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    Hipstercrite says

    The great new hipster cities of America: Chattanooga, Richmond & Detroitthreaten Austin

    Lauren Modery
    Feb 25, 2012 | 8:22 am
    • Hipsters sitting on a Detroit stoop.
      Photo by Westpress
    • Musicians in downtown Asheville
      Photo by Kathy McHenry
    • Chattanooga, Tennessee

    Sometimes it feels like there is no place more hipster-plentiful than Austin. The city has become the poster child of what young creatives and entrepreneurs are discharging into this world. When you look up the word 'Austin' in the thesaurus, the words, 'old-timey facial hair,' 'your grandmother's eyewear,' 'college degree in food carting,' 'bee hive hoarding' and 'Which Wich eating' appear.

    It's true that there is no escaping the fauxhemian gorilla-whale that is running amok in our city.

    But are other cities unscathed by the beast? Smaller, up-and-coming cities that are like how Austin was before everyone showed up? Cities that hipsters can flock to now that other, older hipsters have crimped their style of being on the forefront of a burgeoning scene? The answer is yes.

    Are other cities unscathed by the beast? Smaller, up-and-coming cities that are like how Austin was before everyone showed up?

    Forget Austin, forget Brooklyn, forget Portland, forget Silver Lake. What are the cities on the verge of hipsterfication right now?

    Chattanooga, Tennessee

    Chattanooga has been wooing the panties off the popular urbanite mag, GOOD Magazine, with tales of their new city-wide typeface and 'super green' VW plant. According to the online magazine, the city's new font, Chatype, was born from the coffee shop meeting of a brand consultant and typeface designer. The duo brainstormed about what it would be like for Chattanooga to be the most conceptually awesome city in America and — poof — Chatype was born.

    GOOD also commended VW's new Chattanooga plant that turns paint waste into cement instead heading into landfills. To add to Chattanooga's green-like behavior, the city implemented human-race-eliminating 'smart lights' — LED streetlights that can respond to different environments and situations. These streetlights are controlled by the city's new fiber optic high-speed Internet that is also helping lure fleets of businesses and nerdies into this scenic Tennessee town. In addition to showing America it's the baddest mo-fo city around, Chattanooga was named one of NY Times 45 Places to Visit in the United States, along with its sister city, Space.

    Asheville, North Carolina

    Like Austin, Asheville is a live music Mecca featuring troves of young white men dressing like their grandfathers. But instead of finding collections of synths and Moogs strewn across the land, Asheville musicians find themselves drowning in a sea of mandolins and banjos. One can often hear hipsters comparing who has the largest upright bass in coffee shops. There is always Nashville, New Orleans or Austin, but the inexpensive bluegrass capital of the world has slowly been earning its place as the Southeast's hipster hangout.

    This town of only 82,000 has been a popular go-to place for performers such as Cat Power, M. Ward, The Mountain Goats, Broken Social Scene, The Avett Brothers and Band of Horses, with the latter two having recorded albums here. And if Asheville doesn't do the trick, you can always make the 5 hour+ drive down to Wilmington to search for an ear in a field and reenact your very own Blue Velvet.

    Burlington, Vermont

    Burlington has been known as a hippie city for a long time (Ben and Jerry's Ice Cream + Phish = Phish Food), but now that behaviors of both the hippie and hipster classes have begun overlapping, it's fair to say that this progressive city has been hipsterfied. With a population of only 42,000 people, Burlington exemplifies all the big city hipster traits in one tiny bubble — American Apparel, locally-sourced restaurants, local brew pubs, art galleries, old timey theater, delightful dive bars and, at one point, Occupy Burlington, can all be found within a few blocks of one another other.

    When the hip aren't chowing down at the city's famed Farmer's Market or locally-sourced restaurants such as American Flatbread, they're hanging out at clubs and dive bars that will make you feel like you're in East Village circa 1978. Of course they get to these places via the city's popular taxi cab service, Green Cab, which boasts an all-Prius fleet. Vermont can also proudly claim the country's first ever Cartoonist Laureate with comic artist and Burlington native, James Kochalka.

    Detroit

    What do young and creative urbanites love most in this world? Being on the forefront of a scene — what better place to do that than Detroit, Michigan, a city that's slowly bootstrapping itself up from the PITS OF HADES. Within cities that have lost everything, hipsters favorite second thing in this world emerges — ruin porn. Add a frosting layer of adaptive reuse and you got yourself one sweet hipster cupcake.

    This city has become a newspaper darling with stories of young artists, thinkers and entrepreneurs taking advantage of Detroit's low cost of living and real estate. The New York Times compares Detroit's rebirth (more like slow expulsion from the womb) to Berlin's rise and fall (and rise again) in the 1990s, and the Los Angeles Times insinuates that if up-and-coming artists want to be seen, Detroit is where it's at. Artists have been taking over abandoned warehouse spaces or homes and building them into studios or public art pieces — Detroit is the place to go if you're looking for street cred you really don't deserve.

