TenderLovingKiller®
Well-Known Member
Sean Penn, Dennis Rodman, Warren Beatty, etc…Imagine if Madonna had started dating Joe Montana at the height of her ubiquity.
Sean Penn, Dennis Rodman, Warren Beatty, etc…Imagine if Madonna had started dating Joe Montana at the height of her ubiquity.
I’m not gonna lie, it’s pretty nice.Like, I'm kind of envious of y'all who get to choose entirely what your world bubble looks like but some of us live with folk
I forgot what thread I was in for a minute, but I think the biggest thing Swift has going for her is that she manages to make music for teen girls and their dads at the same time. It's the consumer double whammy.
Also, I think I tune out a lot of pop culture because I don't see her discussed that much or pop up other than in passing ads anywhere except here and the football headlines.
Well that is a terrifying picture. She looks like she is gonna make me into a soul kabob.View attachment 194613
Miley watching Swiftie nation eating eachother alive while she sips eggnog from her 2 Grammys
Being an industry plant used to be an open concept that proved to be a highly successful formula. New Kids on the Block were basically engineered from the ground up, same for NSync, Backstreet Boys, One Direction. So by default, many solo careers are owed to this idea.I really don’t care about a band or artist being an “industry plant” or having connections as long as the music is good. And it’s very interesting that the term is way more often used against female artists and bands (like wet leg and last dinner party) and men are rarely accused of the same or even are rarely negatively affected by being connected (like beck and the strokes)
Being an industry plant used to be an open concept that proved to be a highly successful formula. New Kids on the Block were basically engineered from the ground up, same for NSync, Backstreet Boys, One Direction. So by default, many solo careers are owed to this idea.
At some point, the term became pejorative and listeners/fans took it as a slight that their tastes were somehow being spoon fed to them via synthetic methods.
I don’t mind it either because not all artists can truly be organic. People in the industry have visions for an artist just like artists do for a song. Whether they’re a plant or not doesn’t take away from the fact that they have talent,
I manifested you here, welcome.Taylor is literally non existent in any of my spheres. I never hear of her or talk about her or anything. Until now, right here, in this thread. This thread is some fucked up manifestation. You're literally self-inflicting the actual thing you're talking about. That's a choice and you're not choosing to stop so I can't take your complaints seriously at all.
Yeah, even someone like Justin Bieber, who was discovered by Usher via YouTube videos isn’t a “industry” plant per se, at some point he got a hard Major Label push before he had ever released anything. Whether they developed organically or were developed in house, once a band gets a major label push they become “industry plants” Nirvana wouldn’t be “Nirvana” if they didn’t get picked up by DGC.Being an industry plant used to be an open concept that proved to be a highly successful formula. New Kids on the Block were basically engineered from the ground up, same for NSync, Backstreet Boys, One Direction. So by default, many solo careers are owed to this idea.
At some point, the term became pejorative and listeners/fans took it as a slight that their tastes were somehow being spoon fed to them via synthetic methods.
I don’t mind it either because not all artists can truly be organic. People in the industry have visions for an artist just like artists do for a song. Whether they’re a plant or not doesn’t take away from the fact that they have talent,
I think plant has always been pejorative. Manufactured bands have always had a certain amount of derision from some folks dating back to at least The Monkees. Hell, radio didn’t want to play The Archies because it was a cartoon band.Being an industry plant used to be an open concept that proved to be a highly successful formula. New Kids on the Block were basically engineered from the ground up, same for NSync, Backstreet Boys, One Direction. So by default, many solo careers are owed to this idea.
At some point, the term became pejorative and listeners/fans took it as a slight that their tastes were somehow being spoon fed to them via synthetic methods.
I don’t mind it either because not all artists can truly be organic. People in the industry have visions for an artist just like artists do for a song. Whether they’re a plant or not doesn’t take away from the fact that they have talent,
I think the two bands I’ve seen it applied to the most are Muse and Coldplay.
I think outside of the UK or in the US, there is a feeling that those two bands just exploded from nowhere. Again, since I really only get to talk about music here, don’t see it used much/at all nowadays, but there was definitely a feeling 10/15/ 20 years ago that these guys were grown in a lab somewhere to be juggernauts.Really? That’s weird knowing both started out on the small circuit and released EPs on very small indie labels before being signed…
I’ve actually only really seen it in the last year or two and it’s nearly always been against a female artist or group that ascend quickly.
I think with those it’s just open though, they’re manufactured pop bands. There is no pretence on any side that they’re anything else.
I think this idea of “a plant” in more recent years has come in indie band circles and has more often than not been a way to use some indie snob’s undefinable bullshit idea of authenticity to undermine new and upcoming artists, particularly female or minority ones.
*thing doesn’t happen to me so it obviously doesn’t exist*Taylor is literally non existent in any of my spheres. I never hear of her or talk about her or anything. Until now, right here, in this thread. This thread is some fucked up manifestation. You're literally self-inflicting the actual thing you're talking about. That's a choice and you're not choosing to stop so I can't take your complaints seriously at all.
Exactly. I do think their is an absurdity when an indie band has parents who are highlighted in blue on Wikipedia, but at the end of the day that doesn’t make the work they make any less authentic unless they playing poverty which I haven’t really seen anyone do. And it is very telling that a majority white male audience throws this term at mainly female and minority artists
Taylor is literally non existent in any of my spheres. I never hear of her or talk about her or anything. Until now, right here, in this thread. This thread is some fucked up manifestation. You're literally self-inflicting the actual thing you're talking about. That's a choice and you're not choosing to stop so I can't take your complaints seriously at all.
I think playing poverty is extreme but there is definitely a high degree of appropriation of working class culture from middle and upper class acts, and that really does get on my fucking goat. Own your privilege.
I can totally agree with that. But when I listen to acts The last Dinner Party (the band that inspired the post) I don’t get any vibe that they are appropriating it. They are obviously art school kids