass materialists of the descendants of civil rights fighters? Is that the outcome of the civil rights struggle for African-Americans? Here's a test, name one important African-American political leader under age 40. For that matter, name one important political leader of any race under 40.

There is an important historical reason why Rosa Parks refusal to get up from a "whites only" seat on a public bus matters. She was not the first to do so, but she aligned herself with a nascent political organization called the NAACP, and made a case of it to the court of public opinion and served as an example to others to stand their ground and help the NAACP gain real power to make legal changes to a corrupt system. For a cheap laugh, black Gen-X filmmakers sought to pollute that.

In going after Martin Luther King, Jr., perhaps the film's writers were showing that, hey, this is ancient history now, and we can poke a little fun at him and his place in history. It takes good writing to do that effectively, without harming the man's reputation or achievements to get the desired laugh - clearly a task beyond these Gen-Xers. As for Jackson, he has a lot more recent history ripe for parody or legitimate criticism, but given the context of the remarks - the civil rights struggle, the joke at his expense merely was mean-spirited.

Barbershop overall is a funny, warmhearted movie that people should enjoy, but I hope the controversy over the pathetic denigration of true heroes of the equal rights struggle gives pause to black Gen-Xers and all Gen-Xers and will make them actually consider their responsibilities as artists and members of society before they offer up such drivel again.


Hip-Hop is SO Fake

Vulgar

vul-gar adj.
1. Of or associated with the common people. 2. Vernacular. 3. Ill-bred; boorish. 4. Obscene; offensive; coarse.[L vulgus, the common people.]
vul-gar-i-an n. A vulgar person.


ug-ly adj. -lier, -liest. 1. Displeasing to the eye; unsightly. 2. Repulsive or offensive in any way' objectionable. [< ON uggr, fear.]
-ug'li-ness n.


bad adj. worse, worst. 1. Having undesirable qualities; not good. 2. Inferior; poor. 3. Unfavorable. 4. Rotten; spoiled. 5. Severe; intense a bad cold. [ bheidh-. to compel; afflict]
bad'ly adv. bad'ness n.


BAD FILM
Just as with their politics Gen-X has nothing meaningful to say with their films. There is no daring new way to express the medium, the last to try is Boomer Peter Greenaway. Low-rent is their approach, pushing their output at film festivals hoping to get a big Hollywood deal if their film is a hit on the festival circuit, and most of what they show at these festivals are what the brilliant South Park lampooned as 'Gay Cowboys Eat Pudding' - excruciatingly tedious drivel about characters who for the most part couldn't really exist or aren't interesting enough to warrent a film about them anyway [case in point: The Royal Tennenbaums]. Gen-X filmmakers push the limits of esoterica beyond the bounds of relevancy in their desperate attempt to "stand out" and "be different." Writing a good script first seems to have escaped them, with a very few exceptions. Further, film schools are everywhere now and the sheer numbers of students in film school or graduating from film schools created a steep decline in the talent curve as people who just want a "cool job" pursue film careers when in the past it was those passionate about film who joined the few film programs there were in the 1970s or apprenticed within the industry before there were film schools. A friend of this site's creator was a waiter at Spago in West Hollywood during its heyday and he once had a group of film students from USC Film School ask him who a gentleman was at another table (as many people had gone up to this person). My friend replied, "It's Tony Curtis." None of the film students knew who he was. When Spielberg and Lucas were in film school they could've told you more about the career of Tony Curtis than he himself probably would have remembered. The dumbing down of culture is most evident for Gen-X in their films. When they do have something to say it's some weird twisted interior journey or some soulless expression of youthful anomie which lends no light on how a film's characters got that way. Kevin Smith said it for his generation when he was quoted as saying he may make only ten films because he thought he'd run out of things to say. In his stupid film Dogma he gave us a monster made out of feces - what a gift to cinema history. ...Much more on The List

GEN-X FILMOGRAPHY
... partial list only ...

