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  • All over the world something strange is happening

  • coffee shops everywhere are starting to look the same.

  • We're in a coffee shop in Brooklyn and it has a look you probably recognize

  • hanging light bulbs, natural light, exposed wood, potted plants

  • This look has started to travel.

  • We went to four coffee shops on four continents to understand why.

  • And there's a reason that it's happening right now.

  • I'm Preeti Varathan, this is Quartz.

  • And I just started seeing that whether I was in New York or LA or Berlin or Beijing

  • or kind of any city...

  • Kyle Chayka is a reporter who writes about design.

  • and a few years ago he started noticing this trend.

  • Each city had its own version of this generic cafe

  • it was this kind of combination of

  • reclaimed wood and Edison bulbs and big windows.

  • How did this happen?

  • Well, the story starts with something we're all familiar with

  • Starbucks

  • They created this idea that coffee could be a classier commodity than it was before.

  • Starbucks taught Americans that coffee wasn't just fuel.

  • That coffee shops could be a place where people eat and drink and slow down.

  • Starbucks made coffee a luxury experience.

  • We will give you a tray.

  • We will give you sparkling water with everything.

  • We want it to be a full experience.

  • And as Starbucks went global it spread that expectation around the world.

  • Meanwhile in the late 2000s in the U.S.

  • a design trend is growing that really values original materials

  • and authenticity and rawness.

  • And that kind of bleeds into the Brooklyn culture

  • that's starting to emerge around 2006.

  • And then that hits right into the financial crisis

  • which draws everyone's eye back to these Brooklyn hipster nostalgic look

  • which kind of was super lo-fi.

  • As you enter in our cafe you can feel...

  • wood, concrete, steel and light.

  • And while it's debatable where this look actually originated.

  • it comes to be associated with one place.

  • Brooklyn, New York.

  • It's a very New York, Brooklyn-y vibe.

  • And then something happens that allows this look to spread around the world.

  • Silicon Valley suddenly becomes a huge force in cultural life.

  • Visual social media becomes a major part of our day-to-day lives.

  • — Instagram I think was the first major social media platform to focus almost solely on images.

  • So it kind of created this internet culture of taking and sharing photos in real time.

  • — I came here because the blogger posted some photos when she was in Paris

  • and I really like the vibes of the coffee shop.

  • And so it creates this homogenized aspiration.

  • Everyone aspires for the same symbols of luxury at the same time.

  • As that Brooklyn look proliferates across social media

  • it gets refined down to its most Instagram-able elements;

  • a nostalgic stripped back luxury minimalism.

  • Those digital spaces are really amenable to the minimalist aesthetic

  • because the web is kind of empty and blank anyway and

  • you want these like super clean images that only have a few objects in them

  • because they're more legible on a screen.

  • That's when you start to see the rise of the luxury minimalists vibe.

  • That's how coffee shops around the world came to look the same.

  • But if you ask Kyle this is just the beginning.

  • Because it isn't just coffee shops around the world that are starting to look the same.

  • Social media has changed whole neighborhoods too.

  • Technology and social media is shaping the physical world.

  • In places with these kinds of coffee shops,

  • mini "Brooklyns" are popping up.

  • Bandra is also called the "Brooklyn of Mumbai".

  • The minimalist Brooklyn coffee shop look probably won't be the last global design trend.

  • And places around the world might start to look more and more the same.

All over the world something strange is happening

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B1 中級

どこの喫茶店も同じように見えるのはインスタグラムのせい? (Is Instagram to blame for why coffee shops everywhere look the same?)

  • 155 10
    April Lu に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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