Showing posts with label _. Show all posts
Showing posts with label _. Show all posts

Tuesday, 6 May 2025

Turning 20s in Y2K

 




You turn twenty in the year 2000 and people call it a milestone. But all you feel is the hangover from the nineties. It’s like waking up from the last wild dream of a century that swore it wouldn’t end. And maybe it didn’t. Maybe we just hit pause. 


We were the last analog kids and the first digital addicts. Grew up on Minitel, and now we’re thumbing Nokias like prayer beads. We’re not born into the future. We crash into it.

The nineties in France? A cocktail of contradictions. MTV Europe and Canal+, grunge in our veins, rave in our lungs, and neo-liberalism creeping through the cracks of every concrete estate. We watched our parents vote left, live right, and blame everything in between. We played Tony Hawk on PlayStation, and pirated tapes off Skyrock. We passed joints in stairwells and spoke in slang like it was a second skin. Our sneakers squeaked rebellion even when we were standing still.

We were fed techno in warehouses and fed existentialism in school. We were told to be realistic while our music screamed otherwise. It wasn’t peace and love. It was rage and beats. It was Daft Punk under a strobe. IAM in your Walkman. The Verve and Noir Désir on the same mixtape. Try making sense of that.

The streets weren’t safe, but they were home. Suburbs like Montreuil, Saint-Denis, Villeurbanne—we carried them like tattoos on our tongues. Not tourist places. Real places. Concrete and graffiti and youth that burned too fast.

You’d get on the RER and ride straight through your future without ever being sure where to get off. You’d see kids born in Algeria, Tunisia, Mali, Bosnia, and they’d speak better French than the lycée teachers. But they’d still get followed in Monoprix. We all knew something was broken, but we danced anyway. Maybe we thought if we danced hard enough, we’d shake it all straight.

Then came 2000. The millennium. Y2K was supposed to kill us all. Computers crashing, planes falling. But nothing exploded except our illusions. Everything got... cleaner. Smoother. Corporate.

Suddenly, the same guys who moshed in Doc Martens were in startups, building JavaScript empires. The rebels found careers. The punks wore lanyards. And the rest of us? We stood blinking in the fluorescent light of a new decade wondering where the hell the music went.

They called it the information age, but it felt like the sedation age. Everything fast. Everything optimized. MSN Messenger instead of yelling across the street. Blogs instead of manifestos. Emotions went digital, then got deleted.

You remember when love was showing up. Now it’s a status. A photo. A comment.

In the nineties, heartbreak was slamming a door. In the 2000s, it’s a text at 2 a.m.: “seen.”

We used to believe in scenes. Skaters, ravers, squatters, goths, hip-hoppers. We wore our tribes like armor. Now everyone’s fragmented, curated. We pick aesthetics like Netflix genres. Nothing’s lived. It’s all sampled. Remix culture turned real life into a playlist. No B-sides. Just highlight reels.

You try to scream, but it comes out like a hashtag.

Turning twenty in 2000 meant looking both ways and seeing two different worlds. Behind you: grit, noise, vinyl. Ahead: speed, polish, pixels.

We didn’t choose life. We chose the mix tape, the street corner, the basement gig, the badly photocopied zine. And now we’re here, being asked to choose between a LinkedIn update and another overpriced coffee.

Sometimes I walk down République and swear I can still hear it—the echo of rollerblades on cobbles, of teenagers lighting cigarettes with stolen lighters, of love stories that started on park benches not apps.

We grew up too fast and aged too slow. We’re nostalgic at 30 and burnt out at 35. We know the price of everything but the value of a Friday night that smelled like sweat, fear, and possibility.

So yeah, I turned twenty in 2000. Right between two centuries, two eras, two selves. One wild, stupid, and alive. The other smart, smooth, and sedated.

And I’d give anything to be stupid and alive 


But you keep going, don’t you? That’s the rule. The beat stops but your legs still move. The DJ packed up two decades ago but the bassline’s still in your chest.

Now it’s 2005 and everyone’s pretending to be fine. We’ve got Wi-Fi, Gmail, and sarcasm as a defense mechanism. Authenticity gets filtered through irony. Every conversation’s a tweet waiting to happen. Every mistake’s a meme. We live in an age of pre-apologies and soft cancellations. We’re no longer real. We’re rebranded.

You remember smoking under bridges and skipping school. Now you’re booking wellness retreats to "reconnect with your inner child"—the same one you told to shut up every time they asked where the feeling went.

You can’t talk to anyone anymore without competing with a screen. Dates are job interviews. Friendships are notifications. Love is a ghost story told through blue ticks and unanswered texts.

Back then, you didn’t need therapy to feel something. You needed a Friday night, a Metro ticket, and someone to meet you under the blinking lights of a bar where the walls sweated and the bass made your knees weak. You found God in subwoofers. You found identity in noise.

Now everything’s silent—even when it screams.

We used to take photos to remember. Now we take them to prove we exist.