    Runners-Up

    Pittsburgh

    Along the same lines as Detroit, Pittsburgh has also seen a renaissance with young entrepreneurs and artists in the past several years. In 2010, Forbes named the Steel City the number one most livable city in America due to it's attractive combo of low unemployment, low cost of living and high art and leisure ranking.

    Baltimore

    It's no secret that this Chesapeake Bay city pumps out the hipster muses. Baltimore is the proud birthplace of John Waters, Ira Glass, Frank Zappa, David Byrne (grew up here) and The Wire. It also has that big deal industry city-turnerd bad economy/high crime rate scary place-turned artist haven thing going on (like Detroit and Pittsburgh) that young people love so much.

    Richmond

    The Rumpus named Richmond one of the most inhabitable hipster cities for post-graduates (and it seems like every indie band I meet is from here).

    unspecified
    news/travel

    Now hear this

    New Texas museum shines spotlight on Tejano music history

    Edmond Ortiz
    Dec 18, 2025 | 11:30 am
    Totally Tejano Hall of Fame and Museum, San Antonio, tejano music
    Photo by Edmond Ortiz
    Roger Hernandez serves as board president of the Totally Tejano Hall of Fame and Museum.

    For a city that proudly calls itself the capital of Tejano music, San Antonio has long been missing a permanent place to honor the genre’s pioneers and preserve its history. That gap officially closed In December with the opening of the Totally Tejano Hall of Fame and Museum at 1414 Fredericksburg Rd.

    The music couldn’t have found a better steward than its founder and board president. Roger Hernandez has had his finger on the pulse of Tejano music for decades. His company, En Caliente Productions, has provided a platform for countless performing artists and songwriters in Tejano, conjunto, and regional Mexican music since 1982.

    Hernandez says his wife, who ran a shop at Market Square years ago, would often get questions from visitors about the location of a physical Tejano music museum, a thing that simply did not exist. In 2022, he banded together with friends, family, and other local Tejano music supporters to make the nonprofit Hall of Fame a reality.

    “I decided I've been in the music scene for over 40 years, it's time to do a museum,” Hernandez recalls.

    Hernandez says a brick-and-mortar Tejano music museum has long been needed to remember musical acts and other individuals who grew the genre across Texas and northern Mexico, especially those who are aging. Recently, the community lost famed Tejano music producer Manny Guerra and Abraham Quintanilla, the renowned Tejano singer/songwriter and father of the late superstar Selena Quintanilla-Perez. Both deaths occurred roughly one week after the Totally Tejano museum opened to the public.

    “They're all dying. They're all getting older, and we need to acknowledge all these people,” Hernandez says.

    The Totally Tejano Museum — named after Hernandez’s Totally Tejano Television Roku streaming — has 5,000 square feet of space packed with plaques, photos, promotional posters, musical instruments, and other memorabilia honoring the pioneers and stars of the beloved genre. Mannequins wear stage outfits from icons like Laura Canales and Flaco Jimenez, and a wall of photos remembers late greats. Totally Tejano Television plays legendary performances on a loop, bringing the exhibits to life.

    Totally Tejano Hall of Fame and Museum, San Antonio, Tejano music The newly opened Totally Tejano Hall of Fame and Museum includes a growing collection of memorabilia. Photo by Edmond Ortiz

    Hernandez says the museum will soon welcome permanent and rotating exhibits, including traveling shows, a Hall of Fame section, and an area paying homage to Chicano music crossovers, such as the late Johnny Rodriguez, the South Texas singer-songwriter who blended country with Tex-Mex music. Plans call for the organization to hold its inaugural Hall of Fame induction in February 2026.

    Eventually, a 2,000 square feet back room will be converted into additional display space and host industry gatherings, community symposiums, and record and video release parties. The museum also plans to add a gift and record shop and a music learning room where visitors can listen to early Tejano music and browse archival photos. Hernandez is already talking with local school districts about educational field trips.

    Much like Tejano itself, the museum is a grassroots production. Hernandez and fellow board members have used their own money to rent, renovate, develop, and maintain the museum space. The board also leads the selection of the Hall of Fame honorees and curates the exhibits.

    Hernandez has been heartened by the museum’s reception, both from media outlets and music fans around Texas and beyond.

    “We had a radio station come in this morning from Houston to interview us,” he says. “People have come in from Lubbock, Texas. We have had people from Midland, Texas. We have another person who emailed us who’s coming in from New York. People are learning all about us.”

    That includes many of the musicians who helped shape the genre. Johnny Hernandez, Sunny Ozuna, Elida Reyna, and Danny Martinez from Danny and The Tejanos are among the luminaries who have already graced the halls.

    The Totally Tejano Hall of Fame and Museum is now open 10 am-6 pm, Tuesday-Sunday, and closed Monday. Admission is free, but donations are encouraged. Fans can call 210-314-1310 for more information.


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