15. The American Dream is alive and well in the mind of the consumer, if not the true statistics. Everybody’s got an idea, everybody wants to get rich. Now, the focus is primarily on tech and “Shark Tank” products, they scale better, you can get rich easier. But people still believe they’re entitled to music success. But the truth is the most successful people are those with wealthy parents who send them to the best educational institutions wherein they make life-long relationships that pay dividends in their endeavors. That’s right, they were born on third base and the rest of you are outside the stadium, and most people don’t even know it. The poor have no idea of the advantages of the rich. Despite all the hoopla about wealth, if the general public had any idea how rich the rich truly are, the lifestyle they live, there would be spontaneous revolution. Meanwhile, they’re kept busy perfecting their dreams, which rarely come to fruition, they participate in the sideshow.
Furthermore, the best and the brightest don’t go into the arts, the odds are long and the rewards not only elusive, but relatively scrawny. Expect no change here this year. The progeny of the rich are too anxious to take a risk. I’d like to say change is coming from the artists, but you’re better off looking to “Vice.” That’s the story of the age, the power of news, not art. Create an alternative news site and you’ve got power. But people don’t want power, they want money. Not realizing that power is the trump card. He who reaches the most people and controls the dialogue wins, especially in 2015. I’ve about given up on the artists taking a stand. Mark Zuckerberg is more powerful than any musician. But it doesn’t have to be this way…
-Bob Lefsetz