Tyler and Alex revisit Tyler's 1998 book and trace how commerce disciplines and amplifies creativity. Great artists bargained hard because money buys orchestras and time. "Inspired consumption" means high-quality audiences shape better art. Dynamic, Hayekian competition discovers new genres, while pulp cross-subsidizes the sublime. They disentangle when government support works, why TV improved with entry and subscriptions, how "payola" rhymes with supermarket slotting fees and with Spotify's algorithmic era, and why some modern art maligned as minimal is, in fact, marvelous. Along the way they touch on reading's spiky renaissance, textiles as the smartest undervalued collectible, the real story on brutalism (is the DC Metro overrated?), and a sober take on cultural pessimism's recurring illusions—plus what all this implies for AI-era culture.
Transcript and links: https://www.mercatus.org/marginal-revolution-podcast/praise-commercial-culture
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Chapters
Recorded 1/13/2025
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