nmoore6676 said:
A lot of people shop at WalMart. Does that mean that WalMart is the best store with the best merchandise and best prices?
In most cases it is just because that through a process of forced market share and aggressiveness they have just become the only game in town. What I am saying is that biggest isn't necessarily better.
Yeah, I like McDonald's, and I eat there a lot. Probably too much! But the McDonald's at exit 322 off of I-40 in Crossville, Tennessee, is right next door to the Bean Pot restaurant, one of my faves from my childhood. But no way in hell would I eat at McDonald's when the Bean Pot is right next door! Settle for fast food when home cookin' is right next door? Ain't happening! (Unfortunately, I live over 100 miles from there, but it is a treat for me whenever I am going to, or returning from, beautiful east Tennessee.)
I for one will never every be in a stadium where Ms. Swift is the entertainment. Nor will I ever have a single song of hers in my personal collection. Others can and do feel differently. My only gripe is that like WalMart sometimes the "collective" forces choices on us all. As I attempt to purchase music, legally, from artists I've heard on various classic country or rock stations or even on stage at the lesser venues I find that music just not available despite what should almost be an unlimited menu if the technology wonks were telling us the truth.
I am right now trying to find (on any source) some local stuff that I heard played on Memphis radio back in the '80s. I only have this material on a cassette that I recorded directly off the air back then. Some of it is on youtube now, but much of it is just frustratingly NOT available anywhere now, on any format!
Just as we have more and more TV channels but really less variety we find Taylor Swift and Justin Bieber are always prominently in view in the prime locations at many stores and on such places as Amazon.com and I-Tunes. Sour grapes on my part, probably, but I have my preferences and opinions and I'll stick with them despite the forces trying to make me just accept what I don't really like.
I am just about the biggest Deborah Allen fan that you will ever find anywhere. But since she was never really that big of a star, she has remained amazingly accessible. I have met her on several occasions, and am a Facebook friend of hers. She will hit the big 6-0 this year, but could still pass for 30! Amazingly gorgeous! But because of the youthful obsession with pop and, yes, country music, too, she has continued to make a very good living for herself as a songwriter.
My wife and I are big fans of both Ronnie Lee Twist (rockabilly performer) and the WannaBeatles. Both will never be really big names, and they probably know it, too, but we both personally know and have met Twist
and the WannaBeatles. Twist has since moved to Vegas to further his career, but we still routinely see the Wannabeatles perform in and around Nashville.
A tale of two performers. Eddy Arnold fired the "colonel" as his manager and lived to be in his '90s, while Elvis kept him on, and died at 42. Arnold, of course, never became anywhere near as big of a name as Elvis, but he is still a legend. (Even ran for governor here, once!) I don't believe that Arnold ever even aspired to be as big as Elvis, but he still became, and still remains, a legend in his own right and under his own terms.