What is its social and cultural legacy a decade later, /mu/?>I bet that your kitty real tired>Your kitty lookin' like a flat tire
>>128717172>What is its social and cultural legacy a decade latermeh, it's hit or miss
I'm embarrassed that i used to actually like ilovefriday and i still know all the words to sauce it up
>>128717172this is the real legacy
>>128717172The guy singing went hard
>>128717172>The decision to write a song dissing Khalifa arose over a misunderstanding. A falsified screenshot, intended as a joke, seemed to show Khalifa, who once appeared in a pornographic film wearing a hijab, criticizing Malik for smoking while wearing a hijab in a music video. iLoveFriday thought the screenshot was legitimate.Writing and releasing a full diss because you couldn't identify a meme is pretty cringe
>>128717172she cute
>>128718563this woman looks like a gay man in a wig and thats why you homos liked her
>>128718563>>128720742>woman
>>128717172Diss tracks in general and the attention afforded them are a sign of cultural and artistic decay
>>128717172>>128718563"Hit Or Miss" (Mia Khalifa diss) represents a cultural shift back to slutshaming being popular and mainstream.Zoomers may be too young to remember but part of the SJW movement last decade was campaigning to end slutshaming both casual and professional ("sexwork"). This song flew in the face of that and through its humor undermined the inviobility SJWs had been working to build for sluts. Ever since this song, pornstars have been ragged on relentlessly with no one really publicly coming out to defend them anymore nor shame people for criticizing them.Even though the song and the TikTok video that it inspired are no longer regularly consumed or spoken of, its influence can be found in the right-wing trend of this decade toward sex-negative attitudes becoming more and more socially acceptable, in start contrast to the left-wing trends of last decade. No other cultural moment really comes to mind for marking this shift.