Hidden Brain - Never Go To Vegas
Episode Date: March 19, 2019All social classes have unspoken rules. From A-list celebrities to teachers, doctors, lawyers, and journalists — there are social norms that govern us, whether we realize it or not. This week on Hid...den Brain, we look celebrity culture, as well as another elite group: the yoga-loving, Whole Foods-shopping, highly-educated people whom one researcher calls the new "aspirational class." This episode is from December 2017.
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This is Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedanta.
Being a celebrity can be boiled down to a simple formula.
Follow these rules and you can be an a-lister too.
Rule number one, go to the right parties.
It's the year's most electrifying red carpet with a spoon-shape.
Rule number two, hang out with the right people.
The most successful singers in the biz, Selena Gomez and Taylor Swift.
I mean, the two have been BFS for like, ever.
Rule number three. Be seen, but in small doses.
Over exposure, as we know, actually does make people lose interest.
Rule number four. Never go to Vegas.
What are you talking about Vegas? Vegas, baby, Vegas!
If you go to Las Vegas, it actually pulls your star power down.
Now maybe you're thinking, this episode isn't for me.
I'm not an a-lister, I've no desire to be one.
I don't read us weekly or keep up with the Kardashians.
But Elizabeth Card-Halkeh's research into elite social groups might just apply to you too.
Elizabeth is a professor of urban planning at the University of Southern California,
but if you look at the books she's written, she's actually fascinated by social networks.
From Hollywood to the highly educated people who spend their time and money on things like...
Yoga, breastfeeding,
buying organic food, attending farmers markets listening to NPR, reading the
books on the New York Times bestseller list. These are all physical manifestations
of your cultural capital. This week on Hidden Brain, elite groups and how our
choices are shaped by the people around us.
When you look at which stars shine the brightest in Hollywood, do you ever wonder why certain
people are famous and not others?
Talent certainly has something to do with it.
Wealth and beauty don't hurt.
But in her book, Starstruck, Elizabeth says
there's something else at work.
One thing that happens with interest fads and fashions
and fixations on particular celebrities
is that there is a collective interest,
but that collective interest is recursive.
Meaning, if lots of people are paying attention to something or someone, that
begets more attention.
There are complicated reasons for why this is, and one of the things that I think
really propels this kind of network effect is that in cultural
markets and in taste, which in many ways
celebrities are a part of a taste-driven
market, we look to each other for signals for what to pay attention to. And in many
ways, this explains the success of lots of taste-driven things. So whether we're
talking about films or music or artwork, are the objects or people who rise to
the top really that much better
or that much more interesting than everyone else, probably not that much more.
The disproportionate win is the function of what economists call a winner-take-all-market,
which is that because we're looking for clues, we look at the person next to us and what
their pain attention to, and so that then we pay attention to it too, and then someone looks to us. And then it's
really hard to say if that thing, whether it's a Mark Rothko painting, or my
friend on Facebook, is the thing to pay attention to. But by that point we
already are. When Elizabeth Carrott-Halkett talks about celebrities, she isn't
talking about all famous people. She makes a distinction between people who are
well-known, and people who fascinate us. She makes a distinction between people who are well known
and people who fascinate us.
Fame is simply people knowing who you are.
And the sheer number of people who know who someone is
is very different from a public being
fixated upon someone.
Oh, that Bill Gates, isn't he in technology?
It's very different from what did Bill Gates eat for breakfast today and many, many people
wanting to know.
It can be bewildering the way we care desperately about the details of some people's lives, but
not others.
Barack Obama is a popular politician, but not every president becomes a celebrity in the way
that he did.
I remember reading an article in The New York Times
about the number of almonds
Obama ate every night after dinner.
We know exactly which kind of socks Jennifer Aniston
likes to wear, and the type of diet
Beyonce followed after the birth of her first child.
I think that what has really changed
if we think about the evolution of celebrity
is that we have access to that material now. So celebrities
have existed in some shape or form since probably the beginning of human civilization. We've
always been more interested in certain people for things that transcend their talent. And
we've been more interested in the personal details of certain people. But in the Hollywood studio system,
that was so much more controlled.
And today, it's not by virtue of many different things.
And so that focus on the number of almonds
that President Obama used to eat.
