• Ghostalmedia
    link
    English
    487
    edit-2
    11 months ago

    When idiots realize American Idiot is actually about them.

  • Flying Squid
    link
    40611 months ago

    How dare Green Day do the exact thing you would expect Green Day to do if you knew the first thing about Green Day!

      • Flying Squid
        link
        3211 months ago

        It’s so fucking stupid. I’m not a big fan of either Green Day or RATM’s music (nothing wrong with it, it’s just not my thing), but I don’t live under a rock. I’ve actually heard of the existence of American Idiot because I’ve been a warm body in America since 1977.

        When someone like me who would rather listen to 1930s and 40s music knows enough about Green Day to not even bat an eye hearing this, these people are just drooling imbeciles. But then everyone here already knew that.

          • Flying Squid
            link
            1411 months ago

            Sure. Lately, I have been listening to the Mills Brothers and early Ella Fitzgerald when she sang with Chick Webb’s band.

            • @doyadig
              link
              211 months ago

              I love Ella Fitzgerald but I’m pretty new to her stuff. How do I find the stuff she did with Webb’a band? I’ve got Spotify and can download anything.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        1711 months ago

        Reminds me of Jack Kirby, one of the creators of Captain America. He drew him punching out Hitler on the cover of #1. The US wasn’t in the war at the time and American Nazis were not rare, even in New York.

        Some dudes came to his office building and offered to fight him (they called from the lobby). Unfortunately for them, Jack had grown up fighting in the streets of Depression era NYC. He agreed and by the time his elevator reached the lobby they had run away.

    • gregorum
      link
      fedilink
      English
      311 months ago

      I demand they go back to writing songs exclusively about masturbation and getting stoned!

  • @aseriesoftubes
    link
    31411 months ago

    Aww, did the “fuck your feelings” crowd get their little feelings hurt? Who are the snowflakes again?

  • Ghostalmedia
    link
    English
    29311 months ago

    If conservatives want to listen to music that echos what they hear in Murdoch media outlets, they might want to avoid punk. Also, hip hop and rap. Probably also want to avoid, metal, classic rock, folk, indie, jazz, and EDM. Best to just avoid cool, formerly cool, and or cool adjacent music.

    You should be generally safe with pop country, Christian rock, and post-00’s butt rock.

    • @[email protected]OP
      link
      fedilink
      English
      12411 months ago

      Don’t worry, conservatives still have Kid Rock, that dude from Staind, Gene Simmons, and Ted “shit himself to avoid the draft” Nugent. Truly the best of the best, huh?

      • @Leviathan
        link
        6511 months ago

        He already said avoid cool music. You didn’t have to illustrate it further.

        • @III
          link
          English
          2911 months ago

          Given that the conservatives keep being surprised by bands not supporting their shit agenda, yeah… we do. They thought Rage Against the Machine aligned with them politically. They aren’t going to figure it out on their own.

            • @Ensign_Crab
              link
              English
              1911 months ago

              I suspect that they heard “killing in the name” and thought it was gloating instead of protest.

              • @macrocephalic
                link
                811 months ago

                “Some of those who work forces, are the same that burn crosses”

                Murrica!

                • @Buddahriffic
                  link
                  511 months ago

                  Holy fuck, now I’m wondering if that song effectively ended up as recruitment material to encourage more cross burners to seek employment in law enforcement.

      • @Ensign_Crab
        link
        English
        1011 months ago

        I’m sure plenty of them still buy the urban legend about 311’s name.

      • @Son_of_dad
        link
        211 months ago

        Unfortunately Dave Mustaine is also a Trump nut, but luckily I haven’t seen any Megadeth appearances at Trump rallies

    • @Son_of_dad
      link
      9211 months ago

      My conservative, Trump supporting uncle listens to Bob Dylan and Neil Young and doesn’t see the irony

      • @Wrench
        link
        1011 months ago

        Hey, I cringe a bit when I listen to A7X lyrics. But still scratches that diet metal itch

        • @Bourff
          link
          1411 months ago

          “Diet metal” is a great way to describe A7X, I’m stealing this.

        • @xX_fnord_Xx
          link
          311 months ago

          If I recall correctly, they did an interview with AP or Metal Hammer back in the 00’s explaining that they weren’t a Christian band, they just liked how brutal the story of Cane and Abel was from the Bible and used it as a framing device.

          Correct me if I’m wrong, though; I haven’t looked them up in over a decade.

          • @Wrench
            link
            911 months ago

            Political conservative victimism is a recurring theme in their lyrics. It’s pretty cringey, but those guitar licks are crazy.

