as someone with scene hair, wearing a hot topic mcr tee, gir socks, big eyeliner and invader zim stuff all over my bedroom right now: i give this video a solid RAWRXD out of ten
If you want a good recent-ish analog horror series, I wholly recommend Vita Carnis. They're doing a lot of unique stuff and involving practical models and puppets in really interesting ways, as well as crafting a whole ecosystem of creepy creatures that feels well designed and entertaining
20:00 I really loved Gumball for how impressive the art style was as a kid. Honestly wish more cartoons would’ve taken after Gumball’s style rather than the thin outline style of Adventure Time (Which I still enjoy) but then again, animation is expensive
I wonder how long overly-simplified as an aesthetic has left? Like how McDonalds rebranded to brown square buildings, and every company OS'd their logos. It seems to have left a bad taste in a lot of peoples mouths, without making anyone but executives happy.
Avid RU-vidr here... I spend 90% of my entrainment on RU-vid as I'm a stay at home dad on oxygen... I also use it to teach my child, 30 seconds in and you deserve waaay higher numbers dude, good job ... Down with the algorithm!!
My definition of analog horror: A painfully worn-out fad of horror themed stories/videos typically featuring faux vintage VHS recordings. Having grown up using VHS technology daily, I don't find the aesthetic creepy at all. I only find it annoying when fake VHS static and tracking lines are added to digital video.
What made it annoying for me, is that it brought the potential of using old technology like analog cameras to emulate video from that era, but it never did. It stuck to the same tropes and the same genre
@@anth636 And the video is always "recorded" in SLP mode, because the sound is always muffled. The sound of a VHS recording in SP mode is crisp and clear stereo.
I personally always found VHS stuff more comforting than creepy, so analog horror honestly always did the opposite of what it was supposed to do for me
Scene kids were pulled from the brink by some brave souls who decided to reject the modernity of “tik tok alt” e-boy/girl, and finally embrace frying and teasing you hair within an inch of its life. It’s me, I decided cringe is dead and I’m lol xD so random. I am happy to show new people how to make kandi and watch old asdf
I wanna mention but the plot of Urban Spook is literally just an episode of Tales from the Crypt, Season 3 episode 8; Easel Kill Ya. A man kills people and paints their death for profit
The "Zenith system 3" commercials from the late 1970s had an incredibly unique aesthetic that i cant really define but it looked awesome. Television sets floating in space with lasers shooting around it and it floating on a rainbow all while some guy would shout "system 3 system 3 system 3" in this echoing voice "the best ever! (Ever, ever!)
Is someone who was never allowed to express my interest in scene culture as a kid and teen, now as a 22 year old adult living in a shared living space in a crumbling economy, I'd say there has never been a greater time to become an emo scene kid and honestly it really does help fill a void thats been lingering in my life.
Let’s have the GIR aesthetic but it’s Zim and Dib (Aka. Kid trying to look mysterious but failing miserably and I am a soldier but I wear obnoxiously bright colors and act annoying at the same time)
would the fall era bumpers of cartoon network count as frutiger metro? i am not familiarized with it (in my country the CN city era was still going around that time) but watching a recopilation the design philosophy on that time MIGHT be frutiger metro...
I simultaneously love and hate the scene genre. In retrospect, it's mega cringeworthy, but I somehow also feel a strong connection with it and emo/punk culture because, well, I was there at its prime in my high school years.