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Why the hipster must die

A modest proposal to save New York cool

By Christian Lorentzen
Illustration Credit: Jesse Philips


Illustration Credit: Jesse Philips

Has the hipster killed cool in New York? Did it die the day Wes Anderson proved too precious for his own good, or was it when Chloë Sevigny fellated Vincent Gallo onscreen? Did it vanish along with Kokie’s, International Bar and Tonic? Or when McSweeney’s moved shop to San Francisco and Bright Eyes signed a lease on the Lower East Side? Was it possible to be a hipster once a band that played Northsix one night was heard the next day on NPR’s Weekend Edition? Did it hurt to have American Apparel marketing soft-porn style to young bankers? Was something lost the day Ecstasy made the cover of the Times Magazine? Or was it the day Bloomberg banned smoking in bars? And how many times an hour could one check e-mail and still have an honest, or even ironic, claim on being cool?

Yes, the assassins of cool still walk our streets: Any night of the week finds the East Village, the Lower East Side and Williamsburg teeming with youth—a pageant of the bohemian undead. These hipster zombies—now more likely to be brokers or lawyers than art-school dropouts—are the idols of the style pages, the darlings of viral marketers and the marks of predatory real-estate agents. And they must be buried for cool to be reborn.

It was in the real-estate section of one of the city’s lesser dailies, under the headline luxury seems to be set for the lower east side, that I found an astonishing remark attributed to Michael Desjadon, the director of sales at Massey Knakal: “The profile of the typical renter in the area is changing from the ‘counterculture hipster’ to the ‘more mainstream’ hipster and young professional.”

“I wish I’d thought of this phrase, but we call the Lower East Side ‘the last real neighborhood in New York,’” Desjadon, an amiable fellow and a patron of LES bars, told me when I called him up. “The mainstream hipster,” he explained, “is not an artist or a musician. He has an office job, and wears one hat to work and another at night.” Presumably, the latter is a trucker—or a porkpie—hat.

The mouth of a real-estate agent is rarely the source of truth, but Mr. Desjadon knows his territory (and is no doubt cashing in on this knowledge). He has unwittingly explicated the transformation of the hipster into the “indie yuppie,” an avatar we might imagine as the fusion of Kurt Cobain and Adam Gopnik. The indie yuppie is (literally) the child of the bobo, and just as his father the baby boomer did, he has learned to simulate rebellion while procuring and furnishing a comfortable two-bedroom. His haircut may be asymmetrical, but his dog never misses a walk. And around the corner, sleeping on couches, neophyte slackers dream until they wake up late for their temp jobs. The savvy among them soon grasp that they’ve arrived at the party too late.



Photo: Alexander Milligan

Under the guise of “irony,” hipsterism fetishizes the authentic and regurgitates it with a winking inauthenticity. Those 18-to-34-year-olds called hipsters have defanged, skinned and consumed the fringe movements of the postwar era—Beat, hippie, punk, even grunge. Hungry for more, and sick with the anxiety of influence, they feed as well from the trough of the uncool, turning white trash chic, and gouging the husks of long-expired subcultures—vaudeville, burlesque, cowboys and pirates.

Of course, hipsterism being originally, and still mostly, the province of whites (the pastiest of whites), its acolytes raid the cultural stores of every unmelted ethnicity in the pot. Similarly, they devour gay style: Witness the cultural burp known as metrosexuality. As the hipster ambles from the thrift store to a $100 haircut at Freemans Sporting Club, these aesthetics are assimilated—cannibalized—into a repertoire of meaninglessness, from which the hipster can construct an identity in the manner of a collage, or a shuffled playlist on an iPod.

All isms seek dominance of human affairs, and in this, hipsterism in New York City has proved more virulent than any of its forebears. (Punk, after all, never really broke—except in the form of hipsterism.) At last there was nothing left for hipsters to do but to convert the squares, take them to the bar and let them pick up the tab. Secrets were shared. The hipster hooked up with the common consumer; he woke up a zombie.

How can this be undone? I propose that the only hope for a reanimated bohemia, if not a dezombified hipsterdom, is civil war.

Hipsters in their present undead incarnation are essentially people who think of themselves as being cooler than America. But they are afflicted by that other ism sociologists made an industry of decrying in the 20th century: narcissism. The late prophet of our current moment, George W. S. Trow, posited that television had obliterated the context of American life. The only refuges remaining were TV, God and the self. Young people who live in cities notoriously shun God and television to cultivate themselves. Now, as the age of MySpace comes due for a backlash and the former teen idols of our crypto-ironic fascination start to show their age, the time has come for the hipsters in the garden of Union Pool to open their eyes, realize that they are surrounded by jackasses and milquetoasts, and stage their own dive-bar putsch.

