• WithoutFurtherBelay
    ·
    5 months ago

    No, bro. This was 5 years ago. If this was your childhood, you're still a child.

    No, most of Gen Z already feels like old people. Capitalist enshittification literally aged us at lightning speed.

    • EmmaGoldman [she/her, comrade/them]
      ·
      edit-2
      5 months ago

      If you were the target audience for Paw Patrol or Poppy Playtime or Youtube Kids shit you're like at most 15. Literally a child. Capitalist enshittification and trauma don't make you an adult, this is the difference between maturing and aging. Your telomeres are shorter, you're not more mentally and emotionally mature because of it.

      • WithoutFurtherBelay
        ·
        5 months ago

        Paw Patrol or Poppy Playtime or whatever, sure, but early 2010’s stuff could have someone who was 11 watch them and now be 20. We are in 2024 now.

      • Frank [he/him, he/him]
        ·
        5 months ago

        Watching cartoons doesn't bear on your emotional maturity. Cartoons are fun. Lots of them have a lot more to say than adult fiction. The running theory for a long time is that since cigar smoking men in suites with penthouse offices dismiss cartoons as toy commercials for children the writers have room to play they wouldn't get with "serious" television and that's why a show would sometimes shift from showing off the latest plastic junk to a moment of profound existential philosophy and back and when you're eight you just roll with that.

        • EmmaGoldman [she/her, comrade/them]
          ·
          5 months ago

          Sure, watching cartoons does not bear on your maturity. Being 15 years old absolutely does. Exactly 0 15-year-olds are as mature as the should be doing taxes or dating adults or forcing me to read their universally bad opinions online.

          How are people misunderstanding me so badly? My point is very specifically that it's absurd to see posters acting like they have wizened and far off nostalgia for particularly terrible content made very recently for very small children. Kids have always wanted to act like they're all grown up, that's natural. But it should get a huge eyeroll when a child tries to act like their reminiscing about awful YouTube content from 2018 should have the same gravity as an elderly person reminiscing about iconic warner brothers cartoons they watched in the 1940s.


          I watched cartoons as a kid and I still enjoy cartoons. I am not somehow anti-cartoon. I am anti-children-posting-bad-takes-online