Defining "cool"

Discussion in 'Art & Culture' started by Magical Realist, May 14, 2013.

  1. Magical Realist Valued Senior Member

    Messages:
    16,792
    Who defines what's cool? The new upcoming generation? Or the entertainment media? What was considered cool when you were a teen? Lingo you'd use that showed you were part of the "in" crowd. And what's considered "cool" today?
     
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  3. Nashton Registered Member

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    29
    Cool is anything new one wants to be a part of that separates them from what has already been accepted or normal. Cool is killed by popularity. Cool is something to aspire to. Cool doesn't last.

    Cool is something you can show off, it's like a hidden gem. Cool is not generic, cool is rebellious, a critique to what has already been.
     
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  5. andy1033 Truth Seeker Valued Senior Member

    Messages:
    1,060
    I never wanted cool, but back in school when i heard nirvana play my fav song. here is the lyrics

    --
    Stay Away Lyrics

    Monkey see, monkey do
    (I don't know why)
    Rather be dead than cool
    (I don't know why)
    Every line ends in rhyme
    (I don't know why)
    Less is more, love is blind
    (I don't know why)

    Stay
    Stay Away x3

    --

    I am glad i never fitted into any scene, just wanted to be me. Go and listen to nirvana stay away song to see how i felt towards society and this cool stuff you people want.

    I would think the music industry depicts what is cool towards teens.
     
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  7. Magical Realist Valued Senior Member

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    16,792
    I just had to include this insightful blog post entitled "The Basics of Cool"..Hope that's cool with you.

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    "In F-John's presentation Wednesday night, he gave us a definition of "cool." He said that it was, "An idea of ironic detachment from society that we see as valuable." F-John then continued to describe many different varieties of that definition. There was the "cool destruction" who possessed the "i just do not care" mentality. Then came the Eighties, which gave you "cool without pretense." These people were intentionally trying to be cool—tight pants, big hair, and crazy makeup—an intentional effort to obtain the status of "cool." F-John gave us several examples of types of cool.

    In the end, there were two types of cool presented to us. The first was, “Dissident cool.” Perhaps first perfected by none other than James Dean, but artfully mastered by many other people. To master this particular brand of cool, you must be exciting, rebellious, present some sort of novelty, and I think that mysterious would also fit in well here. Just look at the men on television and the movie stars that women find attractive. There are many examples of this dissidence. Take Heath Ledger’s character in “Ten Things I Hate About You.” He is one on the left and the epitome of dissidence. “Patrick Verona, a bad-boy with a mysterious reputation--some say he ate a live duck once, others that he lit a state trooper on fire, and even more claim that he had a brief porn career.” (http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0147800/plotsummary) Sounds like we have a winner! There are many other attractive males in the public eye that demonstrate this “quality;” the list could go on and on. But the fact is, unfortunate or not, that this is not only a “cool” quality, but an attractive one as well (at least from a female perspective).

    The second type of cool was defined as, “Transcendent cool.” To be this type of cool, you must be sincere, passionate, and do things because you desire to do so and not because it is “cool.” It is ironic that you can become cool, by defying cool itself. I think that more often than not, to become transcendent, you have to go against the norms of society; sometimes, against the wishes of your family and peers. One of my favorite movies displays this type of cool perfectly—Walt Disney’s “Mulan.” IN this movie, you see two sides of Mulan: she displays femininity and discreetness (the one expected by society) and also her desire to stand out and make a difference."---http://emileigh18.blogspot.com/2009/01/basics-of-cool.html

    A good example of transcendent cool imo was Steve Buscemi's character in Ghostworld. Totally into old records in a nerdish way but seen by the two "cool girls" as really cool.
     

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