lol emo kids
#4
So funny to see things haven't changed in 20 years -- average person/mass media know little or nothing about a sub-culture group aside from outward appearances, so they panic and then sensationalize. Those kind of people piss me off.
I remember in HS sitting being lectured by a teacher ad nauseum about having a mohawk, wearing makeup and dark clothes, and not trying to fit in and be like everyone else. He finally shut up after I told him how I fit into his daughter in a hall at a club downtown the weekend before.
I remember in HS sitting being lectured by a teacher ad nauseum about having a mohawk, wearing makeup and dark clothes, and not trying to fit in and be like everyone else. He finally shut up after I told him how I fit into his daughter in a hall at a club downtown the weekend before.
#5
So funny to see things haven't changed in 20 years -- average person/mass media know little or nothing about a sub-culture group aside from outward appearances, so they panic and then sensationalize. Those kind of people piss me off.
I remember in HS sitting being lectured by a teacher ad nauseum about having a mohawk, wearing makeup and dark clothes, and not trying to fit in and be like everyone else. He finally shut up after I told him how I fit into his daughter in a hall at a club downtown the weekend before.
I remember in HS sitting being lectured by a teacher ad nauseum about having a mohawk, wearing makeup and dark clothes, and not trying to fit in and be like everyone else. He finally shut up after I told him how I fit into his daughter in a hall at a club downtown the weekend before.
where you Punk or goth?
and lol at smashing his daughter, then telling him. thats classic
#6
I actually had an emo kid explain the whole sub culture, and 90% of the emo kids ive meet have no real reason to be depressed they do it to fit in. So once i got that explanation i lost respect for all emo kids.
where you Punk or goth?
and lol at smashing his daughter, then telling him. thats classic
where you Punk or goth?
and lol at smashing his daughter, then telling him. thats classic
I was more new waver/goth than punk. I had the mohawk, but mostly wore it down cause it was easier and I thought it looked cooler hanging over my face when I had eyeliner on. Now, I've got a bald spot, so if I did a mohawk again it'd look like someone took a bite out of it.
The teacher was not amused in the least (neither was his daughter).
#7
emo kids are still around?
i thought it was just scene kids now.
i'm not going to lie, i like the style, and i do wear tight pants and everything.
it helps, i ride bmx. baggy pants + chain = no good.
besides, i don't care what anyone says.
girls really do love them!
i thought it was just scene kids now.
i'm not going to lie, i like the style, and i do wear tight pants and everything.
it helps, i ride bmx. baggy pants + chain = no good.
besides, i don't care what anyone says.
girls really do love them!
#8
oh scene kids, how they make me laugh.
#11
damn, that term "emo" pisses me off. ten years ago, there was no emo, screamo, hardcore or any of those labels. it was all punk rock. there was no crying, no bitching, no spoiled kids from the suburbs adopting a style that they thought was cool. it was about music and kicking each others asses and getting drunk and saying f*ck you to the authorities. music these days has been so bastardized and classified so corporations are able to sell products better with sub categories. i hate labels. i hate money, and i hate emo kids! the whole hot topic punk movement is entirely to blame.
#13
So funny to see things haven't changed in 20 years -- average person/mass media know little or nothing about a sub-culture group aside from outward appearances, so they panic and then sensationalize. Those kind of people piss me off.
I remember in HS sitting being lectured by a teacher ad nauseum about having a mohawk, wearing makeup and dark clothes, and not trying to fit in and be like everyone else. He finally shut up after I told him how I fit into his daughter in a hall at a club downtown the weekend before.
I remember in HS sitting being lectured by a teacher ad nauseum about having a mohawk, wearing makeup and dark clothes, and not trying to fit in and be like everyone else. He finally shut up after I told him how I fit into his daughter in a hall at a club downtown the weekend before.
I think a lot of kids go through that "faze" .
#17
NO nut room whatsoever.
just like skateboarding jeans,
split, kr3w, all that stuff.
GUY pants.
thats weird, i just went to pac sun today to look at board shorts (i live in tx, its hot as hell!)
#18
So funny to see things haven't changed in 20 years -- average person/mass media know little or nothing about a sub-culture group aside from outward appearances, so they panic and then sensationalize. Those kind of people piss me off.
I remember in HS sitting being lectured by a teacher ad nauseum about having a mohawk, wearing makeup and dark clothes, and not trying to fit in and be like everyone else. He finally shut up after I told him how I fit into his daughter in a hall at a club downtown the weekend before.
I remember in HS sitting being lectured by a teacher ad nauseum about having a mohawk, wearing makeup and dark clothes, and not trying to fit in and be like everyone else. He finally shut up after I told him how I fit into his daughter in a hall at a club downtown the weekend before.
#19
-most of the jeans were flared, so it wasn't like they were buying skinny girl pants, oh no, they were buying girl flares.
-they would come in with their moms and their MOM would ask me where the girl pants were.
i also used to have an extremely cool haircut (black, kinda shortish, spikey-ish but longer in the front [oh and i'm a girl, btw]) and i had to grow it out because too many emo boys would come in asking for advice on how to do their hair. or once again, the moms would ask for them.
soooo silly.