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Even if that's all true...tough nuggets. I'd like to smack about 98% of everyone that says something offends them.
Sometimes I believe the 21st century interwebz are completely inhabited by virtual 19th century old maid ladies who hear something they disapprove of, and promptly head for the fainting couch with a case of the vapors. Or in this case- their keyboards.
I think what upset a lot of people about this is that:
1. They said they had a limited budget (to some people 15K is a good chunk to spend on a wedding)
2. Decided on a theme that some associated with poverty.
3. When attacked by those who were upset with #2, they presented themselves as something they are not- impoverished- in order to validate themselves with the people who were upset about #2. ("Poor" was the actual term used by the groom on his twitter account.)
4. Used the 15K wedding figure as evidence of their "poor" or impoverished financial state.
5. And therefore looked flippant about actual poverty.
Mine cost $10. And it was worth every penny.
Even if that's all true...tough nuggets. I'd like to smack about 98% of everyone that says something offends them.
Sometimes I believe the 21st century interwebz are completely inhabited by virtual 19th century old maid ladies who hear something they disapprove of, and promptly head for the fainting couch with a case of the vapors. Or in this case- their keyboards.
I'm tempted to quote Lazarus Long on what should be said to Mrs. Grundy....nah, too easy.
I think what upset a lot of people about this is that:
1. They said they had a limited budget (to some people 15K is a good chunk to spend on a wedding)
2. Decided on a theme that some associated with poverty.
3. When attacked by those who were upset with #2, they presented themselves as something they are not- impoverished- in order to validate themselves with the people who were upset about #2. ("Poor" was the actual term used by the groom on his twitter account.)
4. Used the 15K wedding figure as evidence of their "poor" or impoverished financial state.
5. And therefore looked flippant about actual poverty.
The average 'real' wedding goes for $25 to $40K these days, so the budget for their festivities was below average. Might be a lot of money to you (to me as well) but yes, that is a small budget for the average wedding, like it or not.
Did they actually use the word or phrasing they were poor, or merely imply they didn't have a lot of money? I've been hearing people say they said they were impoverished, and destitute. Did they say that or something like that or did they say something like, 'we don't have a lot of money'? Huge difference in the interpretation of that.
Agreed. It is very much an example of the internet mob mentality.This whole business could go down as a textbook example of the internet mob mentality at work -- as soon as one person criticised, on came the rest of them, with torches lit and tongues flapping. We've seen the *exact* same thing happen here at the FL -- remember the Time Warp Wives debacle? In such cases it's never about a true moral question -- I find it hard to believe that any of these commentators are actually *that* outraged about this. It's simply a matter of coming along, seeing a mob beating up on someone, and seeing a chance to win the mob's approval by getting in a few licks of one's own. Facts are irrelevant in situations like this -- it's all about being one of the crowd.
The median cost of a wedding in the US is $18,000. That means that half of couples getting married spend less than $18,000 and half spend more than $18,000. (Averages tend to be skewed upwards by a few high numbers, like celeb weddings.) In light of that, 15K isn't all that frugal. Half of the people in the US who need to have figured how to spend around that figure or less.
The exact statement by the groom was "everything I've said in my defense is also wrong. you spent so much on the wedding! actually no we're actually poor. then get job!" He later said of his critics, "It's like a non-stop parade of homeless people and they're ALL PISSED THAT I GOT MARRIED." (Emphasis is his.) He also comments that his wage is only slightly more than what a hobo gets paid ((I have got to assume this last one is sarcasm).
I mentioned the Hobo wedding in the "Will there be a second Great depression" thread because of the term "Hobo Chic." We were discussing the issue of some people romanticizing poverty while living comfortably. The thing that struck me most about this wedding was the irony that they spent 15k to recreate a wedding that wouldn't have cost a dime.
$15k, $18k, $25k it is their money, and they can do what they want with it. I still don't understand what people are angry about. Its a lot of reactionary stuff from both sides. People are turning up their noses at them spending $15k for their wedding and calling that a lot, but that might not have been a lot to them, whether they were 'poor' or not. I'm sorry these people don't meet your definition of poor. Or perhaps your definition is a stereotyped as their hobo wedding.
LD