Originally Posted by Kaijima
(Post 567495)
The biggest problem with trying to mention "furries" on the Internets is that the Internets is, by this point, pretty much drunk on its own kool-aid of memes, fads, slang, and a massive filter that is designed to distort everything on it for the amusement of the Internets. Going and finding Youtube videos of people being stupid or trying to make "comedy gold" is not exactly an objective take on reality.
The reality with furries is that by any realistic standard, they're /geeks/. Their particular geeky fixation is anthropomorphic animals. The irony of furries being popular for gamer geek and computer geek culture to pick on, is that by the lights of the rest of culture, gamer and computer geeks are often see as "losers who fail at life" precisely because they "don't act, behave, have the manners, or interests" of "the rest of us, who are the NORMAL ones". I've been involved or around furry (and other, such as anime) fandom for a number of years. I've met a lot of people who have issues. Being objective however, I've met just as many people who have issues among Linux geeks, gamers, anime fans, and what have you. People who think they're "normal" and mainstream have just as many issues a lot of the time, that are more easily covered up by those issues blending in to mainstream society.
Furries do however, stand out because their particular gimmick is especially easy to notice. This does also make it easier for furries who have issues to make more dramatic displays with themselves. It /also/ makes it easier for everyone else to create simple stereotypes and slap them on everyone they possibly can.
Having said all that however, my experience has shown me it is also pretty true that "Internet Furries" do have a higher instance of living up to stereotypes, and that online furry culture is often a wriggling mass of bizarre fandom politics and drama. The problem there, again, is that it's the Internets. Put somebody on the Internet and give them an audience, and every bit of social conditioning that makes them behave in front of real live people flies out the window. For those who actually might be curious about all this wackiness, here's another secret of furry subculture: there's quite a split between "internet" and "real life" furries in many regions. Tons of furries have little to do with the online furry crowd and stay away like the plague. Tons of online furry fans don't even realize that the other kinds of furries exist, and this is one reason why you'll find strange, bizarre statements and explanations of what the whole thing is about in many online quarters.
It's interesting to watch the media's reaction to furry fandom continue to evolve for instance, as furries don't just run away after a few MTV specials. Over the last couple of years there have been more reporters attending furry conventions to see what the "controversy" is about. What has happened is that the reporters have had to go home mostly empty handed, having found a bunch of shockingly normal geeks who are almost indistinguishable from any other group of geeks and fans. Even the costumers, fursuiters, cosplayers, LARPers, and the like, have a regretable tendency to just not be, in person, what the Internet would prefer for its idle amusement. Yes, even with teh pr0n lurking in the corners.
Additional Spam:
If your culture pool says stuff like Zeal is cool, then of course it's less embarrassing! Or if emo death metal is your thing, of course it's awesome and not lame to go dress up like a goth rocker. Or maybe you're part of the cultural armada of sports fans and armchair quarterbacks, living out their penis-enhancing fantasies via their athletic heroes. It's certainly not stupid or embarrassing to go around wearing imitation football jerseys bearing the name and number of the substitute, modern-day war-god that you worship and identify with to bolster your self-image.
Anything can be made to seem stupid, foolish, or lame, and embarrassing. Sometimes, I think what really pisses certain people off, is seeing somebody happily doing or being something the viewer is embarrassed by personally. It's like a challenge to the onlookers security. I remember knowing a guy who was embarrassed whenever cartoons - any cartoons - were playing on a TV in the room. He thought all cartoons were idiotic and for 5 year old children. He further felt that just by being nearby a cartoon, he would be associated with them and thus seen as "immature".
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