I want to say the number is seven.
I'm not sure, but I remember that article
and being very interested in this.
That that is also a product of the fact that we can get that information.
Our ability to get that kind of personal information, coupled with the fact that we're drawn to what other people are drawn to, this is a formula for celebrity.
We hear that Obama eats seven almonds and that other people care that Obama eats seven almonds, and
suddenly this detail seems fascinating.
It reminded me of a study that the researchers tanally milk-rimb once conducted in the late
1960s.
He had someone walk along a sidewalk in New York City, the person walked down the street,
and then suddenly stopped and looked up.
The experiment was documented in an educational video.
We are all individuals, but we live in a world with other people and we must often accommodate to them.
To what extent can we remain individuals in a social world?
What kinds of pressures do others exert on us to conform? And how do we deal with such pressures?
How can social psychology study the issues of independence and conformity?
Most pedestrians ignored the man and kept walking, but a few passers-by, about 4%, stopped,
and they looked up too. Then the experimenters had a larger group suddenly stopped and
looked up. When it wasn't just one person but a group, many more pedestrian stop to look up as well, nearly 20% almost five times
more than before. As they increased the size of the initial crowd, they found that the proportion
of passers-by who imitated the looking up response also increased. We take our signals about what
to pay attention to from one another. If one person is looking up, who cares? But if 10 people are
looking up, well, there must be something to see.
That's exactly right.
And there have been a number of different studies since Milgram, where social scientists
have looked at this as well.
Anita Elbersa did this really interesting study where she argued that big companies like
Amazon actually create a collective cohesive fan base for things because they allow us to coalesce around big hits.
There's another really interesting study done by Duncan Watts and Matthew Saganek,
where they did this fascinating study between two different groups of people listening to music.
Let's think about a popular song from a few years ago. Now, the year that called me maybe was released, 2012, there were a number of other pop songs
that could have topped the charts.
Like, why not this one?
Or this one?
You could argue that Call Me Maybe was a catchy song, but did you feel that way the first time you heard it?
Or was it only after everyone else held up the song as the song of the summer that
had started to get stuck in your head?
When a song becomes popular, we get signals from lots of people that we should pay attention
to it.
We hear it over, and and over and over again. Then the hooks in our heads.
And before we know it, we somehow know all the words. The takeaway was essentially that if you didn't know what other people were listening to,
there was much more chaos in the list of the most popular music.
It was much more ambiguous, you know, what everyone thought was the best.
But if listeners knew what others thought was good, that would actually compound upon itself.
And then you got a much clearer list of the most popular songs.
At the heart of your book is an argument about how celebrities become celebrities.
And you say it has a lot to do with being part of a very elite invite-only network. What do you mean by that?
So when I started looking at celebrities, I was trying to figure out if there were particular
personal attributes, even talent attributes that drove the rise of a celebrity. And it
was really hard to come up with them. Simultaneously, I was really trying to understand the social dynamics of people who
worked in creative industries.
My first book, The World Hall Economy, was about how creative industries worked in New
York City.
And it was a very qualitative book.
And I found when I spoke to artists and musicians and designers, that despite the fact that
they didn't have a lot of money,
and that a lot of them needed space to do their work, they felt compelled to live in New York City,
even if getting a big warehouse space in Ohio would have served them well in a practical sense
that they needed their social lives in New York. And so when I finished that book, I really wanted to get a sense of the social networks
and the social knew you in which creative people
lived and worked in and how important it was.
So I teamed up with my colleague, Gilead Ravead,
and he and I looked at photographic data of celebrities.
And we used Getty Images, and we looked at all of the caption information of photographs
in their entertainment catalog over the course of one year.
And what we tried to do was make sense of not just who was in photographs together, but
who went to the same parties, the same events, and where those parties were, and if there was a pattern
in who showed up at parties together.
So was there a randomness to the photographs?
Was there something that drove why people showed up?
So what we tried to look at was a way to cut things off.
So how could we organize all of these people in the database? So what we tried to look at was a way to cut things off.
So how could we organize all of these people
in the database?
So we looked at Forbes star currency,
which ranked stars based on their star power.
And we divided them into the top 60
into three different groups, A list, B list, C list.
And we then looked at these stars in the photographs,
so we corresponded these two different measures.
