For people who pride themselves on their uniqueness...they all seem suspiciously like cloned sheep to me.
You're describing the tragically hip of any generation.
True enough.
I have only observed this hipster thing from afar. I see it as mainly college-age kids...and I am LONG past those days. However, I suspect that I probably have more interaction with hipsters than a lot of people my age, just because of music. You bump into a LOT of hipsters when you are into new music and make an effort to follow it, discover new bands, etc. But once again...I try to keep it at a distance, when possible.
However, I am much more familiar with what happened with another 'anti' trend: Grunge.
The people who started what later became known as 'grunge' did so in the mid to late 80's - NOT when Nirvana put out Nevermind. By the time Nirvana put out Nevermind, what later became known as grunge was old news to the people who actually set it in motion. The people who really WERE what we think of as 'grunge' never called themselves that...because by the time it had a name, they had already moved on. It only got a name when Madison Avenue globbed onto flannel and Doc Martens as a way to make it into something they could SELL.
And the people who really WERE what we now refer to as grunge were so far away, ideologically, from the people who SOLD grunge to the masses in the early 90's that they could not have been more different. The people who really 'lived' what we now refer to as grunge were not remotely interested in 'selling' anything. Flannel wasn't a 'fashion statement' to them - it was simply a way to keep warm on the cheap in cold, damp Seattle via buying flannel at the Army/Navy surplus. That's it. To them, Nordstrom selling $100 flannel shirts was about as far away from their intent in first donning them as you can possibly imagine.
The moral of the story: in every generation, most people are sheep. And the TRULY hip people - the ones who set these trends - set them not in order to set a trend...but because it is who they really are and they have no choice but to just
be that. They set these trends by going in an
unpopular direction - a direction that gets them mocked and ridiculed and thrown out of restaurants. A direction that makes them very misunderstood - even by the very people who, 3 or 4 years later, are trying so hard to be just like them.
There is a price attached to being truly hip. And these kids are NOT the ones who paid it. Ergo, to me, they are just posers, for the most part.