Tuesday, March 9, 2010

On Conformity

MGMT is coming to my school, and I’m pretty stoked. Many of my fellow Wildcats do not share my excitement. Two of the undergrads who do workstudy in the same office as me had never heard of MGMT. “SCOPE [the Student Committee on Popular Entertainment] has been bringing some good shows lately,” one of the girls said. “Like Akon!”

I cringed inside. They also mentioned an excellent show by Sean Kingston. “Who’s that?” I asked.


“You know, he does that song ‘Beautiful girls.’ You’ve heard it.”


They played it for me. I had never heard it. I wasn’t missing anything. I played them “Time to Pretend” and “Electric Feel” by MGMT. They had never heard either song.


The SCOPE message board was in the middle of a flame war. “Plymouth gets Drake and we get MGMT?” one user wrote, and pointed out that Drake has had twelve top-100 singles (including songs he’s been a guest on), and MGMT has only had one—therefore, Drake is the better musician. I wanted to point out that by his logic, Drake is a better artist than Nirvana, and twice as talented as Jimi Hendrix, but I refrained. Like my coworkers, many on the boards have never heard of MGMT (I hadn’t heard of Drake before yesterday).


This drives home something that’s been bubbling beneath the surface ever since I got here. There’s not a lot of diversity. I was warned about this before I came, but I didn’t realize how it would manifest itself on a college campus. College campuses are full of different types of people, I thought—jocks, popular kids, mods, nerds, hippies, goths, punks, business majors, stoners, hipsters, frat boys, and all the weird gradations in between. At least WWU was like this (although I suppose they were wannabe frat boys, since we didn’t have any frats).


UNH seems to have two groups: the hipsters—the people defending MGMT on the message boards, the girls who wear mod dresses and the guys who wear skinny jeans and thick-rimmed glasses and scarves, the people I overhear on the bus talking about Arrested Development—and everybody else.


Everybody else listens to Akon, Lupe Fiasco, Young Money, Ke$ha, or whatever else is killing the Top 40 charts at the moment. They drive spotless new cars, wear Hollister, and drink at the socials every Thursday night (Thirsty Thursdays) at Scorps (a local bar).


Everybody Else.


I haven’t seen a hippie since I got here. Several people who ride my bus are math grad students and talk a lot about their research, but they seem to exist uneasily somewhere on the hipster spectrum, and they disappear once we’re off the bus—faceless in a crowd of Abercrombie, North Face, and perfectly coifed hair. The conformity disturbs me a little, especially coming from Western and Bellingham, a town incredibly tolerant of personal eccentricity. One day when I was back in Bellingham over winter break I watched a woman wearing a top hat and a long coat she appeared to have sewn out of other clothes walk down the street and stand in front of the Bagelry. This would never happen in Durham, I thought. Nothing like it ever has and nothing ever will.


Hipsters, conforming to their own silly bullshit.

4 comments:

  1. Drake was on Degrassi: The Next Generation. This is the only reason I have any clue who he is. I'm not sure what that says about me...

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  2. First of all, MGMT! Love, Love, Love. Second of all, I feel for you and the homogenization of people around you. I love talking to students and people and they don't know any bands/movies/books. It's also weird talking about NW bands and people don't know them. That to me is strange. I know I'm not there anymore, but those bands are big all over, I guess they're just more known in our region (ie minus the bear, pedro, helio sequence, etc). anyway, i hope you bought a couple snoopy rainbow scarves to really stand out...
    Later,
    Joshua

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  3. Who are these bands? I just discovered the Dragonettes so I am VERY behind in popular culture.

    If you think there is conformity where you are at...come and visit me in Idaho when I get there!

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  4. Sean Kingston was big in Hawaii when I was there but he only had that one song and it pretty much repeats itself after one line. It drove me insane... As for your UNH experience, it pretty much feels like my WWU experience. Coming from huge universities with such diversity, WWU seemed and still seems horribly bland to me. Sorry that you have to undergo that experience at UNH.

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