To go further into the weedsStyles Bitchley wrote: ↑Tue Mar 02, 2021 10:45 pmMy experience has been that it has more to do with class than politics. Wherever I’ve been in the world, eating foreign / international cuisine is a marker of being a successful or well educated professional.Pahonu wrote: ↑Tue Mar 02, 2021 10:28 pmAbsolutely, and I think that can lead many to feel overwhelmed by so many viewpoints. That’s not a criticism of any point of view, just a comment on individual’s many reactions to all the options.Styles Bitchley wrote: ↑Tue Mar 02, 2021 8:28 pmThat's true. There sure are many, many options.Pahonu wrote: ↑Tue Mar 02, 2021 8:16 pmI absolutely agree. I was challenging other arguments, namely that content today somehow doesn’t provide any role models or focuses almost entirely on antiheroes. I think the increase in overall content means all types of stories are presented, whereas in the past many other points of view were not given a voice.Styles Bitchley wrote: ↑Tue Mar 02, 2021 7:25 pm
I don't think that all programming does this, but some really does. I think that the impressionability of kids via television was the impetus behind Sesame Street and the many other kids shows that followed. Think of all the after school specials we were exposed to in the '70s and '80s...they were designed to provide moral guidance. Lots of family-oriented sit coms were carefully crafted to provide these lessons, often with virtuous parents who taught lessons. Think of Steven and Elyse Keaton or Cliff and Clair Huxtable. Clearly some programming is designed to provide role models and heroes and some is not.
This may be getting into the weeds a bit, but there is growing psychological literature drawing a connection between individual’s response to variety and complexity in general and their political inclinations. I’ve had several discussions on the topic with a colleague over the last few years, though not lately. Essentially, several recent psychological studies have shown that individuals who view new and unique experiences, such as trying a new foreign cuisine, as a negative and uncomfortable tend to fall on the more conservative side of the political spectrum. Individuals who find such exotic experiences more positive and enjoyable tend to lean more liberal. These studies don’t approach it from a political perspective but rather the lens of personal behavior traits that are very likely biologically motivated. I’m not too familiar with all the details but find the topic fascinating. I’ll have to get more specific details from my coworker, because I feel I’m not explaining this very well.
Yes, I think we’re thoroughly in the weeds!


I do remember one component of one of the studies was pickiness toward food though. It has actually been described in psychological journals that part of the population has higher sensitivities to flavors and are much more cautious about trying unknown flavors. Because these new flavors are often perceived as unpleasant, the experience of trying new ones is viewed more negatively. I think the takeaway was that certain innate tendencies can affect whether people experience new and different things as more generally positive experiences or more negative experiences.
From a purely anecdotal view, I know people on both sides of that spectrum from myself, both the friend who’s up to try anything (sometimes stupidly!) and the friend who’s much more reluctant about those same things and takes a lot of convincing to try something. Now I just have to survey all of them about their political leanings and see how they correlate!!!


