#cultural-commodification

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#ai
Business
from24/7 Wall St.
1 day ago

Why the Heritage Consumption Trend Is Lifting Levi's and Leaving Nike Behind

Levi Strauss is experiencing significant growth while Nike faces declining revenues and earnings.
Arts
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 days ago

Art, sex, nature: why is everything sold to us as a means to an end, rather than an end in itself?

Art should be valued for its own sake, not merely for its utilitarian benefits or health claims.
#fashion
fromFast Company
2 weeks ago
Fashion & style

'Leverage the local': The fashion trend that explains why everyone around you is channeling their inner tourist

Fashion & style
fromFast Company
2 weeks ago

'Leverage the local': The fashion trend that explains why everyone around you is channeling their inner tourist

Clothing featuring city names has evolved from tourist souvenirs to mainstream fashion staples, appealing to diverse consumers and price points.
Writing
fromwww.theguardian.com
5 days ago

I swapped England for Seoul after watching a Korean teen drama and found myself cast in a K-pop video

Discovering South Korean culture through a Mandarin homework mishap led to a deep passion for the language and its entertainment.
Web design
fromMajic 102.3
1 week ago

How speed is redefining modern branding in today's world

Speed is essential for branding; fast-loading websites enhance professionalism and improve search rankings.
Graphic design
fromwww.theguardian.com
4 days ago

Is AI the greatest art heist in history?

Generative AI is criticized for harming creativity, exploiting artists, and causing societal issues while tech leaders promote it as a revolutionary tool.
#hype-aversion
Media industry
fromThe Atlantic
1 week ago

How Some People Became So Averse to Hype

Hype aversion is a reaction against popular culture pressure, where opting out can signify independence and personal taste.
Media industry
fromThe Atlantic
1 week ago

How Some People Became So Averse to Hype

Hype aversion is a reaction against popular culture pressure, where opting out can signify independence and personal taste.
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 weeks ago

The US is no longer the go-to place': How Korean culture is taking Latin America by storm

The Korean wave or hallyu that brought the country's culture to the world has now well and truly engulfed Latin America.
Madrid food
Marketing
fromForbes
2 weeks ago

The Great Convergence: Why The Creator Economy's Future Belongs To Those Who Unite Social, Brand, And Talent

The entertainment industry is shifting power to creators, with traditional advertising losing relevance as the creator economy rapidly expands.
#social-media
fromHer Campus
2 weeks ago
Fashion & style

Consumerism, Conformity, & The Death Of Originality

Social media marketing influences consumer behavior, leading to conformity and potential loss of individuality in personal style.
fromWIRED
2 months ago
World news

Why Everyone Is Suddenly in a 'Very Chinese Time' in Their Lives

Online communities are embracing Chinese aesthetics, products, and identity through viral memes and consumer enthusiasm despite political tensions.
Fashion & style
fromHer Campus
2 weeks ago

Consumerism, Conformity, & The Death Of Originality

Social media marketing influences consumer behavior, leading to conformity and potential loss of individuality in personal style.
fromwww.theguardian.com
3 weeks ago

Readers reply: Travel broadens the mind what other sayings are patently false, or not always true?

Travel broadens the mind thing has been knocking around since long before time immemorial, but I'm pretty sure for Seneca, among others, travel meant pottering about with great effort, getting to know other peoples, their ways of speech, habits, and foibles.
Travel
Media industry
fromEntrepreneur
3 weeks ago

I'm a History Buff Who Started a Unique Side Hustle. It Surpassed $1M a Year and Landed On 'Shark Tank.'

Ari Siegel founded History By Mail, a subscription service for replicas of historical documents, after initial interest from family and friends.
Relationships
fromPsychology Today
4 weeks ago

The Brief Life of Travel Friendships

Travel friendships are psychologically real relationships that form in liminal spaces where normal social roles temporarily dissolve, enabling rapid intimacy through shared novel experiences and vulnerability.
Arts
fromArtnet News
3 weeks ago

The Art Consultancy Firm Saying No to the Attention Economy

Approximately Blue prioritizes anonymity and substance over visibility and social media presence in the contemporary art market.
fromThe Art Newspaper - International art news and events
3 weeks ago

Comment | Museums must be the leaders in a moral revolution

Bregman claims, 'Today the whole of Europe risks turning into one big Venice, a beautiful open-air museum. A great destination for Chinese and American tourists. A place to admire what was once the centre of the world.' This statement encapsulates the concern that Europe is losing its cultural significance.
Arts
Marketing
fromPR Daily
4 weeks ago

Why cultural insight beats product messaging every time - PR Daily

Brands achieve relevance by connecting to cultural values people already care about rather than forcing product features into conversations.
Social media marketing
fromwww.npr.org
1 month ago

Some Gen Z Americans can't stop 'Chinamaxxing'

Young Americans are increasingly adopting Chinese cultural habits in a trend called "Chinamaxxing," driven by social media influencers and geopolitical tensions between the US and China.
Public health
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

Can Media Literacy Games Travel Across Cultures?

