Virgins
This submission is currently being researched & evaluated!
You can help confirm this entry by contributing facts, media, and other evidence of notability and mutation.
About
Virgins is a collective term commonly associated with people who maintain activities that appear highly time-consuming or may be deemed unattractive by the opposite sex, resulting in the assumption that those individuals have no sexual experience. Although the term is at times used as a form of self-parody, its main usage lies with mocking specific groups of people for their looks or hobbies.
Background
During the course of the 20th century, specific activities like playing video games, reading comic books or being active on the internet were most commonly associated in a negative fashion with the nerd stereotype. Maintainers of these hobbies were commonly depicted and generalized as being rather unattractive due to their looks, clothing and body type. This in turn generated the general assumption that they were not deemed attractive by the opposite sex, resulting in the assumption of them having no significant other and still being a virgin even at a higher age.
Spread
[Researching]
Related Memes
Involuntary Abstinence
Involuntary Abstinence is a concept of Internet humor typically iterated in image macros poking fun at male-oriented hobbies and activities that may be deemed unattractive by the other sex. The captions in these image macros commonly imply that the males shown maintain those hobbies for the sole sake of staying a virgin and protecting it.
30-Year-Old Virgin Wizard
The 30-Year-Old Virgin Wizard is an internet myth saying that if a person manages to still be a virgin at the milestone of age 30, he will attain magical powers on the level of a highly skilled wizard. Various requirements have been made up surrounding the myth. The phrase was first coined on the now defunct Japanese free enquete/voting generating service known as the Automatic Enquete Generator or 自動アンケート作成.
Search Interest
Note: Search interest has been reduced to just the category "Online Communities" to avoid search results unrelated to the focus of the article.