Originally posted by vincegamer
Originally posted by EArkham
As long as you don\'t offend your marketing engine or your sponsors (which was the case with the Dixie Chicks -- a group of radio stations got together and decided to stop playing them before any serious numbers from their fanbase was heard), there will always be more fans.
Apparently even if you do offend your marketing engine, since the Dixie Chicks garnered a new audience in part because of the statement, and now have some Grammies to boot.
Sure but you\'ll probably never see them at the Country Music Awards again. It wasn\'t their sponsors who started throwing away their CD\'s.
Do you think it possible the sponsors bailed because they feared the backlash of the fans? Knowing a lot of \"country folk\" myself, I would say that was probably a very good business decision. It also shows they know more about the fan base than the artists themselves. Hell, Jane Fonda is still deeply despised by a large majority in the south, and her actions took place well over 30 years ago.
As to their statement, What Natilie Maines said doesn\'t offend most of us in the least, it was the manner in which it was said.
In her interview afterwards she was talking about how there was all this Anti-American sentiment, and that she was trying to tell the crowd she was against it too. In essence, from her explanation, she dissed the President of the United States, thereby the people of the United States, who put him into office, to woo the crowd.
As a friend of mine said, \"It had the same feeling as the fat girl who rips upon her only friend to be accepted by the \"cool\" kids\"
Needless to say, it showed many a former fan that they were not the country girls they had been portraying themselves as. Country listeners by tradition are a very patriotic bunch, so while Natilie could\'ve said what she said here in the states and gotten little flack, the fact that she did it in a foreign country, playing up to the Anti=American crowd, essentially insulted them all, even if they agreed. You don\'t bring your families problems to someone else\'s house. It showed they were not part on their fan base, a problem that has plagued a lot of singers trying to fit a specific genre.
So instead of the country goddesses they were on the road to becoming, they are now perceived by quite a few of their former fan base as another group of self important celebrities.
Country is by and large about humility, and these girls have none of that.
Grammies? Ha, honestly, without looking it up, can you tell me who won the Grammies in 1983? 1996? 2000? 2003? Grammies mean nothing, songs last far longer. The songs are what make you great, and only then if people listen to them.