The kids today? They’re kind, careful, hyper-aware. They know about boundaries and trauma and climate collapse. They speak in complete thoughts and curated vulnerability. It’s beautiful, it really is. But you worry. You worry they’ll miss out on the mess. The glorious chaos of screwing up with style, of not knowing who you were and not caring, of breaking and breaking and breaking until something stuck.

You want to shake them sometimes. Not to change them—God no—but to tell them it’s okay not to optimize everything. That boredom is holy. That heartbreak builds empires. That your twenties aren’t supposed to be neat.

Because yours weren’t. Yours were brutal and brilliant and confusing and wild. You broke hearts and skipped rent. You danced until the sunrise made your mistakes look holy. You were loved and hated and forgotten and forgiven. You weren’t content—you were contentless.

And maybe that’s why you feel out of place now.

Because the world doesn’t want loud anymore. It wants likable.

But you? You were a mixtape with the volume turned to max. A scratched CD still spinning. A VHS that ate the tape but played magic while it did.

So yeah, you turned twenty in 2000. And nothing since has felt quite as alive.

And maybe it never will.

But maybe that’s okay. Maybe the point isn’t to chase the noise.

Maybe the point is to remember it—to carry it inside you.

A heartbeat. A memory. A war drum.

Still playing.

Always playing.




I wake up and I want to scream but I don’t  
Because I can’t  
Because no one does anymore  
Because everything is fine  
Everything is good  
Everything is optimized  
I wake up and I check my phone and it tells me how I slept and what I missed and who I am  
It knows  
It knows me  
It knows me better than I know myself and I hate it for that  
I hate it  
But I love it too  
I need it like I needed the smoke the noise the bodies

Back in 98  
Back when we were kings and queens of nothing  
But it felt like everything  
Back when you could fall in love in a park with a girl who wore eyeliner like a dare  
Back when a Saturday night meant something  
Meant the world  
Meant sweat and music and maybe a fight maybe a kiss maybe both

Now it means content  
Now it means notifications  
Now it means pretending you’re okay because it’s too hard to explain what’s missing

And what’s missing is everything

There’s no soundtrack  
There’s no pulse  
There’s no rebellion  
Just calendars and coffee and curated sadness

I want to smash something  
I want to throw this phone in the river and run  
Run until my lungs burst  
Until my legs stop being polite  
Until I remember what it feels like to be alive and unfiltered and unshared and unseen

I miss the ugly  
I miss the mess  
I miss the beauty that only came in chaos  
The love that hit like a train  
The pain that didn’t need hashtags

I want to burn it all down  
The passwords the profiles the platforms  
The perfect lives the perfect diets the perfect captions

Burn it down  
Burn it all down  
And dance in the smoke like it’s 1999 and we’ve got nothing to lose  
Because we don’t  
We already lost it

And all that’s left is this

This ache  
This noise  
This chapter


Sunday, 5 August 2012

Junky - William Burroughs - Evene

See on Scoop.it - Contemporary fiction

I do enjoy novels from the fifties, ppl immersed in some community compared to what i feel i read in current " modern" books, emphasizing on the stand alone and weird individualism. well, à book, à surprize, like f*** america from anthr author i read recently. well, yes any book is good to read, fortunately, some times, some memorable stuff, many times from well known authors and sometimes from current books.

"Le livre Junky (10/18) de William Burroughs avec un résumé du livre, des critiques Evene ou des lecteurs, des extraits du livre Junky, des anecdotes et des photos du livre Junky."


See on www.evene.fr

Thursday, 7 June 2012

VW - The Original Click

See on Scoop.it - Contemporary fiction

Nice mechanism for a campaign :) I do enjoy how twisted the mind has to get to walk through that very simple process.

 

"Credits Advertiser: Volkswagen Product: Peças Originais Title: VW -- Peças Originais General Creative Director: Marcello Serpa, Luiz Sanches Co-Creative Dire..."


See on www.youtube.com

Ancient Greek solution for debt crisis

See on Scoop.it - Contemporary fiction

Definitely kind of a thinking stream I am looking at since long. Applied philosophy or simple good sense. worth a read, no?

 

"How would ancient Greek myths, literature and history provide advice to help modern Greeks with their financial worries?"


See on www.bbc.co.uk

Wednesday, 6 June 2012

L'Odyssée Cartier 2012

See on Scoop.it - Contemporary fiction

A long ad from Cartier I really enjoyed earlier this year. wonderful work.

 

"spot joaillerie Cartier Odyssey / musique originale de Pierre Adenot réalisateur : Bruno Aveillan agence : Marcel & Publicis 133 mannequin : Shalom Harlow ht..."


See on www.youtube.com

Sunday, 27 May 2012

"Faudrait quand même qu’on s’engueule un peu"

See on Scoop.it - Contemporary fiction

Un échange plutôt consensuel entre deux figures de la vie politique française.

