The recession is cramping the style of hip-hop artists and wannabes -- many of whom are finding it difficult to afford the diamond-encrusted pendants and heavy gold chains they have long used to project an aura of outsized wealth.
In an attempt to keep up appearances, celebrity jewelers say rappers are asking them to make medallions with less-precious stones and metals. Some even whisper that the artists have begun requesting cubic zirconia, the synthetic diamond stand-in and QVC staple.
Mickey Kaus uses this as an occasion to revisit some ancient (by Internet standards) debate with Megan and Ta-Nehisi about whether President Obama would change black culture. But I think it's really pretty clear that this WSJ article is completely unrelated to that debate. For one, I can't find any mentions of Obama in the piece. Good ol' Occam's Razor suggests that an article about the recession changing consumption habits is probably just an article about the recession changing consumption habits, and not an article about the first black president and his relationship to black culture.
For another, the Journal is not making some cultural argument that rappers are less interested in jewelry, but is instead making the far more intuitive claim that less money means less expensive jewelry. So if you want to reach for an sophisticated-sounding takeaway here, it's that fake jewelry is an inferior good for which demand increases as income falls.











One has to appreciate a WSJ copy editor bold enough to cram two puns into one headline "Culture of Bling Clangs to Earth as the Recession Melts Rappers' Ice." And later: "Bling aficionados fret that the art of "ice" is being watered down." Excellent work, Miguel Bustillo.
Also: railing on each others' fake jewelery through the Wall Street Journal? When did rappers turn into Bravo's Real Housewives of New York? Come on, guys.
I feel I should point out that the writer didn't actually talk to that many rappers and, more importantly, did not talk to 50 Cent, who was doing most of the trash talking.