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BeyondGeography

(40,296 posts)
Mon Dec 30, 2024, 05:06 AM Dec 30

If popular culture is anything to go by, 2024 is the year we simply gave up

If culture is the mirror that reflects the state of society, right now we’re all looking a little dishevelled – and struggling to find the energy to care. The signs have been there for a while, with rumblings initially picked up by trend forecasters’ finely tuned cultural seismometers. In 2021, Sean Monahan coined the term “the vibe shift” in his Substack to explain the transition from the self-controlled, self-improvement-obsessed worthiness of the 2010s to the messy decadence of the 2020s. Three years later, it feels like that earthquake has finally hit.

…The issue with foregoing all meaning and leaning into nihilism is that you can end up in some ethically dubious situations. When Nietzsche wrote his dire prediction for humanity’s future, “there can be no doubt that morality will perish”, he was surely thinking of the spectacle of convicted con artist Anna Sorokin and her ankle tag appearing on Dancing with the Stars. Our collective obsession with stories about scamming has morphed into an ironic open-armed embrace of the scammer.

The question is, are we really having a good time? In the third season of HBO’s Industry (the New Yorker’s pick for TV show of the year), copious amounts of drugs, alcohol and sex fuel the endless accumulation of money and power, but none of it basked in the glow of the 80s’ “greed is good” film and TV. Instead, each scene plays out as if lit by the most unsparing strip lighting. Characters don’t lounge opulently puffing on cigars inside high-end New York restaurants, instead huddling outside London office blocks chugging on cigarettes as if to stave off the next panic attack.

If the 2010s were a battle cry against the excesses of capitalism, social injustice and climate breakdown, popular culture in 2024 seemed to have given up the fight. Of course, the cultural pendulum will no doubt swing back again. In his missive on the next “vibe shift”, written after Donald Trump’s re-election, Monahan writes: “The vibe shift this time is a story about progressive millennials realising that when they declared total victory for their politics in 2020 – it was a pyrrhic victory … They have to get into the trenches and convince people that their interpretations of reality are correct.” It sounds like a slog, but for now, grab a sweet treat or a glass of wine. There is always next year.

https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2024/dec/30/culture-2024-year-we-gave-up-charli-xcx?CMP=Share_iOSApp_Other
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If popular culture is anything to go by, 2024 is the year we simply gave up (Original Post) BeyondGeography Dec 30 OP
I've given up, I feel just as powerless against it as I would against a real earthquake. Walleye Dec 30 #1
After this last election I decided to take a break. Vogon_Glory Dec 30 #2
Decades of relentless GOP attacks, threats, ugliness. Irish_Dem Dec 30 #3
"Angels sleep at night while the devil leaves his porchlight on"-Tom Waits Midnight Writer Dec 30 #4
I haven't given up but know a lot of things are useless JI7 Dec 30 #5

Vogon_Glory

(9,717 posts)
2. After this last election I decided to take a break.
Mon Dec 30, 2024, 06:08 AM
Dec 30

The Christmas season was coming up and I decided that I had leave to leave the trenches for a bit.

Irish_Dem

(65,310 posts)
3. Decades of relentless GOP attacks, threats, ugliness.
Mon Dec 30, 2024, 06:28 AM
Dec 30

Starting with stealing the election from Carter with the GOP secret talks with Iran,
the stalking and harassment of the Clintons, the theft of the Gore election, etc etc.

The public is exhausted.

JI7

(91,474 posts)
5. I haven't given up but know a lot of things are useless
Mon Dec 30, 2024, 09:26 AM
Dec 30

and a waste of time . And that we don't need to make a big show of everything.

That more focus should be on just voting itself.

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