        • @Son_of_dad
          link
          311 months ago

          Megadeth is my favorite metal band but it’s my guilty listen, since Dave Mustaine is a religious Trump nut.

      • Funderpants
        link
        fedilink
        411 months ago

        Southern Man, when will you pay them back? Takes on new meaning when you’ve got a south will rise again revenge plot fantasy in your head.

    • ThePowerOfGeek
      link
      English
      66
      edit-2
      11 months ago

      I remember back in the mid 2000s when they latched on to the Dixie Chicks’ pop country music as being ‘wholesome conservative music’. And then their very vocal rage when the Dixie Chicks publicly dissed W.

      That was pretty funny. Not quite on a level of ‘freedom fries’ funny, or ‘buying expensive French wine only to pour it down the drain in protest’ funny. But it wasn’t too far off.

      • @aesthelete
        link
        811 months ago

        The Dixie Chicks are one of the few acts that were actually kind of “canceled”.

      • @banneryear1868
        link
        611 months ago

        I respect The Chicks a lot more looking back and realizing just how strong their position was when you basically had an entire media industry and censorship falling behind Bush, 9/11, the Iraq War.

      • DrCatface
        link
        611 months ago

        first ive heard of the expensive french wine down the drain, is there a name for that protest? im a winemaker in australia this shit is hilarious to me

        • ThePowerOfGeek
          link
          English
          211 months ago

          Not sure about a name for the protest, but the are a number of articles out there. There’s a entertaining NYT article about a restauranteur pouring $1,000 bottles of don Peringnon(sp?) down his toilet in protest. But it’s behind a postal so I won’t link that one. But here’s another related link:

          https://dailybruin.com/2018/03/15/throwback-thursday-locals-pour-wine-in-westwood-streets-protest-french-aversion-to-iraq-war

          That whole anti-French movement was insane. I remember my wife and I were going to visit England (where I am from, but I live in America) that summer. And the shuttle driver (who was taking us to the airport) and I got friendly chit-chatting. Very cordial and easy-breazy. But he stopped mid-sentence and asked if I was French (because French and English accents are so similar?!). When I told him I wasn’t, he said “that’s good, because if you were I’d pull over right now and leave you on the side of the freeway!” Kind of ironic too, that driver was a black dude, so I’ve would think he’d be a bit more mindful of how stupid discrimination is.

        • @afraid_of_zombies
          link
          111 months ago

          I am going to say it. I don’t think it was real. I think they filled those bottles with red dyed water. It felt so manufactured at the time.

          • @xX_fnord_Xx
            link
            210 months ago

            You know they drank it off camera and refilled it with cool aid.

            People that actually invest in Dom sold that to some rich middle fucks and refilled the bottle.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        English
        411 months ago

        WTYPpod brought up the Dixie Chicks in their bonus episode about country music.

        Interesting to hear about.

    • peopleproblems
      link
      3411 months ago

      You know, I just realized that Hitler failing to get into art school is so much deeper of a joke than I realized.

      Dude was an authoritarian. Artists are pretty universally anti authority. You could say it was his lack of skill to get into art school, or his education, or a whole bunch of things. Or you can say Hilter was already anti-artist, why would an art school educate that?

      • @Bennettiquette
        link
        2111 months ago

        “passable level of technique, entirely uninspired work without any semblance of originality”

        they saw right through him.

      • @andros_rex
        link
        911 months ago

        The failed actor to right wing pipeline is definitely a phenomenon, see Crowder and Shapiro. It’s almost a welfare program for wealthy fail-sons.

      • @perviouslyiner
        link
        111 months ago

        it was super bland architectural art, not really anything emotional

    • @Maggoty
      link
      711 months ago

      Nope Taylor Swift and The Chicks are bringing in pop country too.

    • @butt_mountain_69420
      link
      511 months ago

      This being “the left can’t meme” adjacent, my favorite one to pull out in this type of discussion is “name one successful right-wing comedian.”

    • @banneryear1868
      link
      2
      edit-2
      11 months ago

      You should be generally safe with pop country, Christian rock, and post-00’s butt rock.

      I have a counterpoint to Christian rock. The first album I bought at the Christian bookstore in the mid 90s, back when they had those “if you like [secular band], listen to [Christian band]” charts, was the Christian ska band Five Iron Frenzy’s Upbeats and Beatdowns. The first chorus on the first song destroyed my sheltered church kid brain:

      West we must, in God we trust, lets rape lets kill lets steal

      We can almost justify, anything we feel

      As the Bush years set in and the fight for gay marriage and abortion caused increasing political reactions from the church, many of these lyrics I attribute to starting my journey to the margins of church culture, discovering Christian socialism, New Monasticism, and an eventual leadership role. I later left the church and religion for other reasons.

