Yes, but then again as Henry Ford would himself say, at least he’s not a Jew.
What ?
To me, it’s the opposite. Nerds possess a trove of knowledge and references (and, these days, skills), none of which applies to anything that would ever make them money ever. Nerds know the stats ofa Greater Shadow by heart, they can quote Vizzini’s logic to the letter, they’d know how to build a non-threatening robot using Asimov laws if only they knew thing one about electronics.
Geeks on the other hand can jot down the Mendelbrot set by heart and know Pi to the 457th decimal. They can recite all 20 amino-acids and they never even went to med school, they just learned them for fun or because they were vaguely interested. It’s much less glamorous, and really much less likely to get anyone interested at parties (déjà que…). OTOH, it might let them drive a rover on Mars or somesuch. The useless gits. Did any of the fuckers at NASA platinum Dark Souls, that’s what I wanna know.
See, I think this is the wrong way around, because - as pointed out upthread - the origin of the term “geek” was the sideshow guys at travelling circuses who would bite the heads off live chickens. Which is a skill with only marginally more utility than knowing the name of all the Star Destroyers that appear in a Star Wars film.
Nerds are social outcasts, geeks are obsessives. But the Venn Diagram on this is huge.
22
I identify as a nerd.
Meanwhile, msmith537 is Poe-ing me hard in this thread. Is he being sincere, or making fun of the anti-nerd attitudes of others?
I was a math and science nerd throughout grade school – later, when computers were readily available, I did become a computer nerd. I had one young woman in my neighborhood punch me because her mom would bug her and say things like ‘why can’t you be more like that kid down the block’ (meaning me). Later, I was bullied relentlessly in Jr. High, which did wonders for my happiness. It’s not being a nerd that makes nerds unhappy. It’s not being a nerd that makes nerds lack in social skills. It’s being forced to keep ones head down so that you aren’t noticed that does that. Fortunately, I got my revenge by getting a great job making a more than comfortable salary, and being treated with respect when I got older. On the other hand, the bullying and bad genes contribute to me to eventually have a complete breakdown later in life, so there’s that…
And btw, I didn’t get into comic books until I was in college, and only because our campus coffeehouse (which was actually a large living room in a house converted into a coffeehouse) had tons of comic books all over the place. Sometimes you had to move the comics to find a place to sit down and eat. Also, they had these old pinball games, that if you dropped them just right, would give you free games, and an intellivision with all the games.
Well, aside from the fact that nerds seem to bother you way too much…
I interviewed at ad agencies (in Seattle, though not sure that’s relevant), and noticed that as I moved up the ladder of talking to better and better agencies, and interviewing with Art Directors, then Creative Directors, VPs and owners, those higher on the food chain dressed sloppier (well, okay, more comfortably).
If I could dress any way I wanted to, that’d be a big plus in choosing a workplace.
Hmmm, if almost everyone is more comfortable in jeans, why are so many people willing to wear tight three-piece suits and clunky wingtips (oh, and ties constricting blood flow to their brains)? msmith, which ones are the “smart people” again?
Backslapping consulting bros and other linear warriors can eventually become bitter when they compare themselves to quadratic mages.
I’m not a nerd, Bart. Nerds are smart.
Cause and effect is wrong. If people are making their superheroes do what they want, but not their politicians, then it’s not because they only care about superheroes. It’s because they don’t have the power to change the politicians, so they instead change their fantasy.
Superheroes are popular because the average person feels powerless. Not because nerds are more common. The same thing has happened before.
Hi,
My name is guestchaz, and I am an “ultimate nerd”.
I work at a physically demanding job, awash in a vast sea of manly macho jock testosterone, where I don’t fit quite right because I like reading books and scifi movies more than sports. I don’t care that I don’t fit completely, I love the physical nature of my job.
We share a similar preference.
However, I’d note that boozing, gaming, (and womanizing) have a long tradition in management/business culture. It’s prevalence in modern offices is not the fault of a geek culture infiltration, but rather a natural downward extension of executive culture.