Plagued Consoomers / Consoomer Culture - Because if it has a recogniseable brand on it, I’d buy it!

I guess we never discussed diecasts, I think a lot of car enthusiasts have them.
So I'll run through a few of them.

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Some are excessive to me others not.
So you may want to pick out the ones that aren't and the ones that are fine
 
Archive of the above:
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  • Show dryer
  • Slipper keeper (Does it keep them warm?)
  • Automatic soap dispenser
  • Microfiber towel and paper towel dispenser
  • ??? Some kind of ionizer
  • Vacuum sealer
  • Egg keeper
  • Fridge ionizer
  • Rice box
  • Rice cooker with shitty touchscreen
  • Plastic cutting boards
  • Pop-out trash bin
  • Cutting board holder which apparently also sanitizes things
  • Lazy Susan and spice holders
  • Hotplate
  • Gloves
  • Mini-washer x 2
  • Medium-washer
  • Vacuum cleaner x 2
  • Wet dust mop
  • Phone charger light/sanitizer
  • Collapsible foot bath
  • Automatic trash can
  • Tissue box phone holder
  • Humidifier
  • Iron
  • Depiller
  • Sock organizer
  • Air freshener
  • Vacuum sanitizer
  • Wall charger station
  • Mirror cleaner squeegie
  • Silicone toilet scrubber
  • Bathroom trashcan
  • Bathroom shoes holder
  • The most retarded fucking thing that I keep seeing every damn where when is a toothpaste dispenser fucking hell I get it in you have one hand or something but goddamn
  • Toothbrush sanitizer
  • Shaver
  • Cosmetics fridge with facemask-warmer
  • Cosmetics box
  • Dumb phone-charger dog table
  • Humidifier
  • Projector
  • One more humidifier
More from that channel:
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This is totally CCP propaganda, right?

These are all from #asianskincare and #skincarecollection
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(It's a skincare case)
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Tiktok is a mistake
 
Consumption is an assumed form of group identity that cements itself through financial investment. What is it you are collecting? Tokens of personal significance? Trophies of your own achievements? Or mere signifiers of your consumption?
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What personal significance does this collection have? Were these even "earned"? In truth anyone with sufficient money could acquire an equivalent collection, so what value is being presented here? The value of money spent? Valuable only to those with a compatible consumption based identity.


This is making me want to take a black pill or a shotgun to the face
Can we have some nice examples of people collecting that isn't consooming?
Just to stay sane.
Are you seeking validation for your own habits? If what you have bought is truly valuable to you then you should not feel the need to seek validation for it, but if your purchases were merely meant to cement your identity then it is only natural that you now find yourself here seeking validation for them.

Seek to build an identity not of ownership, but of your own.



There is more nobility in the 50yo weird uncle train autist than there is in any compulsive collector.
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Look at him in his attic —away from the concerned eyes of family— he has found personal value in his autistic pursuit. He builds his little model not to seek prestige in a tiny subculture, but rather for his own personal satisfaction. The value of his model is created not purchased, and it relies upon no external validation.

Consumer behavior is not found in the material or quantity consumed, but rather in the motivations —or rather values— underlying the purchase. For what do you purchase? the utility inherent to the object? the personal value found in it? or merely to impress other consumers?
 
I have a 170 wpm typing speed and I've been using a 2014 Razer blackwidow keyboard that I bought from walmart open box for $45 6 1/2 years ago.
I have a 700 wpm typing speed and I use a 35-year-old Melmer-Sordo marlin XT-5 keyboard that I bought for $2.
I guess we never discussed diecasts, I think a lot of car enthusiasts have them.
So I'll run through a few of them.

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Some are excessive to me others not.
So you may want to pick out the ones that aren't and the ones that are fine
I think, for a lot of these, you really have to see the rest of the room. If it's a semi-normal house with one startlingly large display case full of toys, that's one thing. If it's a house that is either A) totally full of toys or B) half full of toys and otherwise totally lacking personal touches, that's something else.
 