And what we found was that the only group that had
a non-random, very closed connected network,
a click essentially, were the a list.
And that they really reinforced their position
by spending time with each other
at the same parties over and over again
and not spending time with anyone else. It was an A-list recording. I am here with Naomi Watts for the impossible.
Best actress, Oscar nominee.
Amy Adams, Best Score actress, nominee.
Sack, Best Ensemble, nominated.
Oscar nominated.
Everything nominated.
Silver Lines, Playbook.
I can't believe this is happening twice.
What was also interesting was that the B-list and the C-list
did not have those same connections, even with each other.
So they had a much more disparate network amongst each other.
And in fact, their categories were almost arbitrary.
It was really if you were in this top 20 group that you were extraordinarily exclusive
and actually perpetuated that exclusivity by spending time just with each other.
So if this is the case, then a question arises,
which is how does anyone ever crack the A-list club?
If it's essentially a closed club,
and the people in the club take great pains to keep others out,
and the only way to become an A-list celebrity
is to be invited to the club,
it creates something of a conundrum,
which is how do you actually break into the club?
I argue in the book that it's a, you take this kind of quantum leap.
So it's not an iterative thing.
Like if I just keep toiling away as a bea-less celebrity at some point, I'm going to be a
list.
That's not how it happens.
So something big either happens in your career or big happens in your social life.
Like you get married to an a-lister or you suddenly are best friends with an a-lister
and in some way they allow you to permeate the a-list.
But you can also do it because of your career
when I was looking over star-struck
in preparation for this interview.
I noticed that in this far corner is Zoe Kravitz
so she wasn't an a-lister or a B-lister,
I think at the time of organizing this, she was a sea-lister in this database.
But of course, she's now one of the key stars of Big Little Lies, which is an extraordinarily
television show on HBO.
People are obsessed with it.
She's amazing in it.
Okay.
It's shocking.
And a bit disturbing.
But I think it is important that we separate the nobility
of the cause from the misguided means pursuing it.
We champion the former and dissuade her from the latter.
And so where would she be now?
I'd imagine she's probably moving to A-list,
and that's a function of something that happened
to her career.
And those are the ways in which you permeate it if you're not, you know, a young star is
born and you can immediately become an A-lister because you start in this great film and you're,
you know, this actress or actor who was just discovered.
But the other way is if you're already in the Hollywood machine that you jump in is if
you've either connected with someone or you've done something with your career
that enables you to leap.
You found that it makes a difference where you get photographed and that there are in
fact only three places in the world where it's actually important to get photographed if
you want to crack one of these super exclusive clubs.
So yes, this was an amazing finding.
When we looked at all of the photographic data in our database,
and we had something like 600,000 photographic events,
or photographs rather, we found that 80% of them were taken
in Los Angeles, New York, or London.
And that really did mean that in the eyes of the media,
which then becomes the eyes of the public,
you really had to be geographically bound to these places
for people who know who you are and to become a celebrity.
Now, of course, some people don't want that.
I mean, if you think about someone like Daniel Day-Lewis
who's an incredibly revered actor,
I think he actually just retired, but he lives out, I think, in the Midwest. He is
no interest in this. So people know him because he is talented. But he's not a celebrity in the
way that the stars who are photographed over and over again are. And we are then able to build
an interest and a fixation on them. And so if you are heading to Vegas to get photographed at a big social event,
this might actually be something of a strategic mistake.
So this was very interesting that there were certain places that really opt
star power, and one of those places is, you know, if you go somewhere, you know, international,
like Tokyo, and if you're in London for a certain number of days,
if you go to Las Vegas, it actually pulls your star power down.
And I thought a lot about this.
And I think one of the things is that it's not a hub
for talent-driven star events.
And it really is about just partying.
And so there is a sense that going to Las Vegas
really drives your famous for being famous element.
But if you're a bona fide aelister,
you're going to the Vanity Fair of Oscar Party,
but you're not making your way to some nightclub
in Las Vegas.
So there's something very sad here,
because if you're a beelister or a seaelister
and you want to crack the a-list club
You know and you're attending the events that you can get into which might be in Las Vegas for example
That might actually be hurting your chances to eventually make it into the a-list club
Which leads us to the
Dispairing idea that once a bea-lister always a bea-lister
Well, I think that's a pretty good observation.
