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David Sirota: Anywhere Becomes Everywhere

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marmar Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jul-11-08 08:30 AM
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David Sirota: Anywhere Becomes Everywhere
from Truthdig:



Anywhere Becomes Everywhere

Posted on Jul 10, 2008
By David Sirota

I spent the July 4th weekend in my own Americana cliché: I relaxed in the humid heartland, drank one too many alcoholic beverages (screwdrivers), ate at a chain restaurant (Noodles & Company), played with my dog (a golden retriever mix) and attended Hollywood’s latest paean to mediocrity (Will Smith’s “Hancock"). I was in the bucolic suburbs of Lafayette, Ind., but really, I could have been anywhere or everywhere in America—which is both satisfying and troubling.

In the lead-up to my Independence Day respite, I went through the montage of diners, rental car counters and air mattresses commonly known as a book tour. The nationwide journey has been a blur—and not because I’ve been under-rested and over-caffeinated, but because America’s newly homogenized culture has made everything seem the same.

As I discovered, the contemporary road trip tells the tale of hegemony better than even shared holiday experiences. Turn on your car radio and your listening experience is standardized. No matter where you are, you find yourself unable to find much other than either Rush Limbaugh rants or Bad Company songs on a dial now owned by a tiny group of conglomerates. The offramp pit stop—once the spicy outpost of local flavor—today seems mass-produced from a Chinese factory, a bustling harbor of franchise commerce astride Jack Kerouac’s endless road. Towering signs for Applebee’s, Wendy’s and Bob Evans are the boat masts on a sea of corporate food below.

Sure, when you drive north to south, Arby’s morphs into Shoney’s, and when you drive east to west, the Wawas become Circle K’s. And yeah, you’ll find differing street sign fonts, varied twangs and the occasional idiosyncratic landmark. But with the chain store-ification of culture, that’s about it—and today, even our politics is a victim.

At bookstore events in every corner of the country, the discussion is almost completely national focused. Who will be the vice presidential nominees? What will the latest scandal mean for the presidential candidates? How can Democrats or Republicans win the congressional election?

The queries, of course, reflect homogenized news from a consolidated media industry that increasingly provides cheap-to-produce, cheaper-to-replicate federal-level horse-race speculation instead of detailed local coverage. The result is that Americans obsess over distant political soap operas and palace dramas while neglecting pressing issues in their backyards.

Don’t get me wrong—I’m no troglodyte pining for a heterogeneous golden age that never was, nor am I a New Ager opposing all mass culture on a hyper-localist fantasy that never will be. There’s a good side to this. It’s great that we can, for example, widely distribute medicine (believe me, without stomach analgesics at every convenience store my trip would have been unbearable). It’s also terrific that we can have truly national conversations about presidential campaigns and difficult issues like race. ......(more)

The complete piece is at: http://www.truthdig.com/report/item/20080710_anywhere_becomes_everywhere/




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Joanne98 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jul-11-08 08:33 AM
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1. I hate it. They've made life unbearable!
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fasttense Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jul-11-08 08:37 AM
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2. Regional monopolies - they will starting eating each other next.
Soon Exxon Mobile will own everything and Dubai will buy them out. I welcome our new overlord - Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum.
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The2ndWheel Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jul-11-08 08:41 AM
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3. That's the price of cheap energy
There's no need for creativity. It's much easier to standardize, and make predictable, and increase efficiency to the point where everything has to be the same in order to not waste energy. If everyone has to live the same way, that's less energy being wasted in trying to make everyone live the same way.
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marmar Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jul-11-08 09:13 AM
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6. Very true.....
n/t
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Bandit Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jul-11-08 08:42 AM
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4. You load sixteen tons and what do you get, another day older and deeper in debt.
I owe my soul to the company store...The true American Anthem
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ThomWV Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jul-11-08 08:55 AM
Response to Reply #4
5. Tennessee Ernie Ford - I remember the song from when I was a kid
Long long ago, far far away.
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