Hipster Portal Cosplay

Ryzie42 ging dieses Jahr als Aperture Science Test Subject #1 aus die Otakon 2012. Sweet! (via Superpunch)
Hipster Ipsum
Blindtexte voller Banksy master cleanse Vice, Lomo fuck High Life messenger bag und einem VHS Readymade Wes Anderson retro food truck. Wahlweise mit und ohne Latein-Geschmack.
Before they sold out squid craft beer, occaecat ea anim tattooed odio mollit 8-bit excepteur adipisicing Terry Richardson mlkshk. Portland fugiat lomo, fuck Williamsburg consectetur Echo Park High Life. Aliqua dolore blog consequat. Master cleanse quinoa irony before they sold out incididunt aliquip. Mustache Etsy chambray, Vice whatever you probably haven’t heard of them magna. Voluptate Terry Richardson letterpress fixie id. Tempor accusamus vinyl bahn mi, single-origin coffee synth qui scenester chambray DIY quinoa skateboard.
Hipster Ipsum – Artisanal filler text for your site or project (via Jason Kottke)
Alan Moore on Dodgem Logic, Counter-Culture and Hipsters

Alan Moore hat bei The Quietus – und eigentlich hatte ich dort überlegt, den Aufruf zur Unterstützung der Indie-Labels weiterzugeben, deren Lager gestern in London abgefackelt wurden und von denen ich nicht wenige Platten besitze, aber ich bin in dem Thema nicht genug drin, hab’ mich nicht wirklich damit beschäftigt und lass es einfach, hier der Link Tanith) – jedenfalls habe ich dort ein Interview mit Alan Moore gefunden: Think Locally: Fuck “Globally” – Alan Moore On Dodgem Logic.
Darin geht es vor allem um sein Indie-Mag Dodgem Logic, das ich seit der ersten Ausgabe lese, und was es mit Hipstern und die wiederum tatsächlich mit Bildung zu tun haben. Letztlich ist das ein großartiges Statement für DIY-Kultur, Autodidakten und – ja! – Hipster. Auch wenn ich über die Shirts mit V-Ausschnitt und die albernen Mützen immer lachen muss.
How much does Dodgem Logic owe to the fact that you’re a child of the counter-culture and reached young adulthood when outsider magazines were thriving?
AM: With Dodgem Logic we are committed to re-establishing – as much as we are capable of – an open psychedelic culture like the one that was around in the 60s. Not in a retroactive sense. We’re not trying to recreate the 60s. We’re just trying to recreate some of the possiblilities that existed then. We had a psychedelic summer issue with John Coulthard doing a beautiful cover and an article about psych culture. And we’re continually trying to reintroduce the idea of hipsterism which was an elitist thing but also useful. If you were a school boy and you went to a party and someone said, ‘Have you read Sartre?’ And you said ‘Huh, of course!’ then you’d run home and you’d read up on Jean Paul Sartre and perhaps read one of his books and then the next time you were at a party you could say ‘Of course Nausea is my favourite!’ Yes, alright, it was introducing a kind of social pressure and it was elitist but it gave you an education.
It’s seen as a purely disparaging, pejorative term now, based solely on the style of one’s glasses, the width of one’s trousers and whether one chooses to wear a V-neck or not.
AM: Yeah. Yeah, that’s probably true. It used to be a fashion statement but it was information as a fashion statement which is probably going to do you more good than the clothing you wear. I got an incredible education from when I was thrown out of school. Starting at that point. Now I could say that I probably hold my own intellectually with most people who have had university or college educations. And indeed some of them will have done courses on my books. So despite the fact my ‘education’ ended at 16, I had hipsterism – wanting to be hip – which led me to read this incredibly diverse array of books on science, mysticism, science fiction, literature, art… And it’s given me a pretty comprehensive education. And now I am an autodidact, which is a great word… I learned it myself. But I think it’s the best way to be and I do think we can educate ourselves if we’ve got the material there, if we’ve got a library card or these days if we’ve got an internet connection. But it’s important to have the impetus to educate ourselves, which for me came from the type of society we were part of in the 1960s. That was the case in those days and I’m not sure if that still applies.
Dads: The Original Hipsters

Tolles, relativ frisches Tumblelog: Dads: The Original Hipsters. Die Texte zu den Bildern sind gold:
Your dad had big headphones before you did. Right now hipsters you’re probably readying this post with over sized headphones on, listening to a band you discovered on pitchfork, with your legs crossed, touching your face with your left hand, thinking about how douche bag skull candy ear buds are. There’s a reason your dad wore them, so he didn’t have to listen to you throw pissy fits and cry when you were a baby. The last thing he wanted to hear when Jimmy Page was thrashing through a solo was the gutteral, ear deafening screams that would make Beethoven thankful he was deaf.
So hipsters, next time you’re pulling on your headphones to listen to someone whine over bad guitar chords, remember this…
Your dad rocked big headphones because you were a bitch, he’d still be wearing them too but thankful he lost his hearing from living life turned up to 11 and now he can just ignore you.
Your Scene Sucks – The Book

Your Scene sucks hatte ich vor ein paar Jahren schonmal, jetzt gibt’s die Illusammlung auch als Buch. Hier kann man das Ding bestellen, hier ein Preview:
(via Laughing Squid)
Hipster as fuck

Auf Reddit steht zwar im ersten Kommentar, dieses Hochrad gehöre gar keinem Hipster, aber sogar Nicht-Hipster sind 2010 ganz einfach Hipster as fuck. You can’t escape.
Die Hipster-Mofagangs von Brooklyn

Die Kids heutzutage. Kaufen Platten auf Vinyl, zocken Atari 2600, kopieren Tapes (Hometaping if fucking killing Music!) und jetzt heizen sie auch noch auf Mofas durch die Straßen von Brooklyn. Jeez…
Cassette tapes, typewriters, vinyl records, NES consoles. The reclaiming of forgotten technology is every hipster’s siren song.
Mopeds are no different, and the vintage bikes are forming better meatspace communities than most iPhone apps.
Almost every major city in the U.S. boasts at least one moped gang, and the names straddle being badass and ironic: Creatures of the Loin (San Francisco), Puddle Cutters (Portland, Oregon), the Tom Cruisers (Tempe, Arizona), Latebirds (Los Angeles), Landsquids (Sacramento, California), Decepticons (Kalamazoo, Michican), Hells Satans (Richmond, Virginia) and more.
The Oprhans are Brooklyn’s fearsome two-stroke contigent (pictured above), and they’re obsessed with the abandoned pedal-start bikes.
Mopeds reached the height of their popularity in the late 1970s during the oil crisis. Now they litter backyards and clutter garages with their rusted frames and rotted tires. A growing subculture, to which the Orphans belong, is eager to breathe life back into these motorized gems and turn them loose in the streets.
Rebels Without a Hog: Inside Brooklyn’s Moped Gang (via Macelodeon)
Nid and Sancys „Kidzz“-Video mit Fotos vom Lastnightsparty.com
(Vimeo Direktkidzz, via Likecool)
Das Video zu Nid and Sancys „Kidzz“ ist eine Kollaboration von Regisseur Seth Shukovsky und Merlin Bronques, dem Macher der Website Last Nights Party und es hat jede Menge junger Hipster beim Feiern.
How much does Dodgem Logic owe to the fact that you’re a child of the counter-culture and reached young adulthood when outsider magazines were thriving?

