What the fuck is it about hipsters and PBR?

In what sense is beer ironic? Unless it is Iron City beer, of course.

Hipsters are so . . . . . . . . yesterday.

Remember, those oh, so cool “hipsters” got some of you dolts to wear truckers hats.

Jokes on you. Now go choke down your PBR.

I’m surprised how long this has lasted. My first sightings of hipsters with PBR was in 1996 (maybe 97) in Lawrence, Kansas. Specifically at the Replay Lounge, if you care.

Hipsters in Space!

2005 called, it wants its rant back :slight_smile:

(Emphasis mine)

You surely know that no beer is more obnoxiously pretentious than PBR.

Yeah, it’s been around a while. I first saw it among the rockabilly crowd in Atlanta. I believe that would also have been late 90s. Even before that, back into the 80s, Atlanta hipster dive bar Moes and Joes was lavishly decorated with anachronistic PBR paraphernalia.

Me too. This suggests that we should get way into Professional Bull Riding, and then decry all the hipsters who ironically follow us.

Unfortunately, I am already doing this with Competitive Eating*, so I may not have time. You start.

*Go Takeru Kobayashi

My grandpa had a case of Genny in the fridge for as long as I can remember until he died at the ripe old age of like 85. I don’t think anyone in the western New York region will ever be able to drink Genny “ironically” without realizing their dads and grandfathers drink the same stuff.

But even as a kid, the few sips I would get of that stuff was vile and I’ve never touched it since I could drink on my own. Maybe it’s not as bad as I remember.

Well, it’s got two things going for it.
One, it’s cheap, at least around here. In a lot of bars you can still get it for a dollar a can.
Two, it’s not Bud. That doesn’t mean it’s not swill. It just means it’s not actively marketing to the same douchebag demographic that Bud does.
And as several posters pointed out, it’s a relatively inoffensive, easily quaffable beer. My beer of choice is Saranac, but when I’m short a couple of bucks, I have no problem settling for PBR.

So if I get this right, you’re drinking PBR as an expression of your elitism?

Basically, the owner of a dive bar/punk rock club on the west coast (pacific nw?) started stocking mostly just PBR because it was cheap, and his patrons would drink any beer that didn’t cost much. I used to know the specifics, but I can’t search the beeradvocate threads further back than 180 days.

It’s a cheap yet inoffensive fizzy yellow lager, and the brand’s lack of advertising presence may have helped build the trend - as these were people who never saw themselves reflected in beer ads.

:dubious: And how long ago did this allegedly take place? Unless it was well over a decade ago, I serious doubt this is true. Like I said, I predicted Pabst Blue Ribbon would be drunk by my generation back in the '90s. It makes sense without some contrived story about a hip dive on the west coast.

Yeah, this was back in the early nineties when mainstream kids were supposed to listen to grunge and the words emo music and hipster weren’t in the vocab of 99% of people.

There was a really cool PBR swag piece from I don’t know when at my favorite 20th Century Bowling Alley and I wish I had it. It was a large Chalk Board with a 1800’s /1900’s stereotypical bartender graphic charachter, he had a handlebar mustache and stood in white apron and bowtie, serving a PBR on a tray. If I recall correctly, he was serving the beer in a goblet type, heavy glass, beer mug. The PBR Font and logo hasn’t changed. It was probably from the fifties regarding its graphic style, if I were to try to place it. The swag and style of advertisement might have actually been targeted at people who had been drinking draught Pabst in the 10-20’s and were in their 40’s in the 50’s. I have also actually Drunk draught PBR from a 70’s smiley face beer goblet in the 70’s I have fond memories of going there on my Dad’s league nights.

Part of the appeal of PBR might be the fact that the can hasn’t changed. Hipsters tend to like things that have the look of being vintage, and the PBR can certainly looks vintage compared to the cans of other beers. (Budweiser cans also look pretty much unchanged.)

It’s very cheap and hipsters tend to be poor, or be nostalgic for the days when they were in school and poor and had to drink PBR. A similar thing happened with Rolling Rock, although they also had the mysterious label thing going for them.

AKA a beer schooner.

I hear a lot about this Pabst Blue Ribbon but I’ve never seen it for sale here in Australia, which surprises me because there is a Hipster sub-culture here.

Although personally, I find it more fun to be a trailblazer. Rock up at parties with obscure Foreign beers no-one has ever heard of (Tsingtao is a good one- it’s extremely drinkable but it sounds exotic, because it’s from China) and suddenly you look like the erudite man (or woman) of the world and everyone else there looks… pedestrian, for want of a better term.

Tsingtao? Obscure? It’s Chinese Budweiser, and I see it at every Asian restaraunt that serves beer.