Subcultures used to cost you something. Now they cost you nothing — and that's exactly the problem.
In this episode of Threads of Culture, we unpack how algorithm-driven platforms systematically hollowed out subculture, transforming authentic identity into consumable content and leaving an entire generation performing belonging without ever actually experiencing it.
We explore the historical roots of subculture — from punk to rave to goth — and how these movements once demanded real commitment, real risk, and real community. Then we trace the shift: how platforms like TikTok and Instagram flattened these rich cultural ecosystems into aesthetic templates, mood boards, and trending audio clips. We examine the rise of the "-core" phenomenon, where identity is reduced to a visual vocabulary stripped of its original meaning, politics, and lived experience.
This episode also digs into what we've lost in this transition — the friction, the gatekeeping debates, the local scenes, the sense of discovery — and asks whether genuine subculture can still emerge in an attention economy designed to commodify everything it touches. We look at branding, design, and the cultural forces that accelerated this collapse, and consider what comes next for a generation hungry for authenticity in a landscape engineered for performance.
If you're interested in culture, design, branding, and the invisible forces shaping how we express who we are, this channel is for you. Subscribe to Threads of Culture and join the conversation.