Slacker, Spun, Buffalo 66, The Royal Tannenbaums, Dogma, Totally F***ed Up, Metropolitan, Kids, Boogie Nights, Leaving Las Vegas [the filmmaker may have been a Boomer, but Xers loved this piece of crap], Four Rooms, The Truth About Cats and Dogs, The Breakfast Club, Gummo, Blair Witch Project, Kids, Clerks, Reservior Dogs, Magnolia, Doom Generation, Zoolander, Do the Right Thing, Barcelona, Something About Mary, Last Days of Disco, Safe, Bottle Rocket, Good Will Hunting, Dumb and Dumber, Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back, Eddie Murphy RAW, Mallrats, Independece Day, St. Elmo's Fire, Men At Work, ... etc



Being Bad

GenX has made a vocation out of being bad.

THE POSES
It seems to require a posture of toughness. Just look at Ice Cube's face. That scowl he seems to have perpetually scrunched up on his mug is almost a joke now. He's certainly not alone ....
THE MUSIC
gansta rap

THE PETS Pit Bulls and Rottweilers
THE FASHION
ugly, dirty, derivative, pretentious

THE CARS
muscle cars from the 70s, making auto racing popular again, SUVs

THE FILMS
the list is indeed long

THE AFFECTED MANNERISMS
the arm thing ('throwing arms' they call it), "you know what I'm sayyin'?" , "whassup?"


In their quest for attention and to show their carefully rehearsed pose of cool and toughness, they've not only adopted the pose of being bad, they've taken it upon themselves to be bad from within - when the mask becomes the man ... From black, brown, and asian kids hanging out with older gang-bangers and showing no emotion as others are attacked and/or killed to suburban white kids stabbing friends over drug debts or killing another just to see how it feels, distancing oneself from simple human emotion in pursuit of a tough demeanor has led to the wholesale slaughter of compassion from a whole generation of youth.

To be sure not all kids are bad, or have been bad for the past 25 years, but the overarching theme in the artforms they celebrate and draw from are glorification of the villian and of violence itself.

From the black clothes of the punks and Goths (both of which remarkably never went away from their late 70's introduction) to tattoos, cigarettes, Harleys, strip clubs, to every conceivable type of character from every segment of the entertainment world, it is only cool to GenX if it is bad. Kids have always rebelled against their elders, sought to stake out their own voice and aesthetic....but for GenX it is not ideas that drive their deeds and presentations of themselves but lazy posturing and a willing slide into the vulgar.

From the fun street beats, locking/popping/break-dancing and masters-of-ceremonies-on-the-mike of early street rap in New York City in the late 70's/early 80's we have slid down into the cesspool of today's actual murders committed by and against gansta rappers who call females bitches and hos and wear ostentatious displays of gold jewelry and diamonds, and literally throw money....to the white trash vulgar antics of MTVs Jackass, to comics characters such as Spawn, The Crow, to sideshow freaks such as "Puzzle Man" and "Tiger Woman" tattooing nearly every inch of their bodies - including their faces (titanium horns in the scalp for PM), to bands that merely scream unintelligibly and incite crowds to riot and commit vandalism and violence - to masturbating and performing bowel-movements on-stage, to videogames where body parts are obliterated and the blood and gore can add up to hundreds of kills per game.

The characters in fiction, the clothes, the piercings, the tattoos, the smoking, the affected posturing....things only seem compelling to GenX if is negative, dark, dirty, extreme, and bad.



os'-ten-ta'-tious adj. 1. Pretentious display or showiness. [< L ostendere to show]
- os-ten-ta-tion n. -os-ten-ta-tious-ly adv.



Hip-Hop is SO Fake

Hip-Hop is so fake. BLING-BLING When hip-hop was known generically as rap in the early days, there actually was some inspired content to the lyrics from such acts as The SugarHill Gang, but once the artform caught on in the early 80s, such acts as NWA took it to vulgar territory and shamelessly glorified violence, gang culture, misogeny, and ostentatious displays of wealth. The single song which broke this new harder edged rap to a wide audience, and an avalanche of critical acclaim was NWA's Fuck the Police. Many thought it an expression of political outrage at persecution of the black man (and, yes, racism was and is still alive) ... But, let's get to reality for a second here ... it turns out that Dr. Dre and Ice Cube (the authors of the song) had been shooting innocent people with a paint gun, letting them think they'd been mortally wounded, to howls of laughter for themselves, and were subsequently pulled over by the police. The police failed to make the connection between the two and the paint-gun incident and let them go, but Dre and Cube felt that, well, they'd been unfairly harassed, and sat down and wrote NWA's seminal work Fuck da Po-lice ... and thus the die was cast and the phoniness which permeates hip-hop was established ....

