What does KUSO mean?
What does KUSO mean? When it comes to KUSO, many people may not understand it. In fact, KUSO can also be said to be a kind of prank culture. It means "abominable" in Japanese. It was originally just a way of saying, but later it became a culture. Now follow me. Let’s get up and see what KUSO means. What does KUSO mean 1
What does KUSO mean
1. KUSO means "abominable" in Japanese and is also the pronunciation of "dung". It also means "shit" in English.
2. KUSO originally meant to teach gamers how to play "bad games seriously". It is often used as a curse word.
3. In Taiwan’s Internet era, “KUSO” (or Kuso) has gradually evolved to mean “spoof”. Later, kuso also gradually came to mean boring.
4. In the early days of Taiwan, KUSO was limited to the Internet. Later, it took advantage of the characteristics of the Internet and its scope of influence became wider and wider. Later it was introduced to the mainland via Taiwan. Nowadays, it is widely used in mainland China. Mainland China generally believes that it is a parody of some pictures, texts, news released by the media and official documents called KUSO.
KUSO culture
KUSO culture is a spoof culture, which refers to a nonsensical entertainment culture that deconstructs serious themes to create comedy or satire. A common form is to adapt some established topics, programs, etc. and publish them again. Parody is common in contemporary popular culture.
Source of KUSO
1. The young generation of Japan’s admiration for foreign behavior is reflected in the fact that the shit that Americans often talk about is translated into Japanese くそ as a mantra. Later, this parody of "foreign goods for daily use" became more and more popular, and gradually became a representative of a style.
2. There may be a saying that the word Kuso first appeared in the Chinese field. The word Kuso should come from the scream of the protagonist Kosuke Echizen in the kuso game Death Gun when he is attacked by an enemy (kuso).
In 1996, a group of gamers in Taiwan became interested in Death Gun due to the continuous introduction of the worst game column in a Japanese magazine Saturn Magazine (now known as ドリマガ). The protagonist - Echizen Kosuke's scream "kuso" (kuso) became a mantra on his lips. Over time, kuso gradually became one of the synonyms of prank in the Chinese world. What does KUSO mean 2
Representative works
Golden Raspberry Awards: an award that imitates the Oscars and gives junk movies a chance to "get ahead".
The Ig Nobel Prize: imitating the Nobel Prize, awards are given to scientific research that cannot be redone and should not be reproduced. For example: Why is belly button stain mostly blue? (One of the 2002 winning research 1)
The Darwin Award: mainly awarded to people who have "contributed" to human evolution; the winners all died or lost their fertility because of doing stupid things - which means that their stupid genes will not be passed on to future generations. Disaster for human evolution.
Search God’s Legend promotional video: imitating TVB’s 2008 Beijing Olympics slogan “We are the Olympics”.
Stephen Chow's movies "Domestic Lingling Paint" "Ouchi Secret Agent Ling Lingfa" "Journey to the West Chapter 101: The Moonlight Box" "The Finale of Journey to the West: The Romance of Cinderella".
"The Sinking of All But Japan" is a parody of "The Sinking of Japan". It tells the story of the sinking of all the world except Japan and the influx of large numbers of foreigners into Japan.
Stephy Tang's song "Light Bulb" was spoofed by netizens as "Apricot and Orange", which satirizes her singing skills. The same song was changed to "Seriously Miserable" and "Xing Jia Cheng Rehabilitated".
One of Ku Juji's songs "Money, Money, Money" was spoofed by netizens as "Copy, Copy, Copy," which satirizes Lei Songde for plagiarizing the works of Chinese and foreign composers.
The same song was changed into "Bian Bian Bian Bian" which satirized Ma Li's remarks.
Xia Jincheng filmed the famous MV "Chicken and Turtle" for Hong Kong and Taiwan, expressing the contradiction of a handsome man.
"The Chinese team wins the World Cup", a spoof of the Chinese national football team winning the World Cup in Germany.
Zeng Yike, one of the top ten fast girls, is called "Brother Zeng" by many netizens because his image resembles Stallone, Hu Ge and the characters in the Contra game. The PS works that spoof him are also widely circulated on the Internet. To spread. Zeng Yike said, "Call me Brother Zeng? It doesn't matter."
Adidas: It is a registered trademark of sports goods in China. Because its name is similar to Adidas, and the advertisement is more "shocky", the advertising spokesperson because There is an advertising line of "Adiwang, I'm coming", so the spokesperson is called "Aikangmi Master" by netizens. Adiwang's advertising slogan "Everything can change" is also very similar to Li Ning's "Everything is possible". Later, because netizens hated Adiwang and didn’t like the brand, they made pranks on it. Someone posted on the Internet, and to the contrary, he said that there are only 7 pairs of genuine Adidas in the world (imitation of "Dragon Ball"), and the others are imitations (divided into high imitations and low imitations). The low imitations are enough to blind people's eyes, and many of them are imitations. People are looking for King Adi throughout their lives. Some netizens have built a Tieba for Adi Wang and Aikangmi on Baidu Tieba, where they worship and write books and biographies. In fact, they are just pranks for fun. It is also possible that businesses are seeing netizens’ pranks and are adding fuel to the flames to increase their own popularity.
Kuso style is popular in Taiwanese idol dramas such as "Ultimate Class One", "Ultimate Family", "Ultimate Three Kingdoms", etc.
The title song "Change Yourself" from Leehom Wang's "Change Yourself" album also has a sentence: "I got up this morning, looked at myself in the mirror, and suddenly found that my hair style was a bit KUSO when I slept..."