An overpriveliged middle-class teenager who has never known a minute's want or true adversity in his life, yet is also for some strange reason covetous of the arduous existences of others. He reconciles his lack of real-world experience with his burning desire for some kind of excitement in his white-bread, $100 allowance a week existence by spending the majority of his time listening to terrible, angst-ridden rock music at a highly innapropriate volume whilst playing CS on the absurdly over-powered PC his dad bought for him.
In Marx's time religion was the opiate of the people, now it seems we have electronic entertainments to perform the same function. Go figure.
In Marx's time religion was the opiate of the people, now it seems we have electronic entertainments to perform the same function. Go figure.
by moley May 16, 2003
