I guess I will have to figure out what to do with eleven more eggs.
Deviled eggs.
I'm going to conclude that hipsters are a largely mythical being existing only to be the subject of other people's ire.
Hip, as a notion, goes back to early jazz days. It is the idea that you have (at least in one etymology I've seen) hip waders on to forge through the flood of bullshit. In short, it is for outsiders who see the game is rigged and will not be drawn into it. People who work in the margins. Not entitled people.
It is not (historically at least) about Bright Young Things, Home Owners, Eurotrash or Trust Fund Kids.
It is a point of view distinctly derived from black culture as much as camp was once a POV for gay culture.
It is not (historically at least) about Bright Young Things, Home Owners, Eurotrash or Trust Fund Kids.
As with so many things, the meaning has been co-opted by the BYTs.
As with so many things, the meaning has been co-opted by the BYTs.
Much like Williamsburg its self.
I'm going to conclude that hipsters are a largely mythical being existing only to be the subject of other people's ire.
I'd invite you to come with me to Wicker Park and see them in their natural habitat, but I haven't been over there in a while and they may have moved on to other Pabst Blue Ribbon watering holes.
"Hip" to me has a positive connotation, while "hipster" does not.
Wikipedia has two Hipster pages. One is "1940s Subculture" one is "Contemporary Subculture".
one is "Contemporary Subculture".
How is the contemporary version differentiated from sheer dickishness?
It's a special
kind
of dickishness.
I'm going to conclude that hipsters are a largely mythical being existing only to be the subject of other people's ire.
I'd invite you to come with me to Wicker Park and see them in their natural habitat, but I haven't been over there in a while and they may have moved on to other Pabst Blue Ribbon watering holes.
He doesn't need to go that far - we've got 'em all over this city. Valencia is a hotbed, in particular.
Heh. This is pretty cute:
In a Huffington Post article entitled "Who's a Hipster?", Julia Plevin argues that the "definition of 'hipster' remains opaque to anyone outside this self-proclaiming, highly-selective circle". She claims that the "whole point of hipsters is that they avoid labels and being labeled. However, they all dress the same and act the same and conform in their non-conformity" to an "iconic carefully created sloppy vintage look".