When (and Why) Did Geek Culture Become Mainstream?
Even though geek media has been usurped (or, at least, borrowed or shared) by casual mainstream fans, there is still a quality that sets geeks apart.
Even though geek media has been usurped (or, at least, borrowed or shared) by casual mainstream fans, there is still a quality that sets geeks apart.
If you’re on Hulu a lot, you might be missing some of the greatest bingeable series available right now.
As mainstream media is saturated with bad news, our favorite shows and movies embrace the lighter side of life. Geek Travel Guide thinks we need a little happiness right now.
Being a geek isn’t about what fandom we’re in or the universes that we love. Being a geek is about the connections that those geekdoms gift us.
Geeks have always been the counterculture. We find comfort in strange new worlds and in sharing our passions with others who are like us.
Being a geek is showing a secret part of yourself. There’s no time you see more of someone than when they’re showing you what they love.
Being a geek was a bad thing in the ’90s. Then found friends who understood my language. There was no longer a torturous incompatibility in my source code.