It really depends on what your goal is.
I mean, if one's goal is to just be, you know, on everyone's radar, to be in the tabloids,
and to possibly do something with that recognition, then go to Las Vegas.
If your goal is to be revered as one of Hollywood's elite,
it's a better idea to stay home.
Even if becoming an A-Lister isn't your goal, Elizabeth's research might apply to you.
After the break, we're going to talk about social forces that are more relevant to your life.
That's going to be especially true if your life includes farmers markets, yoga classes, and instantly recognizing this
voice.
Screen court, if the legal questions were dry, the argument was not.
Stay with us.
This week, we're talking about elite groups from a list celebrities to a new social
elite that Elizabeth Card, Halcad, has dubbed the aspirational class. This elite
group is highly educated. Its members breastfeed their children. They spend
money on things like organic produce and expensive Pilates classes. We
reproduce a Maggie Penman to a hotbed of the aspirational class, a whole
food in Washington DC.
She adds shoppers a series of seemingly unrelated questions about their habits and choices,
and we're going to hear some of their answers throughout this conversation.
I think small farmers is really ideally where I would get most of my produce. I try to shop at
farmers markets as much as I can. Yeah, organic food definitely because I'm a father of three kids,
and I think it's important to give them healthy food.
For my son I only buy organic food.
I always buy organic food if I'm not getting it out of my own garden.
I don't want the chemicals, I don't want the pesticides, I don't want things that don't
grow naturally from the earth. I do try to make choices that are local, sustainable,
good for my body.
Now, these are all thoughtful people.
When you ask them why they do yoga,
they might say something like,
it's good for my health, it's good for stretching.
And I like the part that it's got a little bit of a
meditative aspect reminding me to just kind of take a break
from the day.
Why do I do yoga because it makes me feel fabulous?
But what if I told you that all of these well-meaning people,
making individual choices that are good for them and good for their families,
that these people are creating a new social elite?
It signifiers might not be fancy cars or flashy watches, but Elizabeth Currett Halkett
says, this club is every bit as exclusive as the A list.
I started thinking about this book.
Really through being inspired by Thorstein Reblund's book, The Theory of the Leisure Class, which
I read many, many years ago as a graduate student and continue to refer to in my later work.
And I was fascinated with his ability to characterize day-to-day behavior that revealed social
position and economic position.
But I also knew that things had changed a lot and these ways in which we
showed social position were not material anymore or not entirely material. And another thing that
seemed to be happening was that these kind of flashy signs of wealth were not celebrated anymore. I mean you had the sort of flashes in 1980s and
you had, you know, some of that in the 2002 with the tech bubble and that really stopped being
mainstream appropriate. And so of course we still have plutocrats and private jets and
oligarchs and their yachts, but that that became more complicated for most elites.
That type of landish material consumption and revealing of wealth was less interesting.
Part of that is because the material goods that might show wealth in a day-to-day basis
had become so commonplace.
Lots of people have nice cars and flats, green TVs.
It used to be that when we thought about people
who were in an elite social class,
we often noticed who they were
because of conspicuous consumption.
You make the argument that I think a lot of people
would find difficult to follow,
which is that the new social class
or the new marker of social class
is what you call inconspicuous consumption. What do you mean by that?
So this all started because I wanted to look at who bought silver spoons in
America today because Thorston Evelyn's famous example with it, you know, the
wealthy bought silver spoons and even though they weren't more useful, in fact,
people purchased them because they
were a sign of status.
So I just, you know, to be honest with you initially, thought it would be kind of fun to see who's
buying silver spoons these days.
And so I looked with my doctoral student, Jo Jung Lee, I looked at the consumer expenditure
survey, and we looked at flatware, and we noticed that it was not this top 1% that was spending
all of this money on flatware.
And so it got me thinking about, well, what do the rich spend money on now?
And here we have this big data set of all these consumer items.
Let's find out.
