Consoomers / Consoomer Culture - Because if it has a recogniseable brand on it, I’d buy it!

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First of all, collagen molecules are too big to enter the skin. Hydrolyzed collagen, too small or something. But point is, topical collagen only works as an fancy moisturiser. It gives the skin a silky feel at least.
It's better to just microneedle and apply tretinoin afterwards. if you don't want to do have a healing time. This is why I don't fucking trust aestheticians.
This isn't dermatologist knowledge, but aestheticians just have this formal training. Which is an quickie on skin, which I doubt they have to update themselves on. At least dermatologists lose their license if they aren't up to date.

I have seen an aesthetician on jewtube that thought tretinoin is toxic, which it is not. If you're not pregnant, but you can't take lots of things then. But yep, I could see an aesthetician in my country say that too.
 
I don't have a problem with people collecting shit like that if I'm being honest. It's just fans being passionate about their hobbies. I do have a problem with hipsters collecting shit for the novelty of it and not giving a shit about it other than to either make money or look special, ruining it people who are passionate about their hobbies.
If you need a separate building to house your McDonald's memorabilia you have a problem.
 
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double whammy
 
I dunno, we love the hand-made porcelain tea cups and saucers my grandma left us. We only use them on special occasions but they’re really fucking nice. Kind of glad she collected those back in the 40s and 50s. Most were hand painted in England. Whatever; if you don’t want your boomer parents stuff sell it or donate who gives a fuck.
 
I dunno, we love the hand-made porcelain tea cups and saucers my grandma left us. We only use them on special occasions but they’re really fucking nice. Kind of glad she collected those back in the 40s and 50s. Most were hand painted in England. Whatever; if you don’t want your boomer parents stuff sell it or donate who gives a fuck.
Those are actually nice and well made though. A lot of us get stuck with basement Home Shopping Network trash and an expansive Precious Moments collection.
Kinda reminds me of the boomers who have an entire warehouse full of 60s muscle cars. I usually keep my little personal collection in my room.
It's just organized hoarding once you reach that scale.
 
I don't have a problem with people collecting shit like that if I'm being honest. It's just fans being passionate about their hobbies. I do have a problem with hipsters collecting shit for the novelty of it and not giving a shit about it other than to either make money or look special, ruining it people who are passionate about their hobbies.

On one hand there are not directly hurting anybody, on another hand:

1/It's just hoarding and consuming. They are hoarder who have money and can organize their collection, but the drive to accumulate to fill the emptiness inside is not that dissimilar. (same with rich people and cars)
2/A lot of that is trash. It's shitty toys that are gonna lose their luster pretty fast.
 
Now you've done it.

Boomer collections:
https://youtube.com/watch?v=ZSzlKV4Hp9Qhttps://youtube.com/watch?v=QL4peQt_glA
Boomer leisure:
View attachment 3461956

Boomer spending:
View attachment 3461959

Articles for Boomers:
View attachment 3461899View attachment 3461881View attachment 3461884View attachment 3461903View attachment 3461906
(If you want the full articles, find 'em yourselves, lazy Boomers.)
Someone should start "upcycling" those unwanted Boomer china hutches into Funko Pop hutches.
 
I don't have a problem with people collecting shit like that if I'm being honest. It's just fans being passionate about their hobbies. I do have a problem with hipsters collecting shit for the novelty of it and not giving a shit about it other than to either make money or look special, ruining it people who are passionate about their hobbies.

Yeah, it’s weird when it reaches that size, but I can’t help but feel a little respect towards the SW boomer, who managed to turn his collection into an actual museum/tourist attraction.

And other fans get to enjoy it too, which is cool.

I know that consolefags/game fags have a pretty competitive collectors environment where they just hoard stuff and never let anyone take a peek at it.

If they have some techdemo of an unreleased title, or some obscure piece of SEGA software they’ll sit on that shit and get some perverse joy from knowing that they might be one of the few people who’ve ever seen it.
 
Yeah, it’s weird when it reaches that size, but I can’t help but feel a little respect towards the SW boomer, who managed to turn his collection into an actual museum/tourist attraction.

And other fans get to enjoy it too, which is cool.

I know that consolefags/game fags have a pretty competitive collectors environment where they just hoard stuff and never let anyone take a peek at it.