Culturally tailored misinformation games significantly outperform generic Western-designed versions in building media literacy across different populations.
Madrid food
fromenglish.elpais.com
1 month ago

Sold out' as a fictional story: How the music industry learned to sell success even when it didn't exist

Sold-out signs in Spain's live music industry function as marketing tools rather than accurate capacity indicators, with venues using modular configurations and guest lists to artificially create sold-out narratives that legitimize events regardless of actual financial performance.
Social media marketing
fromSlate Magazine
1 month ago

Why So Many Americans Online Suddenly Want to Become Chinese

Chinamaxxing, a social media trend where Americans adopt Chinese practices, perpetuates harmful stereotypes by framing Chinese culture as exotic and inferior while reflecting broader anxieties about American economic decline.
Arts
fromArtnet News
3 weeks ago

Museum Treasures, History-Making Guitars-And Collectibles to Watch

Brooklyn Museum is auctioning 200 objects, including rare American furniture and artworks, to enhance gallery space and adhere to deaccessioning guidelines.
Fashion & style
fromEntrepreneur
1 month ago

Young Entrepreneurs Are Building Businesses Around 'Grandma Hobbies' and Demand Is Surging

Millennials and Gen Z entrepreneurs are building thriving businesses around analog hobbies like needlepoint, mahjong, and blacksmithing as an antidote to screen fatigue and digital burnout.
Arts
fromArtnet News
3 weeks ago

Are We Entering a Post-Individual Era of Art? | Artnet News

Artist Christopher Kulendran Thomas explores how technology reshapes human identity through AI-generated imagery, deepfake interviews, and installations examining political systems and future trajectories.
fromThe New Yorker
1 month ago

Has Taking the Perfect Photo Ruined Tourism in "The Spectacle"?

On one rocky outcropping surrounded by fog which makes it seem to jut out beyond the edge of the world, a multitude of people chattering and maneuvering for pictures organize themselves into a line-giving each group or person a turn for a snapshot at the cliff's edge, working together to manufacture the illusion of solitude.
Photography
Television
fromenglish.elpais.com
1 month ago

It's a trompe-l'il, it can't even turn you on': Have on-screen bodies become too unrealistic?

Despite increased sexual content in film and television, critics argue these portrayals lack genuine eroticism due to idealized bodies and choreographed encounters, potentially causing audience fatigue.
Books
fromSlate Magazine
2 months ago

Are We Just Recycling Old Stories, Ideas, and Styles?

21st-century culture is abundant and accessible but suffers an innovation deficit, leaving a "blank space" where original cultural creation should emerge.
#brand-storytelling
Marketing
fromForbes
1 month ago

Stop Softening Your Story: Why Specificity Is The Key To Global Brand Relevance

Deeply rooted, culturally specific stories outperform universalized content globally, making authenticity more commercially viable than ever before.
Marketing
fromForbes
1 month ago

Stop Softening Your Story: Why Specificity Is The Key To Global Brand Relevance

Deeply rooted, culturally specific stories outperform universalized content globally, making authenticity more commercially viable than ever before.
Digital life
fromBuzzFeed
2 months ago

People Are Pointing Out The Parts Of American Culture That Are Changing Before Our Eyes

Widespread convenience technologies let people avoid leaving home, reducing everyday face-to-face interaction and increasing social isolation, division, and hostility.
Music
fromFast Company
2 months ago

The Missing Export: Culture as Economic Infrastructure

Cities can treat music as an exportable cultural asset and economic engine to drive jobs, tourism, investment, and distinctive place branding.
#advertising
fromFortune
2 months ago

Chinese shoppers can't get enough of Disney's Zootopia and Ralph Lauren's 'old money' look despite nationalistic vibes | Fortune

In China, consumerism appears to outweigh nationalism regardless of how testy relations have become in recent diplomatic spats with countries like Japan and the United States. It has been common practice for the ruling Communist Party to whip up nationalist sentiment and deploy propaganda condemning countries deemed to be violating China's stance on territorial issues as Taiwan and Tibet. At times, Beijing targets companies that make ideological missteps in their maps or advertising.
World news
Business
fromFast Company
2 months ago

Navigating the ghosts of cultures past

Organizational culture constantly changes; leaders must discern which legacy cultural elements to retain and which to remove while balancing enduring beliefs with adaptive practices.
Food & drink
fromBuzzFeed
2 months ago

