--- On Mon, 12/1/08, Tango Society of Central Illinois <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 
wrote:

Cultural validity of the product is irrelevant in a marketplace where consumers 
are largely ignorant and indifferent regarding accurate representation of the 
cultural art form they are acquiring.

Ron
_______________________________________________

Sean here,

I suspect I could be labled an avid tango consumer. Yet I have to admit that 
I've never gone shopping for a "cultural art form". Maybe the largely ignorant 
consumers are smarter than you think. They buy what they like, not what you 
want them to like. (Or need tham to like to improve your market share?)

Very few American tango dancers are likely to become Porten~os. Tango in the US 
is not and never will be the same as tango in Bs. As. But at least one thing is 
probably similar. I suspect thare are as few Porten~os as there are N. 
Americans trying to buy a "cultural art form".

I dance a rhythmic close embrace style of tango to golden age music because I 
like it; not because I need some form of 3rd party "authenticity" validation. I 
have friends (I think?) who dance nuevo to all sorts of wierd alternative 
music, because they like it. I don't tell them what clothes to wear, what food 
to eat, or what car to drive. Why would I tell them what style to dance? If 
someone is rude or interferes with other dancers, whether through poor 
navigation (or by preaching authenticity ;) I might intervene and ask them to 
be more considerate of their fellows. But I'm not going to try and impose my 
preferences on them. 

Sean

PATangoS - Pittsburgh Argentine Tango Society  Our Mission: To make Argentine 
Tango Pittsburgh’s most popular social dance!  
http://patangos.home.comcast.net/   



      

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