THE VULGARIZATION OF CULTURE BLING-BLING is a result in large measure of the pervasiveness of the imagery and lingo and cultural affectations of hip-hop....

When Jay-Z first hit the scene I thought it must be a joke, the ostentatious displays of wealth seen for so many years in rap and hip-hop videos were so completely played out, but no, Jay-Z led to even more of the same, yachts racing the waters packed with people partyin' BLING-BLING diamond jewelry *ice* everywhereBLING-BLING huge gold chains with people's names in "ice" BLING-BLING throwin' the Benjamins BLING-BLING super-expensive clothes, sunglasses, etc. BLING-BLING gyrating females 5:1 for the males BLING-BLING ultra-expensive sports and luxury cars BLING-BLING and, my personal favorite as evidence that Black Gen-X has no politics: super-giant, mega-polluting, terrorist-supporting (heard of imported oil?) SUVs [Cadillac Escalade the one of choice] BLING-BLING-BLING-BLING-BLING-BLING-BLING-BLING-BLING-BLING ... and my absolute favorite: "Keep it real." If it WAS real not one person would have had to say that even once.

A special mention needs to made regarding Tupak. Anyone who's seen early interviews with him knows he started out as a sweet kid, idealistic, passionate, compassionate, and of course loaded with talent. But by his own admission, he didn't "understand" until he moved to Oakland [having lived previously in New York, Baltimore and other parts of northern California] and was "shown." What obviously happened is that someone early in his time in Oakland called Tupak a punk or in some other way questioned his blackness and/or his manhood. Tupak obviously made up his mind that he'd show that person (and the world), and thus set himself on the course to becoming the Supreme Thug. The sweet idealistic kid in the early interviews devolved into someone taunting the camera with, "If I drink its cuz a nigga drank! If I smoke, its cuz a nigga smoke!" ... Tattooed, gun-toting, in the employ of Suge, shot-up once before the final hail of bullets felled him, he unfortunately succeeded all to well.

Leading Proponent of "Hip-Hop Culture"
USC Professor Todd Boyd - self-aggrandizement knows no bounds...
[Obviously doesn't know the meaning of the word oxymoron]




GAY GenX

A nasty virus called Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) began to afflict homosexual males in the industrialized West in the late 1970's - early 1980's, and garnered the most press attention in the U.S. - as the new "gay cancer." This virus, later known as AIDS, for Acquired Immune Deficiency Sydrome, killed gay men in devestating numbers (as well as incidental numbers of others - until the pandemic became more widespread and hetersexual populations were hard hit). HIV comes from monkeys who've probably carried the virus for hundreds of thousands to millions of years. The virus "jumped species" as is the case with the common flu (influenza) virus, which usually jumps species from pigs and/or chickens (usually in China, where people live in close proximity to their livestock). As humans have encroached upon once purely wild land areas, bacteria and viruses which never touched humankind can gain access to our bodies. We denude the forests and plunder for resources, or people simply need a place to live and push into once pristine areas. The Kinshasha highway traverses lower-central Africa West to East, and it is along this route that HIV left the forests and infected people, with trucks, cars, trains, boats, and especially planes spreading it far and wide. Due to the vectors for transmission being numerous in our modern age, AIDS spread like wildfire (a major contributing factor was the hyper-promiscuousness of a percentage of gay males).

THUS AN ENTIRE GENERATION OF QUEENS WITH TASTE AND LEARNING WERE ALL BUT ERADICATED.

Into this vacuum slowly trickled unmentored GenX homosexuals, utterly lacking in the educational influence of their elder Queens to instruct them in the ways of taste, wit, dining, dress, decorating, architecture, art, writing, travel, fashion, and design. Hence the rise of Flock-of-Seagulls junk coming down the Paris runways by Alexander McQueen, the crap on the racks at Fred Segal (which they want to charge $600.00 for and copied from something at a thrift store), the lazy and uninformed retro 60's/70's abortions in furniture and design layouts and motifs, the weak 70's films which capture none of the anomie and social malaise of the era [Seen 'Over the Edge' kids?], the tacky piercings and I-rolled-out-of-bed-in-these-clothes-and-it-looks-like-I-spit-in-my-hair look, ad infinitum.