      A lot of Christian rock is purely marketing though, bands that could be signed to major labels but found a Christian label willing to pay them. It’s a huge industry. Contemporary Christian Music/CCM swallowed up a lot of the industry back when I was more engaged with it. Newsboys going worship represents this for anyone in the know here, basically a pretty quirky and idiosyncratic band turning in to the most bland and boring Christian music possible. Could maybe argue the same for early Reliant K who turned in to pretty mainstream post punk.

    • @raynethackery
      link
      1
      edit-2
      11 months ago

      Does anyone remember that Lee Greenwood song they used to play at every Fourth of July celebration in the 90s?

    • @afraid_of_zombies
      link
      111 months ago

      Why do they have the worst music, art, and comedians? The only ones I can think of over the past century are Wagner, HP Lovecraft, and Kelsey Grammer. The past 100 years has produced more culture than all of human history combined and multiplied. Of that ocean I can only come up with 3 names that might be remembered a century from now. Not sure about 2 of them.

  • @Jimmyeatsausage
    link
    25511 months ago

    From the people that brought you, “I liked RATM before they got all political”

    • gregorum
      link
      fedilink
      English
      4
      edit-2
      11 months ago

      what’s that famous song of theirs?

      ah, yes, that old chestnut…

      or was it this one?

      morello really gets around :P

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    English
    16811 months ago

    oH My GoD ThEy sHoUlDnT Be PolitIcaL like ThaT!

    Hey maga people, remember when you were really concerned about free speech and people being canceled for “just voicing their opinion”?

    Pepperidge Farm remembers.

    • @Yokozuna
      link
      3411 months ago

      It’s never about freedom of speech, it’s about freedom of their speech and only theirs.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        2511 months ago

        It’s about freedom of their speech and their freedom to control yours.

        Same as it ever was. “Conservatism consists of exactly one proposition, to wit: There must be in-groups whom the law protects but does not bind, alongside out-groups whom the law binds but does not protect.”

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      1311 months ago

      Roseanne Barry just kicked DeNiro off of some show she’s doing for being “woke.”

      Of course, every MAGAt is cheering and not a single one is screaming about how um actually it’s illegal to not do business with someone you don’t like, like they do to us.

    • @PoliticalAgitator
      link
      1211 months ago

      People who abuse and manipulate their family also have social media, which they use to abuse and manipulate society.

      They’re a certain type of person and for a lot of people, social media is their first real experience with these patterns of behaviour that were usually hidden behind closed doors.

      But for anyone who grew up in an abusive home and broke the cycle, it’s instantly recognisable.

      The tricks and motivations don’t change. They want to dictate how everyone around them looks, acts and thinks. If anybody gets it wrong, they lash out at them and try to hurt them physically or emotionally.

      Everything that comes out of their mouths is just a means to that end. Things like logic and consistency don’t even enter into it.

      They have no qualms at all about deliberately misinterpreting “freedom of speech” so they can say what they like, then handwaving it away so they can prevent others from doing the same.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      English
      2
      edit-2
      11 months ago

      Except they’ve never hidden the fact that their “free speech” only applies to their opinions and they have never even once endorsed anyone else’s right to voice their own opinions. Apparent in the fact that they consider things like LGBTQ+ advocacy, where members of that community express their opinions and exercise that right, to somehow be an active suppression of their free speech because, well because they disagree with the LGBTQ+ community and their messages so they don’t think they should have the right to express it.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      English
      111 months ago

      As with everything else with these types, it’s “free speech for me, but not for thee.”

    • @mdurell
      link
      3011 months ago

      Why insult Conan like this? ;)

    • @butt_mountain_69420
      link
      111 months ago

      Every day, all day long, with short breaks for masturbation and rubbing shit in their hair.

  • @CobblerScholar
    link
    12211 months ago

    Okay how about we stop calling it a meltdown and start calling it a temper tantrum just like the ones toddlers throw. The solution for both is the same, putting them in a corner and ignoring them until they act like reasonable people while the adults keep things running

    • BlanketsWithSmallpox
      link
      English
      311 months ago

      By corner they mean insurrection at the us capitol.

      They still occasionally smear shit on the walls though…

  • @0110010001100010
    link
    11711 months ago

    lol, fucking snowflakes getting upset over the tiniest of things.

  • Nakedmole
    link
    104
    edit-2
    11 months ago

    What “Machine” did you think he was raging against? The dishwasher?

