Nerdfighter
English
Etymology
From nerd + fighter.
Noun
Nerdfighter (plural Nerdfighters)
- A member of the mainly online-based community subculture Nerdfighteria.
- 2008 August 10, Timothy Alex Akimoff, “Big Sky nerds: Brothers still speak for underdog”, in Sunday Missoulian, page B2:
- The experiment birthed the Nerdfighters, a nebulous group of self-described superhero geeks who follow the exploits of John and Hank Green religiously, and who claim to be “made of awesome” rather than flesh and bone.
- 2012 January 28, Xander Wiersema, “A young girl slays inner demons while fighting cancer”, in The Vancouver Sun, page D6:
- John Green is possibly best known for Vlogbrothers, the YouTube channel he shares with his brother Hank. Together they have formed a large community of so-called Nerdfighters (note that Nerdfighers are not people that are against nerds but are in fact people who are for nerds). […] Twelve-year-old Xander Wiersema is an avid reader, gamer and Nerdfighter living in Victoria.
- 2014 May 13, Caroline Vella, “Written In the Stars”, in HuffPost, archived from the original on 20 December 2022:
- With the help of his brother, he is rallying Nerdfighters everywhere with the battle cry of "raising nerdy to the power of awesome."
- 2014 June 8, David Lindquist, “‘Fault’ premiere draws adoring crowd”, in The Sunday Star, page E2:
- When lead actors Shailene Woodley and Ansel Elgort arrived, one 20th Century Fox executive was heard saying, “We could have filled Yankee Stadium” with Nerdfighters — the nickname of supporters of the pro-intelligence and good-deeds agenda of Green and his brother, Hank Green. […] “The Fault in Our Stars” producer Wyck Godfrey, known for his role as producer for four “Twilight” films, said Nerdfighters are making their presence felt.
- 2020 November 15, Jennifer Burek Pierce, “Introduction: Reading John Green and Writing Anticipatory History”, in Narratives, Nerdfighters, and New Media, Iowa City, Iowa: University of Iowa Press, →ISBN, page 2:
- Despite their affinity for new media, Nerdfighters are readers, many of whom have reported reading more than twenty-five books annually—an amount Hank once described as “a lot of frickin’ books.”
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