The fault lines are clear enough already. We know that there are Sweet hipsters, who practice the sort of irony you can take home to meet the parents, and there are those Vicious hipsters, who practice the form of not-quite-passive aggression called snark.

On the Sweet end of the spectrum, The Believer lavishes its literary and pop-culture idols with a uniform layer of affection that renders it near impossible to distinguish the great from the mediocre. This aesthetic of relativism grants everybody an A for effort and allows anyone projecting the image of an artist to conceive of himself as such. It proliferates as a social plague among hipsters who invite their entire address book to readings, shows and art openings. The e-mails arrive, and though it is known in advance that the art will be nothing much,the trek is made. The avant-garde illusion ultimately sustains itself on free beer.

As the war claims its casualties, the Sweet may discover that behind their aesthetic relativism is an impulse more political than cultural: They are rightfully activists. Their cause has emerged in the form of global warming, and I would not be surprised if the color of cool in their future is green. Along the way they might rediscover a concept hipsters have lately had little use for: love.

Meanwhile, among those who adopt the Vicious pose, a lighthearted scorn perfected by Gawker is roundly applied to the objects of pop celebrity, both talented and (mostly) otherwise. The effect is akin to dipping sushi in wasabi sauce: The flavor is a little less bland, but it’s still mostly rice. The hipster who keeps up with the antics of Hilton, Lohan and Spears does so sneeringly, and her knowingness introduces one degree of difference between herself and the Midwestern housewife who buys Us Weekly at the Wal-Mart checkout line.

When I asked Gawker managing editor Choire Sicha whether it was possible to ignore talentless celebrities, he responded with the remorse of a custodian of cultural decline: “Everyone can, and should, be ignored. We were warned about this situation we find ourselves in by philosophers, and well before it happened. It’s just too bad we weren’t warned by celebrities, or we would have listened to them.”

So the Sweet will turn on the Vicious, and the Vicious will shun the Sweet. The sniping in the blogosphere will escalate, and turf wars will ensue. Power will be consolidated in the frontiers of the outer boroughs as the Vicious tighten their grip on Bushwick and the Sweet flee south to Kensington and Windsor Terrace, or give up and move to Queens (better yet, to their rightful home: the West Coast).

If they can vanquish the Sweet, the path for the Vicious is less obvious. A good first step might entail purging the lawyers and bankers lurking in their company. But on the other hand, those guys are good at footing the bill. Another tactic would require the conversion of snark to self-criticism, and that would necessarily involve ignoring no-talent celebrities, and mean an end to playing it safe. The safest game in town—in fashion and music especially—is retro, and if there is no Ezra Pound in corduroys out there to say, “Make it new,” let me be the one to say, “Stop making it old.”

What distinguishes the zombie hipsters at large today from the “white Negroes” Norman Mailer described in the 1950s is a lack of menace. The original hipster—Mailer had in mind James Dean and the Neal Cassady who inspired On the Road—was a “philosophical psychopath” who might steal your car and drive it to Mexico. The myth of menace survives in the pages of Vice, but the magazine’s signature feature—the “Do’s and Don’t’s”—suggests a safe path to transgression, a notion as oxymoronic as the “mainstream hipster.” Mailer, who traced hipster psychosis to the Holocaust and the atom bomb, would likely point to September 11 as the event that left hordes of twentysomethings whispering, “We would be safe,” to quote the Sweet hipster novelist Jonathan Safran Foer. Menace is now lost on anyone older than 20. It is left to those born after 1990 to move to town, frighten the zombies away, destabilize the real-estate market and restore something unsavory to what used to be called hip.

Until then, the battle will rage. Which side are you on?

Comments (28)
 
