• CharlesDarwin@lemmy.worldOP
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    5 hours ago

    Oh yeah, 100% agreed. I bet a lot of that change has to do with the effect of narrowcasting and more p2p communication that arose in the 90s but was not really broadly distributed to everyone until late 90s/mid 00s.

    I think things were much more monolithic in prior times. As an example, I’d hear my mother (who was a boomer) complain about fashion in her day. She said there was a period of time where it was nearly impossible - at least as a woman - to find pants that were not bellbottoms (and she loathed bellbottoms, LOL). I got hand-me-downs from older kids and not a few of them were bellbottoms, and I also thought were some of the dumbest things going, especially when I was trying to learn to ride a bike…my general lack of interest in/disdain for mainstream culture, most especially fashion, probably got its start with that, LOL.

    People looking for niche culture things really had to work at it (and have at least some amount of privilege in the form of disposable income) and the geographical thing really mattered when it came to “finding the others” back then. So most people probably tended to fall into whatever the mainstream culture was serving up.