Thursday, February 9, 2012

how to tell if you are a hipster



I have to admit, I am intrigued by hipsters.  I was intrigued by hipsters before being intrigued by hipsters was cool though. (joke. but not really)

It goes way back.  The attraction to the different, the disdain for the norm - the distaste for being a sheep, for trying to fit in - or Cod forbid, for being like everyone else.  Baaaa.  I was always fighting this desire to blend in and be invisible versus this desire to be able to just relax and be myself.  But I came to the conclusion that being myself may have drawn more attention to me, which I disliked vehemently - so I just stuck with blending in.  Being somewhat of a fake version of myself I guess.

I really think I was a wannabe hipster before I even knew what it was.  I liked their look for the most part. I liked the idea of a crowd that could march to the beat of their own drum, no explanation necessary.  But at some point along the way, it actually became hip to be hipster.  That in itself was kind of an oxymoron.  All of a sudden it became cool to be not cool.  Huh?

These days it seems like everybody hates a hipster except the hipster himself, obviously.  It’s like everyone has an opinion on who the “real” hipsters are, how original you are and if you’re just acting a certain way to fit into a certain crowd.  Like, you are not being genuine, authentic.  My inner wannabe hipster is so confused... I'm like, torn between two worlds.  The outer me is definitely not hipster in any form.  The inner me is always fighting to scream Fuck you!  Outta my way!  Leave me alone to mull obsessively!  Give me a clove cigarette! OK not really the clove cigarette exclamation.




Before I go any further, I should probably attempt to define the term hipster for those of you who are lost at this point.  Unfortunately, there is no clear description.  But there are these kind of vague judgmental definitions out there, so I'll do my best to help you understand.    

So there are two basic definitions out there.  The definition of a hipster by a hipster, and the definition of a hipster by a hipster hater.

How a hipster will define him/herself: “a subculture of men and women typically in their 20's and 30's that value independent thinking, counter-culture, progressive politics, an appreciation of art and indie-rock, creativity, intelligence, and witty banter.  Although hipsters are technically conformists within their own subculture, in comparison to the much larger mainstream mass, they are pioneers and leaders of the latest cultural trends and ideals.”





How anti-hipsters define the typical hipster: “Hipsters can generally be identified by their completely unwarranted arrogance, passion for obscure bands, obtuse fashion sense, cheapness masquerading as quirkiness or upper-middle-class white self loathing. In actuality, most of the culture boils down to judging. Judging items, activities, bands, companies, clothes, oneself and most importantly other people. If someone else is less savvy, cutting edge or knowledgeable than you, they are worthy of mockery and disdain.”

So now I ask myself, could I actually be a hipster based on the typical stereotypes?  I’ll try to break it down.

The typical hipster garb:

Horned rimmed glasses, preferably thick and black (I do not wear glasses, however I am supposed to because I have terrible eyesight.  If I did wear them, they would more than likely not be horn rimmed.  I'd be willing to bet that's a style that I could not pull off)
Old nostalgic pop-culture t-shirts, skinny jeans or leggings, vintage anything, plaid, flannel or cowboy shirts, chucks and skinny hoodies (I would wear any old comfy t-shirt that wasn't ugly, I don't really care too much about what is on it.  In fact I have an awesome old soft Pearl drum t-shirt that I just dug out of a tub of clothes from the 80s. As far as vintage stuff, skinny jeans and legging?  Vintage rarely looks right on me, and skinny jeans are meh on me.  Hipsters are notoriously skinny, and I am so not.  The closest I get to leggings are yoga pants.  I'm pro-hoodie and I enjoy chucks - just not on me.  My feet are too big and they make them look like canoes)
Crazy thick beards or weirdly styled mustaches, hairy girl legs and armpits (Obviously I don't have facial hair, so that doesn't apply to me, but I would never go hairy armpit.  I just think it looks gross and smelly.  Hairy legs... I don't know - personally I am not very hairy so I couldn't grow guy-hairy legs if I tried, not that I would, because I just prefer the clean-shaven leg look on a girl)
Hideous sweaters (I don't believe I wear hideous sweaters, nor do I want to.  Certainly not the kind that hipsters typically go for - which would be something vintage, with messed up clashing colors and the glorious smell of mothballs.  Cardigans like Mr. Rogers wore maybe, except more ugly)
Knit caps, vintage fedoras or trucker hats (I don't hate knit caps.  If I could rock one I'd wear it - trucker hat? so no.  Fedora? meh)
Bedhead, tiny pigtails, bangs and colored tights (You know when someone has short hair but somehow manages to get it into tiny little pigtails?  I love that and I think it's really cute.  I also think short bangs and colored tights are adorable.  For a 3 year-old. Bedhead I don't usually do)
Tats and funky body piercings  (I may just shock my entire family and get a discreet tattoo, but currently I have plain old pierced ears and no body art)

