You know, I was pondering the whole popular click stereotype, and I think it is poorly defined. It's not what Disney Channel (yes I'm harping on them again, they're like my conservative media) thinks, where they are all extremely obnoxious and everyone has to like them except the protagonist. I think it's more that, there's this group of really social people, who obviously get out more and probably have sex earlier in life, and that lifestyle is looked up to. These people are usually for some reason or another, very outspoken. I know this doesn't define them, it's just ties on to the culture; I know this because I joke around in a very crude humor style with these people roughly four or five times a week. I also know that it's not the physical attractiveness of the people, all be it that does help. I believe it to be the situation and lifestyle of the person to be what other people envy, not the people themselves. I really stopped remembering what my point of writing this was, I just think the entertainment industry doesn't have this down, and because of this all of their "marketed to young teenagers" shows that six through eight-year-old girls watch regularly is badly altering the opinion of these people; it's makes them look for and classify situations as they would be on a sitcom. They believe, or want, life to be like these shows, and because of that they have a strongly influenced opinion on topics such as popularity and clicks which originated from the really extremist stereotypical characters found on those shows. Yeah, that sounds like what I meant to say. I do want to make it clear, I don't have much of a problem with these people for the most part, if you are around them enough, class, work, etc., you start to see their good points as well as the bad. That is to say, my list of who to shoot when I lose my mind Columbine-style is blank.
I had another point, but I lost it somewhere in the middle of that. Oh well.