Let's hope as they get older, their tastes will change and they'll leave that behind. Scrapbook your memories and photos, sell those damned Disney pins, and use your Disney movies as a once-a-year nostalgia rewatch.
It'll likely get worse, tbh. I know a lady who is retired and obsessed with Disney World, she goes every year either with her (adult) daughter or with a friend. And when the subject comes up in conversation she'll go on an autistic half-hour long sperg about how wonderful Disney is, and how it's totally worth the money and far better than a cruise or tropical vacation or any other kind of vacation.
 
It'll likely get worse, tbh. I know a lady who is retired and obsessed with Disney World, she goes every year either with her (adult) daughter or with a friend. And when the subject comes up in conversation she'll go on an autistic half-hour long sperg about how wonderful Disney is, and how it's totally worth the money and far better than a cruise or tropical vacation or any other kind of vacation.
Yeah, if Disney gets into a kid's brain at a young enough age, they're usually in for life. They go after kids harder than a pedophile and they sink those fangs in deep.

Disney fully understands the long game when it comes to creating fanatics and 100% prioritizes kids above all else in their park operations. They'll drop everything (including older guests) to make sure a young child isn't having a bad time at their parks. Hell, if a parent dolls up their daughter in "princess" garb for her park visit, they'll mute their own fucking ads and shush everybody just to shine a spotlight on her and announce to everyone that they've been graced with the presence of a Disney Princess(tm). And that will happen everywhere she goes all fucking day long. Want to see Disney actually cough up a non-trivial freebie or two? Send your "princess" in first wherever you go in the parks. Employees have been fired for not making a big enough spectacle of it, so they tend to put out the good china when they turn up.

Fucking lunatics.

And god help your lady friend if she ever realizes Disney has a vacation cruise line that sails to tropical destinations. She'll die penniless and alone.
 
Yeah, if Disney gets into a kid's brain at a young enough age, they're usually in for life. They go after kids harder than a pedophile and they sink those fangs in deep.

Disney fully understands the long game when it comes to creating fanatics and 100% prioritizes kids above all else in their park operations. They'll drop everything (including older guests) to make sure a young child isn't having a bad time at their parks.
That makes me curious as to what would have happened if I ever went as a kid. I know I would have been bored as hell. just wanting to go back to the hotel room to play my GameBoy or something.
 
That makes me curious as to what would have happened if I ever went as a kid. I know I would have been bored as hell. just wanting to go back to the hotel room to play my GameBoy or something.
I did go as a kid, once, and once again as an adult. It was actually a pretty good park and I appreciated it as an amusement park but even as a kid I was cynical enough to not trust advertising due to my parents and grandparents raising me to be skeptical of claims made by strangers. I think it really depends on how you raise your kids, I really enjoyed museums as a kid, even museums that didn't try to appeal to kids.
 
That makes me curious as to what would have happened if I ever went as a kid. I know I would have been bored as hell. just wanting to go back to the hotel room to play my GameBoy or something.
I went to Disneyland once as a kid, probably 10-11 years old. Boring as fuck. I have never been more underwhelmed by a theme park. I've been dragged to Disneyworld as an adult on a couple occasions, and it's just as dreadfully dull as it was back on the west coast only much bigger, more spread out and with about a hundred times as many credit card readers.

Universal Studios, Six Flags, Busch Gardens and even Knott's Berry Farm are far better. The only thing keeping Disney going these days is a combination of inertia, frantic scrambling to ensnare fresh fanatics while they're young and constant acquisitions and mergers to add existing popular stuff to their portfolio. Disney hasn't come up with anything new of its own in recent years that's achieved any degree of success (at the scale they need it to, at least) or staying power at all.
 
That makes me curious as to what would have happened if I ever went as a kid. I know I would have been bored as hell. just wanting to go back to the hotel room to play my GameBoy or something.
Funnily enough, when I went to Disneyworld back when I was like 10, my mom insisted we avoid Magic Kingdom cause it was way too crowded and commit our 5 day stay to Epcot and some adjacent water parks instead. I didn’t give a fuckshit about Disney properties anyway and had more fun just browsing Epcot’s little exhibits of different world cultures. I probably avoided the more obnoxious Disney fanatics in doing so anyway.

