billy g Wrote:
A lot of interesting, well-articulated theories here that I'm not sure I buy at all.
I'm not sure what's special about all these bands you're deeming silent majority. You might say that's the point, but I haven't heard a note of Drake either or almost anyone on the pop charts, or most of the indie acts you folks follow for that matter either.
As far as the food trucks go, i think it's more of a supply driven phenomenon than a hipster demand driven one. Basically, its much cheaper to have a food truck than a restaurant and if the food is still good, there'll will be a demand for it.
Way to basically see all of this through your own perspective and have zero actual perception. Not having heard these ROCK bands is exactly the point. You wouldn't like Drake no matter what - and neither really would the people who are mostly the meat and potatoes of generation x - a generation that was 16-20 when when "grunge" was big, and
didn't really grow up listening to rap like the people who are a few years younger than the main era of Gen Xers or the bulk of Generation Y, who are people that rap was never a
revelation or a shock to, it was just always there.
And that's the market for these bands. People who don't like rap, and aren't smart enough or don't care enough to seek out new bands. They want to be fed, and don't care if the food is locally sourced fusion cuisine.
And while you haven't heard these bands or these indie bands, you've heard OF the indie bands. No one's friends are talking about this group of bands - yet somehow they're huge. Just like you don't know anyone who's going to see a Kevin James' movies, but they're all huge. Its because there is a silent majority who needs their tastes dictated to them, never veers off the mainstream, and even if they heard and liked a New York Dolls song lets say, wouldn't follow them down the rabbit hole like the people here.
Same with food trucks. Of course they've always been there. But the taco trucks of 10'years ago were actual mexicans selling tacos to actual mexicans. Then white people who were adventurous about food realized they could get better tacos from those trucks - and that the food was certainly better than any goddamn hot dog cart. And it spread from there - but it has spread like wildfire because of the phenomenon that Fu articulated.
Food truck now means, for a majority of people who would know what it means, a cheap, fast, and adventurous alternative to what the silent majority eats. Oh, y'all eat at Taco Bell or Chic Fil A or even Ruby Tuesday at lunch? We eating a bulgogi taco, or we going to hit that lobster truck who you have to follow on Twitter to know it's location.
And we don't have any food trucks in Alabama. We have Gar-B-Cue and Meat and 3s. We don't have enough hipsters for Banh Mi tacos - whether served from a truck or not.
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