You’re kind of forgetting about digital cameras. Looking back, I was on my 3rd or 4th digital camera at the time - and Polaroid had been bankrupt for years.
The aughts?? Surely that must have been a particularly ignorant teen, or they were messing with you. High quality phone cameras were far from ubiquitous then. My phone had a camera but I was still buying disposable ones at CVS before going on trips so I could get high quality photos all the way through the aughts. And if that teen is in their mid 30s now, I'm still younger than them...
jballs@sh.itjust.works 1 day ago
BremboTheFourth@piefed.ca 1 day ago
I didn't mean good digitals didn't exist, but that analog camaras were still very common. And they were. The overwhelming majority of teens in the aughts would know very well what polaroid was
Deceptichum@quokk.au 1 day ago
Maybe it was the Polaroid part they didn't understand? Probably used to disposables.
yermaw@sh.itjust.works 1 day ago
Probably that. Im mid 30s, UK, and have never seen a Polaroid in my life. Ive seen 2 people with polaroids on their bedroom walls, but never seen a camera except on TV.
To my mind they’re only used to show “look, its the 80s! Its a scene set in the past!” Or “look how quirky the indie hipster kid in this scene is!”
marighost@piefed.social 1 day ago
I'm 29 and we had a Polaroid at our wedding three years ago. That teenager must've been living under a rock.
Death_Equity@lemmy.world 1 day ago
In the time period they were referencing Polaroids were at risk of extinction because only one company was making the film at one plant and only through the complaining of hipsters were you able to have Polaroids at your wedding.
2001 Polaroid went bankrupt. 07-08 cameras and film stopped production.
2010 a hipster group restarted production.
2020 new Polaroid cameras are introduced.
Many younger people only know Polaroids as an icon in a video game or a prop from a music video; they don’t know what they are called.