And what became really clear was that they were spending on things that weren't
inherently material and obvious. And so the stats actually made me think more qualitatively
about how the wealthy spend. And so you have tons and tons of stats showing that really, I mean,
inconspicuous consumption. So consumption we can't necessarily see drives a lot of wealthy spending today. Whereas the middle class,
and I mean this in the true sense, those in the 40th to 60th percentiles are spending on material
goods. What did that qualitatively look like? And so I looked around and what you see is
like. And so I looked around and what you see is this use of cultural capital to show social position and ways in which people talked wasn't about, you know, their fancy new car. It might be justified
by it being diesel or it's electric and Pilates classes and then you look closely and are like,
well, those are like, you know, 20 bucks a pop. Like how, like if people are going to those three days a week,
that's real money.
And people buying all of this are organic food,
which if you, you know, look in the grocery store,
it's, you know, sometimes at least 50% more expensive
than the conventional fruit.
And yet, these became the practices
that were inherently more expensive.
And yet, they weren't screaming wealth in the
way that previous elite spending patterns might.
I asked Elizabeth for examples of things that people purchased that would be conspicuous
forms of consumption.
Luxury cars, fancy electronics, fancy handbags, really, you know, expensive watches, and
in conspicuous consumption.
So education, nannies, gardeners, housekeepers, pensions, retirement, health care, these
are things that people can't see.
And yet, they're actually a lot more expensive than having a nice watch or a nice bag.
Elizabeth has noticed in her research a shift in spending patterns among the wealthiest or a nice bag.
Elizabeth has noticed in her research a shift in spending patterns among the wealthiest Americans
away from the flashy and to word the invisible.
Like for example, breastfeeding.
So we understand that it helps build their immunity when they're really small.
My first child didn't get his first cold until a month after I
stopped nursing and that was 16 months. Elizabeth Archeos at breastfeeding is an important marker of entry
into this new social elite. When I became a mom I you know I immediately breastfed my kid and I
signed up for mommy and me classes and you know my husband and I said oh we should definitely get
an education fund started so that you know he can go to whatever college he wants to and the and breastfeeding
by the way you know just like saving in a college fund were just the things that my friends
did too.
So everyone was just doing this and we didn't even question it.
I mean everyone went to mommy in me classes and read to their kids from you know day one
of life.
And it pushed me to think about,
well, does everyone do this?
And when you look at the data,
you realize what a bubble you're in, right?
You're in a bubble if you can save money at all.
You're in a bubble if you can save for your kids' education.
And you're in a bubble if you are breastfeeding your kids
for six months to a year.
And that made me realize that these were all signifiers
of being a part of an educated class
with good maternity leave and a decent salary.
And that those were, again, markers of my social position.
And they were for lots of people in my group.
And if I actually never left my group or thought about it,
I would just think that's how people behaved.
And you realize that, wow, that's not everyone.
And yet, in my world, it was everyone.
So when you think about breastfeeding, it's interesting that you're thinking about it in terms
of inconspicuous consumption because people would say, what's being consumed here, you're
deciding to breastfeed your child, how is that consumption of any kind?
Well, you're actually spending an awful lot of money to breastfeed your child because
time is money today.
And in a knowledge-driven economy where, frankly, the flexibility of work life is a product often of education and well-paid jobs and good maternity leave and good health
benefits, that's expensive.
And so that was the thing that really was interesting to me when I thought about how elite spend
money today is that they spend it to get time back, spending on gardeners and child care
and housekeeping. that's what that
is.
I don't want to have to do this with my free time, and I have the money to not have to do
it.
And breastfeeding is something that is incredibly time intensive, and it takes a long time to
get the hang of it for a lot, a lot of moms, and I'll add something else, and this is something
from one of the sociologists I interviewed, you also have to be in a social world where you feel comfortable
if you're going to do that in public.
And so actually all of that is built into, you know, being in an environment where you
feel that you're safe and that there's other people doing that, and then the fact that
the time that you devote towards breastfeeding is expensive.
So we've talked a little bit about inconspicuous consumption at the front end of life.
I'd like to go to another example of inconspicuous consumption that you mentioned at the other end of life.
At the time we die, you find there are really interesting differences now between rich and poor
in how we think about death and how we conduct funerals.
rich and poor in how we think about death and how we conduct funerals.
Yes, so what is the interesting statistics or findings in in my analysis is that
the poor spend over a quarter more on funerals than the rich.
