Replying to Avatar HODL

Are there still places with vibes anymore? Or did the internet kind of kill it?

I feel like digital spaces have vibes. Nostr has a vibe for sure, but everywhere I go (in America at least) feels flat, steril and homogenous now.

People like to pretend otherwise, romanticizing local charm and it’s fun to do so, but in reality there is no meaningful difference between New York, LA, Chicago, Austin, Miami etc…

The differences feel increasingly superficial. Miami with its neon pink and bad Latin art. New York with its identical minimalist cafes selling identical oat lattes. These aren’t cities anymore, they’re brands. “Keep Austin Weird” feels less like the rallying cry of a bohemian collective and more like a safe corporate brand slogan.

It wasn’t always like this. Cities used to incubate true subcultures that couldn’t thrive anywhere else. Seattle once had grunge music emerging organically from local clubs, distinct in sound and attitude. Detroit was a birthplace for techno and industrial grit that couldn’t have been manufactured. New Orleans had jazz clubs and vibrant local traditions that permeated every street corner authentically. Before the internet collapsed distances, you could sense deep authenticity upon arriving somewhere new. The vibe wasn’t something designed by marketing departments; it was organically woven into the streets, the people, the music, and local myths.

Now, vibes feel engineered and commoditized, reduced to Instagrammable moments and easily replicable aesthetics. I once watched from the balcony of my hotel in Nashville as 200 women waited in line to take the same stupid picture with the same stupid set of angel wings.

Digital spaces, ironically, have become refuges of uniqueness, fostering communities unburdened by geographical homogenization. Platforms like nostr host unique niche communities, from hyper-specific gaming bitcoin cultural milieu to obscure philosophical discussions, that retain genuinely distinctive vibes.

Perhaps we’re now entering a strange inversion, where real-world spaces chase digital popularity, adopting blandness to maximize broad appeal.

In this inversion, digital worlds might become the primary spaces where unique vibes survive, thrive, and multiply—leaving our physical world as little more than a flattened reflection of what used to be.

Nostr is where the vibes are at.

I have a tiny condo in a hotel on the Las Vegas strip. Vegas strip vibes are pretty cool, probably because I encounter happy people from all over the world who want to have fun. The strip locals and employees are cool too. Lots of libertarian tax refugees from CA. You go off strip though and man, depressing cookie cutter houses and malls. No good vibes whatsoever.

My hometown of La Jolla, where I still spend a good fraction of my time, has a nice vibe too — if you like locals bars and surf culture. Check out the La Jolla neighborhood of Birdrock, for example.

This is totally off topic but you might Google “vibe coding” if you have an interest in software development. It’s the gradual migration to this coding style that cemented my decision to retire. Whatever vibe I felt for coding before is evaporating, just like the diminishing vibe you’re experiencing at the city level.

https://softwareengineering.stackexchange.com/questions/456840/what-is-vibe-coding-and-what-are-the-strong-points-of-this-methodology

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