Want to buy or sell something? Check the classifieds
  • The Fedora Lounge is supported in part by commission earning affiliate links sitewide. Please support us by using them. You may learn more here.

Is "Retromania" destroying culture?

Nathan Dodge

One Too Many
Messages
1,051
Location
Near Miami
[video=youtube;Z4mTTigqTSA]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z4mTTigqTSA[/video]

All this Singing Nuns talk has put me in a serious "Up with People" mood. I figure there's enough Fedora Loungers to match their numbers...
 

Gingerella72

A-List Customer
Messages
428
Location
Nebraska, USA
.



Gingerella 72: one could say that 2000-2009 gave rise to the fad of modern hipster-ism, which is still slouching along. The 2000s was the first decade in which I (born in 1967) felt 100% disengaged from pop culture.


LizzieMaine ... you've hit the nail on the head. Luckily, some other regions of the world are still living life as if the year 2000 hasn't happened. Yet.

Perhaps it is my age showing. I was born in '72 and like others have said, I feel completely disengaged from current culture.

So that begs the question.....do we become less interested in such things as we age? Do we reach a point where trends, fads, and pop culture pass us by without us realizing it? Is it because we reach a maturity where these things seem less important?

I used to think I was fairly "up" on what was trendy, be it music, movies, etc. but now when I read gossip news I don't know who any of the celebrities are they're talking about. The disconnect started a couple of years ago when I moved to a different department on campus where I work; my former office, I was always surrounded by and interacted with college students in the 18-21 age range. I was more exposed to what was young and hip. Now I'm more isolated and rarely see any students at all. Then the disconnect became even more pronounced this year as we no longer watch TV. Without that constant exposure and bombardment of pop culture, I'm completely out of the loop. And what's more......I don't care. I find myself wanting to crawl further and further away from modernity and embrace yesteryear. Would that be progressing, or regressing? lol
 

LizzieMaine

Bartender
Messages
33,825
Location
Where The Tourists Meet The Sea
So that begs the question.....do we become less interested in such things as we age? Do we reach a point where trends, fads, and pop culture pass us by without us realizing it? Is it because we reach a maturity where these things seem less important?

I think it's a matter of modern popular culture being increasingly youth-oriented. If you look at 1930s popular culture most of it was targeted to adults -- there were some youth-oriented elements, like the whole jitterbug fad, but even these things were focused on college-age young adults, not teenagers or pre-teenagers. But the truly mass-culture fads of the time appealed to anyone.

It's not like that now -- the target age of popular culture is moving younger and younger, it seems, and has been since the mid-fifties. And that trend shows no sign of letting up.
 
Messages
13,473
Location
Orange County, CA
You two are really not going to thank me for this. It's a commercial for a North American chain of fake Australian steakhouses.



[video=youtube;GGG--S-kLYs]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GGG--S-kLYs[/video]

The radio spots for Outback Steakhouse were even worse! I do have an ear for accents and dialects and whoever did those spots had the most atrocious Aussie accent I've ever heard -- fingernails on a chalkboard! Incidentally, I've never been there is it any good?
 

Gingerella72

A-List Customer
Messages
428
Location
Nebraska, USA
Yup. Did it for years, and still do a bit of it on the freelance. It's one step above writing for fortune cookies -- which I have also done.

I'm dying to know if you have ever come across a fortune cookie message that says "Help! I'm trapped in a fortune cookie factory!" ? Every time my husband and I eat Chinese we joke about this. We're easily amused.
 

LizzieMaine

Bartender
Messages
33,825
Location
Where The Tourists Meet The Sea
What I wrote were mostly ads -- "Bright Picture In Your Future at Joe Blow's TV and Appliance." We did a non-ad one, though, that said "This restaurant is under surveillance -- please leave your waiter a marked bill."

The idea of selling ad space in cookies didn't go as far as it should have, alas. Somewhere in Ventura County there's a warehouse full of thirty-year-old cookies with ads in them.
 

PrettySquareGal

I'll Lock Up
Messages
4,003
Location
New England
This is what I say to people who say I am stuck in the past: The things that originated pre-2011 and which I embrace, watch, listen to, collect, live by, are my idea of TIMELESS quality or TRUE FOR ME. I don't give a (unladylike word here) what the calendar states. If it makes sense to me and works for me, so be it. if I see something born in the current day and I like it, I won't shun it because it's new. It's called critical thinking and freedom of expression, not living in the past for nostalgia's sake. It's also possible to be a lover of retro but forward thinking.
 
Last edited:

PrettySquareGal

I'll Lock Up
Messages
4,003
Location
New England
Oh, and to go nostalgic on you, here are some Hendrix lyrics I like:

Now, if 6 turned up to be 9,
I don't mind, I don't mind.
If all the hippies cut off their hair,
I don't care, I don't care.
Cuz I got my own world to live through
And I ain't gonna copy you.
 

Forum statistics

Threads
109,640
Messages
3,085,554
Members
54,471
Latest member
rakib
Top