I was stumped by this finding to be perfectly honest. So I asked my colleague David Sloan, who's a historian at the University of Southern
California,
and he is written on funerals and cemeteries, and I said, what to make of this?
And so, as he explained it to me, one of the things that happens is that poor families have
much greater social capital. And so, the funeral becomes a very, very important center of, you know, social
gathering, you know, even if it's, of course, solemn and it's honoring the person who just
died, that it does become a place for the entire community to come together. And, you know,
think about, sort of conventionally, like the Irish wake, for example. And so it then has these performative aspects, right?
So it's about, you know, showing the honor towards the person who's died,
making a big deal.
It's also that you have more people there.
So it becomes a much bigger event than it does for wealthier families.
There are also class differences in burial practices.
I would like to be cremated.
I think burial is a poor use of land space.
I would want to be cremated, I think.
Well, it has become my family standard to be cremated.
And I think it has a lot to do with a sense of an overcrowded planet.
Increasingly, cremating the dead has become a signifier of class.
Yes, so this is another interesting distinction between the rich and the poor.
The rich cremate more and the poor bury more.
And again, I was stumped by this.
But again, when I spoke with my colleague, David, he said,
well, it's because they have very different attitudes towards death.
And the wealthy tend to keep it very private.
And this, of course, inherently lowers its expenses.
You might extend this to this idea that the poor have
greater amounts of social capital.
And so again, the concentration of people coming makes it more expensive.
And that they actually, the richer and the more educated you are, is the more likely
you are to cremate.
And I don't know what this is.
I mean, is this correlated to religion?
Is it correlated to beliefs in the afterlife?
I don't know, but it's clearly there's a larger trend
that wealthier people not only want something private,
but they also have a different philosophy
about what to do when someone dies. When we come back, how these choices add up to the creation of a new social elite, and
why some wealthy people feel guilty about being rich. This is Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedanthu.
This week we're talking about elite groups.
Elizabeth Carrad-Halkit has been studying the spending patterns of the wealthiest Americans.
She finds them moving away from things like fancy cars
and giant TVs, and instead spending their time and money
on breastfeeding, organic food, and education.
My children are the recipients of the most expensive
education in the history of the world.
Stepping back to look at the big picture
of Elizabeth's research, you can see how privilege
replicates itself.
From the earliest days of someone's life, there are the breastfed or formula fed.
Maybe that one thing doesn't make a big difference, but as they grow up, their parents are buying
organic tomatoes or conventional tomatoes.
They get signed up for piano classes or they don't.
Their parents are able to save for their college education or they're not.
Elizabeth argues that each of these small decisions adds up.
It creates a new social elite.
These behaviors and practices reinforce their privilege and reinforce the
privilege of their children in a way that superficial material goods
don't pass on from generation to generation.
One of the people that is very interesting to consider when looking at this class is
Pierre-Bordier's concept of habitats.
So he argued that he was a great thinker on cultural capital, and he argued that there
were these physical manifestations of cultural
capital. And so yoga, breastfeeding, binaurganic food, attending farmers markets, listening to NPR,
reading the books on the New York Times bestseller list, these are all physical manifestations of
your cultural capital, right? They show your education, they show that you have time,
and they implicitly show you have money.
The thing that I think is most cause for concern
with the rise of what I call the aspirational class
is that there is a kind of belief
that all of these practices are actually for the good, for the
good of society.
You know, I'm putting money away for education for my child.
I'm breastfeeding my child.
That's what my doctor told my son's pediatrician told me to do.
I am practicing yoga, which makes me healthier, which is important.
And then there becomes this ignorance
to the fact that others can't do this.
So I find breastfeeding to be a particularly fascinating one
because in my bubble of motherhood,
everyone breastfeed, the thing that I have found
with some of my friends who are mothers
in this social group is they actually feel
really bad when they have to stop and they feel embarrassed if they have to
introduce formula because they have to go back to work and so suddenly I, you
know, you know, writing this book, I was thinking why would you feel bad about
any of this? I mean this is this doesn't make sense to feel bad about this and so
you realize that
this is a signifier of a particular type of motherhood that they espoused you.
I want to talk about one specific aspect of inconspicuous consumption that is really striking,
and in some ways might actually be at the heart of many of the other things that you're mentioning.
