harry Wrote:
The absorption of the VV by "The Weekly" chain is but one more evidence of the dumbing down, numbing and corrosive standardizing of American culture. Starbucks, Office Max, PetSmart, Apple Bees... one size fits all in the hegemonic fog of domination and lemming-marches to an certain/uncertain future....
I have to disagree with you here, harry. The vanguard of culture has always tended, over time, to move towards the mainstream. Look at Rolling Stone magazine, the Beatles, or James Joyce - all were at one time considered shocking, outlandish, cutting edge. Now they're so accepted they seem quaint. The "American culture" that you fear is being corroded is still thriving, it has just moved on to a more stylish locale: the internet. Magazines like the Villiage Voice and RS can no longer expect to sell as many copies as they once did, now that they're competing against free content on line - they have no choice but to try and attract a broader audience. People will still read Christgau, no matter where he ends up.
Its true that the big corporations you list have taken over most retail sales in the U.S., making it seem like, no matter where you shop, everything is the
same - you buy your toaster at Target, or Wal-mart, or Shopko - odds are its the same damn toaster. But not so on the internet: there are likely a hundred boutiques online selling custom made, stylish toasters. Or, log into ebay and find a unique antique toaster... OK, maybe toasters aren't the greatest example. But I think Americans have a
greater amount of choice than they once had, despite the monotony of our strip-mall existence. Do I like the monsterous acres of shopping malls? No - but I hardly expect to find a hegemonic fog of domination somewhere on aisle 12.