The Quincy Punk: Difference between revisions
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{{trope}}
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{{quote|''"Punk (music) is nothing but death and crime and the ''rage of a beast!''"''|'''[[Batman]]''', ''Fortunate Son''}}
Every youth subculture gets its moment to be [[The New Rock and Roll]]
But where the general societal backlash to a subculture tends to abate over time, there's still the idea that punk is violent and nihilistic. Maybe it's the pervasive nature of the imagery. Maybe it was the hardcore seeding of memetics that painted punks as people who wanted to tear the system down and piss on the ashes. Or maybe it was because [[Sex Pistols|Sid Vicious]] fucked it all up for everyone else.
Hence, the Quincy Punk. The Quincy Punk looks for all the world like a stereotypical
For actual information on Punk rock, see [[Punk]] or the [[Punk Rock]] page. Nothing to do with [[John Quincy Adams|the president]], unless some tell-all biography reveals his youthful radicalism. [http://www.amazon.com/Destroy-Movies-Complete-Guide-Punks/dp/1606993631/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1293676826&sr=8-1 There's now a book out that's a field guide to these sorts of portrayals, paired with the rare cases where the creators actually knew what the hell they were doing.]
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== [[Comic Books]] ==
* As Linkara from ''[[Atop the Fourth Wall]]'' has covered, there was an infamous ''[[Batman]]'' graphic novel called "Fortunate Son" about Batman's strange relationship with rock and roll. In flashback, Bruce Wayne reveals that as an angry young man, he went to Europe and fell in with the punk
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