New Age Retro Hippie: Difference between revisions
→Tabletop Games: Added to example
m (Mass update links) |
(→Tabletop Games: Added to example) |
||
(15 intermediate revisions by 6 users not shown) | |||
Line 1:
{{trope}}
[[File:haight-
Hippies are often depicted in television and video games as pot-loving, tie-dyed shirt-wearing, [[Disco Dan|stuck-in-the-'60s]] types who believe in [[Eternal Sexual Freedom|sexual freedom]], [[Nude Nature Dance|celebrating nature]] and railing against "[[The Government|the man]], man." While this was (and whoah, still is, you know, dude) true to some extent, it has been [[Flanderization|exaggerated]] ([[Rule of Funny|naturally]]) in fiction, dude.
Line 14:
Former hippies who joined the establishment while retaining their countercultural values become a specific type, the [[Bourgeois Bohemian]].
== [[Anime]] and [[Manga]] ==▼
▲=== Whoah, there's Examples, man: ===
* ''[[Turn
* Two unnamed hippies (a man and a woman, possibly a married couple) appeared several times in ''[[Yu-Gi-Oh! 5D's]]'', and were an essential element to the plot of one story.
▲== [[Anime]] ==
* In the dub of ''[[Yu-Gi-Oh! GX]]'', Human Wave duelist Belowski didn't dress as one (though his old Obelisk Blue uniform wasn't in very good condition) but he talked and acted like one.
▲* ''[[Turn a Gundam (Anime)|Turn a Gundam]]'' has the Red Team, a family of Moonrace-descended Terrans who wear hippie clothing and spend a lot of time getting drunk, dancing, and singing songs about the Moon. The rest of the Moonrace treats them... well, kind of like real life hippies are treated. They're a subversion though: rather than countercultural peace-lovers, they are warriors absolutely loyal to the Lunar Queen, Dianna Soriel.
== [[Comic Books]] ==
* Ted Richards' underground comic ''[[The Forty Year Old Hippie]]'' came out ca. 1979 - the title character looks about 70, and regales youngsters with stories about the old days. His catch phrases: "Over 200 trips and they've all been bummers - but I ain't givin' up!" and "I ain't been high since The Pot of '69!"
* The most well-known version of ''[[Justice League]]'' villain Prometheus (the one whose name has never been revealed) was the son of a hippie couple - who were also cold-blooded [[Serial Killer]]s who were eventually gunned down in a police sting. Their son grew up to be just as rotten.
== [[
* Clearwater Commune in ''[[DC Nation]]'' fits this. Founded on [[Actual Pacifist]] principles, and implied to have devolved a bit into the [[Granola Girl]] trope. Led by [[Retired Badass]] "Brother" Joseph Cross, who is [[The Atoner|atoning for the atrocities he committed during the Vietnam War]]. The Titan Fauna was born and raised on the Commune, and remains as much of
== [[Film]] ==
* The Dude from ''[[
* ''[[Flirting With Disaster]]'' has Ben Stiller looking for his birth parents - they turn out to be old hippies (Alan Alda and Lily Tomlin) who passionately argue that LSD shouldn't be a felony (as well they would, as they're manufacturing it).
* In ''[[I Love You Alice B Toklas]]'', [[Peter Sellers]]' character joins a hippie commune, and is quickly disenchanted with them.
* Filmore in ''[[Cars]]''. Since the cast is made up of cars, he's naturally a VW microbus.
* William Sturtevant, in ''[[San Francisco International Airport]]''. Is falsely accused of starting a fight.
* Sgt Oddball in ''[[
* As opposed to that other [[Clint Eastwood]] movie ''[[Heartbreak Ridge]]'', where he's informed that hippies no longer exist.
* [[Significant Monogram|Lorenzo St. Dubois]], the actor who Max and Leo find to play Hitler in [[The Producers]] (the original film).
Line 39 ⟶ 40:
* ''The Blithedale Romance'' by Nathaniel Hawthorne portrayed a proto-version of the trope as early as 1852 (albeit with Transcendentalists rather than hippies proper.)
* ''[[Paris in The Twentieth Century]]'', written in the 1860s, has as its 1960s protagonist a [[Love Freak]] and self-proclaimed poet who grows his hair long and detests corporations. He's not a drug addict, but the foundations of the trope can be seen. (Again, this was probably working off the Transcendentalists.)
* Starflower Creed from ''[[Love in
* Gloria Glyczwych (Witch Gliz) and her gay traveling companion John
* Practically every human character we see in the 1967 science-fiction novel ''[[The Butterfly Kid]]'', but subverted in that there's no "Retro" here -- in the 1976 of the book, the hippie counterculture is still a vibrant and living thing, almost at the tipping point where it stops being "counter" and becomes the culture. And the narration suggests that that's exactly what happened after the events of the book.
== [[Live Action TV]] ==
* Leo on ''[[That
** The hippie persona of Tommy Chong is a character he played, not his real personality. Though he was indeed a hippie back in the day it wasn't to the extent you see in his comedy routines.
* There was an early episode of ''[[All in The Family]]'' where a pair of hippie friends of Meathead's come to visit. For once, Gloria and Meathead come around to Archie's point of view about them. Mostly, because the guests believe in wife-swapping.
* Half the cast of ''[[Dharma and Greg]]'', this being the premise of the show. Larry, Dharma's father, was the most [[Egregious]] example, compared to his unmarried partner in a very [[Over and Under
* The last ''Quartermass'' somehow managed to combine this and [[The New Rock and Roll]]; the cities are decaying, and one symptom of this is a band of violent
* [[The Young Ones]]:Shut up, hippie.
