{"version": "1.0", "type": "rich", "title": "Realizing that the thing about the 2000s, certainly at least in my LA experience \u2013 neo-disco \"blog house\" DJed parties with...", "author_name": "kontextmaschine", "author_url": "https://kontextmaschine.com", "provider_name": "kontextmaschine", "provider_url": "https://kontextmaschine.com", "url": "https://kontextmaschine.com/post/693695286979264512/", "html": "<p>Realizing that the thing about the 2000s, certainly at least in my LA experience \u2013 neo-disco &ldquo;blog house&rdquo; DJed parties with photographers and not like, <i>scene</i> scene kids, but like the Mis-Shapes, Cory Kennedy, the kind of scene that &ldquo;<i>scene</i>&rdquo; was gesturing at, rooftop parties at art collectives, VICE magazine, hipsters \u2013 is that those are all recapitulations of things that originally came about in the load-bearing context of heavy hard drug use \u2013 heroin, cocaine, benzos and other pills \u2013 and were a little silly in our generation.\ufffc\ufffc</p><p>VICE started out (as government-funded CanCon) in Toronto when it was a beat, heroiny (but not white-flighted. Canada!) city. Back before they sold out (and were richly paid) a sort of raw-dadly &ldquo;don&rsquo;t be fucking junkies, kids&rdquo; was part of Gavin McInnes&rsquo; schtick.</p><p>And then I went to a free VICE party in Hollywood sponsored by Colt 45, which was funding it and giving free tallboys because before the &lsquo;08 crash alcohol companies just gave it away to establish brands with us urban (pre-social media use) &ldquo;influencers&rdquo; and I guess the &ldquo;indie sleaze&rdquo; 70s vibe (I used to live two blocks from the original American Apparel store!) matched up with the &ldquo;hey, remember Billy Dee Williams?&rdquo; branding. But it just\u2026 no. We were a wild, free, and fun-loving crowd <i>in that we were in our twenties</i>, but\u2026</p><p>I mean, part of it was we were the back-to-the-city generation, and that was the kind of authentic grittiness we had romanticized about the last time white life was lived in cities, the 1970s. Of course we were middle-class white, like 70s cities or the places where the headline meth and Oxy waves weren&rsquo;t.</p><p>Ecstasy kinda came back but they called it &ldquo;Molly&rdquo; and held &ldquo;raves&rdquo; in stadiums</p><p>Xanax was kind of a thing but as an anxiolytic it&rsquo;s kind of a combination of benzos that don&rsquo;t fuck you up and cocaine that doesn&rsquo;t get you speeding (cocaine is not only a stimulant but an anti-anxiety agent; when cokeheads tell you all about their brilliant idea for a screenplay/world domination scheme it&rsquo;s cause they&rsquo;re not only amped up but <i>disinhibited</i>)</p><p>Coke was <i>kind of</i> a thing, Gawker all &ldquo;can you imagine! there&rsquo;s a <i>coke bar</i> in Brooklyn (that surely sells trampled-on shit) called <i>Kokies</i>!&rdquo; </p><p>But that was kinda the suburbanites thrilled at their urban worldliness that they could even find anything harder than weed now, one $60 bag at a time, it wasn&rsquo;t really sybaritic excess. Even at post-warehouse sunrise afterparties where we got naked in the hot tub there were never <i>piles</i> of cocaine or anything, and we mostly made jokes and left by 9</p><p><i>Sparks</i>, that was our thing. Coming before Four Loko, it was the wild speedball combination of <i>malt liquor</i> and <i>caffeine</i>, that&rsquo;s how adventurous we were.</p>"}