Twitter: nashvillefeed
- Debate rages as Spotify, MOG, and Rdio kill / save the music industry | The Verge http://t.co/sAze95k6 03:04:51 PM January 27, 2012 from HootSuite ReplyRetweetFavorite
- RT @Willpower101: hey do any of you #bcn11 peeps have info on the hackathon-type-event that's going to be happening in november? I didn' ... 06:19:02 PM October 17, 2011 from HootSuite ReplyRetweetFavorite
- @obsolete29 @freakyweasel thanks for listening. We're going to do a live show at BarCamp tomorrow. #bcn11 04:52:51 PM October 14, 2011 from Twitter for iPhone in reply to obsolete29 ReplyRetweetFavorite
- @freakyweasel @sallaboutme @obsolete29 - don't know why we don't work in stitcher. BTW new show recorded live at BarCamp tomorrow. #bcn11 03:48:11 PM October 14, 2011 from HootSuite in reply to FreakyWeasel ReplyRetweetFavorite
- RT @mDave: blog tour: What Else Does BarCamp Nashville 2011 Offer - http://t.co/FE6k1Mjy #bcn11 09:13:46 PM October 12, 2011 from HootSuite ReplyRetweetFavorite
Sign up for The Nashville Tech Feed Newsletter | Tech, Music, Culture + More
Recommended Sites to Read
Meta
tattoo Archive
-
Painted and Poked: The Tattooing and Piercing of Generations X and Y
Posted on June 4, 2007 | No CommentsNot so long ago, tattoos enjoyed acceptance only in certain limited social circles: primarily bikers, longshoremen, and skanky strippers. At that same time, piercing was only suitable for earlobes, and even that was confined to a single gender. But sometime in the mid 1980s, a cultural shift took place. Maybe it was Axl Rose’s well-inked arms. Maybe it was a punk scene that was just beginning to poke its head above the underground water. Maybe it was simple youthful rebellion. Whatever the reason, tattooing and piercing established strong roots in the counter-culture of the time. Throughout the 1990s, both became progressively more accepted by mainstream twenty somethings. Generation X was painted and poked more than any generation before them.

