LizzieMaine
Bartender
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If there's one word that could sum up today's pop culture, it's "snarky" -- that sort of swaggering, wiseacre attitude that sees everything and everyone as fair game for rude, crude commentary. My generation had the National Lampoon and the original Saturday Night Live as the spearheads of this attitude, and even as insulated as I was from much of the pop culture of the '70s, I couldn't help but absorb some of this attitude myself. There was a time when I could be quite lethal with my wisecracks, as my tenth-grade English teacher never fails to remind me whenever I run into her.
But now I find that, the older I get, the less appealing I find this sort of "wit." The blogosphere is saturated in snarkiness, you can't turn on commercial radio without being inundated by talkmeisters scrambling to out-snark each other, and movie and TV comedy are pretty much non-stop snark. We see it all around us, it's part of the cultural landscape, and it never seems to stop.
And I am *so sick of it.*
As far as I can tell, the Culture of Snark stopped being funny a long time ago, and frankly, a lot of it never *was* funny. Am I right? Or am I just becoming a cranky middle aged lady who's one step away from yelling at the neighborhood kids to stay off her lawn?
But now I find that, the older I get, the less appealing I find this sort of "wit." The blogosphere is saturated in snarkiness, you can't turn on commercial radio without being inundated by talkmeisters scrambling to out-snark each other, and movie and TV comedy are pretty much non-stop snark. We see it all around us, it's part of the cultural landscape, and it never seems to stop.
And I am *so sick of it.*
As far as I can tell, the Culture of Snark stopped being funny a long time ago, and frankly, a lot of it never *was* funny. Am I right? Or am I just becoming a cranky middle aged lady who's one step away from yelling at the neighborhood kids to stay off her lawn?