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Reverse
Chic Is Better Than No Chic At All
by Mad Dog
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We’re eating
Hamburger Helper without the expensive hamburger, watching boring
network TV instead of paying for 500 boring channels, and praying that
Joe Millionaire and Zora don’t make it so we can try to weasel our way
into a piece of that million-dollar check. |
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Times are tight. The
Consumer Confidence Index is at a 10-year low. Unemployment is getting
so bad the pollsters might find themselves out of work any day now. Is
it any wonder people are flocking to buy rolls of duct tape rather than
LG Electronics’ new $8,000 Internet refrigerator that comes with a
15-inch monitor, 20-gig hard drive, MP3 player, and digital camera?
It’s cheaper. And the Internet refrigerator hasn’t received the
Department of Homeland Security’s Seal of Anti-Terrorist Approval.
Yet. Though it should. After all, it would scare off pretty much anyone.
Just the thought of a refrigerator that can take photos of me cooking
and email them to everyone in my address book because I wouldn’t make
the icemaker happy by playing MP3s of Ice Ice Baby scares me. And
it should scare you too. Especially if you’re in my email address
book.
When the economy gets this bad,
cutting back becomes a way of life. Corporations do it, which is why so
many people are reading this in a newspaper they picked up off the
ground. And hopefully won’t need to use as a blanket when they sleep
on the bus stop bench tonight. Families cut back, which is why we’re
eating Hamburger Helper without the expensive hamburger, watching boring
network TV instead of paying for 500 boring channels, and praying that
Joe Millionaire and Zora don’t make it so we can try to weasel our way
into a piece of that million-dollar check. Right, us and the 40 million
other people who watched the last episode because it was cheaper than an
$8 movie ticket. At least I hope that was everyone’s excuse.
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Reverse chic is
really just reverse bragging. Where we were once proud to toss money
around as if it grew on trees, now we’re happy telling everyone that
we have to burn trees to stay warm. |
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Just
because times are tight doesn’t mean we have to give up everything.
Take wine, for instance. The low budget rage on the West Coast right now
is Charles Shaw wine, a supposed Napa Valley vintage that sells for all
of $1.99 at Trader Joe’s, a supermarket chain which attracts a more
rabid following than Michael Moore at an NRA convention. At that price,
a case of Merlot, Chardonnay, or Cabernet Sauvignon costs less than a
bottle of what people were drinking a year ago. To put it in
perspective, it’s just a bit more expensive than bottled water and
cheaper than a gallon of gas. Of course you only get about 27 staggers
to a bottle of Charles Shaw whereas you can get 27 miles with the gas
(actual mileage and staggers may vary).
Everyone is proudly serving
“Two-Buck Chuck” to guests, who of course are equally as proud to
announce that they have a case or two of it at home. Adding to the
cachet are the rumors about why it is you can get decent wine with a
cork cheaper than a bottle of Thunderbird with the requisite brown paper
bag. One theory is that since corkscrews aren’t allowed on airplanes
anymore the airlines had to dump all the wine they’d bought and
can’t use. Another is that Charles Shaw is selling the wine at a loss
so his wife can’t touch it in their divorce proceeding. The simple
truth is there was an overproduction of grapes in California. And an
overproduction of P.R. at Trader Joe’s.
The obvious relish people show for
serving cheap wine is a sign that reverse chic is setting in. After all,
if you can’t enjoy the good things you might as well go out of your
way to enjoy what you do have. That’s right, reverse chic is really
just reverse bragging. Where we were once proud to toss money around as
if it grew on trees, now we’re happy telling everyone that we have to
burn trees to stay warm. Hopefully trees that aren’t in full bloom
with C-notes. If they are, harvest them first. Then burn them.
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Reverse chic is Martha
Stewart making a festive holiday centerpiece using the hem from an
orange prison-issue jumpsuit, a bar of soap, and a shiv borrowed from
her cellmate. |
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For years
my brother boasted about his large, expensive car which he traded in
every other year whether he needed to or not. Then times got tight and
one day he picked me up at the airport in a smaller, though still new
car, bragging about how it was so much cheaper and used less gas. A year
previous he would have rather gouged his eyes out with a Tiffany brooch
than proclaimed those to be good attributes in a car. My, how times
change.
Reverse
chic is showing off the Seven jeans you picked up at the thrift store
for $2.00 and hoping your best friend doesn’t recognize them. It’s
splitting the cost of the Sunday newspaper with your next door neighbor
and being proud that you thought of placing tracing paper over the
crossword puzzle so you can each do it. It’s Martha Stewart making a
festive holiday centerpiece using the hem from an orange prison-issue
jumpsuit, a bar of soap, and a shiv borrowed from her cellmate. And
it’s hoping things don’t get so bad that you have to follow her
instructions.
All
of this is good for us. Think of it as Chickenless Chicken Soup for the
Soul. It builds character, helps us feel good about ourselves when times
are tough, and most of all gives me something to write about so
hopefully I can afford a whole case of Charles Shaw Merlot. Don’t
worry, you’ll be the first to hear about it.
©2003 Mad Dog
Productions, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
These columns appear in better newspapers across the country. Borrow one
so you can read them.
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