Someone pulled out a digital camera (a 5-megapixel Point-and-Shoot) to document the night. These photos would be uploaded to a Facebook album titled Nights to Remember later that weekend—once they found the USB cord. Ending the Night As Leo walked home, he checked his
Music in 2006 was deeply tribal. The dominant youth movement was emo and pop-punk, a mainstream explosion of emotional vulnerability. Bands like Fall Out Boy ( From Under the Cork Tree ), My Chemical Romance ( The Black Parade ), and Panic! at the Disco ( A Fever You Can’t Sweat Out ) were stadium-filling giants. Their anthems of heartbreak and alienation were blasted from car speakers and iPod headphones alike. On the other side of the spectrum, hip-hop was enjoying a lavish, club-ready era. Artists like Nelly Furtado ("Promiscuous"), Justin Timberlake ( FutureSex/LoveSounds ), and The Black Eyed Peas dominated the airwaves, while "ringtone rap" saw artists like Soulja Boy Tell 'Em rise to fame through early internet buzz. teen defloration 2006
To understand a teenager in 2006, you have to understand a paradox. They were the last generation to experience the "analog holdover" of the 1990s while simultaneously sprinting headfirst into the digital deep end. They weren't quite the smartphone zombies of 2012, nor were they the grungy slackers of 1994. They were hybrids: fluent in AIM (AOL Instant Messenger) lingo, fluent in MTV reality shows, and still reliant on the mall as a social headquarters. Someone pulled out a digital camera (a 5-megapixel