    • Hominine
      link
      English
      25
      edit-2
      11 months ago

      SELL THE HOUSES TO WHO, BEN? AQUAMAN?

    • qaz
      link
      311 months ago

      Who are you quoting?

          • Nakedmole
            link
            211 months ago

            Interesting, thank you!

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          6
          edit-2
          11 months ago

          “As far as i’m concerned you and Pink are completely done.”

          I know the article calls this out too but WHAT!? I mean, good for this guy for having diverse tastes in music, but Pink went full pop basically in her second album. (If I recall correctly, it was a long time ago and I’m not a huge Pink fan). But Pink has never hidden her tendency towards activism.

          And not to gatekeep, I get that people enjoy music for different reasons, but it just seems odd that someone would actually be a fan of Rage Against the Machine and expect anything less. And again, the guy acknowledges Rage’s political activist nature in the article, but now it’s apparently too much since he no longer agrees with their message. That sure sounds like “cancel culture” to me.

          • Nakedmole
            link
            3
            edit-2
            11 months ago

            Yes, the tendency of right wingers to define themselves as oppressed victims seems to add to them regularly identifying with left perspectives for all the wrong reasons.

            Another very weird example if this was a young female nationalist and xenophobe from Germany, who unironically covered the radical anti colonialist Get Up, Stand Up by Bob Marley and The Wailers, in a cringe af YouTube video. Before anyone asks, I sadly was not able to find it anymore, otherwise I would have posted a link for your amusement of course.

            Then there was also the teenage anti-vaxxer, who held a speech at a protest organized by the Querdenker movement (german localization of QAnon) and seriously compared herself to Anne Frank during WWII, because she illegally held her birthday party in secret during the covid lockdown. You can´t make this shit up …

          • BeautifulMind ♾️
            link
            English
            211 months ago

            but now it’s apparently too much since he no longer agrees with their message

            Yep, sure has ‘don’t make me uncomfortable for having politics that sanction oppression’ energy to it.

  • @Ensign_Crab
    link
    English
    9311 months ago

    Did they expect Green Day to be pro-fascism?

    • @kofe
      link
      English
      3211 months ago

      Don’t wanna be an American idiot

  • TechyDad
    link
    9211 months ago

    That’s okay. They can still sing “Born in the USA” because that song is super-patriotic and not critical of America at all.

    Oh, wait…

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          1011 months ago

          They had all kinds of household item related songs like “Sleep now in the dryer”, “Grilling in the name”, and “Spatula radio”

          (OK, the last one was a bit of a stretch.)

          • stinerman [Ohio]
            link
            fedilink
            English
            911 months ago

            They play Killing in the Name at Columbus Blue Jackets games all the time and it cracks me up. I wonder what they think “Some of those who work forces are the same that burn crosses” means.

        • @afraid_of_zombies
          link
          1011 months ago

          I still don’t get it. Rage was always political and they never hid it. I can still remember on their first website having a detailed FAQ on exactly what type of communist each band member identified with. Also they were putting stuff out in the CD era when you would literally get a slip of paper that showed you the lyrics. So it couldn’t have been that they didn’t know what the songs were about.

          What part was confusing? You can have all the debates you want about communism and about music’s role in politics but there is no debate at all exactly what these guys stood for. It was a known product. How was anyone for a second confused that a band screaming about class warfare is leftwing? Those twats must have been lying about how they felt betrayed. It is “I am shocked shocked there is gambling going on here” on roids.

          • Doc Avid Mornington
            link
            fedilink
            English
            1711 months ago

            when you would literally get a slip of paper that showed you the lyrics.

            Insert “If Those Kids Could Read, They’d Be Very Upset” meme here.

  • @TheEighthDoctor
    link
    89
    edit-2
    11 months ago

    He’s the one who likes all our pretty songs And he likes to sing along and he likes to shoot his gun But he don’t know what it means

    • @RaoulDook
      link
      English
      -3911 months ago

      That was Nirvana, you know, the band that Green Day wanted to be at the start.

      • @WoahWoah
        link
        3411 months ago

        You’re of the opinion that the Bay-area pop-punk band wanted to be like the PNW grunge band?

        Kerplunk and Bleach sound nothing alike, I think I’m misunderstanding what you meant?

        • splicerslicer
          link
          711 months ago

          Ya, not even the same genre. If you don’t like the music just say that instead of comparing them to someone else that you do like

          • @WoahWoah
            link
            011 months ago

            They didn’t even have the courage to say they don’t like Green Day (I’m not a huge fan myself), all they did was show their knowledge of music is paltry.

