A Blog by Jonathan Low

 

Mar 1, 2015

Bye-Bye Bohemian Bump: Have Hipster Fashions Peaked?

For its original incarnation, Pabst was a workingman's brew: 'red necks, white socks and Blue Ribbon beer,' being the title of Hank Thompson's classic 1974 anthem.

But then it became yet another wry hipster nod to authenticity and retro style, along with Converse sneakers, Brooklyn, heavy black eyeglass frames and numerous other odes to irony.

Like all fashions, there is a time and a season for everything from truckers' hats to Gucci bags. And the data are beginning to suggest that the hipster moment may be peaking.

As the following article points out, Brooklyn may be the least affordable urban neighborhood in the US. Basketball star Lebron James has sported eyeglasses without lenses as a personal statement and there are now so many knockoffs of Converse All-Stars that parent company Nike is suing everyone who produces them.

This will entail some uncertainty and insecurity. After all, what's going to be next? JL

Lauren Laughlin reports in Fortune:

For a trend nominally premised on anti-consumerism, the signs of overkill are clear. Sales of eyeglasses are now at their highest in 15 years. RealtyTrac recently cited Brooklyn as the least affordable place to live in the country.
The trouble with any financial bubble is that a broadening market can be dangerous to those not at the epicenter. The smartest traders sell first. Others should follow, but rarely do.
Fashion is not so different. Witness the multibillion-dollar explosion of hipster style: Once reserved for dis­affected scenesters, the trend is now enjoying widespread adoption and huge sales. But just as Brooklyn has already moved on from the term and the ethos, so, too, will the rest of the country—and, we’re guessing, soon.
Hipsterism, a nebulous moniker for a subculture of young urbanites fond of artisanal pickles and ironic T-shirts, gained traction a little over a decade ago. It characterized the intellectuals and the under­employed who embraced a low-cost, retro style: canned beer, mustaches, trucker hats—and later plaid, beards, and thick-rimmed glasses.
BRI-01.15
The trend caught on, and quickly the ultimate hipster insult, “mainstream,” became an accurate description of it. Sales of eyeglasses are now at their highest in 15 years, according to Euromonitor, which cited the “normalization of the ‘hipster culture’ ” as the reason. Nike’s Converse division sales climbed 70% since 2010, helping nearly double its stock in the past two years. (Adidas has fallen 18%.) And even Lands’ End is selling skinny jeans.
For a trend nominally premised on anti-consumerism, the signs of overkill are clear. Real estate researcher RealtyTrac recently cited hipster headquarters Brooklyn as the least affordable place to live in the country. Merz Apothecary in Chicago, a 139-year-old pharmacy, sold out of beard-grooming kits on Black Friday weekend. And in a throwback to the dotcom years, at least one young grad we know of has left a promising career in consulting to start an overalls company.
Yet a bubble’s telltale sign is when it produces a spectacularly valued transaction. Unbelievable at the time, in retrospect it marks the top. For hipsters, that deal may be the sale of Pabst Blue Ribbon. Urban cool propelled PBR consumption 42% in the U.S. in the two years leading up to 2010, according to Euromonitor. That year, billionaire Dean Metropoulos bought the company for $250 million. Volume then grew another 35% over the next three years. Impressive, sure, but not as much as the growth in the brand’s value. In November, Metropoulos sold the pale, low-budget brew reportedly for nearly $750 million.
The takeaway? Get out while you can. And ditch the beard.

1 comments:

Steve Finnell said...

WATER BAPTISM DENIERS BY STEVE FINNELL

Water baptism deniers claim that you can ignore Mark 16:16 because some of the earliest manuscripts do not include Mark 16:9-20. The problem is there are 60+ Bible translations that include those verses. I know of no English translation of the Bible that omits Mark 16:9-20. Yes, these same deniers have Mark 16:16 in the Bible they read. That does keep them from explaining away that truth of Mark 16:16.

Mark 16:16 "He who believes and is baptized will be saved; but he who does not believe will be condemned. (NKJV)

If the deniers cannot convince you that Mark 16:16 is not the inspired word of God. They will deny that "and" is a conjunction.

And Defined: A conjunction is used to grammatically coordinate words, phrases, or clauses.[Ref. Dictionary.com]

Examples
1. Mark 16:16 He who believes and is baptized will be saved..(NKJV)

2. Acts 2:38 ...Repent, and let every one of you be baptized in the name of Jesus Christ for the remission of sins...(NKJV)

3. You need an engine and gasoline to start your automobile. You cannot start your car by the engine alone.

4. Your doctor says you need surgery and a blood transfusion in order to live. You cannot live by surgery alone.

5. You must have a house with walls, and a roof and a heating system to keep your house warm in winter. You cannot keep warm by a house with walls alone.


Denying that the Bible includes Mark 16:16 does not prove that water baptism is not essential in order to be saved.

Denying that "and" is a conjunction does not mean that you can have your sins forgiven without being baptized in water.

It takes a skilled professional to convince men that immersion in water (that is baptism) is not essential in order to be saved from the penalty of sin.

Honestly seeking God's truth trumps the erroneous teaching of skilled professionals every time it is tried.


YOU ARE INVITED TO FOLLOW MY BLOG. http://steve-finnell.blogspot.com

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