"So tourists photograph our €12 Stroopwafel. And worship cuisines they do not understand. We pretend knowing spice blends makes us cosmopolitan. We reduce thousand year civilisations to their lunch options.
And we call this our culture."
https://heritagestandard.substack.com/p/the-joke-thats-eating-culture
@levisan literally this. A lot of people here have the pretense that this town is a world cultural mecca, so when I ask for a few examples of how, inevitably the fact that several restaurants sell ridiculously overpriced rice and gravy comes up as a primary supporting argument. (Others might include, "look, a man in arab garb!" or in rhetorical form, "do you know how many languages are spoken here?!")
We need a term for this. Something like "Spice whores" but possibly nicer?
@jezza I feel like the language count comment… still not a great measure of culture as a whole but better than just food!
Spice whores is good. We can pencil that in for now until we find something more polite.
@jezza Ahhh yeah students don't count! That's a good point—my town has ~30% of residents French as a first language and that's a lot different in culture than somewhere that's 3 in 10 francophone students.
Office plankton is a great phrase! I love trying to pick up foreign idioms (even foreign English things) and trying to make them stick here. I think that's a good example of culture actually spreading
@jezza Hahaha I love it!
@levisan in school, there were a group of us ("memetic terrorists" before "meme" means what it does now) who would try to get invented phrases and words to stick.
For example, "reich" as a adjective in the vein of "cool" ("that totally reichs!"), or one of the unfortunate successes, "men are equal, women are lesser" which caught on with many players of team sports.