I remember some 20-30 years ago you would sometimes hear about an artist (usually musician, or a group thereof) being sellouts, or having sold out. This of course in a pejorative way, as this was the most heinous of crimes an artist could ever commit against their fan base.

However, I can’t recall having heard this term for at least a couple of decades. Has the term been replaced with something else? Is it more accepted? Or is it simply so hard to make it nowadays that the concept of “selling out” is basically just synonymous with making a living?

Are there any modern examples of this and I simply missed the online chatter about it?

  • @FanciestPants
    link
    62 hours ago

    Does Snoop Dogg performing for the Trump crypto ball or whatever the shit that was count as selling out?

  • @tronx4002
    link
    1
    edit-2
    45 minutes ago

    Echoing what others have said, I think most people realize how hard it is to make a living in the arts. I think another part of it is with the recent awareness for workers rights, the idea of being a ‘starving artist’ has lost its glamour.

  • @2piradians
    link
    English
    72 hours ago

    I think the plot was lost when the piracy/drm wars reached a peak and set new norms. The ‘talent’ that emerged steadily became performers rather than artists and put out disposable, largely formulaic pop made with protools.

    Nearly all the mainstream now are what many would have called sellouts prior to all this.

    Maybe there will be a move back to quality over quantity. Granted quality music is still being made, but by and large the current listener just wants to jump from the current sensation to the next after the staleness sets in.

    Long story long the internet changed a lot of things, attention spans are eroded, and we’re still learning how to deal with all of it.

  • @DarkFuture
    link
    English
    519 hours ago

    Because selling out is the standard in America now.

    It’s not noteworthy to sellout anymore. It’s expected.

  • @Lauchs
    link
    228 hours ago

    If your idols are youtubers and tiktokkers, their business model is selling merch.

    So opinions had to change.

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    29
    edit-2
    9 hours ago

    True, it’s not really a thing any more. Two reasons I’d say:

    • If you want to make a nice living by being distributed by a label “selling out” is mandatory
    • Anti-establishment musicians have a cheap distribution method in the form of internet. If they don’t care about making money, they just offer it for download directly to their fans

    That being said, the term is still used in the open source software community quite a lot.

  • @BroBot9000
    link
    English
    139 hours ago

    Can’t sell out when everything is a sellout.

  • shoulderoforion
    link
    fedilink
    109 hours ago

    McDonalds started charging $15 for a Quarter Pounder Value meal, and everyone realized in this post 9/11 America, you need to make as much money as possible just to be able to survive, which is diametrically opposed to the 60’s and 70’s still post war boom(ers) playacting socialist/communist Hippies, pointing and laughing when an artist they liked took a big check, when they’re own rent was either subsidized by their parents, or cost them $200 a month and their University tuition another $500 a year. Shit was different. Shit changed.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      English
      67 hours ago

      which is diametrically opposed to the 60’s and 70’s still post war boom(ers) …, when their own rent was either … cost them $200 a month and their University tuition another $500 a year

      I think this is it. The cost of living was lower, so Boomers could get by without selling out. The attitude continued into the 1990s and early 2000s until it became harder and harder to lead a comfortable life on a modest paycheque.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      English
      77 hours ago

      Adding on to this, I’ll say the term is likely used less now because, for the reasons you mentioned, the common person actually aspires to get famous for the specific purpose of selling out and making a big payday to escape the hellscape of everyday wage-slavery.

      But then there are also “sell outs” that are totally situational. For example, a content creator (who I won’t name because that’s not the point) who’s an OG that’s been around for over 20 years now, constantly putting out content, never had sponsors until a few years ago. Initially I was annoyed at suddenly seeing “Sponsored by NordVPN!” and “Sponsored by RAID Shadow Legends!” in every video, but then I learned he’d had a child with his wife. And his child had a bad birth defect that required a lot of expensive surgeries.

      After that, I was like, “Get that paycheck, my guy.” It’s hard out there.

      • shoulderoforion
        link
        fedilink
        23 hours ago

        well, then you were mistaken, and being purposefully obtuse for some reason. there’s everything before 9/11, and then there’s everything after, and you can draw a clear line to differentiate the two time periods, in every country around the world

  • @RaoulDook
    link
    English
    89 hours ago

    Sellout would be what I’d call snoop doggy lapdog after his recent performance

  • @fallowseed
    link
    1010 hours ago

    we do hear about ‘industry plants’, however…

    • Porto881
      link
      English
      69 hours ago

      Came here to mention industry plants, too. There’s no “selling out” for the most part because most major artists are controlled from day one by the industry, versus back in the day when they needed to scrape their knuckles on their own to appeal to a major label. Social media and The Algorithm lets the labels build careers out of nothing.

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    9
    edit-2
    9 hours ago

    I only know this phenomenon from the punk scene and I think it still exists today. NOFX released a song about it 10 years ago.

    First verse lyrics:

    She asked me if I was a singer, then called me has-been
    She said she really liked my band in the early '90s, oh yeah
    I said stop saying those mean things, my ego is so fragile
    And then she called me a poseur punk
    Why don’t I drink up and get the hell out
    'Cause I’m a sellout

  • Revv
    link
    fedilink
    37 hours ago

    Not a direct answer to your question, but I heard a cool story on a podcast recently about Chumbawamba that feels related. Turns out they were punk as fuck.

    Part one

    Part two

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      34 hours ago

      Loved hearing that story. Margaret Killjoy is a treasure, and as it turns out so is Chumbawamba.

      • Revv
        link
        fedilink
        34 hours ago

        She sure is! Have you read the Sapling Cage? I just finished it a week ago. Incredible.

    • @[email protected]OPM
      link
      fedilink
      English
      1
      edit-2
      7 hours ago

      From what little I know about them, that tracks. They just happen to have a song that was pretty in line with what was (became) popular at the time and made it big. Everything else by them is A LOT more punkish.