And that's education. You say that the top 10% of Americans have increased their share of educational expenditures
by almost 300% between 1996 and 2014, while the poor are spending essentially the same amount
as they've always spent on education at the same since 1996, despite higher tuition
cost, higher education costs. Let's just talk about education for a second
and stay with this idea.
What are the effects do you think of this increasing disparity
in how people are investing and value education?
The thing about education is that it essentially sets
a child up for future success in the workplace, right?
So, you know, historically, if we think about the middle class of the 20th century,
you know, something like under 10% of men had college degrees.
And now, the overall population is something like 33% of people have a college degree.
So, college degrees have become essential for social mobility and these
knowledge-driven jobs, whether you're working for NPR or you're working as a
professor or you're working as a banker, they require college degrees, often
graduate degrees, and so being able to send your child to college essentially, it doesn't ensure, but it certainly
increases the likelihood greatly that you will pass on that social mobility.
You will give them a chance.
The part of this that is alarming is that it's so, so expensive.
So if you look at the increase in the cost of all sorts of goods, I think it's 10 years,
education has increased 80% in its cost, and that is so hard for people to write checks
for. Even if you're in the upper middle class, it's hard. And so, that is part of the problem
with education as being a status good now is that in fact it's not just the
moment in time of status, it's the reproduction of the privilege. And I would add one more thing
to that. You know, part of how you apply to universities these days is that you have this
very wonderful, culturally rich mosaic of a person, right? So they've traveled abroad and they maybe they've taken
piano or violin lessons, they have fabulous, I say, T scores, they've gone to a pretty good high school,
there's this whole package and I think that that matters more and more. It matters a lot more than
when I apply to university, I can say that. And those things cost a lot of money.
And you can see it.
So for example, the top 1%, then 20 times more
on musical instruments than the middle class.
In fact, they spend five times more
than the rest of the top 10%.
So if you think about the way in which we get
this cultural capital that is so important in the college application process.
That is also expensive.
And I'll add one other thing that is not my own data.
This is Raj Chadi from Stanford.
They looked at elite bachelor's degree.
So they used Ivy Leagues.
And they found that if you were in the top 1%,
you were 77 times more likely to
attend an Ivy League than if your parents were in an income group outside of the top 1%.
So here's a paradox Elizabeth. And in some ways I think asking this question might betray
my own class membership in terms of the aspirational class. But isn't there some intrinsic value in breastfeeding
and learning the piano and in investing in education
and investing in retirement
and making environmentally conscious choices?
I mean, the thing that I find tricky
is that in some ways it seems like you're launching
a critique of these practices.
When many of the practices arguably have something
good to say for them.
And of course, at the top of that list, I'd say listening to NPR.
This is a great question.
And again, I will reveal my own class position.
I do all of these things that I write about.
You know, my child started piano at the age of four.
You know, we save for college.
I breastfed my child over a year, both of them. I practice Pilates, so I am as guilty as you
and not just engaging these practices, but also believing that they are the right uses of my time
and money. But the thing that was important for me, as I wrote this book,
was to think about how you get access to do these things
and who doesn't, who doesn't.
Because it's really clear when you're dealing with a Rolex
that unless you have $5,000 to $20,000,
you can't wear a Rolex watch, OK?
But it's just a watch, right? I mean, maybe you give it to your okay? But it's just a watch, right?
I mean, maybe you give it to your son,
but it's just a watch.
But when I looked at these practices,
I thought, this isn't just a watch.
These are things that are really good.
They're really important.
But part of the fact that they are so important
is why they really set the stage for the next generation.
And the luxury to do them, I think,
in many ways, the people who participate
in these practices, who are members of the aspirational class, aren't fully aware necessarily
of how privileged we are to be able to do these things. And how difficult it is to do these
things if you don't have the education to know that x, y, and Z should be done or you don't have the income to write
the check to do them. So one of the things that I think is kind of interesting about these practices
is that we, you know, there's a sort of obliviousness. It's a very good nature to obliviousness,
but it is. It's a, well, I'm just doing these things because they're good for my family and they're
good for the environment. But there is still this reproduction that adds to inequality. So if you're buying organic food and you're
breastfeeding your kid and you're exercising, you probably think you're doing the right
thing in society. You're doing nothing wrong and you're listening to NPR so you know what's
going on in the world and you probably read the New York Times and you feel updated and you feel that you are on the right side of things.
