Via Salon that the New York Times
(or, as I call it, "The Times") somehow
portraying Taylor Swift as an underdog:
Swift’s current tour will take her to stadiums all over the world,
including Metlife Stadium in New Jersey, capacity 82,600. Her net worth
is roughly $200 million – that’s about 3,550 times the median net worth
of an American household. By every available measure, she seems to be
doing pretty well, and at 25, she’s probably just getting started with
her world domination.
But to the New York Times, she is, apparently, an “underdog.” The paper of record used the term twice in its review
of her show in a relatively intimate 13,000-seat arena in Louisiana and
pulled it out for the headline as well: “On Taylor Swift’s ‘1989’ Tour,
the Underdog Emerges as Cool Kid.”
Well, Taylor Swift may be a lot of things, but we’re not really sure “underdog” is one of them. Let’s back up a little bit.
Like
a lot of country singers – that’s how she first broke in – Taylor Swift
grew up on a farm. It wasn’t a subsistence farm in the rough part of
Kentucky but a Christmas-tree farm in Pennsylvania. “Her mother worked
in finance,” a New Yorker story
says, “and her father, a descendant of three generations of bank
presidents, is a stockbroker for Merrill Lynch. (He bought the tree farm
from a client.)” In Swift’s hometown, she told the magazine’s Lizzie
Widdicombe, “it mattered what kind of designer handbag you brought to
school.”
I'm not here to bitch about T-Swizz or implicate that her music is any less meaningful because of this, but rather to remind you of when years ago
HERE
I bitched about how rich & successful people demand we see them as
some sort of scrappy underdogs who through individual struggle and
against all odds triumphed over their own good fortune:
I think the need to feel like an oppressed underdog who has succeeded
against all odds is as American as apple pie. One thing America is
fascinated by is the ruling class of the uber-wealthy, and the more
uber-wealthier they get the more we're fascinated by them, and yet they
always feel like they have to win some public relations war for our
affection that doesn't exist, be it corporations crying foul on being
asked to pay taxes, or NFL owners having to swallow only making a
trillion dollars a day. Nobody likes to admit out loud "part of my
success is due to economic and social conditions cemented long before I
was even born"; we must be made to believe that Successful Person X
was left to die in a dumpster, then pulled himself up by his own
bootstraps and became a real rags to riches story. Nobody's happy
simply to have been given the keys to the kingdom, they also hafta
portray themselves as "victims."
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