Brick wrote:
Joe Orr Road Rod wrote:
veganfan21 wrote:
Maybe it means the "public square" revolves around something other than shopping. Consumerism arguably fuels a lot of outdoor activity and if that's going to move online - though not completely online - maybe it means society repurposes all this abandoned retail space for something better.
So what does the "public square" revolve around? Call of Duty 10?
I don't think the "public square" has existed for many decades. You simply have people who occupy the same space as you for a time and then they go away and you pretty much don't see them again. A select few become lifelong friends but the rest disappear with minimal contact.
I'm sure it was different when most people lived their whole life in the same town or right near the same town that they were born in but people move around so much now that even the people I know who stayed in the same area I grew up in don't have an experience like that unless they head to the townie bar.
There's the physical public square and then there's content public square--when most everyone consumed the same set of tv shows, films, music (to a lesser extent). Probably NBC's must-see tv lineup and Sunday nights on HBO were some of the last of those relatively universal shared experiences.
in the early to mid-00's, when we first moved to Chicago after graduating, neighborhood bars (Inner Town Pub, aka ITP, y0) served the purpose of public square, social media communication mechanism and dating app. a decade on and that shit was dead, dead, dead. mostly because females stopped patronizing bars on the regular except for special occasions in favor of social media and dating apps.