And if we actually think about, you know, for example, what happened with the election
and, you know, a lot of liberal elites were shocked.
Oh my goodness, how did this happen?
And actually, if you step outside of one of those liberal elite
bubbles, you completely see how it happened. People don't think like this. They don't necessarily
have the same practices, and they actually, in some ways, resent the exclusion. That is
just even if it's accidental is very, very obvious for people who are not members of the aspirational class.
Elizabeth Carrot-Halcott is a professor at the University of Southern California.
She's the author of Starstruck and the sum of small things, a theory of the aspirational class.
If you're feeling a bit sheepish after hearing about this research and you're wondering
whether your choices to go to yoga classes and by organic produce are problematic, you're
not alone.
Erin Beaton is an assistant professor at Ohio State University.
She studies inequality.
She offers us this commentary on the conflicting emotions people feel about their wealth.
My husband and I don't go to church, but we wanted to have some sort of Sunday routine,
so I tracked down an emergency shelter and asked a volunteer.
We go down there at 5.30 every Sunday, and for about 90 minutes my husband and I stand
side by side as people shuffle past, holding out styrofoam plates.
He serves the vegetables, I serve the entre and some
bread. The food. What can I say about the food? Some days it's noodles and chicken
with some corn. My husband and I look at one another as we serve the meals. We'd
eat this food if we had to, but definitely not if we had choice. The people we
serve take plastic bottles of hot sauce
back to their tables and slather their food with it.
I remember one woman in line.
She must have been in her 40s.
She looked very, very tired.
My husband's an extroverted man
and he cheerfully greeted her with, how's it going?
She stared at him.
No, that's not right.
She clared at him. Finally he asked,
was that an inappropriate question? She nodded, yes.
After we're done at the shelter, we go out to dinner ourselves. Usually sushi. We sit
at the bar and I order spicy tuna, rainbow rolls, dragon rolls. My husband likes anything
with tempura.
He orders craft beer.
If it's hot outside, I have a glass of shardinay.
If it's cold, I like pino noir.
We talk about the evening and the contrast between the meal we're having now and the one
we just served.
I feel guilt.
Worse, I feel shame.
I recognize this feeling.
As an ethnographer, I've conducted research into the behavior of the very wealthy.
In one study, my colleagues and I spoke with wealthy people who are interested in combating
inequality.
We usually think of the very wealthy as uncaring and selfish, but the people I studied
sound a lot like my husband and I do at the sushi bar.
They're stricken.
Some of them are self-made entrepreneurs, but still, they feel guilty.
And it's worse for those who inherited their wealth.
One rich woman confessed that it was much harder for her to admit to being wealthy than to come out as a lesbian.
All of us live in worlds of our own.
We spend time with people who look like us, who go to the same schools.
We do this not only because we get along easily with people like us, but because those people
allow us to see ourselves the way we see ourselves.
When I talk to someone who moves in the same circles I do, I recognize myself.
When I look at myself through those eyes, that Aaron I'm familiar with.
When I look at myself through the eyes of that exhausted woman at the shelter, I see an unfamiliar
version of myself, the privileged Aaron. Few of us are willing to break outside our social
networks. It's not comfortable to look at the world and ourselves differently. One reason
privilege endures is because those of us who have it are often unconscious of it.
This is what makes the hard work of getting out of our comfort zones so important.
If you want to create a more equitable world, the first thing you must do is to step outside.
Aaron Beaton is an assistant professor at Ohio State University.
This episode of Hidden Brain was produced by Maggie Pennman and Raina Cohen and edited
by Tara Boyle.
Our team includes Renee Clark, Jenny Schmidt and Parts Cha.
Our unsung heroes this week are Jonathan Gang, Ann Neu Sanny and Maria Bollinska at the
conversation.
The conversation is a news and commentary website that helps bring great ideas from academics
to the general public.
Jonathan Ann and Maria help produce Erin Beaton's commentary in today's episode.
You can sign up for the conversation's newsletter at theconvacation.com slash newsletter.
You can also follow us on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram and listen for my stories and
morning edition on your local public radio station.
I'm Shankar Vedantam, see you next week.