Marc Chevalier
Gone Home
- Messages
- 18,192
- Location
- Los Feliz, Los Angeles, California
Marc Chevalier said:You were alive in the '30s and '40s?
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Marc Chevalier said:Well, isn't that what we are?
Let me rephrase your words:
"A Fedora Lounger, to offer one example, is not a person who actually dates back to the '30s (or before); a Fedora Lounger is just self-designed to appear as if he or she did."
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jamespowers said:We are also not reenactors. Those people want to act like someone else.
Senator Jack said:Trying to recapture youth is a terrible way to live.
Yes, I was reminded yesterday, by a fellow Iowan at a music event, that we're really all just pretend pizza-chain wiseguys.Marc Chevalier said:Are we worried about whether other people will look down on us? Heck no!
Furthermore, we're looked down upon already: http://www.styleforum.net/showpost.php?p=1242398&postcount=30
And scroll down to post #5 in this link: http://forums.filmnoirbuff.com/viewtopic.php?id=6217
Fletch said:Yes, I was reminded yesterday, by a fellow Iowan at a music event, that we're really all just pretend pizza-chain wiseguys.
SlyGI said:like Atavist. To me, an Anachronist is someone who you find at the Renaissance Fair.
Carlisle Blues said:Why Renaissance Fair?? Are they not the same as dressing vintage?? It is quite apparent that both are period dressing...[huh]
LizzieMaine said:To get back to the Senator's original purpose in trying to come up with the term, the main problem with "Anachronist" is precisely because it's so associated with the SCA. Not that there's anything wrong with what they do, but it's *their* brand, closely associated with their activities, and it's never a good idea to try to co-opt someone else's brand for yourself. You wouldn't do a very good job of carving out a distinctive identity for a Chevrolet by trying to get people to call it a Ford.
LizzieMaine said:the main problem with "Anachronist" is precisely because it's so associated with the SCA. Not that there's anything wrong with what they do, but it's *their* brand, closely associated with their activities, and it's never a good idea to try to co-opt someone else's brand for yourself. You wouldn't do a very good job of carving out a distinctive identity for a Chevrolet by trying to get people to call it a Ford.
Fletch said: