![]() |
LL Bean .....hip?........yea i guess if its the early 1980's and I was back at the University of Illinois.... if one considers preppy as being hip...maybe... :rolleyes:
|
Maybe Axciom told LL Bean that you bought bike gear and now LL Bean is sending you the cyclist cover instead of the car camping cover.
|
I work with a lot of hipsters. They all drive Priuses. But lately I've noticed a lot more bike commuting. I think they think they are hipper then the other hipsters because they are even more eco friendly then the Prius crowd. I don't know. I just like riding.
|
Originally Posted by alan s
(Post 16047915)
Bike commuting in the rain and snow is definitely hip. Fair weather, not so much. Just the other day, while waiting at a light during a downpour, someone on the sidewalk told me they thought what I was doing was really hip, and asked how could they be more like me. I just smirked, and rode on.
"It is easy to be cool when you are cool." |
Originally Posted by ShartRate
(Post 16047727)
If you are a hip person and dress hip and have a hip bag and a hip bike and you can ride to work without becoming a sweaty mess, sure bike commuting can be hip.
If you are instead like me, and you are fat, wear bike shorts and an athletic shirt from Target, and have a Trek hybrid that you commute on and carry your crap in panniers and wear a dorky helmet and can't ride anywhere without becoming drenched in sweat, then no you are not hip. |
Originally Posted by ItsJustMe
(Post 16046190)
It's hip unless you care if it's hip, then it's not hip :)
Re: the new commuting fad - 1) I am glad that more cyclists on the road will bring better infrastructure for the rest of us, who will still be riding long after the flash in the pan has burned off and the crowd has moved on to go-karts or segueways or whatever. 2) There will be a few people from the trendy crowd who will be true converts and stick with it. It's worth enduring the fad just for those reasons. |
It's hip to be different and currently bike commuting in the US is pretty uncommon in most areas. That's my take on it, but not my reason for it. I just love riding and spending calories instead of petrol.
|
People think I'm weird for bike commuting, and my boss really encourages me to buy a car. Also, most everyone else I know.
Also, what is this "Fred" thing? Just now encountered the term... M. |
I deleted the last few posts that were going in a political direction. Global warming, Republicans, and any other political-type stuff belongs in the P&R forum. Thanks for your cooperation with this.
|
Originally Posted by Colorado Kid
(Post 16044450)
I just thought what we are doing is fun.
Marc |
I don't care if it's hip or not, I just hope more people do it.
|
Originally Posted by Dave Mayer
(Post 16048467)
Hip? Gawd.. I hope not. Now that the fixed gear thing has totally flamed out, I can get back on my track bike again after a multi-year repreave. I've been commuting daily for 14 years and I would hate to have to give that up.
I for one won't stop doing what I enjoy just because more people find a reason to enjoy the same thing. |
Originally Posted by cobrabyte
(Post 16051302)
If something becomes popular and that is reason for you to give it up, then you my friend are even more concerned with what others think than those trying to be "hip"...oh the irony...you hipster, you ;)
I for one won't stop doing what I enjoy just because more people find a reason to enjoy the same thing. |
Originally Posted by acidfast7
(Post 16047496)
commuting around europe has always been hip.
. . . |
Originally Posted by bikemig
(Post 16051348)
The urban areas in the US are becoming, in this sense, more European. That has long been true on the coastal cities but I live in the midwest and you see it here even in smaller cities.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pedestrian_zone |
I think it's particularly hip if you're fat and don't have stylish clothing, because you're smart enough to see why it makes so much sense. You also want to give it a try and maybe lose weight and enjoy yourself at the same time.
Bike commuting is exploding in NYC now. I'm heartened to see so many people riding who are clearly not cyclophiles or athletes. My dreams are coming true. In the minds of Joe and Jane Average, bike commuting is starting to make more sense than all other ways of getting around. |
Well, I tried it out for size on today's commute just to test. Rode out past the kids at the bus stop thinking hipster, ironical thoughts. I oozed hip on the mean streets, then switched to the Greenway to hip around there. I gotta say, none of that worked - it just felt like self-consciously trying to be pretentious. So I don't think it's hip yet.
|
Originally Posted by wphamilton
(Post 16051634)
it just felt like self-consciously trying to be pretentious.
|
Originally Posted by ShartRate
(Post 16047727)
If you are a hip person and dress hip and have a hip bag and a hip bike and you can ride to work without becoming a sweaty mess, sure bike commuting can be hip.
If you are instead like me, and you are fat, wear bike shorts and an athletic shirt from Target, and have a Trek hybrid that you commute on and carry your crap in panniers and wear a dorky helmet and can't ride anywhere without becoming drenched in sweat, then no you are not hip. |
|
Edit: ^ Beat me to it...
|
Originally Posted by caloso
(Post 16047572)
I question the major premise of your argument. Do you really think L.L. Bean is hip?
|
Originally Posted by MEversbergII
(Post 16050320)
People think I'm weird for bike commuting, and my boss really encourages me to buy a car. Also, most everyone else I know.
Also, what is this "Fred" thing? Just now encountered the term... M. Of course, many of us here embrace our Fredliness. More recently the term has also been used to describe people who are seemingly over-equipped but under-skilled - maybe they bought a $5000 racing bike and putter along at 10 km per hour on the sidewalk with their bike set up all wrong, and have no idea other riders ridicule them, perhaps partly due to resentment. |
|
Originally Posted by Squeeze
(Post 16047967)
I'll never be hip then. I've been a little overweight but not obese, and I've been thin and ripped when I was much younger and a regular athlete. Through it all, I've always sweated profusely, especially from my head. My son has the same condition. Yesterday, he and a bunch of friends were outside playing and running around. Most of the other kids' heads were totally dry, but my boy looked like he had just climbed out of a pool. And he's not fat, at all. He has awesome six-pack abs at age five!
Signed, Ol' Sweaty, who will never be hip. I don't sweat too bad (unless its particularly warm out and I'm particularly slow...), but I will confess to being fatter than normal, particularly uncool in my attire selection, and just patently unhip... I guess I'm not ironic enough... lol |
| All times are GMT -6. The time now is 10:26 AM. |
Copyright © 2026 MH Sub I, LLC dba Internet Brands. All rights reserved. Use of this site indicates your consent to the Terms of Use.