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You may think these are all just things. They are not. Suddenly, they are “lifestyle brands.”
Take the sushi burrito. This summer, Maki Shop, a Washington, D.C., carryout specialising in the trend food, announced that it was closing. Not because it was failing. No, the brand was simply breaking free of the physical — and spiritual — confines of bricks and mortar. Because, as the upbeat news release announcing the closure noted, Maki Shop is no mere hand-roll purveyor. At its core, “it is a lifestyle brand.”
Of course it is.
What exactly is a lifestyle brand remains one of the great existential mysteries of the first world in 2017
But what exactly is a lifestyle brand? This remains one of the great existential mysteries of the first world in 2017.
The word “lifestyle” itself seems to have burst into the national consciousness sometime after the 1950s, and mentions of it have peaked in the past five years, according to Google data. A bit of linguistic revisionism, it seems to have risen in step with “plant-based” as the new term for vegetarian food. To have evolved the way organising our stuff became Kondoing, which has given way to death cleaning. We don’t understand it the way we still don’t understand what constitutes “mindfulness”, though we are mindful that it’s also having a moment.
The phrase “means a lot of different things to a lot of different people,” acknowledges Alex Frias, president of the New York-based firm Track Marketing Group. “I see it as a brand that has a deep understanding of its consumer’s way of life.”
So Vineyard Vines thinks its salmon-coloured pants are a lifestyle; Marley Natural bills itself as “the official Bob Marley cannabis lifestyle brand.”
Ellen DeGeneres’ collection of pet carriers and stuffed bone-shaped dog toys is a “pet lifestyle brand.” Rihanna has given us the Rihanna lifestyle, lending her imprimatur to chunky suede creepers for Puma and a Fenty Beauty highlighter that looks eerily like gold lamé. Ivanka Trump is a lifestyle.
Maybe it’s all because of Goop. Unless you’ve been off disconnecting at an ashram in India, you probably know about Gwyneth Paltrow’s lifestyle empire. Goop tells us that the way we live is broken, then sells us the regenerating facial oils, reishi mushroom dust and 8,500-dollar Rolex to cobble it all back together.
Of course, selling a product remains the endgame for a lifestyle brand, Frias says, but it’s accomplished by not actually attempting to sell you a product.