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.

Cities neglected by big corporate interests tend to be heavier on the vibes in my experience, or even some smaller towns. The ones that say, fuck the bottom line, we live here, and this place is for us, not you, for every you out there. And it's of course a continuum, but nothing kills the vibes of a place like the existence of giant private equity firms and publicly traded anything.

Arguably at least to some extent this can be felt at times in smaller cities around hubs; I'd argue Brooklyn has more vibes than Manhattan, Cambridge more than Boston, Oakland more than San Francisco, or Eugene more than Portland. And that's not to say these places haven't lost character over time too; just that they're being scrubbed of it slower. Assimilated slower, as the Wall Street Borg removes individuality in its steady march forward.

I hesitate to blame money itself, because money has always been with us. It seems more like the marriage between those driving the money and their organizational systems on the one hand (AGILE...), and DEI, which together, seek to turn people from individuals with unique characteristics into standardized commodities, interchangeable. We're no longer nuggets of gold found in different streambeds and mineshafts, we're melted down, stripped of 'impurities,' and poured into identical weights and stamped with the same image.

I know many see the story of Revelation as a warning for the future, and maybe it's both, bit it bears reminding that 'the Beast 666' (or 616, as it appears in earlier manuscripts), very clearly refers to Nero. One of the things he did, along with slaughtering saints, was debase the money, so that it became less about the metal content, and more just about the mark it bore, as coins no longer had the same reliable weight. The 'mark of the Beast' everyone needed to transact with was these coins, which represented his system of human control, that sought to homogenize society at the time.

Meanwhile, weird comes from Germanic 'wyrd' or Norse 'urđr' meaning 'fate' or 'destiny.' If you ever sit down one day and realize nobody's called you weird in awhile, I'd say it's time to seriously examine your life choices.

Be a force of nature, not a product of a workflow.

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