(Akiit.com) Merchandise Cottage Industry And Its Impact On The Economy…
Barack Obama’s election to the Presidency of the United States has had a residual effect on the economy in ways that are not (yet) reflected on the New York Stock Exchange. Barack Obama merchandise is huge.
T-Shirts, hats, buttons, coins, photos, posters, calendars, bobble head dolls and other paraphernalia has created a cottage industry in and of itself that has moved money through the economy in ways not even flat screen televisions have. It’s the gift that keeps on giving, and it has no limits.
There appears to be a merchandizing product segment ready to supply an all too eager consumer market, that has found very creative ways to tap into Obama-mania. Just when you thought that there were no new ways to separate poor people (not just black people) from their money, the popular effects of what the
Obama election means to people reflects the impact of popular culture on this Presidency. From “Obama Girl†to Tina Fey, pop culture elected Barack Obama. Now pop culture is profiteering on Obama. This holiday season, “tis the season to be Obama.†Fa-lalalala.
A friend of mine dropped Barack Obama money in my mail box last week. The Obama bills replaces George Washington on the one dollar bill. His notion being that the first President should be replaced by the first black President. Of course this is not legal tender, or even legal, but this just shows the depth and breath of excitement around this historical event. Those million small donors that gave Barack $80 a pop (on average) are now spending $80 on sequenced, designer t-shirts, $50 on limited edition Obama one dollar gold coins, and $20 on reprints of election day newspapers. This is history, and people want to touch it, feel it, wear it and romanticize it. This icon-ization of Barack Obama is also feeding the persona in ways that will make the expectations his Presidency difficult to fulfill. That doesn’t make it any less exciting. That’s how they know black people have money. We buy what we want, and often beg for what we need. And we want a piece of Barack right now. The accomplishment, in and of itself, makes Obama bigger than life. They burned Beatle records when John Lennon once said the Beatles were “bigger than Jesus.†What he meant was that, to young people, the Beatles represented a new type of hope in a depressed nation that had photos Jesus, and an assassinated JFK, on their walls, that came down when posters of a new visual reality came about. Pop culture phenomena often are direct reflections of our socio-political realities. That’s what we are witnessing in this Obama-mania. America has turned a corner, of sorts, in a way that people still can’t believe.
But we all must be careful not to allow Barack Obama to be canonized and even martyrized before he has a chance to make his impact on American society. On every street corner, he’s already in photos with John F. Kennedy and Martin Luther King, Jr. What does that signal? I went in Roscoe’s Chicken and Waffles the other day, and there is Barack Obama as Abraham Lincoln, “the Great Emancipator.†I don’t know what being pictured with Abraham, Martin and John signals to you, but it signals to me all men who met tragic ends before the significant impacts they made on American society were completed. We can buy into to some things, but not visual realities that represent incomplete hopes and dreams. Or else, how do we project where all of this ends? Yes, we can project Barack in the grandness of accomplishment, but we must project Obama in a vision of completeness. His finality must be in the context of fulfillment, not tragic unfulfillment. Slavery may have ended with Lincoln’s death, but semi-slavery (legal segregation) was back 30 years after his death. JFK may have first introduced affirmative action and the first legitimate civil rights bill of the 20th Century, but it could only be passed in his death and affirmative action was, by and large, dead 30 years after his death. Martin Luther King, Jr. may have brought an end to legal segregation and inspired a voting right act, but de facto segregation still exists and voting rights protection still have to be renewed every twenty years, forty years after his death. The hopes and dreams of all these men are largely unfulfilled. No, the election of Barack Obama is a real demonstration that America is not what it was, but it still is not what it should be. Obama is just a visual reflection of what America can become, at this point. It is up to the rest of society to help him fulfill the hope and promise of America. Not as a poster on a wall, or a picture on a t-shirt, but as a reality in the quality of each of our lives. The Barack Obama cottage industry is probably putting money in the pockets of people who otherwise wouldn’t have made such monies, but it also is putting money in the pockets of capitalists that didn’t vote for Barack and are just exploiting the passions of the hopeful (previously known as the hopeless). Economic opportunity (and exploitation) makes for strange bedfellows—and the black community is certainly no stranger to capitalists.
Tis the season to be Barack-ky. Wear him proudly, but with the substance of a historic completion in mind. Let the economic impact move past trinkets and tragic symbolism.
Written By Anthony Asadullah Samad
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