See on www.nonfiction.fr

Journée mondiale des geeks

See on Scoop.it - Contemporary fiction


See on vidberg.blog.lemonde.fr [COMMENT: Potential image copyright issue detected]

Wednesday, 23 May 2012

Maelström Magazine | Musiques, cultures et miscellanées

See on Scoop.it - Contemporary fiction

Musiques, cultures et miscellanées...

See on www.maelstrommagazine.com

Equilibrium Tremens

See on Scoop.it - Contemporary fiction

Freak, thought of this title for my book and googling it, can see finance had already it, sob... Shivering balance reaching steady state on a delirium tremens after-move. Another shot please.

Well at least, I drew a clear first cover image

See on observer.com

Tuesday, 15 May 2012

F-Plan Diet

See on Scoop.it - Contemporary fiction

I might not have plan B, just a plan F that is built as core in my system, as shown here describing a diet scheme, hence needing to move to the W plan quite quickly.


See on www.everydiet.org

Monday, 7 May 2012

Squeezed Middle Class in China | China Bubble Watch

See on Scoop.it - Contemporary fiction

"Squeezed Middle Class in China

I wrote an article for China Economic Review’s March issue on China’s income tax reform. In the article I emphasized that the voices of middle class discontent on the Internet have led to some efforts by the government to alleviate the tax burden of the middle class and improve the transparency of how taxpayer money is spent. But I increasingly feel that maybe I have over-estimated the power of the middle class in China."


See on www.chinabubblewatch.org

Saturday, 5 May 2012

The Dice Man

See on Scoop.it - Contemporary fiction

And the dice says 4.

 

After, planning them would spoil the surprises at the corner, my brain might not have been a friend there. Yet, I am happily accountable for any of my decisions whenever I chose to take one. So that's enough philosophical cornerstone thinkings for the next 6 months.


See on en.wikipedia.org [COMMENT: Potential image copyright issue detected]

The Dice Man

See on Scoop.it - Contemporary fiction

And the dice says 4.

 

After, planning them would spoil the surprises at the corner, my brain might not have been a friend there. Yet, I am happily accountable for any of my decisions whenever I chose to take one. So that's enough philosophical cornerstone thinkings for the next 6 months.


See on en.wikipedia.org

Wednesday, 2 May 2012

Marc Bloch - L'etrange defaite

See on Scoop.it - Contemporary fiction

"Ces pages seront-elles jamais publiées? Je ne sais. Il est probable en tout cas,
que, de longtemps, elles ne pourront être connues, sinon sous le manteau, en
dehors de mon entourage immédiat. Je me suis cependant décidé à les écrire.
L'effort sera rude: combien il me semblerait plus commode de céder aux conseils
de la fatigue et du découragement! Mais un témoignage ne vaut que fixé dans sa
première fraîcheur et je ne puis me persuader que celui-ci doive être tout à
fait inutile. Un jour viendra, tôt ou tard, j'en ai la ferme espérance, où la
France verra de nouveau s'épanouir, sur son vieux sol béni déjà de tant de
moissons, la liberté de pensée et de jugement. Alors les dossiers cachés
s'ouvriront; les brumes, qu'autour du plus atroce effondrement de notre histoire
commencent, dès maintenant, à accumuler tantôt l'ignorance et tantôt la mauvaise
foi, se lèveront peu à peu; et, peut-être, les chercheurs occuper à les percer
trouveront-ils quelque profit à feuilleter, s'ils le savent découvrir, ce procès
verbal de l'an 1940"

 

If we've got to review the whole history of France in the past centuries, let us go thoroughly. Some times call for deep thinkings, sometimes for actions. Well, we might turn around the spot too often while our modern world calls for a balance of both, active and efficient, don t you think?


See on www.marcbloch.fr

Saturday, 28 April 2012

Comment écrire à son voisin trop bruyant quand il fait l’amour ? - Rue89

See on Scoop.it - Contemporary fiction

Ce sont les mots qu'on scotche dans l’ascenseur, ceux qu'on placarde sur une porte ou ceux qu'on dessine... Il y a peu, ma collègue Aurélie Champagne, qui s'occupe de Rue89 Culture, et Olivier Volpi, qui collabore avec elle sur le blog Chez...

See on www.rue89.com

Friday, 27 April 2012

Tribeca: Film vs. Digital in 'Side by Side'

See on Scoop.it - Contemporary fiction

The director Chris Kenneally discusses his documentary "Side by Side," which looks at how digital technology is transforming filmmaking.

See on artsbeat.blogs.nytimes.com

Thursday, 26 April 2012

To Avoid Stupid Mistakes, Think in French

See on Scoop.it - Contemporary fiction

Si c est eux qui le disent, enfin encore une fois, je vois un décalage la aussi entre mon vécu de l'intérieur et ma vision venant de l'extérieur par cet article aussi.

 

"Would you take a bet that offered you an even chance of winning $12 and losing $10? If you’re like most people, you would not. But what if someone offered you the bet in French?"


See on www.businessweek.com