The Right Attitude

Now that you understand the geek chic look, let's talk about the geek chic attitude. The kids who spent their high school years outside the popular crowd have come into their own, with a defiant, open-armed embrace of what makes one a geek: love of books, computers, video games, comic books, horror films, technology. It's cool to be smart. It's cool to do what you love -- bonus points if what you love requires exhaustive knowledge of obscure things.

VH1's "World Series of Pop Culture" is like the trivia-obsessed Geek Olympics. Remember "Freaks and Geeks," Judd Apatow's critically acclaimed and much-beloved TV series that NBC now wishes it hadn't cancelled? With the success of "Knocked Up" and "The 40-Year-Old Virgin," you'll keep seeing "long wait" status on Netflix for the season DVDs. You'll also see a big celebration of kids on the fringe, those outsiders who were outsiders for a good reason -- intelligent, complex characters struggling to deal with the horrors of high school.

In "Freaks and Geeks," the character of Neil Schweiber (Samm Levine) delivers a line about high school romance that will resonate with most geeks: "The dance is tomorrow. She's a cheerleader, you've seen 'Star Wars' 27 times. You do the math." In high school, that equation means one thing, but the opposite sex might now find that quirky sensibility quite attractive.

Geek with coffee
Fausto Gilberti
That's right: being geeky and stylish are no longer mutually exclusive.

That knowledge and borderline obsession can translate into a certain snobbishness. In "High Fidelity," Rob Gordon (John Cusack) claims this as the reason for his record store's success: "I get by because of the people who make a special effort to shop here -- mostly young men -- who spend all their time looking for deleted Smith singles, and original -- not re-released, underlined -- Frank Zappa albums." In the film, he refuses to sell a record to a customer "because you're not a geek." The customer then counters by saying that the staff is a bunch of snobs who think they are unappreciated scholars.

Well, yes. The fanboy is a natural extension of this obsessive quality -- utter devotion to one geeky topic (the merits of Linux, for example) and aggression toward all detractors. Consider Comic Book Guy from "The Simpsons" or the boy decked out in Halo gear in Gamestop who accosts you and demands you list the merits of PlayStation on the spot.

Geek chic permeates the mainstream. The Harry Potter phenomenon brought back reading as a trend, while librarians the world over rejoiced. Making reading cool is a big enough feat, said the English major, but reading about wizards? That's taking a page from the WOW crowd. J.R.R. Tolkien's "The Lord of the Rings" left the backpacks of high school dorks and leaped onto the screen, complete with Orlando Bloom. The Matrix movies made major bank, and comic book movies like "Sin City," "V for Vendetta," and the X-Men and Spider-Man movies dominated the box office. "Buffy the Vampire Slayer" was a huge hit on TV. "Star Wars" no longer remains the exclusive property of the geek faction -- the prequels filled the theaters. Joss Whedon and Neil Gaiman's names are starting to mean something to the non-geek.

Doctor Who
BBC/Adrian Rogers
David Tennant, The Doctor on "Doctor Who,"
with a sonic screwdriver: pure geek chic

The real geek-chic mafia are the geeks with the money and the gadgets, the hard-core Slashdot addicts who were trading patent information about the iPhone for months on Apple fan blogs and were first in line for its release (or blogging endlessly and passionately against it). In the information age, geeks are making the money and spending the money. Steve Jobs, Apple's guru and the original techy geek, could probably start his own army if he felt like it. The Slashdot Hall of Fame yields threads on politics, Creationism, hackers, Google, Microsoft and Scientology -- hot-button topics, computer stuff and politics. The geek chic are cooler-than-thou, intelligent, hyperconnected and passionate.

What does it all mean? You can have a retro computer collection and still get a date.