People Are Sharing The Foods That Have "Quietly Vanished" From Society Without Anyone Realizing

Several nostalgic convenience and processed foods from past decades have largely disappeared from mainstream availability.
Renovation
fromArchDaily
2 months ago

Rooms as Heritage: How Interior Typologies Carry Cultural Memory

Cultural memory often survives in domestic interiors and everyday practices rather than visible architectural facades.
Europe politics
fromwww.thelocal.com
1 month ago

'Made in Europe': New Push to buy European causes splits in bloc

EU proposes requiring strategic-sector firms to manufacture in Europe to get public funds, dividing calls for strict 'Made in Europe' versus 'Made with Europe'.
Philosophy
fromArchDaily
2 months ago

When Do Buildings Begin to Matter? Rethinking Heritage in Local Time

Global heritage systems prioritize longevity and material authenticity rooted in European slow-growth models, disadvantaging rapidly changing cities where cultural time operates unevenly.
fromArtforum
2 months ago

Commercial Break

AT FIRST GLANCE, the phrase "avant-garde advertising" might seem like a contradiction in terms: The avant-garde is assumed to be inherently anti-capitalist and the realm of advertising crassly commercial. But the involvement of avant-garde artists with advertising is in fact rich, complex, and long-standing, encompassing a full century of collaborations, critiques, and reworkings of all sorts. That entanglement-in all its diversity-is the topic
Film
fromwww.npr.org
2 months ago

How the West was won: K-pop's great assimilation gambit

She watched her peers get called up for groups like SHINee and f(x), but her own debut never came. When Kim, now known professionally as Ejae, was finally dropped by the agency in 2015, the explanation she got was simple: This was a business. As she recently told the Philippine media network ABS-CBN, "SM has a very specific vision and sonic sound and I just didn't really fit that."
US news
#creativity
fromemptywheel
2 months ago

How Do You Want Your Family to Remember You? - emptywheel

The Stasi, the secret police, were legendary for their data files. Their work was based on instilling fear, and they induced stunningly amazing numbers of East Germans into informing on their neighbors. Something along the lines of 1 in 6 East Germans were informants, whether out of fear or out of approval of what the East German government was doing.
US politics
Psychology
fromThe Atlantic
2 months ago

The Upside of Not Fitting In

Feeling like an outsider often signals growth potential and builds resilience, creativity, and original thinking through discomfort rather than indicating failure.
Books
fromThe New Yorker
1 month ago

What Fetishists Can Teach Us About Consumerism and Desire

Fetish cultures transform ordinary objects into sources of transcendent meaning and sustained erotic power that resist the disappointment of conventional consumerism.
Public health
fromThe Atlantic
2 months ago

America's Annoyance Economy Is Growing

A 62-year-old man died uninsured after an insurance enrollment error, leaving his family responsible for a roughly $270,000 hospital bill.
#virtual-museums
Digital life
fromSilicon Canals
1 month ago

9 weekend rituals from the 60s and 70s that created a sense of togetherness screens have replaced - Silicon Canals

Shared weekend rituals like family meals and aimless Sunday drives fostered togetherness, intimacy, and presence that digital devices have gradually eroded.
Travel
fromTravel + Leisure
1 month ago

These Are the 10 Most 'Authentic' Travel Destinations in the World

Bogotá, Colombia ranks as the world's most authentic city based on Google Maps review analysis of authentic, local, and traditional mentions.
Music
fromNature
1 month ago

Music is not a universal language - but it can bring us together when words fail

Music continues to unite people globally and remains central to debates about universality, human uniqueness, and responses to AI-driven inhumanity.
Business
fromHarvard Business Review
2 months ago

For Multinational Companies, Localization Matters More Than Ever

Global companies must localize core operations, duplicating supply chains and integrating regional suppliers to meet data-sovereignty and local sourcing mandates, sacrificing scale for resilience.
Television
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 month ago

Reality bites: why the wildest TV shows of the 2000s are haunting us now

Reality television from the 2000s is being retrospectively criticized for monetizing humiliation, with shows like The Biggest Loser, To Catch a Predator, and America's Next Top Model now examined for their exploitative practices and cruelty.
fromThe Art Newspaper - International art news and events
1 month ago

Book on 'useful art' offers timely retort to the commodification of artists' work

The reason why useful art will change the world is that art, as we have come to know it since the 18th century, is the subject of 'neoliberal occupation', government regulation and commercial sponsorship. It has become useless, but not because the aesthetic exists in a Kantian separate world, but because, like everything else, including ourselves, it has become part of the neoliberal circulation of commodities, instrumentalised by the creative industries.
Arts
Digital life
fromInsideHook
2 months ago

Is the Analog Lifestyle Trend Really Analog at All?