A few words about AIDS terrorists Davis Pasquarelli and Michael Petrelis: These two men are members of ACT UP San Francisco, which broke away (or was forced out) of the national ACT UP activist group due to their extreme and anti-scientific views. ACT UP was a brilliant advocacy and protest movement which turned the horror of AIDS into progressive action, influencing politics and culture and educating all about the facts of HIV. Years after many of the older queens had died from the terrible disease (and other causes in some cases), these two idiots step onto the scene and barged their way into the politics of AIDS and ACT UP by claiming all kinds of wild conspiracy theories and spouting anti-science diatribes which claim that HIV does not cause AIDS and that gay men should go ahead and have unsafe (unprotected) sex with multiple partners ... basically these two fruitcakes are in total denial and are willing to do anything to get attention for themselves. 99.99% of the politically active gay and AIDS communities have shunned these two freaks. Yet their dangerous foolishness is emblematic of Gen-X: dirty, disgusting, ignorant, in-your-face, and vulgar.



Cultural Low Points

Legitimizing gang culture, gagsta rap, dumbing down of language with the ubiquity of street slang, nose rings, pierced tongues, disrespecting females, girl gangs, Hooters, new Neo Nazis on the web, Vanilla Ice's brief career, Jim Carrey bending over and making his butt cheeks talk to an audience estimated at over a billion people on a live Academy Awards telecast, Eminem (his very existence), Puck - and every word he uttered and action he took, renewed popularity of "pro" wrestling, renewed popularity of auto racing, Eddie Murphy discussing his excrement in detail in his concert film "Raw", Central Park sexual assaults in 2000...


MUSIC: There are some successes in this category, namely DJ culture and the terrific underground, house, deephouse, techno, etc which came into being ... but popular music became whiney and snivelly, with what is essentially folk music passing as rock, badly. And mediocre talents scored big with their lamb-in-heat vocalizations and dreary sonic dreck. Gen-Y kids love the 80s music and punk and new wave are back - so far though, just a weak copy ...
A CHALLENGE IS OFFERED: Any sound engineer can prove my point that most of Gen-X music such as alternative rock and most hip-hop is grating on the ears - I'm sure sound-wave measurements will show that this type of music falls outside the range of what can be described as pleasurable and falls into what the body percieves as noise


LITERATURE: Gen-X has nothing to say. They have no great ideas they wish to share with humanity, no stunning gift for language and storytelling they've brought to readers, rather they've given us tortured self-indulgent weird "little" writing, or they showcase and hence celebrate the most reprehensible characters (see the work of Bret Easton Ellis). They are afraid of big aspirations and are slaves to their own contrivances.



Primary Gen-X Communication Units:
"Uh...," "Um...," and "...Whatever"



pain n. 1. An unpleasant sensation arising from injury, disease or emotional disorder. 2. Suffering or distress. 3. pains Trouble; effort 4. Penalty. Pain of Death -v. To cause or suffer pain.
[~Gk Poine, penalty]
-pain'-ful adj. -pain'-ful-ly adv.



slack adj. 1. Slow; dull; sluggish. 2. Not tense or taut; loose. 3. Careless; negligent. -v. To slacken. - n.
slack-er n. One who shirks work or responsibility.


nox-ious adj. Injurious to health or morals. [<L noxa, injury, damage.]
(see also odorous)


ex-e-cra-ble adj.
1. Abominable; detestable. 2. Extremely inferior. [< L exsecrari, to EXECRATE.] ex-e-cra-bly adv.


RANT


The Slag-Heap of Humanity
GenXers, in their quest to be cool, have forsaken their very souls. They are literally drowning, spiritually and intellectually, in a sea of ignorance, vulgarity, and crass consumerism.