        • @RampantParanoia2365
          link
          -111 months ago

          I mean, I wouldn’t say nothing alike. The fan base certainly hugely overlaps, and they both come from a punk rock origin.

        • @RaoulDook
          link
          English
          -1011 months ago

          I don’t listen to Green Day, so I don’t know about any of their albums’ specifics. After Nirvana ended I saw Green Day first on a late night talk show, and they came out and played the same style of music that Nirvana made popular, with a similar stage presence and style. That’s when I assumed they wanted to be Nirvana.

          Later they changed into modern Green Day that is completely different than what they were at the start.

          • @sbmc29
            link
            1611 months ago

            “I don’t actually know anything about music but I saw a talk show once in the 90s”

            lol

            • @WoahWoah
              link
              311 months ago

              Yeah he’s just an old dude that trolls, but he’s an actual troll, so it’s not like he’s doing it to be a dink for karma, he’s just really insufferable as a person. He migrated over from Reddit where he did the same thing there.

              The amount of hours this guy has invested across Lemmy and Reddit is insane, so, at some point, you just have to respect the dedication and interact with him at your leisure. At least, that’s what I do.

              • @RaoulDook
                link
                English
                -111 months ago

                Really, you must be very interested in my comments then. What’s my Reddit handle, since you know so much?

                You must really not like all the things that I’m right about, have you seen a therapist about your cognitive dissonance problems?

          • @WoahWoah
            link
            211 months ago

            What composed the “style of music” that you feel Nirvana made popular that Green Day was imitating? Music with guitars and distortion?

            • @[email protected]
              link
              fedilink
              411 months ago

              I think it was all the singing with their mouths and their guitars with strings, what a bunch of biters

            • @RaoulDook
              link
              English
              -711 months ago

              Specific chord structures and rhythms actually. If you knew much about guitar you could see the similarities in their early stuff and Nirvana’s popular songs. Overall the same punk-grunge style basically.

              • @[email protected]
                link
                fedilink
                English
                211 months ago

                They both formed the same exact year, though, so I don’t know how one would be copying the other. If you actually know anything about guitar, you would know all modern rock music pretty much copies the Beatles. It’s why the chord structures and rythyms are similar in most popular rock and pop music.

              • @[email protected]
                link
                fedilink
                211 months ago

                Try finding a punk rock fan in the 90s who would argue that Green Day are punk. If you did, you’d find them surrounded by a group of other angry punks insisting otherwise.

                They seem to have let off sometime after American Idiot was released, but there were long, heated discussions about this back then.

          • @Doomsider
            link
            111 months ago

            FYI Green Day plays and sounds like other bands. I went to a concert of theirs where they played like six different bands and sounded just like them. They are very skilled musicians.

      • @dtrain
        link
        1711 months ago

        He wasn’t attributing the song stanza to Green Day.

        Just saying it was relevant to the context of the article.

      • @Maggoty
        link
        311 months ago

        I don’t think they landed far from the mark.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        English
        311 months ago

        This is so easy to debunk with a simple search. Both bands formed the same exact year 1987. I dont think either band knew about each other until the 90s.

        • @RaoulDook
          link
          English
          -411 months ago

          Dude get the fuck off of my nutsack. This is not an important topic to keep on about.

          • @[email protected]
            link
            fedilink
            English
            1
            edit-2
            11 months ago

            Lmao you sound mad. I’ll stay on whoever the fucks nutsack I want. Maybe don’t comment dumb things if you don’t want to be corrected.

            • @RaoulDook
              link
              English
              -111 months ago

              OK well, you will not bother me again because you are now blocked, you dumbass dipshit.

      • prole
        link
        fedilink
        English
        311 months ago

        Lol Green Day wanted to be Nirvana? Not a huge fan of either band really, and Green Day wasn’t exactly groundbreaking stuff, but it’s a completely different genre than Nirvana.

  • @melisdrawing
    link
    8411 months ago

    At this point it is remarkably refreshing to see a childhood hero still be based. Feels like a breath of reality in a stuffy box of hypocrisy and pretension.

    • @afraid_of_zombies
      link
      -511 months ago

      Don’t worry I am sure Billie will go on Twatter later and say something problematic. It is the way of the universe to correct these irregularities.

      We don’t get to have heros. We get people we like for a few minutes and then they go insane

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        411 months ago

        He’s never done anything even approaching that in his entire life. He’s not about to start now. Billie Joe Armstrong is a fucking legend and one of maybe five people in the world I am completely positive will always remain a good person.

  • @banneryear1868
    link
    8111 months ago

    American Idiot is the millennials’ Fortunate Son