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Punk (Culture)

A culture popular among young people, especially in the late 1970's, involving opposition to authority expressed through 'shocking' behaviour, clothes and hair, and through loud fast music

See also Punk Rocker

Some of the 'founders' or punk music (or Punk (Culture))are the Ramones, Buzzcocks, The Rezillos and Generation X.

by Siobhan m May 11, 2006

107đź‘Ť 19đź‘Ž


Do It For The Culture

"Do it for the Culture" is usually a statement requesting that someone carry out a specific action for benefit of their shared culture. Used mostly in regards to pop culture, it can be used in a var

BACKGROUND INFO: The term grew in popularity when Migos claimed other rappers weren't giving them credit for their rap flow, calling those individuals "culture vultures" basically meaning they used the Migos flow without giving them their proper credit. Furthermore, these individuals are assumed to have used the flow to benefit themselves, not the culture.

Kendrick: This a crazy world we living in man. I feel like I gotta say somethin. Shit aint sitting right with me.
Quavo: I feel you bruh, do it for the culture.

by T.M.412 March 8, 2017

309đź‘Ť 65đź‘Ž


sheep culture

Culture based upon the following of the masses. Usually the uninformed following a government or it's rules without question.

The sheep culture in this town is unbelievable!

by summershadow April 8, 2016


Cultural reset

A single point in time that serves as a reference point to indicate a significant shift in popular culture. The point in time often refers to a specific real-world event that is tremendously influential, so much so that it profoundly affects and reshapes popular and mainstream culture. Usually, a cultural reset is promptly followed by a new Zeitgeist (which means "the defining spirit or mood of a particular period of history as shown by the ideas and beliefs").

Trump winning the 2016 election is a clear-cut example of a cultural reset. After this point in time, pop culture became increasingly more fixated on politics and social justice. Internet memes went through a complete terrible overhaul. Pop music began to shift from inspirational to silly frivolous tunes (both musically and lyrically). And people have started adopting a more critical view towards what they read on the news.

by Mary Mary Quite The Contrarian May 23, 2021


Cringe Culture

The social landscape wherein those who display a facet of their identity that is considered “cringy” become targets of mockery, bullying and harassment, typically via social media sites like Reddit or YouTube.

“Cringe content” is usually aimed at completely harmless behavior and/or individuals and was popularized in the early 2010s during the boom of Anti-SJW Cringe Compilation videos on YouTube.

Person 1: I really want to cosplay at the convention but I'm afraid it'll come off as cringy.
Person 2: Oh, didn't you hear? Cringe Culture is dead! Do whatever you want forever!

by thisvexesme July 31, 2023

8đź‘Ť 2đź‘Ž


non-culture

Culture which has a largely negative influence.

Rap non-culture loves its prostitutes, violence, vandalism, materialism and superficiality.

by JZ783 August 7, 2017


Flex Culture

The behavior of deliberately showing yourself off about your personal belongings in the goal of giving yourself higher value in front of other people. (noun from the verb to flex)
• Very widespread in daily life’s social settings (workplace, school etc.) and especially through social media platforms. (Instagram, TikTok, Facebook, Snapchat, YouTube etc.)
• Common topics bragged about are: Expensive stuff (electronic devices, money, clothing, beauty products etc.), physical appearance (body, face, curves, skin, hair, health, etc.) and personal success (academic performance, business, talent, lifestyle luxury etc.)
• The targeted audiences for this demeanor are classified into 4 categories: Friends, family members (siblings, cousins etc.), acquaintances and online strangers.

• Celebrities and influencers are definitely the best at seducing all their admirers, but even ordinary people like us have already bragged at least once in our life about something we had.
• The main reasons why people involve themselves into this type of activity is to obtain approval, attention and recognition from their peers, to try fulfilling an emotional emptiness inside of them, or to simply cure their boredom on the internet.

P-S. I actually made a whole essay out of this after working 2 hours straight of online research about this word. But anyways, I hope you all appreciate my work. Please credit me anywhere if you ever use my work. Peace. :-)

Kate: "Hey Rhett, do you have AirPods? I forgot them at home."
Rhett: "No, sorry, I don't have a pair."
Kate: "Just kidding, they’re right here. And I just bought them last week, isn't that cool?!"
Joe (Rhett's friend): "Let that girl be. She's into flex culture."

by FaithfullyDefiningInMyOwnWords November 19, 2021