A growing analog lifestyle movement reduces screen time through nostalgic, hands-on activities while its online popularity risks undermining offline goals.
fromHuffPost
2 months ago

'Inheritourism' Is Shaping Our Vacations. Here's What Experts Want You To Know.

A 2026 travel report from Hilton identified "inheritourism" as a notable trend for the new year ― with 66% of travelers surveyed by the hotel brand saying that their parents have influenced their choice of accommodations, 60% saying they guided their choice of loyalty programs and 73% saying they shaped their general travel style.
Travel
Business
fromWIRED
2 months ago

How China's 'Crystal Capital' Cornered the Market on a Western Obsession

Donghai transformed into a global crystal capital, employing about 300,000 residents and generating more than $5.5 billion annually through an extensive crystal trade.
Television
fromConde Nast Traveler
2 months ago

How 'Pluribus' Makes a Playground Out of the Whole World

Pluribus portrays an alien 'joining' that creates a hive mind while one immune woman travels through emptied, varied global locations realized by meticulous production design.
Fashion & style
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 months ago

Tell us: what are you wearing right now and why does it matter?

Clothing functions as powerful non-verbal communication, reflecting identity, occupation, and workplace needs while enabling personal expression.
fromBored Panda
2 months ago

80 Vintage Ads That Show Which Values Changed And Which Stayed The Same Over Time

We might be exposed to more ads and commercials today than ever before in human history, but the idea of advertising itself is certainly not a new concept. According to Instapage, the first signs of advertisements actually appeared in ancient Egyptian steel carvings from 2000 BC. Meanwhile, the first printed ad was published in 1472, when William Caxton decided to advertise a book by posting flyers on church doors in England.
Marketing
Arts
fromwww.aljazeera.com
2 months ago

Is globalisation killing craftsmanship?

The rise of fast, cheap mass production erodes handmade crafts, threatening sustainability, cultural identity, and artisanal skills in a profit-driven global economy.
fromExchangewire
2 months ago

Timmy Bankole, CultureSync Media Q&A

We meet CultureSync Media founder Timmy Bankole, formerly of SCMP, discusses why cultural insight and audience understanding are fast becoming the most valuable currencies in modern advertising... Timmy Bankole has a wide range of experience across the ad tech spectrum, counting roles at Blis, PHD and South China Morning Post, and has recently founded agency CultureSync Media. In this Q&A, Timmy shares how agencies can move beyond generic targeting to uncover the deeper cultural codes shaping consumer behaviour.
Marketing
Business
fromBusiness Matters
1 month ago

Development of the "Creative Hub" Model as a Factor of Sustainable Development and the Enhancement of Ethical Standards in the International Tattoo Business

Creative hub model supports sustainable development in the tattoo business by fostering professionalization, artist growth, brand-building, ethical standards, and commercial success.
fromVogue
1 month ago

How a New Generation of Designers Are Promoting, and Protecting, Their Names

What if I took my design lens and built out my essentials capsule for the Everlane customer? I felt like that would be a really amazing opportunity for me to introduce myself as a designer to an audience outside of EB Denim.
Fashion & style
Marketing
fromThe Drum
2 months ago

How to sell the experience rather than the product

An exceptional, emotionally engaging brand experience—beyond product features and price—creates customer loyalty and keeps customers returning.
fromThe Art Newspaper - International art news and events
2 months ago

When it comes to restitution, how can museums solve a problem like inalienability?

When Thomas Jefferson wrote about the "inalienable" rights of man in the US Declaration of Independence 250 years ago, it's possible he lifted the term from the French. And long before it was ever used as an adjective to describe human rights, it defined royal property. To this day, "inalienability" remains a cornerstone of public collections in France-and many other countries-impacting museums and their ability to deaccession, including for purposes of restitution.
Arts
Arts
fromHyperallergic
1 month ago

We Must Do More Than Simply Depict Our Lives

The Bronx Museum biennial spotlights representational works that center urban youth and marginalized identities, challenging mainstream narratives through sincere, everyday portrayals.
#art-market
fromHyperallergic
1 month ago

How White Elites Drained Ancient Art of Its Color

In the autumn of 2022, Max and I walked up the iconic steps of the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City to visit Chroma: Ancient Sculpture in Color. As the young son of a professional classicist, and a burgeoning one himself, my museum partner already knew about the ancient history of painted statues when we began to explore the galleries. Max's knowledge seemed the exception rather than the rule.
Arts
Arts
fromArtnet News
1 month ago

Can Performance Art Win Over a New Generation of Collectors? | Artnet News

Performance art is already sellable; recent shifts are increasing how its market value is established through editions, documentation, and institutional purchases.
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