The Unlikely Icons Who Shaped Baby Goth Girls (Millennial Edition)
Amanda Kotiesen Amanda Kotiesen

The Unlikely Icons Who Shaped Baby Goth Girls (Millennial Edition)

From Sitcom Sidekicks to Animated Outcasts, These are the Characters and Celebs Who Gave Us Permission to Be Strange

Every goth girl has a story of initiation. It wasn’t always the black eyeliner, the lace corset, or the Nine Inch Nails CD that did it — sometimes the first spark was subtler. 

The way we gravitated toward the sarcastic friend instead of the bubbly lead. The way we secretly wanted to be the villainess, not the princess. The way our hearts beat faster at a girl with strange hair, a biting wit, or a dangerous streak.

These were the warning signs of a budding goth: you didn’t want to be Lizzie McGuire, you wanted to be Xena the Warrior Princess, flinging around your Mum’s cross-stitching hoops and calling out her iconic battle cry. You started wearing short shorts and styling your hair like Lara Croft, eager to solve ancient mysteries at a fever-pitch pace. And when everyone else was laughing at Dee Dee wrecking Dexter’s lab, you thought: she’s chaos incarnate, and I love her for it.

Pop culture of the 1990s and early 2000s was full of unconventional female figures — women and girls who weren’t marketed as goth, but who cracked something open for baby goth millennials. They gave us permission to be weird, dark and clever. In hindsight, they were archetypal teachers, each aligning with one of The Lace Ledger’s darkly glamorous gothic archetypes.

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