I doubt I would shell out the money to go back as an adult though. Hell, the corporate sterility of everything bugged me as a kid!
 
That makes me curious as to what would have happened if I ever went as a kid. I know I would have been bored as hell. just wanting to go back to the hotel room to play my GameBoy or something.
Pretty much. Yeah.

Universal is were most kids would have rather been, Disney was mostly a chore but Universal had terminator, jurassic park and indiana jones.
 
Can't go into any detail because it's a hell of a powerlevel, but when I was a kid, I was actually supposed to go to Disneyland at one point, but my trip got canceled. Even at the time, I remember not really caring too much. It's always fun to go somewhere new, but hey, now all the stress of pretending to care about anything Disney is lifted, and I can stay home and play Nintendo and watch Nickelodeon.

Pretty much. Yeah.

Universal is were most kids would have rather been, Disney was mostly a chore but Universal had terminator, jurassic park and indiana jones.
Eeeeeeeeeexactly. Way later on, I realized I would have been down there while Nickelodeon Studios was still open, and I'm sure if I caught wind of that, I'd have wanted to go there instead. They also had that Back to the Future ride.

The whole thing with millenials being into Disney perplexes me, anyway. The one, sole Disney property I really enjoyed as a kid was Aladdin, but I only really enjoyed that for Genie, and Genie was moreso just Robin Williams doing his own thing than anything particularly Disney. Everything else I'd seen from Disney, I didn't care about. There wasn't even anything on Disney Channel I ever watched. It was all Nickelodeon and Cartoon Network for me. I don't remember any other kids ever being into Disney properties, either. It just wasn't a thing back then, but you wouldn't know it nowadays.

Funnily enough, when I went to Disneyworld back when I was like 10, my mom insisted we avoid Magic Kingdom cause it was way too crowded and commit our 5 day stay to Epcot and some adjacent water parks instead. I didn’t give a fuckshit about Disney properties anyway and had more fun just browsing Epcot’s little exhibits of different world cultures. I probably avoided the more obnoxious Disney fanatics in doing so anyway.

I doubt I would shell out the money to go back as an adult though. Hell, the corporate sterility of everything bugged me as a kid!
It probably would have bugged me, too, and yeah, I'm sure I'd only really want to see Epcot. Not that I'd go out of my way to see it, but it'd just be something to do that I'd at least get something out of, ironically, considering it's supposed to be a child-centric wonderland that costs a small fortune to even just visit.
 
The whole thing with millenials being into Disney perplexes me, anyway.
Millenials grew up in the late eighties through the late nineties, this was the Disney Renaissance era. From 1989-1999 Disney studios would produce almost all of it's most famous animated works one right after the other, you know the ones they keep remaking ad-nauseum? All from that span of years. Disney also saw massive success in television animation during that era as well as things like Radio Disney and what not.

1989: The Little Mermaid
1990: The Rescuers: Down Under
1991: Beauty and The Beast
1992: Aladdin
1994: The Lion King (This was the highest grossing animated film of all time, grossing 968.5 million dollars world wide, until 2003 when Finding Nemo took it over. To this day The Lion King is still the highest grossing hand drawn animated film of all time and currently sits at twelfth place for all animated films)
1995: Pocahontas
1996: The Hunchback of Notre Dame
1997: Hercules
1998: Mulan
1999: Tarzan

Following the official end of this era Disney still put out some really good animated films though, a lot of those would go on to become cult classics too and many of the children that would form the tail end of the millenial generation grew up with them. Films such as Fantasia 2000, The Emperor's New Groove, Atlantis: The Lost City, and Treasure Planet are good examples of this.
 
smartphone "buttons" a shit, you're better off trying to build a rasberry pi or use the new emulator machines the chinese are making.
I had one that was ok for 30 bucks but the buttons were awkward, emulation was iffy and it eventually died. I'm sure better models will come out soon that will even be as nigh indestructable as nintendium.

