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* Subverted in an episode of ''Series/HunterNBC'' where a robber dressed up like this trope turns out to be just doing it as a disguise. When the CorruptCorporateExecutive he robbed gets a PsychoForHire to get his money back, committing a number of murders in the process, we then have Creator/FredDryer dressing up as a Quincy Punk to lure the psycho out.

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* Subverted in an episode of ''Series/HunterNBC'' where ''Series/HunterNBC''. In "Death Machine", a robber dressed up like this trope turns out to be just doing it as a disguise. When However the CorruptCorporateExecutive he robbed doesn't know this, and gets a punk PsychoForHire to get his money back, committing a number of stuff back. He commits several murders in the process, so we then have Creator/FredDryer dressing up as a Quincy Punk to lure the psycho out.
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Incidentally, EmoMusic grew directly out of this trope, or more specifically, as [[SpiritualAntithesis a backlash against it]]. The roots of emo go back to the "Revolution Summer" in the UsefulNotes/WashingtonDC punk scene in 1985, when a group of musicians led by Music/MinorThreat vocalist Ian [=MacKaye=] clustered around Dischord Records felt that the scene had been overrun by violence, sexism, and people who came to shows just to [[FightClubbing fight in the mosh pit]]. Joining the PostHardcore scene, their more melodic sound and personal lyrics became an important forerunner to emo.

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Incidentally, EmoMusic grew directly out of this trope, or more specifically, as [[SpiritualAntithesis a backlash against it]]. The roots of emo go back to the "Revolution Summer" movement in the UsefulNotes/WashingtonDC punk scene in 1985, when a group of musicians led by Music/MinorThreat vocalist Ian [=MacKaye=] clustered around Dischord Records felt that the scene had been overrun by violence, sexism, and people who came to shows just to [[FightClubbing fight in the mosh pit]]. Joining the PostHardcore scene, their more melodic sound and personal lyrics became an important forerunner to emo.
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The TropeNamer is an infamous episode of ''Series/QuincyME'' called "Next Stop, Nowhere," where the titular M.E. tries to save the youth of UsefulNotes/LosAngeles from the moral scourge that is punk rock. For years, "Quincy punk" came to be used in Southern California's scene to describe a punk who cares more about the rebellious image than anything else. [[https://youtu.be/TZU4XXalNys The promo]] for the episode shows a good example of Quincy punk in its natural habitat.

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The TropeNamer is an infamous episode of ''Series/QuincyME'' called "Next Stop, Nowhere," where the titular M.E. tries to save the youth of UsefulNotes/LosAngeles from the moral scourge that is punk rock. For years, "Quincy punk" came to be used in the Southern California's Californian punk scene to describe a punk who cares more about the rebellious image than anything else. [[https://youtu.be/TZU4XXalNys The promo]] for the episode shows a good example of Quincy punk in its natural habitat.

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