The mook was described as a man who is not grown up, or someone who is immature. One of the first people I thought of when this was said was Adam Sandler who is probably the king of the mooks. He is a grown man who stars in movies where he is typically a sort of immature man who resorts to crude humor and complains a lot. This was the description more from a decade at least ago. Today, I see the mook as more of someone who is "punk." Like the 20+ year olds you see who have tattoos, gauges, probably smoke, probably ride a skateboard, or probably sing/play the guitar. They live the party lifestyle that certain teens want and want the freedom of adolescence to still be relevant in their lives. I feel like this is because they just aren't ready or weren't taught to be ready for life and the challenges that are in it.
One last response to the Toddlers and Tiaras thing is the episode of South Park, Raising the Bar, where Honey Boo Boo, one of the well known children from Toddlers and Tiaras comes to fight an obese Cartman who finds himself entitled to a scooter. James Cameron comes to save the day by raising the metaphorical but physical, in the show, bar that raises standards to more appropriate levels because everyone finds the fight between Cartman and Honey Boo Boo to be perfectly fine and entertaining. After raising the bar, the people watching on the White House lawn begin to realize, hey, this is messed up.
This leads to my point that the media actually is trying to force feed us this information to choose who we should be. When we can set standards for ourselves, we also let the media control what we think and like and use the rationalization, even if subconsciously, "It's okay if everyone is doing it," to allow ourselves to indulge in this behavior that, without the media, would seem shameful.
A quote from Green Day's American Idiot;
Don't want to be an American idiot.
One nation controlled by the media.
Information age of hysteria.
It's calling out to idiot America.
Wow, I did not think of Miley Cyrus. Now that you mention it, I feel that she does fit the role of the midriff. She has completely changed from an innocent girl to a party girl. I think she has made an influence on the media although many people calls her out for her very inappropriate performances and videos.
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