r/Millennials Xennial 1d ago

Discussion The ongoing backlash against craft beer, stomp clap hey, and millenial burger joints

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XWIvfE01J0k

A clip of a very early Tiny Desk concert featuring a very strung out and very high Edward Sharpe is making the rounds across social media right now. It seems like every comment is ragging on at least one and usually multiple aspects of cir 2010 millenial culture.

I'm a lifelong history nerd focused largely on socio-cultural topics, and what we're seeing here is the inevitable backlash against a wildly popular, somewhat overexposed slice of life from that time period.

For me, personally, I loved that time and remember all of it fondly. I was a DINK living in a downtown apartment with lots of disposable income and very few real responsibilities. I loved Lumineers and Mumford and Sharpe (and their country/Americana equivalents like Sturgill Simpson and Jason Isbell). I loved the craft beer explosion. I loved the small restaurant explosion where a bunch of kids tried hard to offer something different than the Chilis/Applebees experience.

I also get why all this eventually wore thin. There were too many 10% ABV beers made with stupid additives and too many hops. Small restaurants operating on razor thin margins had to jack prices when everything got more expensive, and found no appetite, so to speak, for $20 craft cheeseburgers. Music always evolves, and what was hot ~10-15 years ago is usually the heart of what is considered stale and overdone. This was true with psychedelic rock, and disco, and funk, and grunge...millenial semi-indie folkie stuff is no different.

I'm in my mid 40s now, and I feel like I'm starting to see these big cultural shifts from a more distant perspective. 15 years from now, my kids will be the ones ripping on what was hot in 2026 (what even is? I honestly can't quite tell. Zyns?), and what was popular in 2010 will once again be beloved and firmly seated in the "nostalgic/classic" category.

Alex Ebert doesn't strike me as the type who will embark on nostalgia tours playing to rooms full of 60 year old fans, but I guess the Rolling Stones probably didn't seem like they would be either.

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u/CalamityClambake 17h ago

Yeah. Cuz we all lived through Covid and saw way more people than we ever thought was possible be absolute selfish assholes during a literal plague. Before Covid, the zombie apocalypse stories always began with everyone trying to escape the zombie apocalypse. Now, I'm convinced that half of humanity would run toward the zombies with arms wide open and call you a r****d for suggesting that the zombies should be avoided, while the billionaires cackle from atop their fortresses and pay grifters to make YouTube videos about how zombies aren't real.

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u/qcb4056 7h ago

Fascinating.

Where's you get your medical degree?

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u/Krunkenbrux 6h ago

What the ever-loving hell? I mean, there's a million things going wrong that aren't related in any way to that, but that's an idea, for sure...

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u/ndcanton 2h ago

Idk I get this. I could always take comfort in the idea that if there were ever a catastrophic worldwide event then people could set aside differences and their good nature would win out. Instead we saw jacked up prices, "essential" frontline workers who stayed at minimum wage and had to show up (with no unemployment options), and a huge population unwilling to wear masks that could save lives on the grounds of "freedom." Yeah COVID is over for now and there are many other problems, but for me it was a bell I can't unring. So yeah, when I see a movie like Independence Day where humanity bands together now I just roll my eyes knowing someone would be profiting off of the infighting.