


Your hair is awesome and you're smarter than us. We dare not make fun of IT guy lest he not help us the next time we forget our passwords. Fallon captured Nick Burns the IT guy on SNL brilliantly and probably launched his nerd-friendly career leading us all to Video Game Week.

We all see them in our offices and universities. I love goths - you keep the Bauhaus and Siouxsie dream alive - but some of us other nerds are making fun of you. I was confused, asked one what was up and was informed that it was "Bat's Day." Go figure. Just last month I was at Disneyland when I noticed that hundreds - nay, thousands - of visitors were dressed in what could only be described as Harajuku 2004. But that's just it, isn't it? They take themselves way too seriously, and the rest of us are aware of this and find it kind of funny. But the goths of today have split into micro-factions from mall goths to cyberpunks to steampunks to others I'm not about to even try to parse at the risk of being called out as a poseur. To be fair, goths were always pretty nerdy, what with their antisocial behavior and deep interest in times of yore that often led to uncomfortable Bram Stoker pseudo accents. Either way, LARPers, when going to the extreme of taking paper balls and throwing them at fellow players as lightning-bolt vehicles, are among the nerds we other nerds love to make fun of. LARPing is nothing new - one could argue that Civil War re-enactments are LARP events. LARP stands for Live-Action Role Playing, by the way, and it's the act of taking the fantasy out of RPGs and acting it out IRL. When the "Lightning Bolt!" video first graced the intertubes in the early 2000s, it made millions of nerds worldwide feel better about their own predilections. Noobs who will most likely graduate to another level of nerdiness. Weaboos are made fun of by all nerds regardless of rank. Some say, "Nya!" In the end, they're harmless and we'll probably realize they're pretty cool in, say, 20 or so years. Coiffed like anime characters, they feign Japanese accents and shout words like "kawaii" and "sugoi" at mall meet-ups. These nerds - arguably accurately - look to Japan for inspiration, but take it a little too far and make others a bit uncomfortable.
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This list is far from exhaustive and, as subcultures change overnight, probably full of inaccuracies, so I invite your additions and corrections in the comment section below. So with that, here are some of the nerds we love to make fun of. It's a bizarre thing, and it's the world we live in.
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It seems, not only as evidenced by /r/cringe, but also by television programming like The Big Bang Theory and just about any Greg Mottola movie, there is now a complex nerd hierarchy, and the coolest nerds are free to make fun of the not-so-cool nerds, and so on. Imagine, for a moment, Johnny Carson, David Letterman or even Kimmel doing that. Just this week Jimmy Fallon, the upstart king of late night, is doing something he calls Video Game Week. Sure, there were geeks, sportos, motorheads, dweebs, dorks, buttheads. In the early tech days, things were pretty binary: nerds vs. You can disable notifications at any time in your settings menu. Still a cool movie, though, and a righteous theme song. You were grouped into a subculture that enjoyed all things electronic, idolized Brian Tochi, knew who Steve Wozniak was and could explain why Weird Science was not a nerd revenge film, but actually a celebration of giving up the machine for love and conformity shrouded in a Hughesian attempt to finally give the dweebs a chance to get some. You were into computers and Dungeons & Dragons or you weren't: that was pretty much it. There were no levels of dorkiness like we have today. I love /r/cringe, the sub-Reddit dedicated to those moments usually caught on video that make us feel better about our lots in life when we can watch a 30-second chunk of happenstance and walk away thinking, "I am at least one level of dork above that person."īack in the day you were either a nerd. Each week Joshua Fruhlinger contributes This is the Modem World, a column dedicated to exploring the culture of consumer technology.