The typical hipster is into:

Yoga and meditation (I think yoga is a good concept and it's awesome to be in tune with your bod and to be healthy, but my experience with die-hard yoga followers is that it's kind of cultish and weird, however I am rather limited in my worldly ways, so I could be way off base on this.  I may also be unappreciative of yoga because I can't do a lot of the fucking poses)
Vintage or retro everything - clothes, shoes and products found in thrift shops (I appreciate some interesting vintage stuff, but I really dig modern stuff too)
Books that you were forced to read in high school, JD Salinger, Kurt Vonnegut, or Jack Kerouac (Uh. This is embarrassing to admit for a lover of books, reading and English class in general, but I’ve read and understood very few books like these.  I used Cliff notes.  Don't tell my kids)
Vinyl records Oh! But the sound quality! (You know, I really might be making a huge mistake in saying this, but I think the sound quality on vinyl sucks.  Yeah, I went there.  Change my mind and I'll love you forever) 
Vegan or organic (If I suddenly became rich, I'd probably go organic.  I'm still not there with giving up eating meat though.  I just love good food, and meat tends to be a part of that equation)
Old label brand or cheap beer (PBR anyone? Yes, Pabst Blue Ribbon, the beer of choice for the hipster. I hate beer)
Obscure bands/Indie music, music recommended by Pitchfork or the Village Voice it's like, "I listen to bands so underground, they haven’t even heard of themselves!"  (OK, so I am into different not always known bands and artists, but not to be ironic.  Just because I like them.  I also like some current pop, alternative, rock... I just like good music.  That's all)
Old movies, independent and/or foreign films, Wes Anderson movies (I can't get into that kind of movie usually.  I'm open to try, but for the most part, I just want to be entertained when I am watching a movie -- I don't want to have to think too hard)
Clove cigarettes (I don't smoke...)
Being ironic (I barely know how to coherently explain what ironic means)
Macs and/or anything Apple (I'm right there in the Apple loving)
Fixed geared bikes (Can't comment on this one because besides being a bicycle, I just have no freaking clue what they are)
IKEA (IKEA is gold to me)
Messenger or Courier bags No, not backpacks. (I don't carry either of these - I hate carrying bags - I prefer mashing everything into my pockets)

So if you wear those kinds of things or like those kinds of things, it doesn't automatically mean you're a hipster.  Just to clarify, I'm not here to judge - just to make observations.  Apparently the issue for the haters isn't necessarily about their fashion choices or their interest in eclectic unknown bands.  The thing that seems to get people all fired up is the superiority.  The vibe of the hipster is generally picked up as, "I'm better/cooler/more obtuse/ironically trendy/faux artsy than you are," and that's what seems to turn people off of the whole hipster culture.  Oddly, the hipster cares so much about how people perceive them, yet they go over the top trying to pretend that they don't care at all.  The ironic thing about hipsters is that they don't like to be judged, but they seem to judge everyone around them who isn't like them.  Hipsters judge people on being judgemental!  

I don't see any problem with any of the above mentioned things - except for the superiority of it all.  If you like vinyl for reasons of your own, go for it.  If you like old band t-shirts because that's your style - rock on.  If you're into what you're into - really, I don't care.  What I don't like is the trying too hard part.  The "I'm better than you because I smoke clove cigarettes, don't eat animals and go to yoga regularly" part, the "Dude. That was totes deck!" part.  I don't particularly care for that nagging feeling of constantly being assessed and ridiculed or judged, it's just not cool with me at all.