May 29, 2007
Comments
after reading this blog (and the comments) i gotta say i have lost all faith in humanity.
By dissapointed (not verified) on 2/04/2012 at 5:10 pm
This is the best article I've read about the hipster revolution that is ruining NYC. I'm living with a self-described hipster-yuppy right now that recently explained to me how $40 for her cowboy shirt at Uniqlo was a good deal. She only shops at Whole Foods, and will not eat meat because of animal cruelty but has no problem with the mass production of milk. She has a MacBook, iPhone, and iPad all running at the exact same time. It's insanity. I've told her about establishments in our neighborhood (Washington Heights) and she says she only likes to eat out when she's away from home. Translation: Upper East Side. She's an art history major looking for an art museum job, effectively blending professionalism and creativity. She wants to live in West Village but would never live in Brooklyn, because those kind of hipsters do drugs and stuff. It's beyond me. Whatever happened to being yourself? If you can read the book "Stuff White People Like" and check off every single item, you need to rethink yourself.
By Anonymous (not verified) on 10/18/2011 at 10:44 pm
All the "ad hominem" b.s. aside, this article and it's accompanying comments provided the perfect context for a complete social commentary on hipster culture, i.e.: the cheap knockoff shallow bull-#$%^ that is this so called "hipster culture". Personally, I have a deep desire to keep working class culture for me and my people. Rock n Roll, Punk, whatever. I feel that we have paid or dues and this is ours to keep. $H*# we created it, not you! Hipster's destroy what is not theirs to destroy, that is the bottom line. It is extremely offensive for these middle class transplants to come into our neighborhoods and adopt out music and our influences and then act as if they are so above the very people that this music was created for and by. God help us all.
By Julia (not verified) on 9/21/2011 at 2:46 am
I was born in New York in summer 91, making me 20. I moved out to the midwest (Colorado) five years ago and intend to return to my home after I finish college. As you say, kids born after 1990 need to come in and fuck shit up to fix this square issue. How about a generation of kids raised on video games, jackass, and power rangers? Violence is like embedded in my subconscious. The whole Hipster phenom is odd. Aren't you supposed to try to fit in when you're in grade school? It looks insecure on a grown ass man(/woman). There's a code to the New York of my childhood that I can tell is diluted by the mass migration of turds. These turds need to learn that culture doesn't come from the web, but is earned and refined by your interactions with the millions of people you share a confined space with. So stop ruining my favorite place ignorant sluts of the blog
By Bryan (not verified) on 9/09/2011 at 3:59 am
First, lets define hipster. What is the hipster "movement"? It is a group of young adults who use every subculture's (and even some mainstream) fashions, music, literature, and philosophy since the 1940's. To go beyond, or to deny this definition, seems impossible since this "group" has no goal or leader, so there is no one within this "group" to define it. It must be defined by observation, and I argue that the above definition is valid. The glaring problem that should stare you in the face from this definition is this: if every single culture since the 1940's in western or anglo culture is being used by this group, and this group is without a specific location or background (besides being western), how do we know when we see a hipster? The only clue is observing an individual that is not wearing volcom, macy, hollister, sports clothing, or any other modern 90's-present mainstream clothing(and this is not always true, making it even more confusing). Once you get to know the individual, the same can be observed with their hobbies, interests, and tastes in music. Do they do something that is considered artistic, or not usual? Then they are open to be labeled hipster. And since the hipster title is always negative (also for comedic purposes, but that is besides the point), it becomes a bit like the red scare. Then, you could call anyone a communist if they had a hint of "non-american", now you can call anyone who doesnt watch football, keep up with celebrity gossip, watch tv, etc, a hipster. So now that it is defined, what are the effects? Does the hipster phenomenon (if you want to call it that), have negative, or positive effects on society and culture as a whole? Also, what kind of reactions to the hipster "group" will have negative, or positive effects on society or culture as a whole? What I will say below is just hypothetical and guess work, but I do believe it isnt the worst guess work on what the effect of this "group" will be. The only effect I can see from this group is america at its core: the merging of cultures, the melting pot of america. What hipsters do instead of merging different cultures from different lands (immigrants during the 20th and 19th centuries coming to america and being attacked for being outsiders, patriotism emerging, and non-anglo cultures merging with the anglo-american cuture; the hippies and beats accepting eastern cultures in a stronger way then before, etc), is merge subcultures from different times from the anglo or western world. This can lead to one of two things, one being what the author of this blog pointed out, culture apathy. The merging of cultures leads to information overload, and culture loses its umph, what makes it unique and sacred. The other outcome is a greater understanding of subcultures, and individuals being more open minded to new things, and possibly a decrease in conformity, since there are too many cultures present in one spot to allow for conformity to occur. So then if these are our two outcomes, the following will happen in the reactions. If we react positively, we may enforce culture apathy, as this author has pointed out, or we will enforce the individual being open minded to new cultures, or possibly, enforce just the idea of the individual itself. If we react negatively to this "group", we may stop culture apathy from occuring, as the author of this blog has advocated, or, what i am getting at, we create a new red scare for being open minded to new cultures, and possibly, the individual that american subculture has been striving for for centuries. So then, how do we know what will happen? Im 20, I dont know what the fuck will happen, but im optimistic, and say let the those who want to try what is different, try what is different. You may retort, what if they truly dont care, do it just for the image, and sell authenticity like walmart sells tvs? Well, id respond, its a start, this might not be the generation where individuals thrive and conformity dies, but the information is spreading, and thats a start.
