Anonymous wrote:Stay young at heart.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Take up shuffleboard, OP. Oh and constantly talk about how music was sooooo much better when you were younger.
Older music acts are discriminated against in the USA. In other countries older music artists are recognized but in the USA they are largely forgotten.
Hahhah you don't follow music I guess. The older acts usually charge _more_ per ticket than younger acts, because the older fanbase can afford it.
New Order and Pet Shop Boys at Merriweather next year. All seats (not lawn) start at $110:
https://www.ticketmaster.com/pet-shop-boys-new-order-the-columbia-maryland-09-28-2021/event/1500585495952587
New Kids on the Block, $135: https://www.ticketmaster.com/new-kids-on-the-block-columbia-maryland-08-04-2021/event/15005AC3D52C48A8
Anonymous wrote:I turned 60 this week and could care less. Youth care about youth. Do you want to pack yourself on ice and be a preserved ice mummy or live?
Anonymous wrote:I don't think our culture is "youth oriented" I think it completely caters to the baby boomers who have the money and voting power.
Anonymous wrote:Here’s the thing. As you get older you don’t care about being a part of the broader culture. Hopefully you don’t need that validation. You find your people. Your passions and just live your life. It’s actually terrific!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Take up shuffleboard, OP. Oh and constantly talk about how music was sooooo much better when you were younger.
Older music acts are discriminated against in the USA. In other countries older music artists are recognized but in the USA they are largely forgotten.
What an utterly stupid generalization.
Bruce Springsteen would be surprised to hear you say that. As would the many, many bands from the 1980s that are still touring, and even recording. Jon Bon Jovi sang for the inauguration celebration. Heck, I think the Beach Boys are still touring. My elementary aged kid loves the Beatles.
1980 was not that long ago. But you would be hard pressed to hear any new music released from artists from the 1980s on top 40 radio stations.
New poster. The youth these days do not listen to "top 40 radio stations." They stream whatever they want, whenever they want it. And so do these folks in their 40s and 50s who want to hear music. They can get all the older artists they want to hear by streaming their new stuff. My favorite 1980s band just released a new album and they'd never even consider top 40 radio airplay to be important any more.
Top 40 radio is pretty much all about the DJs chattering and/or playing songs for dentist offices and stores to put on the speakers because it's cheaper than a music streaming subscription.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Take up shuffleboard, OP. Oh and constantly talk about how music was sooooo much better when you were younger.
Older music acts are discriminated against in the USA. In other countries older music artists are recognized but in the USA they are largely forgotten.
Hahhah you don't follow music I guess. The older acts usually charge _more_ per ticket than younger acts, because the older fanbase can afford it.
New Order and Pet Shop Boys at Merriweather next year. All seats (not lawn) start at $110:
https://www.ticketmaster.com/pet-shop-boys-new-order-the-columbia-maryland-09-28-2021/event/1500585495952587
New Kids on the Block, $135: https://www.ticketmaster.com/new-kids-on-the-block-columbia-maryland-08-04-2021/event/15005AC3D52C48A8
Anonymous wrote:The Boomers and Millennials make up the largest population in the U.S. Each is around 71 to 72 million, not so youth oriented. Then comes Gen X which is around 62 million.
Our media industry is fake and not representative of American life. Probably what OP is talking about.
Anonymous wrote:I don't think our culture is "youth oriented" I think it completely caters to the baby boomers who have the money and voting power.