A hipster, I am not. Maybe you are. Here’s how you can check: do you wear Buddy Holly style glasses? Do you know who Buddy Holly is? Ride a fixed-gear bicycle? Use lo-fi appliances like typewriters and Polaroid cameras? Gravitate towards 1950s furniture? Collect those re-issued Penguin paperback classics with the orange covers? Have you grown tricky facial hair? A Ned Kelly beard? Are you mad for fonts? Do you hold the mainstream in contempt?
Now you have a better idea of your hipster status (I scored 0. I don’t even know what a fixed-gear bicycle means and I love the mainstream! Hello Coldplay!), those who rated highly be warned: your way of life is under threat. Threat of being mocked.
I promise this won’t be a column that bullies hipsters because hipsters are apparently being bullied in 2011 and that’s not OK. It’s not. Cool people have feelings too. And yet even the advertising industry – which is surely full of hipsters – has joined in with the mocking.
According to a recent article, ‘From Cool To Tool’ by journalist Samantha Seliger Morris about how the tide is turning on hipsters, “…a Honda ad for its compact Jazz vehicle crams in stereotype after stereotype about the group. It has Angus Stone and Maggie Gyllenhaal lookalikes trying to ram an LP record into the CD slot, knit, use a typewriter, compare the car’s black interior and bright exterior to a film by French new wave director Jean-Luc Godard and self-consciously pose for a Polaroid pic while shouting ”Free trade!”
Oh so mean. And yet a little bit funny. OK, quite hilarious. Clearly, many people think hipsters are contrived. Others find them well meaning if earnest. The unfortunate part (for hipsters) is that what began as non-conformist expressions of individuality have become a bit, well, common. Their USP no longer has a ‘U’ in it. The Angus-And-Julia-Stone style of hipster, satirised in the Honda ad, reminds me a little bit of that old adage about teenagers whose MO tends to be: “I want to be an individual, just like all my friends”. Hipsters can be a lot like that, I think. Not better or worse than non-hipsters, just different. While being strangely the same.