Freakscene
Obscure member
Excuse my digression, just asking from a linguistic perspective: Is this the German word "Dreck", which means "dirt", "rubbish"?
Ja, das ist es.
Sorry, my German is execrable. I have no idea if that’s even vaguely right.
Excuse my digression, just asking from a linguistic perspective: Is this the German word "Dreck", which means "dirt", "rubbish"?
Yes. Also Yiddish as 'drek', both meaning the same thing. It's an old slang word which has been around for decades, mostly in America.Excuse my digression, just asking from a linguistic perspective: Is this the German word "Dreck", which means "dirt", "rubbish"?
Ja, das ist es.Ja, das ist es.
Sorry, my German is execrable. I have no idea if that’s even vaguely right.
Interesting. While in German it is not slang, but normal use, I´ve never read it in English before.Yes. Also Yiddish as 'drek', both meaning the same thing. It's an old slang word which has been around for decades, mostly in America.
I remember hearing it a lot growing up around Rochester NY, not sure why. I remember it as Russian though.Interesting. While in German it is not slang, but normal use, I´ve never read it in English before.
Thank you, gentlemen!
I remember hearing it a lot growing up around Rochester NY, not sure why. I remember it as Russian though.
toda ravaДрек in Russian means the same thing. It came into Russian from Yiddish, and ultimately from German.
TV's got cheaper which meant folks who were less affluent could buy them. And generally the less affluent are less sophisticated and the live drama was relaced by quiz shows, soap operas and serial TV shows.
There's a German philosopher called Theodor Adorno who seems relevant here; he wrote a lot about the difference between "high culture" and "low culture" in the 1960s, and is generally talked about as if he absolutely despised popular culture, but it's worth pointing out his earlier works dealt more with the method of delivery than an elitist stratification of culture itself. There's a quote referenced in his Wikipedia page that says it well: "The meaning of a Beethoven symphony heard while the listener is walking around or lying in bed is very likely to differ from its effect in a concert hall where people sit as if they were in church."Careful now, someone will look at what you've written and infer that you're elitist. 😄 But the wider the spread of technology, the lower and lower the common denominator of users becomes. Now that every man and his dog has the internet, every man and his dog can post whatever they like.
There's a German philosopher called Theodor Adorno who seems relevant here; he wrote a lot about the difference between "high culture" and "low culture" in the 1960s, and is generally talked about as if he absolutely despised popular culture, but it's worth pointing out his earlier works dealt more with the method of delivery than an elitist stratification of culture itself. There's a quote referenced in his Wikipedia page that says it well: "The meaning of a Beethoven symphony heard while the listener is walking around or lying in bed is very likely to differ from its effect in a concert hall where people sit as if they were in church."
I think that's both the root of the TV and Internet issues here. Regardless of their socio-economic background, it seems that the less effort people have to put in, the less they value the result (or the thing they consume). That's what's really fuelling the "race to the bottom".
Someone else mentioned Usenet; I've been thinking a lot lately about "eternal September", or the changing of Usenet's culture when Usenet access was bundled in with AOL accounts, flooding the service with non-techy users. That basically defines the entire internet for me: while Web 2.0 et al. claimed to be democratising the internet, reducing the barriers to entry (or, more accurately, creation) just flooded the entire web with low-effort, poorly-thought-through noise with no curation. And people saw this as a get-rich-quick scheme, monetising it through one idea or the other (YouTube ad revenue, paid influencers, crypto, etc.) while simultaneously trying to find ways of doing it faster and faster with less effort (leading to the GenAI-created slop that is overwhelming every space on the internet now).
Same thing's happened with news: people don't read any more. They don't study. They don't take time to understand. They just want it fast and easily consumable. And companies and corporations want to give them that, because it's quicker and costs less for them to make while bringing in more money.
I don't know how to undo that rot, but making the whole thing more difficult again might be a start.
It's a sobering reminder that the internet is not a free platform. Maybe it was designed to be, but we all agreed to be herded into privately-held sandboxes, which will only become increasingly censored on what ideology can be represented.And yet Politics and Good photos are at the center of Leica.
interestingly the word 'Schmutz' is also from Yiddish and is a synonym for DreckДрек in Russian means the same thing. It came into Russian from Yiddish, and ultimately from German.
Excuse my digression, just asking from a linguistic perspective: Is this the German word "Dreck", which means "dirt", "rubbish"?
I have to correct myself a little. Dreck is proletarian/lower bourgeoise, while Schmutz is more upper class. Scheiss is pure proletarian.Yes, demagogy in use but more polite than Sheiss
Good to know! From now on, "scheiss" will be my preferred term. Long live the victory of the proletariat! 😉I have to correct myself a little. Dreck is proletarian/lower bourgeoise, while Schmutz is more upper class. Scheiss is pure proletarian.
It's a sobering reminder that the internet is not a free platform. Maybe it was designed to be, but we all agreed to be herded into privately-held sandboxes, which will only become increasingly censored on what ideology can be represented.
I didn't mean "no cost," I meant free as in freedom of information and expression. As you say, that was hardly the intention of the original architects of the web, but there was a dream... I remember it in the 90s and early 00s...The point is that it was never really a "free" thing, nor was it intended to be. The researchers, of course, gave "free" access to their students but even that was paid for by someone.
I didn't mean "no cost," I meant free as in freedom of information and expression. As you say, that was hardly the intention of the original architects of the web, but there was a dream... I remember it in the 90s and early 00s...
I remember a couple of marketing types at WANG Labs complaining about the engineers having troubles getting TCP/IP working on the VS systems. They were so used to developing their own products that often didn't see the light of day. They had text (WANG Office Mail) to voice (read into voice mail messages) down so well with their PBX back in the mid 80's it was amazing.Well, you know, yesterdays weapons become today's toaster ovens 😉 Almost all of the technology we enjoy today around the world has its roots in the US military systems of the 1960s (the space race) and 1970s (internet et al).
If only they could come up with a safe fusion reactor to power my house ...
Perhaps chuckroast made a Freudian slip. Mr. Capa, dashing and handsome, had quite the reputation as a "ladies' man", as the phrase goes. Something of a randy old goat, you might say.