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A few years ago I'd agree with you on the state of mobile emulation and the incompatibility of a lot of external devices, but nowadays you can use full size keyboards with phones easily and gamepad grips for full portability.
 
Millenials grew up in the late eighties through the late nineties, this was the Disney Renaissance era. From 1989-1999 Disney studios would produce almost all of it's most famous animated works one right after the other, you know the ones they keep remaking ad-nauseum? All from that span of years. Disney also saw massive success in television animation during that era as well as things like Radio Disney and what not.

1989: The Little Mermaid
1990: The Rescuers: Down Under
1991: Beauty and The Beast
1992: Aladdin
1994: The Lion King (This was the highest grossing animated film of all time, grossing 968.5 million dollars world wide, until 2003 when Finding Nemo took it over. To this day The Lion King is still the highest grossing hand drawn animated film of all time and currently sits at twelfth place for all animated films)
1995: Pocahontas
1996: The Hunchback of Notre Dame
1997: Hercules
1998: Mulan
1999: Tarzan

Following the official end of this era Disney still put out some really good animated films though, a lot of those would go on to become cult classics too and many of the children that would form the tail end of the millenial generation grew up with them. Films such as Fantasia 2000, The Emperor's New Groove, Atlantis: The Lost City, and Treasure Planet are good examples of this.
The two that I watched from that era were Aladdin and The Lion King, probably both on VHS because I would have been super young when those were new. But, I honestly don't remember any other kids being especially into anything Disney produced at the time, let alone any of my childhood friends. There was tons of excellent children's entertainment back then, and I'd probably have been (rightfully) called a fag if I wanted to watch Pocahontas over Power Rangers.
 
The two that I watched from that era were Aladdin and The Lion King, and none of my friends cared about anything Disney. In fact, I honestly don't remember any other kids being especially into anything Disney produced at the time. There was tons of excellent children's entertainment at the time, and I'd probably have been (rightfully) called a fag if I wanted to watch Pocahontas over Power Rangers.
I grew up right on the tail end of all that shit and a lot of kids liked Disney but Star Wars was making a huge comeback and anime was starting to become more widely available with better localizations and so most of us watched that shit instead.
 
I grew up right on the tail end of all that shit and a lot of kids liked Disney but Star Wars was making a huge comeback and anime was starting to become more widely available with better localizations and so most of us watched that shit instead.
Same here grew up on the tail end of that wave but Star Wars we’re huge for me as a kid, especially the first two lego Star Wars games. I remember going to my cousins house (they were significantly order from 6-10 years) and they had a big collection of Disney VHSs. For some reason I was fascinated by Pocahontas 2 because I wanted to see more English colonialism and I wanted to see where the based colonizers came from.

I was also fascinated by the cover art and after seeing a few minutes of the Road to El Dorado. Same deal with the history of colonialism aspect. Just I could never remember what the name of the film was for the longest time.
 
Same here grew up on the tail end of that wave but Star Wars we’re huge for me as a kid, especially the first two lego Star Wars games. I remember going to my cousins house (they were significantly order from 6-10 years) and they had a big collection of Disney VHSs. For some reason I was fascinated by Pocahontas 2 because I wanted to see more English colonialism and I wanted to see where the based colonizers came from.

I was also fascinated by the cover art and after seeing a few minutes of the Road to El Dorado. Same deal with the history of colonialism aspect. Just I could never remember what the name of the film was for the longest time.
I had all the Disney animated films growing up and I liked most of them but they never became anything more than just good movies to me. I was never asking for Disney toys or merch as a kid, I wanted Power Rangers and Star Wars and mangas. Even for western animation the non-Diney studio films left a larger impression on me as a kid, movies like Balto, Secret of NIMH, An American Tale, Road To El Dorado, and even Anastasia wowed me more as a kid due to their generally more serious tones.
 
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