featured-image

King’s Bunker, host of King’s College’s bohemian parties and Ents, recently witnessed a revival of corny late-millennial culture in a March event simply named ‘#SWAG’. Ten years after the initial surge of Tumblr, excessive hashtag use, and MTV, has the pressure in 2024 to have a Pinterest-worthy wardrobe and a perfectly curated Instagram feed strayed too far from our roots? Are the students enthusiastically donning their neon baseball caps and high-top converse at King’s infamously cool Ents scene doing so ironically, or just nostalgic for a childhood of no responsibilities and the cultural freedom to be cringe? A decade after the peak of this wave of internet culture, I interviewed some of the ‘kool kids’ to see how #swag they were in 2014. When asked to define ‘swag’, most of the people I spoke with struggled to come up with a concrete definition.

Instead, I received a list of items, with space buns, galaxy-tide tees, and iPod shuffle being some of the popular ones. These answers begged the question of whether this gauche stylistic and cultural period is genuinely part of our pre-teen memories, or rather a collective reimagination of Tumblr archives created by cooler older cousins. “[I had] minus-swag,” says Chloe Jacob, “Striped leggings and ballet pumps were what I was wearing in 2014.



” Stripes and pumps seemed to be some solid wardrobe staples in 2014. Also claiming to be “not swag at all back then,” Iz Dyson was rocking these with her sis.

Back to Fashion Page