Spring Breakers, growing up, & the evolution of youth

Apr 4, 2013

There’s like, a bunch of  stuff about Harmony Korine in the weirdo news.  I never saw any of these clips before- but they’re gaining views.


Harmony Korine in 1996

Back in my day, we didn’t have YouTube to help us find other weirdos.  We had the magazine section of Tower Records and chance opportunities for a single-air televison viewing.  I must not have been watching Letterman on my teeny black-and-white rabbit-ear TV these nights.


Harmony Korine in 1997

I loved Harmony Korine’s Kids, his book Crack-Up at the Race Riots (now being re-released), and I used that book as a personal branding tool, just like my Dead Kennedys stickers and brightly dyed hair.  The intimidating cover, a cross burning in front of bunny costumes was cultish and provocative and frightening.  I laid it on my desk each day as a measuring stick– did you get it?  Were you cool?

Crackup At The Race Riots Harmony Korine

Today the world of weirdo weird stuff is so accessible.  It’s popular culture:  six of the 2012’s top grossing movies were fantasy or superhero films.  My little sister and I, thirteen years apart, independently discovered the amazingness of Kembra Pfahler.

Kembra Pfahler Beautalism Book

While I scoured record stores for secondhand Richard Kern videotapes and desperately hoped to find interviews in fly-by-night indie zines, my sister pulled Kembra’s entire videography from YouTube, has a file folder of photographs, and maintains a tribute blog.

Cassette Tapes Letters Old School Communication

The differences in our cultural absorption are huge.  Where my teenage self had to get in the car, grab my friends, then pool our resources as we sought the strange, today’s generation can access, absorb, and catalog their preferences in an atmosphere that not only supports this behavior but rewards it.  One is not better than the other; but they are different.

Teenage Diary Gibson Guitar

As I grow older, I don’t want to lose my teenage sense of justice and wonder.  Teenagers are so pure in their self-obsessed anxieties and indestructible immortality.  I recently went to a Crystal Castles show.   One teenage ecstasy-seller actually wanted to see my ID after I told him “I’m too old for drugs, my friend.”  He could NOT BELIEVE I was born in the 80’s.  

Sonic Youth Negatives Film Thurston Moore

My need to stay connected to youth isn’t based in any sexual appeal of minors (god, no, they’re BABIES), or in order to represent myself as younger.  It’s based in the need to stay culturally afloat,  mentally alert, and CREATIVELY RELEVANT.   I found this quote from Harmony Korine to be extremely  insightful:

“The soul has morphed. It’s become something else. It’s a new idea. It’s a new vision. It’s about kids that are raised on video games and YouTube clips. Television babies. The step from watching to doing is sometimes very small.”

What a fluid observation on pop culture.  Using my access to online weirdos and thinkers, I keep uncovering thoughful support for the theory of an emerging energy shift.  The future is being created, and we older Milennials on the cusp must cross the digital bridge with determination.   Our youth of restless real-world wandering no longer exists.   It’s time to digitize ourselves.

I had a friend who had a brother who skated with Harmony Korine when Harmony briefly lived in Vegas.  This is only a story I’ve heard.  I have no proof.  But it feels like a real connection, and it lent authenticity to my copy of Crack-Up at the Race Riots as I laid it on my desk as a challenge and expression of my personal “brand.”

But if I follow Harmony on Twitter and he tweets back at me…. is that more or less real?  

 

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *