"Hipster" as pejorative.

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(Okay, three posts in I see what I'm getting at: people actively defer to hipsters in matters of taste, and thus they prize and fear the hipsters' opinions about them. They should stop that.)

nabisco (nabisco), Monday, 10 February 2003 17:58 (twenty-three years ago)

Actually I think there is a talent to being trendy (in the non-pejorative sense of "following trends, staying up-to-date") that I can admire without irony. I'd like to believe, but don't actually, that it's just a matter of choices I've made that I am not a hipster.

Amateurist (amateurist), Monday, 10 February 2003 17:59 (twenty-three years ago)

This is also why I'm amused by people who always use the sneery-pejorative "hipster" -- on some level it says you believe these people actually are cooler than you and that you're bothered by that!

A lot of people think 'cool' is shallow and thus to be mistrusted (but maybe resented too).

Differences between being 'cool', 'trendy', 'hip' and 'a hipster'?

I get intimidated sometimes in Hoxton bars or whatever where the clientele look trendier and more confident than I do, but I know that they mostly would be v.uncool if you actually talked to them. Certainly not hipsters anyway. Hipsters have to know stuff. Though I'm not you could be one and look a total state. Maybe, though.

N. (nickdastoor), Monday, 10 February 2003 17:59 (twenty-three years ago)

Ah, but the importance of staying up to date style-wise is arguably important, as Billy Joel once croaked:

"And if you can't understand why your world is so dead,
why you've got to keep in style and feed your head
Well you're 21 and still your mother makes your bed,
And that's too long"

Alex in NYC (vassifer), Monday, 10 February 2003 18:03 (twenty-three years ago)

Amateurist you are a hipster. Everyone ever on ILX apart from maybe GALE is a hipster.

It's one of those things like "middle class" -- everyone thinks they're pretty hip but not an actualy HIPSTER like THOSE people over there. Those people, in turn, think the same damn thing right up through supermodel egomaniacs, who are in thrall to the ultra-square and their ability to live normal rational lives.

But by any serious measure of "hipster," pretty much everyone here is one.

nabisco (nabisco), Monday, 10 February 2003 18:05 (twenty-three years ago)

I refuse to waste any precious time figuring out what is 'fresh' 'new' or 'hot', as in a year's time or less it will be 'stale' 'old' or 'cold'. If no one's wearing, buying, reading, listening, or watching something in 5 years time, doesn't it show a lack of quality (whatever that is)

Oops (Oops), Monday, 10 February 2003 18:07 (twenty-three years ago)

what about monSTERS?
Oooh, they're worse than hipSTERS

Horace Mann (Horace Mann), Monday, 10 February 2003 18:07 (twenty-three years ago)

Amateurist you are a hipster. Everyone ever on ILX apart from maybe GALE is a hipster.

No, I'm just a weirdo.

Christine "Green Leafy Dragon" Indigo (cindigo), Monday, 10 February 2003 18:12 (twenty-three years ago)

i agree with nabiscos first 3 posts, as usual he got it down EXACT

not so sure about the 'everyone here is a hipster' thing, but "i dont care about whats cool right now etc etc" is usually the hipsters trademark, because, like, if you were a hipster you wouldnt admit to that right?

gareth (gareth), Monday, 10 February 2003 18:13 (twenty-three years ago)

No, it's just that you're likely to have different criteria for 'cool' than they do.

N. (nickdastoor), Monday, 10 February 2003 18:15 (twenty-three years ago)

I guess it depends on whether you're obeying a widely shared idea of what's cool or whether that idea is more hermetic. Is hipsterism a social quality or is there a such thing as Platonic hipsterism?

Amateurist (amateurist), Monday, 10 February 2003 18:16 (twenty-three years ago)

Kismet N. + Amateurist!

Amateurist (amateurist), Monday, 10 February 2003 18:16 (twenty-three years ago)

My grammar was not cool.

N. (nickdastoor), Monday, 10 February 2003 18:17 (twenty-three years ago)

is it possible to be a populist hipster?

jess (dubplatestyle), Monday, 10 February 2003 18:19 (twenty-three years ago)

Hefner?
Or is he just cool and not hip? I really need to think this through

Oops (Oops), Monday, 10 February 2003 18:22 (twenty-three years ago)

i always thought/used hipster as a patronising synonym of trendy, ie a follower, someone who is up to date but only looking at other people's clocks, y'know topshop without the kokosolaki endorsement

the most agreeable aspect of this used is that while said victim would still dislike being defined as cool maan (keep yr guard up) he/she might slightly prefer being called a hipster than a trendy... thus confirming their hipsterness!!!

zemko (bob), Monday, 10 February 2003 18:22 (twenty-three years ago)

Of course, jess! (that's what ILM used to be about, isn't it?)

N. (nickdastoor), Monday, 10 February 2003 18:22 (twenty-three years ago)

zing!

jess (dubplatestyle), Monday, 10 February 2003 18:23 (twenty-three years ago)

hoho the joke's on him not me! sigh

zemko (bob), Monday, 10 February 2003 18:23 (twenty-three years ago)

this is like one of those "atom in the tail of a dog" things isnt it?

jess (dubplatestyle), Monday, 10 February 2003 18:25 (twenty-three years ago)

anyway basically the hipster level is nowhere near the top. it's gola shoes and airport bags

zemko (bob), Monday, 10 February 2003 18:25 (twenty-three years ago)

uhoh i didn't close somehting

zemko (bob), Monday, 10 February 2003 18:26 (twenty-three years ago)

s'ok

zemko (bob), Monday, 10 February 2003 18:26 (twenty-three years ago)

So...Hipster= shallowness, fashion-obsessed, focuses on appearances

Oops (Oops), Monday, 10 February 2003 18:29 (twenty-three years ago)

but not very good at it

zemko (bob), Monday, 10 February 2003 18:38 (twenty-three years ago)

so, oops, what you're saying is the hipsterism is anti-rockism then?

gareth (gareth), Monday, 10 February 2003 18:40 (twenty-three years ago)

don't know what anti-rockism is, but we seem to be saying that hipsters are into a 'scene' more than music. Their whole lifestyle (what they do, eat, read, listen to, etc.) is just a fashion statement.

Oops (Oops), Monday, 10 February 2003 18:49 (twenty-three years ago)

To me "hip" is kind of all right, that just means you know how to have fun and you're not overly populist about it and you're also not too concerned with trends either...you just like what you like, basically. So what if something is deemed "rockist," that's just someone trying to impose their tastes on you, to cut you down to size. To be hip is to be relaxed about what you like and to not take it too seriously, it's just popular music anyway. But being a hipster is making a cult out of it, and unless you're really a musician who gets obsessed with certain things for the purpose of understanding it--doing it--being obsessive about it beyond your own personal enjoyment of it is a drag, which is not hip. I know I'm stating the obvious and I risk being branded not hip to say it...so maybe I'm not hip after all...

Edd Hurt (delta ed), Monday, 10 February 2003 19:03 (twenty-three years ago)

*Ahem* Was "hipster" coined as a pejorative?

Amateurist (amateurist), Monday, 10 February 2003 19:07 (twenty-three years ago)

More like a fashion agreement...

I don't think there's any correlation with being "cool" and being a "hipster".

Does discussing the definition of hipster qualify you as one? Not me, I'm here for scholarly purposes only.

What do people who are overly populist about having fun do for fun?

I don't know if you're hip or not, Edd, but you're definitely OTM.

Stuart, Monday, 10 February 2003 19:08 (twenty-three years ago)

No, Amateurist.
Hipster was a pretty groovy thing to be. This was before there were alternatives to alternative lifestyles and before there was 5000 magazines and websites telling you their opinion of cool. Almost anyone who wasn't mainstream and 'square' was a hipster. Dig it.

Digable Planets used it positively as recently as 1993.

Oops (Oops), Monday, 10 February 2003 19:11 (twenty-three years ago)

amateurist i think it was probbly coined as a positive word — ppl who are in the know — but IMMEDIATELY INSTANTLY also became a diss

the word "hipicat" means something relevant in wolof: sadly i forget what

mark s (mark s), Monday, 10 February 2003 19:12 (twenty-three years ago)

From The Straight Dope

Dear Cecil:

What is the origin of the expression "hip hip hurrah"? According to one book I've read, it derives from an abbreviation of the Latin Hierusylema Est Perdita, "Jerusalem is destroyed." Apparently, medieval antisemites yelled "Hep! Hep!" as they exiled or executed innocent Jews. Can this be true? Can modern expressions such as hip, hipster, hippie, and hip-hop have such an odious etymology? Say it ain't so. --Name withheld, Washington, D.C.

Cecil replies:

You're not going to believe it, but there may be a germ of truth to this bizarre story.

Hip, hippie, hipster, and presumably hip-hop all derive from hep (meaning hip, of course), which dates from the turn of the century. There are several theories where hep came from:

(1) From the marching cadence "hep, two, three, four." If you were hep, you were in step with what was happening.

(2) From Joe Hep, who ran a low-life saloon in Chicago in the 1890s. (You may recall our discussion of another 1890s Chicago saloonkeeper who allegedly lent his name to the language, Mickey Finn. 1890s Chicago saloonkeepers were obviously quite a crew.) Hep liked to hover around the local hoods while they plotted their dirty deeds and fancied himself in the know. His name was originally used ironically to refer to someone who thought he knew what was going on but didn't. The ironic sense was soon lost and to get Joe to or to get hep to simply meant to get the straight dope, so to speak. (Source: D.W. Maurer, American Speech, 1941.)

(3) According to a 1914 slang dictionary, "from the name of a fabulous detective who operated in Cincinnati."

Of the three explanations, #1 is probably the least absurd. Hep (or hup or hip) has long been a multipurpose exclamation. In addition to being a cadence counter it was a traditional cry used by teamsters and herders to rouse animals. Hip was used to mean something on the order of "yo" or "hey" in the 18th century, and folks obviously thought it made a nice kickoff for hip hip hurrah.

Now we get to the bizarre part. Antisemitic rioters in Europe in the 19th century often shouted "Hep! Hep!" while on the prowl for Jews. Mob harrassment of Jews in Hamburg, Frankfurt, and other German cities in 1819, in fact, became known as the "Hep! Hep!" riots.

The origin of the expression is unclear. Some claim it derived from Hierusylema (also spelled Hierosolyma) Est Perdita. This theory obliges us to believe that a significant fraction of the rioters were students of Latin. Others say it came from the German habe, in this context apparently meaning "give." But some believe it was nothing more than the traditional herdsmen's cry, perhaps used because the rioters thought Jews ought to be rounded up like animals.

Does this mean we owe hip, hippie, hip hip hurrah and the rest to the howling of a bunch of Jew baiters? Not necessarily. Literary citations of hip hip hurrah in clearly innocent contexts date from 1818, the year before the "Hep! Hep!" riots. (I've seen nothing to convince me "Hep! Hep!" was used in the middle ages.) The most plausible explanation is that hip hip hurrah and "Hep! Hep!" simply have a common source, the herder's cry. Still, it's something to think about next time you're about to give someone three cheers.

Jerry the Nipper (Jerrynipper), Monday, 10 February 2003 19:12 (twenty-three years ago)

hipicat, Wolof: “one who has his eyes wide open”

(i got this from the net, not a speaker of Wolof)

mark s (mark s), Monday, 10 February 2003 19:16 (twenty-three years ago)

hipikitten

mark s (mark s), Monday, 10 February 2003 19:16 (twenty-three years ago)

Chumpikittin!

Almost anyone who wasn't mainstream and 'square' was a hipster.

E.g. almost no-one was a "hipster" -- Mark is spot-on here, that such terms can only be developed by the subculture they describe (as a way of identifying and distinguishing themselves) but as of the 40s and 50s in America the standard arc was for that description to be revealed to the mainstream public ("here we have the freaks who describe themselves as X") and then become bulk-usage pejorative. (If the dynamics were anything like they are with such words now, one assumes the subculture quits using it as soon as it's revealed to the larger public -- it loses its purpose as a shibboleth and in lots of senses cops to what they'd probably consider the public's "misunderstanding" of them.)

E.g. in bulk usage from 1963-1976 what would you guess the ratio would be between "hippies" as positive or neutral description and "hippies" with an implied "damn dirty" beforehand?

nabisco (nabisco), Monday, 10 February 2003 19:21 (twenty-three years ago)

And so what interests me is that in the aftermath of the cultural inversions of the 60s and then the 90s subculture-vogue the reaction isn't "these horrible freaks" anymore, it's "omigod I feel so uncool these people know things I don't."

nabisco (nabisco), Monday, 10 February 2003 19:22 (twenty-three years ago)

punkimutt

mark s (mark s), Monday, 10 February 2003 19:24 (twenty-three years ago)

is wolof for clashfan

mark s (mark s), Monday, 10 February 2003 19:24 (twenty-three years ago)

True fact: there was a time in the U.S. when high school students would be mocked and dunked in toilets for being interesting, not admired and feared for being tapped into some supposed subculture.

nabisco (nabisco), Monday, 10 February 2003 19:25 (twenty-three years ago)

I've seen Meldrick Lewis (of Homicide: Life On The Street) described as a jazz hipster, and I think that's quite evocative and not at all negative, but that is rare. It's one insult from which I'm completely safe, I think it's fair to say.

Martin Skidmore (Martin Skidmore), Monday, 10 February 2003 19:50 (twenty-three years ago)

shibboleth

I was called before a high school English department tribunal for using this word in a newspaper article my freshman year. They wanted to know where I had stolen it from.

Martin, I think you're on the right track, since I do recall reading about jazz musicians favorably talking about "hipsters," at least c. 1950. Although by then the word had a slightly patronizing cast, it seems, meaning someone who came from the outside but eagerly, admirably wanted in. (I.e. the white fans who would trek to Harlem clubs in those days.)

I think the word's lost most if not all of its racial implications right? Can we safely say that?

Amateurist (amateurist), Monday, 10 February 2003 20:06 (twenty-three years ago)

Yeah, there's none of that left. Even the "jazz hipster" phrase could be used of a white person (imagine a Chet Baker type, say).

Martin Skidmore (Martin Skidmore), Monday, 10 February 2003 20:12 (twenty-three years ago)

Well I think "jazz hipster" might have had implications of white cultural tourism even as far back as the 40s/50s. I.e. John Hammond. (Not to say Hammond was a tourist, but he was likely perceived as such by some, for a while.)

Amateurist (amateurist), Monday, 10 February 2003 20:29 (twenty-three years ago)

Does discussing the definition of hipster qualify you as one? Not me, I'm here for scholarly purposes only.

What do people who are overly populist about having fun do for fun?

I don't know if you're hip or not, Edd, but you're definitely OTM.

-- Stuart (gonzomoos...), February 10th, 2003


See, Stuart, I'm so unhip I don't even know what "OTM" means. On the money? Off the money? Off the mark? On the mountain (Hank Williams Jr. reference)? I always thought the word itself came from Wolof (sp?); that's what Robert Palmer (the late music writer, not the British singer who wears suits all the time) says in "Deep Blues."

I always was under the impression that "hipster" was not a compliment, it referred to a white-person jazz wannabe--who was that guy, Dean Benedetti, who wire-recorded all the Charlie Parker solos he could get but left out the others? Am I wrong here? Didn't the term come into general use in the bebop era?

Edd Hurt (delta ed), Monday, 10 February 2003 23:10 (twenty-three years ago)

Yeah but Palmer and other blues authors are so keen to trace everything in the blues and black culture directly back to Africa in this too-linear way, so I wouldn't trust that hypothesis.

Amateurist (amateurist), Monday, 10 February 2003 23:11 (twenty-three years ago)

Me liking Rush = not hip. Once that was realized about fifteen years ago, I haven't cared since.

Ned Raggett (Ned), Monday, 10 February 2003 23:15 (twenty-three years ago)

Your awareness than Rush is not hip and your liking them anyways in defiance = you are v. possibly a hipster. (Hipsterism being an omnivorous beast.)

Amateurist (amateurist), Monday, 10 February 2003 23:17 (twenty-three years ago)

only one of ned's eyes is ever open tho ;-)

mark s (mark s), Monday, 10 February 2003 23:19 (twenty-three years ago)

haha

(when i was in the shower today i flashed on that sun ra quote "blah blah these are the hopes and dreams of someone, don't be so hip" to his sneering band. i can't date it, tho.)

jess (dubplatestyle), Monday, 10 February 2003 23:20 (twenty-three years ago)

Skipping 2299 messages at this point... Click here if you want to load them all.

I am still in favor of a return to "hep cat" as an accolade.

A is for (Aimless), Sunday, 26 January 2020 22:23 (six years ago)

seeing this in sans-serif, btw

A is for (Aimless), Sunday, 26 January 2020 22:23 (six years ago)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SPzt3A4Se_U

TS: Kirk/Spock vs. Marat/Sade (James Redd and the Blecchs), Sunday, 26 January 2020 22:27 (six years ago)

mcsweeneys reading man bristles at unflattering depiction of hipsters as 'so passe'

lumen (esby), Sunday, 26 January 2020 23:18 (six years ago)

ftr it was in my facebook feed, I do NOT reed McSweeneys!

longtime caller, first time listener (man alive), Monday, 27 January 2020 04:24 (six years ago)

That Blossom song (OK a Dave Frishberg song sung by Blossom) is one of the best things ever, do click that triangle

Guayaquil (eephus!), Monday, 27 January 2020 04:34 (six years ago)

Speaking of McSweeney's, Dave Eggers Trump novel sounds like it's the worst thing to ever be written.

Greta Van Show Feets BB (milo z), Monday, 27 January 2020 06:26 (six years ago)

Did you post the McS link without reading it?

sarahell, Monday, 27 January 2020 17:23 (six years ago)

Seeing pieces like this published in 2020 is like finding one of those isolated Japanese island bunkers where the soldiers don't know the war is over.

― longtime caller, first time listener (man alive), Sunday, January 26, 2020 10:17 AM (yesterday) bookmarkflaglink

good. let's wind the culture back to 2010 -- a moment of crisis but also incipient hope -- and just do this shit over again, better this time.

treeship., Monday, 27 January 2020 17:40 (six years ago)

four years pass...

Speaking of bunkers where the soldiers don't know the war is over, I give you: Brooklyn Taxidermy
https://www.brooklyntaxidermy.com/about

longtime caller, first time listener (man alive), Sunday, 7 July 2024 22:19 (one year ago)

I still do not quite grasp how/when hipster went from scowling leather jackets to, like, recovering Christian summer camp or whatever

brimstead, Sunday, 7 July 2024 23:43 (one year ago)

is it like how everybody got into The Band in 1969

brimstead, Sunday, 7 July 2024 23:43 (one year ago)

One of my favourite internet writers is, or was, Greg Goebel, who had a website filled with little capsule summaries of things. Which appeals to me because I have a short attention span.

Many years ago I would have written "because I have a short..." and just left the sentence hanging. But I'm beyond that kind of cheap joke now. I have moved beyond that. And in any case there would be a risk that kids might scrawl "penis" at the end of the sentence thus mocking me.

He also published a lengthy piece on the JFK assassination, which was filled with interesting tiny little details that I was unaware of, because JFK was a baby boomer thing:
https://web.archive.org/web/20150316084755/http://vectorsite.net/twjfk.html

One thing that stood out is "the three tramps". They were three vagrants who were photographed being arrested just after the investigation, but there was no record of their identities. Some people believe that one of the tramps was E Howard Hunt, the Watergate mastermind. The idea was that they were far too well-dressed to be just tramps:
https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/6/61/The_Three_Tramps.jpg

The odd thing is that they really do look suave by modern standards. They have a certain sprezzatura. Of course in reality none of the men are actually real - they're just tricks of the light and reflections from the planet Venus. But baby boomers didn't have the internet, so they had to entertain themselves by obsessively fixating over tiny tiny details of things, which is why their conversations consist of describing trips to the shop.

Something something hipsters. They look like hipsters. There you go. Hipsters.

Ashley Pomeroy, Monday, 8 July 2024 21:24 (one year ago)

Are you alright

Bad Bairns (Boring, Maryland), Monday, 8 July 2024 23:41 (one year ago)

Anyway MSTs The Girl In Lovers Lane taught me that hoboes could be fancy lads

Bad Bairns (Boring, Maryland), Monday, 8 July 2024 23:42 (one year ago)

I give you: The Voidz

https://api.floodmagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/02/julian-and-the-voidz-1-1920x1080.jpg

Andy the Grasshopper, Tuesday, 9 July 2024 00:26 (one year ago)

> Did that work? Looking at the page source it appears that Zemko tried to close an imaginary tag that hadn't been opened. My hunch is that the forum software has been upgraded over the years to trap HTML errors, so when I hit "submit post" this will still be in teeny-tiny letters.

But perhaps that's ironic. The teeny-tiny letters. Is that what hipsters want?

Ashley Pomeroy, Tuesday, 9 July 2024 17:39 (one year ago)

No, it did not work. We are stuck forevermore with tiny words. Tiny words that will fly underneath the radar of The Man. Tiny words, tiny truth - but truth.

Ashley Pomeroy, Tuesday, 9 July 2024 17:40 (one year ago)

seven months pass...

Everything hipsters were into 15 years ago went mainstream. You can buy raw denim at Uniqlo. Target has vinyl records. Your corner store has craft beer. Right wing chuds dress like urban lesbians and graphic designers did in 2010. Everyone drinks fancy coffee now. They won. https://t.co/vi9ScF1cWL

— Max Dubler 🏳️‍🌈 (@maxdubler) February 26, 2025

thuringer spring (Eazy), Thursday, 27 February 2025 02:59 (one year ago)

Is that tweet 15 years old?

brimstead, Thursday, 27 February 2025 15:06 (one year ago)

Skinny jeans, mesh trucker hats, and Pabst Blue Ribbon thankfully did not survive though...

fajita seas, Thursday, 27 February 2025 16:42 (one year ago)

Skinny jeans are the best!

the talented mr pimply (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 27 February 2025 16:50 (one year ago)

goorin bros hats are mainstream

slim fit ftw

brimstead, Thursday, 27 February 2025 16:56 (one year ago)


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