If they have some techdemo of an unreleased title, or some obscure piece of SEGA software they’ll sit on that shit and get some perverse joy from knowing that they might be one of the few people who’ve ever seen it.
A lot of the boomer collectors could make some nice retirement pocket money by opening up museums for dumb shit. People love a weird tourist trap.

There is definitely a war going on with the game collectors though. You've got preservationists vs the secret hoarders/speculators. It's interesting to watch.

One wants to keep their stuff private like you said, the other is willing to obsessively order Toys R Us advertisement cards off ebay and scan/archive them. They're literally just small pieces of cardboard with usually just the game box on them so you could read what you were buying. They'll easily pay $25+ for a single card.


I discovered them not that long ago. The amount of money this man has in small pieces of cardboard with no new information or even visuals from the game boxes is impressive.
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I dunno, we love the hand-made porcelain tea cups and saucers my grandma left us. We only use them on special occasions but they’re really fucking nice. Kind of glad she collected those back in the 40s and 50s. Most were hand painted in England. Whatever; if you don’t want your boomer parents stuff sell it or donate who gives a fuck.
Those are hand-made porcelain teacups, and there's a reason that's the sort of thing focused on in the article; they resonate with the audience as "things that have value" so they can go "Dumb, lazy adult children! They don't care about anything but the newest electronic device! They prefer experiences!"
Like Yaks said, this:
A lot of us get stuck with basement Home Shopping Network trash and an expansive Precious Moments collection.
is much more common. Precious Moments less so these days, but "trash" is still the bulk of what's out there.
Younger people who have room for "things" aren't universally going to reject well-made, older items, the problem I'm seeing much more often irl is that the Boomer parents either:
A. Wants to "downsize" for retirement or just because they're getting older, and wants the child to keep their things
or
B. The parent has fucked up in some way and has to move and wants the adult child to "hold on to" their stuff
Let me be clear here, this is all happening while the Boomers are still alive. Boomers may want to know their shit is going "to a good home" but when they're dead they don't get a vote and wouldn't care anyway.
All this conflict is happening because these people are still alive, and in some way, they don't want to part with their crap. They see "giving it to their children" as a way to keep their stuff in their lives, but won't admit it to themselves or others.


Someone should start "upcycling" those unwanted Boomer china hutches into Funko Pop hutches.
 
Yeah, it’s weird when it reaches that size, but I can’t help but feel a little respect towards the SW boomer, who managed to turn his collection into an actual museum/tourist attraction.

And other fans get to enjoy it too, which is cool.

I know that consolefags/game fags have a pretty competitive collectors environment where they just hoard stuff and never let anyone take a peek at it.

If they have some techdemo of an unreleased title, or some obscure piece of SEGA software they’ll sit on that shit and get some perverse joy from knowing that they might be one of the few people who’ve ever seen it.
I have a pretty decent size collection and I'm not that anal about people touching my shit.
 
On one hand there are not directly hurting anybody, on another hand:

1/It's just hoarding and consuming. They are hoarder who have money and can organize their collection, but the drive to accumulate to fill the emptiness inside is not that dissimilar. (same with rich people and cars)
2/A lot of that is trash. It's shitty toys that are gonna lose their luster pretty fast.
I don't know dude. Your words are actually motivating me to get back into collecting and befriend other like minded fellows. Might actually buy a library shelf to store my games too while I'm at it.
 
I don't know dude. Your words are actually motivating me to get back into collecting and befriend other like minded fellows.
With used game prices these days, good luck, lol. When the bubble pops, I'm gonna buy up hell of deals at yard sales but I ain't paying no three hundred bux for The Jetsons on NES
 
With used game prices these days, good luck, lol. When the bubble pops, I'm gonna buy up hell of deals at yard sales but I ain't paying no three hundred bux for The Jetsons on NES
Just waiting for the bubble to pop really. Kinda hard to justify buying a 500$ PS1 game when you aren't making a 6 figure salary.
 
See you in a few years on your youtube channel showing off your 15 copies of Barbie Horse Girl Simulator.
 
Zoomer shopping network:

Boomer shopping network (live at the time I'm making this post):

Looks like I'm going to build a warehouse to store my games then.
I have a pretty decent size collection and I'm not that anal about people touching my shit.
Use the multiquote, broski. Just hit that little "quote" link at the bottom of posts, then when you go to the composition box at bottom click the "Insert Quotes" button and it will put them all into a single post.
 
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