The corollary to “make bad art” is “let other people make bad art.” And I mean individuals, not Marvel or Disney or whoever thinks they own stories nowadays. I mean, if you see a poem on the Internet and you think it is THE WORST CRINGE OF ALL TIME… just leave it. If some teen has written a Wattpad book you really hate, let it go. If you see a chain going around with everybody crapping on the same random artist they don’t like online, don’t reblog it. Ask yourself every time you’re making fun of “bad art:” 1) is this really such a big deal? 2) is this in line with my ideals of allowing people to enjoy themselves making art which may not be “objectively” or “technically” sound? 3) am I making a positive impact by sharing this?
It’s so difficult already to feel comfortable making and posting your own work online; just because someone’s art is “cringey” or “boring” or whatever doesn’t necessarily merit an online hate campaign. Please try to remember that the vast majority of people who “blow up” for this kind of stuff are the exact people we’re trying to encourage: someone with an idea, and the confidence to execute it without worrying about being the best artist of all time. Especially when we’re talking about teens, we have to let people make bad art. That’s the only way we can do it ourselves.
Something that really saved me from cringe culture was realizing that my favorite works of art, including works widely considered by critics and audiences alike to be genius, are very very easy to describe in such a way that makes them sound irredeemably bad. Including sharing pieces of them out of context as “proof”. Once I internalized that, I was never able to look at dunkposts from strangers the same way again.