So yeah, though I am not a big fan of labels, I guess one could conclude that I have a little hipster in me (and his name is Atticus and he wears flannel and he lives in a loft in Wicker Park and he spends hours contemplating what it all means). In case if you were wondering, my inner wannabe hipster is not an asshole.  Maybe my inner wannabe hipster is a touch infantile with vulgar jokes (see above), but my inner wannabe hipster is pretty genuine.  The big difference between me and a hipster nowadays is that I truly don't care that much.  I am a nonconformist by nature, and though I might be into some things that typical hipsters are associated with, I am not going to be arrogant or obnoxious about my interests.  I'm into things because I am into them -- not because it's either hip or mainstream.


Anyway, I don't think I could be a true hipster because I'm too old, and I don't live in a coastal city.  Apparently, the majority of the people in the hipster club are in their 20's and 30's, the largest concentrations in NYC and San Francisco.  Damn.
I guess I'm done here.  


So, wanna attempt a guess at how many times I used the word "hipster" in this massive long winded post?

5 comments:

  1. The apparel would have appealed to me in my younger years. Still does in a way though now it just makes me look like an eccentric old lady! Maybe that's what happens to old hipsters!

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  3. Hubs' oldest nephew and his wife are 'hipsters' according to the lovelies. But they've been dressing like this forever. Way before the trend was trendy. The whole look reminds me of Leonard on The Big Bang Theory. LOL The nephew and wife are artsy- she is an artist, he is a musician/youth pastor. They are religious fanatics and both are covered in tats---is that hispterish? LOL The lovelies are not fans of trends in general but they are particularly opposed to 'fake' hipsters. But they say that their cousin isn't a fake one. I just stay out of it. LOL

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  4. careful....

    Your "16 candles" is showing

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  5. The problem is that hipsters - since at least 20 years everywhere in the western world - follow the norm. Extremely. By 2012 when you wrote this article it seemed to me many still enjoyed being a hipster. Today, it started about 2011 slowly, slowly, in 2016 it is a universal phenomenon - 99% are bored to death, get aggressive in every-day-situations in every quartier they took over ( throwing out hundreds of thousands out of the quartiers they lived in for 10-40 years came through gentrification-hipsters). Hipsters are all alike now, uniformists. Manic aviation, 5-20 times per year over the weekend, "shopping in Barcelona" or where ever. Tired. Bored to death. Older hipsters have 2-3 kids, which, aged 3-5, look bored, with these big, big spoilt eyes, unnerve every poor seller in any baker shop every day... "No, not this one. Is this with pumpkin seeds? Oh I don't want that one that looks burnt. (5 minutes later, the crowd behind her, hipsters all, start to hiss rather silently, as it is uncool to shout, etc etc).

    I think Oscar Wilde would write a huge novel today about how his socialist view of a hipster was destructed. His society was full of lies, protestant body-haters, right-wing-people wanting to be the upper-class. Wilde today would find - as hipsters! - people full of lies, indifferent-right-wing people (like the german green party or the US democrats), coming from the upper middle classes, hating the poor. Oscar Wilde liked the hipsters and he and all there loved the poor. Wilde would not believe it...if he could see old hipsters like Bryan Ferry making ads for mass-companies like H&M that exploit poor kids in far-away-countries...

    The original idea of a hipster got perverted by marketradicalism. Hipsters today are fragile egos aiming to be like all others. Advertising designers know this and play with the long lost hipster-view still residing in the heads of people who are a) insecure themselves, longing to be mainstream-hipster or b)who live in a "the earth is flat" society,not looking around anywhere. You can't find any big town in the western world where hipsters would be disdaining norms. A corruption of language, really. Like the german green party claiming they were against climate change, yet their voters are those who fly the most of all, waste the most, etc. You are not hipster, you are bourgeois but claim to be supercool.
    Oscar Wilde hated protestant homophobe bourgeois norms, and fought it. He was no follower, like all hipsters are today!
    Maybe after a youth movement would get rid of all these arrogant lies, new, innovative hipsters would unmask these all-look-alike-women and men...

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