It feels like all my relatives listen to this shit.

    • jolliver_bromwell [she/her]
      ·
      10 hours ago

      THANK YOU. coming from a place where it is endemic and now living in the NE I was very confused about the love my rehab roomie had for it until she told me all about her extensive cop and conservative family and it clicked. Everyone else up here that listens to it that I personally have met is the same, and it’s never the kind of stuff I don’t mind hearing either (George jones or Gary Stewart or Delbert McClinton or even some patty loveless or juice newton). It’s always the trucks n flags n eagles shit, kinda reinforces the point

      • wild_dog [they/them]
        ·
        11 hours ago

        It can totally be conspicuous consumption. Have you ever tried to buy a new pair of cowboy boots? That shit is expensive. As is a lot of the other trappings of the genre/aesthetic like big trucks. Plus there's an entire subset of people who spend a ridiculous amount of money to look like they're dudes helping out on the family farm.

        That's not a country only thing but it definitely rubs people the wrong way.

          • wild_dog [they/them]
            ·
            10 hours ago

            I think the culture surrounding music is relevant when discussing it but even if we want to stick only to the actual music: steel guitars are super expensive and the lyrical themes of many country songs involve lifestyles most working class people are priced out of.

            • halyk.the.red@lemmy.ml
              ·
              8 minutes ago

              Same thing with culturally black music. Buy expensive things, commit crimes, lash out at one another, compete with everyone. It's seemingly designed to keep black people broke, in jail, and fighting one another.