- Burnout (stereotype)
Burnout is a 1970s and 1980s slang term often used to refer to (typically) juvenile delinquents interested in heavy metal music (see also
Metalhead , hesher), typically dressed in 70s/80spopulist hard rock fashion: denim, work boots, flannel shirts, wallet chains, concert shirts, leather studded wrist bands, and medium to long hair (or a mullet hairdo).The stereotypical burnout indulges in rowdy anti-authoritarian behavior, including drugs and alcohol, vagrancy, vandalism, truancy, smoking, petty theft, violence and wild "pit parties" typically held in abandoned construction pits in wooded areas outside of suburban neighborhoods.
John Bender from
The Breakfast Club was referred to as a burnout.Favorite music of burnouts includes
New Wave of British Heavy Metal groups such asIron Maiden ,Judas Priest , andOzzy Osbourne , as well ashard rock /heavy metal and other wild or radical bands such asAC/DC ,Black Sabbath ,Deep Purple ,Led Zeppelin , Rush,The Who ,The Doors ,Van Halen (withDavid Lee Roth ),Guns N' Roses , and later in the 80s,death metal ,thrash metal , andspeed metal groups includingSlayer ,Metallica ,Megadeth , and Venom and hardcore/punk music such asStormtroopers of Death ,Sex Pistols andSuicidal Tendencies .In the early 1990s, bands such as the
Melvins , Nirvana,Mr. Bungle ,Supersuckers andButthole Surfers would champion the "burnout" aesthetic, although the stereotype quickly faded into obscurity asalternative music andgrunge music changed the cultural landscape and previously "burnout" characteristics were assimilated into mainstream youth culture (typified in the film "Kids").In popular culture, the
Ramones ,Lemmy of the bandMotörhead , the character John Bender in film "The Breakfast Club ", the bully on the album cover of A.C.'s "Everyone Should Be Killed ",Beavis and Butthead ,Crispin Hellion Glover 's character in the film "River's Edge ", the teenageEarl J. Hickey portrayed in the television show "My Name Is Earl ", the 1980s lineup ofGuns N' Roses , the 1970s rock bandThe Runaways , the album cover ofThe Who 's "Who's Next ", various characters in the films "Dazed and Confused", "Over the Edge" and "Desperate Teenage Lovedolls", and the character Buddy Revell in the film "Three O'Clock High " typify the "burnout" image. The rock bandRedd Kross wrote the song "Burn-out" for their 1982 album "Born Innocent". The stereotype can be traced back to leather jacketed 1950s juvenile delinquents and bikers portrayed in films such as "Rebel Without a Cause " and "The Wild One ".The term "burnout" originated in the late 1960s
hippie era, referring to youths/dropouts who had "burnt out" from excessive drug use, and dressed in the unkempt hippie fashion, opposed any authority and preferred a raucous lifestyle and louderpsychedelic and emergingheavy metal styles of music. In 1960s rock, early "burnout anthems" included Steppenwolf's "Born to Be Wild " andThe Troggs ' "Wild Thing". Early "burnout" icons includeJames Dean ,Jim Morrison ,William Burroughs ,The Stooges , the bandit in the film "Rashomon", andCharles Manson .ee also
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Metalhead
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