By Chris (not verified) on 8/10/2011 at 10:52 pm
Hey who gives a shit, the fact that you are so concerned about other people are, and not your self is pretty sad. How about you stop trying to change other people, and change yourself. Why you hatin?
By Mike (not verified) on 7/25/2011 at 2:01 pm
Well here it is ladies and gentlemen- the dead end of Western Civilization. I read through just about everyone's comments and I thought most of you have some sort of clue about something. I'm just not sure what it is. My two cents is as follows- what's wrong with being a hipster? It, like hip-hop (and I mean hip-hop of today, not how it started), it's a FAILED CULTURE. What do I mean by failed culture? A culture is supposed to mean something, something sacred. This one based entirely on fashion and narcissism. What makes someone a hipster isn't how they dress, or the computer they use, or the music they listen to- it's the fact that they have no balls behind any of their beliefs or ideals. Say what you want about the idiot (yes idiot) redneck who talks about fighting for his country. At least he's willing to stand up and fight for something. Forget that it's a rotten, corrupt, bloated sow, that is going to leave everyone under the age of forty completely screwed in the years to come with it's rampant criminality and military industrial complex. Our idiot redneck believes in it and is willing to sign up for the military and go fight a few thousand miles away in a desert to preserve something. I think that whole ideology is B.S. but he's READY TO FIGHT. What is a hipster ready to do? He'll go to an art/fashion/indie music/ show and talk philosophy and wax poetic about the beats and the '60s and the counterculture. He may even get high and write really cool blogs about the way things used to be or the corruption we face now or how the end is nigh or how "the hipster must die". But is he ready to fight? If just one tenth of the people who claim to really want change actually got together and did more about it then sign a petition or march at some protest (HOW MANY PROTESTS DO THERE NEED TO BE BEFORE WE SEE THEY DON'T WORK) we could have a real revolution on our hands. That's the difference between now and then. Then, people were ready to act, ready to fight, and as one of the greatest emcees ever said READY TO DIE for something. Today no one is willing to die for anything. No one will even sacrifice anything. I like idiot rednecks, because there is a degree of nobility in their ignorance- they'll die for what they believe in. Pick up a gun to defend it. What will a hipster or anti-hipster do? Write a clever, snarky, article or blog about it for a bunch of other people unwilling to sacrifice to comment on. When push comes to shove, I'd rather be with the redneck.
By Clero Batista (not verified) on 7/11/2011 at 9:25 pm
I think the article is very thoughtfully crafted with some excellent points. We are talking about people that go out of their way to look/ be cool and the flowering of unbridled narcissism that occurs in the vacuum created when the values of traditional society/ the masses are shunned... but it's really just their youthful becoming... it looks different because this is a different time... more information and connectivity and still learning as humans how to handle the input and expectations of living in such a time. The article points out the schism between espoused values and actions and that's a relevant point for all to consider... not just the mac addicted all-organic hipster. Getting what we say and do in line with what we think is a life-long challenge for all to be mindful of. I suppose I'm sweet but much too old for the classification of hipster... and I've never been cool except to my own friends... but I don't hold it against anyone if they think they're super cool for their politics, recycled clothing, or musical tastes. I have seen my and my friends attitudes change as we got older, had kids, and figured out what was important to us... I am sure many of these folks will, too. In the meantime, let's all lead the kind of lives that are true to ourselves and set the best example of action-oriented living that we can. I strive to keep in mind that being informed and siding with the good guys doesn't actually make any change happen... you have to get out there and live the difference.
By gido (not verified) on 6/18/2011 at 1:38 pm
I'm not the least bit surprised that much the attacks against the writer of this article are not only ad hominid, but epitomize the very attitudes which the author is concerned about in the first place. Alice provides an excellent example of this; all force and no content. It's simply a bitter and pretentious response to an article that a reader took too personally.
By Jason (not verified) on 6/02/2011 at 12:53 am
@By TheDoctor : Although you may think your clever behind the relative safety of your keyboard, you do "realise"(the proper British spelling) that "you are both a bitter and talentless writer" is perfectly acceptable? So clearly the fellow you just mocked is actually correct, that my friend would make you not only a grammar elitist wanker, but more importantly, rather awful at expressing an argument whilst you made some points your rebuttal lacked any real criticisms of worth. In short, before being a douche on the internet sit back, and think about shit, surely you have the time!
By Peter (not verified) on 5/23/2011 at 5:05 am
Have an Opinion? Let's hear it