Audiogon_bill - It would appear that, chuckles aside, you didn't understand why I connected HH and HP.
Both were lifestyle gurus in their time. Both sold an ego-driven self image. "What sort of a man reads Playboy?" vs. selfless pursuit of the Absolute Sound in bathrobe and slippers with cognac and appreciation for the finer things in life nearby as inferred and essential props. Both were nonsense but both were widely embraced by thousands in HP's case and millions for HH.
Both have become "Manager's Specials" as both have long since passed their respective sell-by dates.
If there are to be "good new days" they will only come as the result of extreme recalibration. The "American Century" ended 10 years ago according to the calendar and the bank accounts of working Americans. In 1980 the financial industry accounted for 16% of our business. Now it accounts for 40% and almost none of those funds are trickling down to working audiophiles, as promised.
So it is entirely possible that we will again stop worrying and start enjoying ourselves and our music with a sense of well-being and confidence, but it will never be like it was 20-30 years ago.
We Americans had a great run but we ran ourselves out of it with greed and ignorance. We should have and could have seen this coming but we were having too much fun. Now the bills are coming due and way too many of us have been taken out of the game. Most of the rest are worried about falling into the same trap. For this reason, commerce is at a standstill. There is no reason to think that audio will be excepted from this caution.
By the way, I'd love to know how your kids would describe HP.
Both were lifestyle gurus in their time. Both sold an ego-driven self image. "What sort of a man reads Playboy?" vs. selfless pursuit of the Absolute Sound in bathrobe and slippers with cognac and appreciation for the finer things in life nearby as inferred and essential props. Both were nonsense but both were widely embraced by thousands in HP's case and millions for HH.
Both have become "Manager's Specials" as both have long since passed their respective sell-by dates.
If there are to be "good new days" they will only come as the result of extreme recalibration. The "American Century" ended 10 years ago according to the calendar and the bank accounts of working Americans. In 1980 the financial industry accounted for 16% of our business. Now it accounts for 40% and almost none of those funds are trickling down to working audiophiles, as promised.
So it is entirely possible that we will again stop worrying and start enjoying ourselves and our music with a sense of well-being and confidence, but it will never be like it was 20-30 years ago.
We Americans had a great run but we ran ourselves out of it with greed and ignorance. We should have and could have seen this coming but we were having too much fun. Now the bills are coming due and way too many of us have been taken out of the game. Most of the rest are worried about falling into the same trap. For this reason, commerce is at a standstill. There is no reason to think that audio will be excepted from this caution.
By the way, I'd love to know how your kids would describe HP.