added by sari and · updated 1y ago
The Umami Theory of Value: Autopsy of the Experience Economy
- We also believe that the experience economy is dying, its key commodity (umami) has changed status, and nobody knows what’s coming next.
from The Umami Theory of Value: Autopsy of the Experience Economy by Emily Segal
sari added 3y ago
- As very little of this newly minted money has been invested into building new productive capacity, infrastructure, or actually new things, money has just been sloshing around in a frothy cesspool – from WeWork to Juicero to ill-advised real estate Ponzi to DTC insanity, creating a global everything-bubble.
from The Umami Theory of Value: Autopsy of the Experience Economy by Emily Segal
sari added 3y ago
- But today’s rich don’t generally wear the 2020 version of royal purple, something like parametrically fitted garments made of nanofibers embellished with synthetic mother of pearl (which might be the results of real growth). Instead, they wear $500 cotton t-shirts with inscrutable references and visual motifs pulled from a smörgås-moodboard that ma... See more
from The Umami Theory of Value: Autopsy of the Experience Economy by Emily Segal
sari added 3y ago
- The recent historically long market expansion began with the recovery from the 2008 global financial crisis – and its inevitable end seems to have arrived via virus. Your impression of these high times might vary. You might remember the period for austerity, the Arab Spring, Trump, Brexit, Yellow Vests, the rise of the far right, rising costs of ho... See more
from The Umami Theory of Value: Autopsy of the Experience Economy by Emily Segal
sari added 3y ago
- Let’s take an example. The luxury sector, fashion in particular, has increasingly become a key theater for umami. Throughout the history of human civilization, luxury was premised on being expensive, meaning it resulted from investing an unreasonable amount of work, material or other scarce resources into the making of a thing.
from The Umami Theory of Value: Autopsy of the Experience Economy by Emily Segal
sari added 3y ago
- We believe that umami has been both literally and figuratively the key commodity of the experience economy. Umami, as both a quality and effect of an experience, popped up primarily in settings that were on the verge of disintegration, and hinged on physical pilgrimages to evanescent meccas.
from The Umami Theory of Value: Autopsy of the Experience Economy by Emily Segal
sari added 3y ago
- Value, in an economic sense, is theoretically created by new things based on new ideas. But when the material basis for these new things is missing or actively deteriorating and profits must be made, what is there to be done? Retreat to the immaterial and work with what already exists: meaning.
Meaning is always readily available to be repeated, re... See morefrom The Umami Theory of Value: Autopsy of the Experience Economy by Emily Segal
("JP") added 6mo ago