TikTok wants me to have Roman Hubera dinner party, but the year is 2025, and I'm not a billionaire.
It could be that it's spring, the ultimate dinner party season, but being fed constant streams of dinner party content on TikTok during the economic thrill that is April 2025 seems — at the minimum — worth consideration. Even the term "dinner party" eludes a sort of quiet luxury; no one is encouraging us to have potlucks or reinventing picnics a la, the cottage core trend of 2018, despite its enduring presence.
SEE ALSO: Recession indicators are everywhere online — even if we’re not actually in oneInstead, I open the app and am bombarded with overflowing tablescapes, monumental floral arrangements, beautiful ceramic plates adorned with scalloped edges, and so many tapered candles.
Is this the clinking of glasses at your favorite influencer's Lower East Side dinner party — the sound of a true recession indicator —or just that of a new hot status symbol entering the villa?
Food has always been, and likely always will be a status symbol. In the 18th century, for instance, pineapples were a sign of wealth because they were so difficult for people to get their hands on. And in the 19th century, only the wealthiest of folks had celery in their homes. Rich people cornered the market of dinner parties during the Victorian era, not only because food was so expensive but also because it provided the crucial ability for people to maintain social connections and depended upon people having all day to prepare to host such an event — an ability sequestered to the elite who didn't have to go to work or do manual labor.
Food is an indicator of wealth in 2025, as well.
Fresh food has become a status symbol and the ultimate indicator of wealth as groceries become increasingly expensive. Vogue Business pointed out that "hotspots" like viral TikTok bakeries or Erewhon's $19 strawberry "have evolved into cultural status symbols much like streetwear."
Hailey Bieber cradled an armful of colorful carrots, bananas, and tomatoes tumbling out of a brown bag in a new ad (Read: "Who cares if the carrots fall to the pavement! I'm rich!") Tradwifes are offering up a dystopian-level look at their unattainable lifestyle through making food from scratch, ingredients and time abound. Lori Harvey hosted a dinner party for her birthday. Loewe, Rachel Antonoff, Lisa Says Gah and other designers are putting pasta or cocktail shrimp or tomatoes on every other shirt, skirt, and bag they sell.
Ultimately, as Bon Appetit writer Megan Wahn wrote, "Food and clothing used to be essentials for survival — now they’ve come together as things to enjoy. They're objects of spectacle."
"[Groceries-as-luxury] is definitely a post-2020 sentiment, and as we’re halfway in the decade, it’s no surprise to see it permeate into the mainstream,” Andrea Hernández, the author of the food and beverage trends newsletter Snaxshot, told Fast Company. "Food scarcity and grocery prices skyrocketing is real, and our generation made fancy smoothies a form of affordable affluence. It’s Gen Z’s 'avocado toast trope.'"
So, is it a recession indicator that instead of bragging about expensive homes and clothes, we're zoning in on our grocery hauls? And, to take that a step further, is it an indicator of further economic downturn that the most palatable way to show off your wads of cash is by feeding your friends, filling the middle of your table with tall candles and a bunch of greenery, and posting it to TikTok?
The rise of dinner parties likely isn't a true recession indicator in the same way that a decrease in real GDP or high unemployment would be, but cultural cues aren't to be ignored. After all, in 2025, the difference between the wealthy and the poor could be the ability to buy eggs. So what better way to show off your money than to flaunt your food?
Topics TikTok
The 'official' Prince tribute concert is on next month, and it is loadedThe iPhone 7 Plus won't be available in Apple Stores this Friday'The Daily Show with Trevor Noah' will go live after presidential debatesThe 'official' Prince tribute concert is on next month, and it is loaded3 things recruiters consider when a good candidate is underUK football club responded perfectly when a psychic canceled her eventMom and daughter's text convo about tampons rips into the patriarchyPolice cat proves you can fight crime, even if you sleep 16 hours a dayPolice cat proves you can fight crime, even if you sleep 16 hours a dayPolice cat proves you can fight crime, even if you sleep 16 hours a dayAlibaba fires 4 employees for hacking system and hoarding mooncakesA squad of Stormtroopers stormed Ireland and danced like no one was watchingHero saves smallest kitten ever on busy highwayAntonio Brown was fined for twerking, and his response is goldYou can now order Domino's Pizza from a Facebook Messenger botNot everyone is happy Jimmy Fallon messed with Donald Trump's hairMom and daughter's text convo about tampons rips into the patriarchyGet to know BriTANick, two of 'SNL's new crop of writersBaseball trumps a new crush in MLB and AwesomenessTV series 'Out of My League'Want SoundCloud ad A Loaded Deck: Bawdy Playing Cards from the Middle Ages The History Behind Agatha Christie’s “And Then There Were None” Last Chance: Get a Free Copy of “The Unprofessionals” Robert Frost’s Death Wish Janet Fish: Glass & Plastic Comfort TV: Notes on “The Great British Baking Show” “February: Pemaquid Point”—A Poem by Ira Sadoff Garrett Price’s “White Boy” Is an Unlikely Slice of History Abandon All Hope: Rowan Ricardo Phillips on the 76ers Ted Hughes in “The Fouled Nest of the Industrial Revolution” Why Does the First Person Come First? Steve Clay on the Beginning of Granary Books Sixty Years of The Paris Review’s Design: A History Say “I Love You” With Our Special Valentine’s Day Box Set Smoking with Lucia Berlin Poem: Molly Peacock, “The Distance Up Close” Jonathan Blow Discusses His New Game, “The Witness” Remembering Arnold Greenberg and the Complete Traveller Staff Picks: Raymond Pettibon, Jane Campion, Maggie Doherty Watch a Strange, Spooky Documentary About Isak Dinesen
2.9312s , 10132.578125 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Roman Huber】,Fresh Information Network