I own this shirt. Today I share it as a symbol of what I hope to define: the Pop Culture Nerd. Also, check out that mustache. I call him Benedict Cumberbatch.
Pop culture has many definitions. Pop culture obsession can deal with those who obsess over Miley Cyrus' wardrobe, the shocking new twists in the banal idleness of the Kardashians, and the dating life of Taylor Swift. In other words, the worship of celebrity. This is not the world of pop culture to which I refer.
Nerd also carries multiple meanings. The shirt I am wearing above is certainly (and I believe this is the scientifically correct term) HELLA nerdy, but the pop culture nerd-dom I seek to analyze differs from the Nerd Kingdom that can group the planets of the New Republic Era by both allegiance and distance from the galactic core or are still having night-sweats about the neglected Tom Bombadil, though these groups might share some overlap.
No, the pop culture nerd of which I speak might wear a shirt like that one. On the surface, one might notice that "What the frak?!" is an obscure reference to Battlestar Galactica, both the original series and the reboot (like I said, the shirt is hella nerdy). However, this is not a Battlestar Galactica shirt, or at least not entirely. This is actually a 30 Rock shirt from a brief scene with Selma Hayek:
An obscure quote from a geeky sci-fi show on a low-rated sitcom starring Tina Fey? I live for these moments. What does this have to do with anything important? I hope to answer just that.
By the way, here are a few more shirts I own:
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1000 Friendship Points to whomever can name all six references first! |
I define the Pop Culture Nerd (PCN) by the following attributes and characteristics:
- The PCN is obsessed with media. They may specialize into one or more branches, but their interests are dominated by television, movies, books, video games, and music. They are in love with creativity and often feel that their devotion to a film/show/book series actually makes them co-creators and co-owners of it.
As such, the PCN tends to be excellent at indexing the names and work histories of the many people involved in the world of creative entertainment, while sometimes even failing to remember the names of those around them. I would compare some PCNs to the obsessive sports fan who can name every team member, coach, assistant coach, owner, and win/loss record in the league. They have the same disease, just different symptoms.
- Perhaps most importantly, obsessing over pop culture is a way for the PCN to understand and communicate with the world around him/her. The #1 rule for a PCN is that they must always be in on the joke and they must always be a part of the conversation.
Did you not know that the ending of that one Key and Peele sketch was a reference to The Shining, but you're okay with it? You're probably not a PCN. Did you hear a classmate quote There Will Be Blood and you were so embarrassed that you could not add a witty rejoinder that you immediately pushed it to the top of your Netflix queue? You're probably a PCN.
Culture at its core is a system of symbols, languages, customs, etc. that help bring people together with mutual understanding and shared experience. To thrive in the world of pop culture, one must become fluent. Some television shows only speak in the language of pop culture via reference, call back, parody, and homage. The perfect examples of this would be 30 Rock, Community, and Arrested Development. Their styles feel so similar because they carry the same cultural accent and the most fluent PCN will translate each of them to the fullest.
Hence the significance of my shirt. Only a PCN fluent enough in the pop culture languages of both Battlestar Galactica and 30 Rock would get its meaning to its fullest extent and this fluency is only achieved by hours of commitment to both shows.
- This intense commitment, however, is part of the appeal to the PCN, and thus they thrive on media that asks a lot of them as a consumer. Television shows such as LOST, Game of Thrones, and Breaking Bad are not only required viewing because of their high quality and the cultural attention they command, but also because of their complexity that begs analysis and discussion. Perhaps, and this is a topic I hope to explore more in the future, this is why LOST's ending remains so controversial: its allure was in its mystery and if its resolution was out of sync with the viewer's theories, the allure tarnished.
A less serious side effect are moments like these:
Jack puts on Jane's hate, "This is my hat now! Totally my hat!"
*No response*
"Hot Rod, anybody? Nobody?"
Jack returns to his seat, dejected, hat still on his head.
What about you, are you a long-suffering pop culture nerd? What is your obsession? Do you suffer from other side-effects? Let me know!
Next time: Why you are wrong about LOST.
Nice one man
ReplyDeleteConan, Archer, Parks and Rec, Community, HIMYM, and Arrested Development. *bazinga!* To be honest though, I possibly cheated on the Community one. I ended up saving the image, cropping it to just that shirt and dropping it into google images just to figure it out... but by your post above I believe that should be a normal response for me to have?
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