- Joined
- Feb 4, 2018
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That site was always lit around halloween time. I loved the Laws for Kidz comic strips they mocked and then held a contest for.
I-Mockery.com | Law Stripz: Exposed! CONTEST RESULTS!
I-Mockery.com | Law Stripz: Exposed! CONTEST RESULTS!www.i-mockery.com
Pretty much all of them, as far as I can tell, but the one that hit me the hardest was Onion's The AV Club. It used to be a great place to go for well written reviews of movies big and obscure, and had one of the most comprehensive TV review/recap collections that were actually worth reading.
Now, at best you'll get a smug, pretentious review from someone who has to compare everything to an obscure Polish film from the 60s, but you're much more likely to get everything heavily filtered through TDS, lots of aggressive wokeness, and a lot of 'male fans are manbaby racist sexist pigs, female fans with their shipping and slash fiction are pure goodness and light'.
It's just frustrating when it was so good and did things you couldn't find anywhere else, and now it's an unreadable trashfire filled with discussing how much everything is 'problematic'.
Have to mention IMDB. Once upon a time IMDB was a truly good resource for information on film and television. The community was small and informed, the message boards were always a decent read. Then they started locking info behind pro accounts. They got incestuous with the industry, started advertising and promoting certain films and shows, working with celebrities. So you can't trust their info or ratings anymore. In 2016 they closed the message boards because people were expressing views they didn't like around the election, god forbid. So they've gutted the site and made it useless for all but the most basic reference.
Someone did make an archive/continuation of the boards called moviechat though. Which is decent honestly. The small dedicated userbase gives it that early web 2.0 feel which is rare these days.
SCP foundation- A Russian scammer copyrighted the brand of the SCP foundation and he is suing the Russian branch of the website. The website has now intrusive ads. Discord trannies have also co-opted the site and tried to change the lore of the SCP foundation so it is LGBT-friendly. Ironically, if you know jack-shit about the lore of the SCP world you will notice how the SCP foundation is an extremely evil, fascistic, nepotistic, corrupt and ill-intentioned organization, so yeah...
The IMDB message boards were a blast. I can remember watching scary movies while reading what other fans have sad about the movie on the forums. Made it feel like a mix between a treasure hunt and having a group of friends watching with you. Sure there are other websites that offer the same thing, but IMDB was special because you had forum dedicated to each movies; not just, say, scary or sci-fi movies.
Second this, I used to love DA partly because of the group feature and the amount of creativity it allowed. But all the cool people left honestly and now it’s that and also hordes of just bizarre fetish art and stuff left. I miss old DA....
That’s a photoshop, but not far from the truth. For me, the sign that the site was terminal was when they responded to allegations that they’d become to political with an article about how they were totally justified in being political and not entertaining because Trump. I knew it was dead when I came back later and saw that they’d started censoring swear words.
I miss when Rotten Tomatoes had forums where meaningful movie discussions could be had. Even the late Roger Ebert, who had a verified forum account, would post in there occasionally. These days, Rotten Tomatoes, which nuked their forums about three years ago, seems to be just a place where woke corporate movies get their "Certified Fresh" stamp of approval (often with mediocre reviews designated as "Fresh" to get it over the Certified Fresh threshold (Fresh-hold?)),
Even Box Office Mojo got rid of their forums, with the BOM forums essentially having been spun-off into its own site, Box Office Theory.
YouTube for sure. It's golden age was around the 2009-2013 time period and it all went down hill from there. I remember wasting my days in the high school library reading Cracked before it got irreversibly pozzed.
Bit of a sperg take, but I swear, starting off into the whole internet culture stuff in the mid-late 2000s, looking how it is now is basically the same feeling of the intro of Red Dead Redemption 1 where you're seeing the Wild West finally becoming tamed and civilized to the point where the frail old rich ladies now deem it safe to move in
"Our time has passed, John."
Its really wonky with what is pay walled and what is not. I've found copywrited material that was free to download, and then court document transcripts where I needed to pay. Then they have this weird system where you can download more if you upload pdfs, leading to a ton of corporate slideshows and other inane shit being uploaded,Scribd is another one. They keep flip flopping to being a pay site then not a pay site to whatever the fuck it is now. It can't really be that difficult to host PDF files and make it easy for people to discover them.
I hope that at some point a new Wild West era of the net will come to passIsn't it interesting that so many websites tried to take people's ability to have a voice away around the 2016 election?
It's really depressing how short lived the Wild West era of the internet was.
But what's really bad is that the internet isn't being clamped down on to maintain the old status quo, it's being clamped down on while evil, toxic, civilization destroying ideologies like feminism are being pushed, stuff that should be criticized, called out on and mocked at every opportunity.
The forces of identity extremism were unleashed from below the surface of society by the internet, but this isn't a matter of trying to tone down extremism in general, this is simply a matter of which flavor of extremism will be the winner.
The IMDB message boards were a blast. I can remember watching scary movies while reading what other fans have sad about the movie on the forums. Made it feel like a mix between a treasure hunt and having a group of friends watching with you.
Mad Magazine cucked out too. Before they were finally taken out behind the woodshed, they were constantly publishing unfuny totally-not-mad-bro tds "humor".Mad Magazine > Cracked
Mfw I'm watching a youtube vid of a Newgrounds flash from 2003 and the comments are "wow 2010 internet was wild!"When something from Newgrounds is linked, its usually a Youtube video recording. HTML5 and the death of Adobe Flash has probably been the biggest contributor to their downfall.
Mad Magazine cucked out too. Before they were finally taken out behind the woodshed, they were constantly publishing unfuny totally-not-mad-bro tds "humor".
I hope that at some point a new Wild West era of the net will come to pass
You also had that weirdo who posted "happy birthday" on every celebrity's board on their birthdays. EVERY DAY.
I used to think it was a bot, but it slowed down for a while and I realized it was an autist.
Unfortunately they're relaunching as direct-market and subscription only and with majority reprint content.That's disappointing to read. They need to bring back their movie parodies.