* Naomi's mum Gina from ''[[Skins]]'' is this; she's turned their house into a commune populated by naked people, Jesus lookalikes, free love (one of the hippies notes of just-woken-up-naked-Naomi that "it's nothing he hasn't seen before", and she's "even got the same haircut her mum does"
* A religious cult of hippies who appear to worship trees to the extent of almost having sex with them appears in an episode of ''[[
* Buzz Sherwood from ''[[The Red Green Show]]'', though a bit more energetic than most hippies.
== [[Music]] ==
* One of the characters in [[Ayreon]]'s ''Into the Electric Castle'' seems to fit this - he's referred to only as "the Hippie" and for the first half of the album thinks that it's all an incredible drug trip. [[What Do You Mean It Wasn't Made
== [[Professional Wrestling]] ==
Line 60 ⟶ 62:
== [[Tabletop Games]] ==
* Done slightly better in ''[[
== [[Theatre]] ==
* Pretty much the whole main cast of ''[[Hair (theatre)|Hair]]'', a "tribe" of politically active bohemian hippies in New York City, fighting conscription into the [[Vietnam War]].
== [[Video Games]] ==
* The [[Trope Namer]] is the New Age Retro Hippie from ''[[
** Oddly enough, in ''[[
** The music apparently wasn't Jimmy Hart-ed enough: It was cut from ''[[Super Smash Bros.|Super Smash Bros. Brawl]]'' and it's been cited as one of the biggest obstacles to an American re-release of ''Earthbound'', due to copyright concerns.
** Hippies appear in ''[[
* Shinta Iwata, the owner of the ''Cosmic Corner'' shop in ''[[
* ''[[
{{quote|
'''The Truth:''' Shoot? I'm a hippie. The only thing I've shot is acid. I heard of a dude snorted it once. Thought his nose was a kangaroo and the moon was a dog! }}
* ''[[Kingdom of Loathing]]'' features hippies rather prominently in a late-game quest involving a large-scale war between a hippie enclave and a dorm of frat-orcs.
* ''[[Persona 4]]'': {{spoiler|Kunino-sagiri}} may not be a
* The Elves of ''[[Overlord II]]'' are an entire race of this and are the closest thing to a [[Hero Antagonist]] this series has.
* Annie Frazier of ''[[Backyard Sports]]'' is a total New Age Retro Hippie, even though she's from the '90s.
Line 81 ⟶ 86:
== Web Comics ==
* [http://www.egscomics.com/?date=2008-04-16 Victor von Hip] from ''[[
* The Star family from [[
== [[Western Animation]] ==
Line 88 ⟶ 93:
** Appropriately enough for ''[[The Simpsons]]'', Mona's character has been [[Flanderization|Flanderized]] in each of her subsequent appearances. Originally, she was supposed to be more of a New Left radical than a hippie (which is why there was a massive police manhunt for her). Then again, in [[Real Life]] just about anyone who was "unconventional" in some way during the 1960s probably fell under the "hippie" umbrella.
** There's been a few other generic hippies in Springfield, such as the woman running the New Age shop with the sensory deprivation tanks, and the guy who runs the recycling stand:
{{quote|
'''Hippie:''' Sounds like somebody's livin' in the past! Contemporize, man! }}
** Ned Flanders' parents are often called "hippies" by fans, but they were, in fact, "beatniks", a different type of counterculture that started in the '50s.
* Cartman from ''[[South Park]]'' hates hippies with a passion, to the extent that he runs a hippie extermination business. While Cartman [[Axe Crazy|has issues]], the hippie swarm is definitely the villain of this episode.
** These hippies seem to vary between traditional dirty party-hippies and upper-class Boulderite socialist-elitist hippies. To a modern Coloradoan, of course, the difference between the two is quite superficial.
*** The irony, of course, is that the original 1960s hippies (''including'' the socialist ones, though they weren't really hippies in the truest sense of the word) were infamous for spitting in the face of the elites of ''their'' era. Depending on your point of view, this has apparently been a case of either [[Rule
* ''[[The Goode Family]]'', Mike Judge's follow-up to ''[[King of the Hill]]'', makes hippie/activist folks the main thrust of its comedy.
* The best friend/owner of ''[[Scooby Doo]]'', Shaggy, is the fully G-rated comic relief version of this trope, and has remained this way in every incarnation.
* One episode of ''[[Avatar: The Last Airbender]]'' introduces the closest thing that the [[Fan Nickname|Avaverse]] has to
* Mandark's parents in ''[[
* [[The Nameless]] store owner in ''[[The Mighty B!]]'' is a walking hippie archetype, complete with a beard you could get lost in.
* ''[[King of the Hill]]'' has them feature in an episode where they have a nonprofit fruit and veg store. And they start panicking once Hank makes them more efficient and they start ... ''earning money''!!
* Mr. Van Driessen from ''[[Beavis and Butthead]]''.
Line 108 ⟶ 114:
== [[Truth in Television]] ==
* [
* Explore the San Francisco Bay Area a bit and you're bound to find a few of these somewhere. Especially common in the city of Berkeley and the Haight-Ashbury district of San Francisco.
** One suspects that much of the scenery is really the result of market-savvy former hippies [[The Theme Park Version|playing up the simplified stereotypes for all they're worth]] [[Modern Minstrelsy|in order to amuse and pander to uninformed outsiders]]. The "multicolored tie-dyed clothing," for example, [[Unbuilt Trope|wasn't even that ubiquitous in the '60s]]. If you look at quite a few of the pictures of "flower children" from that era, you'll notice that they're often wearing fairly drab clothing (partly, of course, a sign of their aloofness from middle-class materialism, but also simply to keep
----
Line 120 ⟶ 126:
[[Category:Did Not Do the Research]]
[[Category:The Sixties]]
[[Category:Self
[[Category:
|