The great questions which confront every generation of youth, as they discover and make sense of the world and their place in it, have utterly escaped GenXers. They have not questioned, have not searched - in fact, feel no compulsion to seek - to place their own intellectual stamp on human understanding. These dreary slackers are instead content to wallow in the cocoon of easy-consumer credit to buy mass-produced cheap electronics, immerse themselves in the commodification of culture, over-indulge in hyper-sensory entertainments, and pride themselves on their political ignorance and lack of civic involvement. Most cannot read or write at even the level of a proficient 9th-grader.

GenX would not even grasp the concept of wanting to be an educated person for the sake of being an educated person. The greed-driven 80's led to a sea-change in the desire of students to get a degree, that slip of paper, which would enhance their marketability to employers and income-earning potential. The scandalous and almost ubiquitous patterns of cheating in school grew exponentially in this time period, and the corresponding decay in moral and ethical standards set the stage for the anomie which led to a wholesale abandonment of college students pursuing liberal arts degrees in favor of MBA's.

GenXers took up smoking with a vengeance - to look cool of course, dramatically reversing the declining percentage of youth smokers, and actually were swayed by calculated and obvious marketing devices like the Joe Camel character. Gen-Y seems better, already youth smoking is down some 30% for Gen-Y. GenXers made auto racing popular again. The environmental ethic which had been built up for decades, primarily by the young, by students - particularly college students, was thrown out the window as trendy GenXers bought gas-guzzling old American cars or giant SUVs. The desire to drive a vehicle that gets good gas mileage so as to cause less environmental harm is not even in their lexicon. Just look at the idiot Xers in their mega-SUVs with an American Flag on the window ...

Participating in civic affairs is simply a non-starter for them, unless it is somehow cool. No doubt the cycle will reverse itself at some point, and the whole lost generation that is X will suddenly become politically active - because it has become cool somehow...and they will read one issue of the Economist or watch a few episodes of Crossfire and instantly think themselves informed and start dictating their demands. [er, maybe not ...] The dismal voting percentages GenX has turned out the past few election cycles bespeaks of their ignorance. Most behavioral scientists and scholars generally, from philosophers to playwrites, think humans act out of self-interest. But not GenX, they have become so hypnotized with their easy consumer culture and comfortable with their new lower standards of art and of living, that they do not and have not for years recognized the threats to their own well-being and, ultimately, survival. GenX weakly claims that their non-involvement is their statement on politics generally. But their inaction in pushing their elders to consider their needs has led to the tightening grip by the corporatocracy (run by older white men) on laws which could make permament second-class citizens out of their age group. Yet the seem not to care - mostly because they don't even know it's happening. The weakening of labor, the health care crisis which sees huge corporate entities getting rich off of human suffering as patients are denied care which kills them due to cost considerations, the declining performance of students - to the point that many don't know basic manners, cannot write an essay, nor understand basic science or math, all add up to loss of power. It would be interesting for a social science study to be done which calculates the number of hours Boomers spent in the 50s, 60s and 70s studying, meeting, and engaging in political activities to change the world contrasted with the number of hours Xers spent in the late 70s, 80s, and 90s planning, designing, and playing (often very violent) video and computer games. My guess is the numbers would be roughly equivalent.

But GenX doesn't care. They're watching another dumb awards show on MTV, or sitting in a Starbucks or some equivalent local joint reading Razor, The Source, Gear, Crunch, Flaunt or Swing - smoking of course....





ULTIMATE VULGARITIES
It doesn't get worse than this, folks ...
  • MTV's Jackass host's Dumpster-roll HE ENDED UP COVERED IN FECES
  • MTV SHIT-SPRAY Incident 2 Gen-X performers squatted and voided their bowels in front of electric fans at the edge of a stage at an MTV-sponsored event in Aspen, Colorado in January, 2001 - spraying the audience with their feces




NEW LOWER STANDARDS

ART ...

... LIVING





Be sure to watch writer and social commentator Douglas Rushkoff's insightful documentary The Merchants of Cool on PBS's Frontline PBS
THE PROGRAM IS A TELLING EXPOSE OF HOW MASS-MARKETING HAS CREATED A "FEEDBACK LOOP" IN WHICH COOL HAS BEEN ALL BUT DEVALUED AND GEN-X HAS BECOME A BUNCH OF MOOKS AND MIDRIFF GIRLS


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