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A Chicken in the Pot to the Kardashians

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Manage episode 500612965 series 2515319
Content provided by Chris Abraham. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Chris Abraham or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

Once the dream was a chicken in every pot and a car in the driveway. Today it’s Kardashians, crypto, and curated excess—fantasies without a staircase.

The American Dream used to be modest, and that was its strength. A chicken in every pot, a house in the suburbs, a car in the garage, kids who might do a little better than their parents. It wasn’t glamorous, but it was believable. A ladder you could climb rung by rung: steady work, a paid-off mortgage, kids who graduated without a lifetime of debt.

That phrase—“a chicken in every pot”—has its own history. It traces back to Henri IV of France, who supposedly wished that even the poorest peasants could afford a chicken on Sundays. Centuries later, Republicans revived it in 1928, boasting of prosperity: chicken in every pot, a car in every backyard. Hoover never said it himself, but the promise clung to him—so much so that in the Depression, “Hoovervilles” and “Hoover flags” mocked the gap between slogan and reality. The line survived because it was modest, plausible. Not silk socks and yachts—just chicken and a car.

But that plausibility collapsed in the late 20th century. The postwar boom built suburbs on one salary, then wages stalled, housing spiked, health care and college ballooned out of reach. By the 2008 crash, the Dream itself looked like a trap. Millions saw the ladder pulled out from under them—homes foreclosed, equity erased, savings gone. The modest ranch house, once the symbol of stability, became the scene of mass eviction.

Into the vacuum rushed social media. Where TV once sold middle-class sitcoms, Instagram sells penthouses, yachts, and Bali retreats—always framed as attainable, always staged by “people just like you.” The Kardashians and their copycats turned success into spectacle, training us to measure ourselves against an airbrushed elite. What was once aspirational now feels punitive: if you don’t match the feed, you’ve failed.

Meanwhile, the millionaires next door are invisible. In places like Arlington, Virginia, they’re ex-government workers who did 30 years, maxed their retirement accounts, and bought houses decades ago. They drive Camrys, cook at home, and quietly cross the million-dollar mark on paper. But that doesn’t trend. It isn’t cinematic. Our culture keeps inflating the definition of success—first $1 million, then $10 million, now $100 million—as if stability itself no longer counts.

And here’s the second lie: that burn rate doesn’t matter. We’re told that buying Starbucks every day doesn’t block you from owning a home. But it does. Small habits compound, just like savings and compound interest. The “millionaire next door” built wealth by living modestly, not by chasing Instagram lifestyles. That truth is boring, so we bury it under envy and excuses.

So we are trapped between two illusions: the fantasy of instant luxury and the consumer gospel that spending freely is harmless. Both erase the modest, achievable dream that once defined America. The tragedy isn’t that the Dream died. It’s that it was replaced with one that has no ladder. A chicken in the pot and a car in the driveway were never glamorous, but they were real. The penthouse in Malibu and the private jet to Tulum are not just unreachable—they are designed to be.

Without a ladder, a dream is only a taunt.

  continue reading

409 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 500612965 series 2515319
Content provided by Chris Abraham. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Chris Abraham or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

Once the dream was a chicken in every pot and a car in the driveway. Today it’s Kardashians, crypto, and curated excess—fantasies without a staircase.

The American Dream used to be modest, and that was its strength. A chicken in every pot, a house in the suburbs, a car in the garage, kids who might do a little better than their parents. It wasn’t glamorous, but it was believable. A ladder you could climb rung by rung: steady work, a paid-off mortgage, kids who graduated without a lifetime of debt.

That phrase—“a chicken in every pot”—has its own history. It traces back to Henri IV of France, who supposedly wished that even the poorest peasants could afford a chicken on Sundays. Centuries later, Republicans revived it in 1928, boasting of prosperity: chicken in every pot, a car in every backyard. Hoover never said it himself, but the promise clung to him—so much so that in the Depression, “Hoovervilles” and “Hoover flags” mocked the gap between slogan and reality. The line survived because it was modest, plausible. Not silk socks and yachts—just chicken and a car.

But that plausibility collapsed in the late 20th century. The postwar boom built suburbs on one salary, then wages stalled, housing spiked, health care and college ballooned out of reach. By the 2008 crash, the Dream itself looked like a trap. Millions saw the ladder pulled out from under them—homes foreclosed, equity erased, savings gone. The modest ranch house, once the symbol of stability, became the scene of mass eviction.

Into the vacuum rushed social media. Where TV once sold middle-class sitcoms, Instagram sells penthouses, yachts, and Bali retreats—always framed as attainable, always staged by “people just like you.” The Kardashians and their copycats turned success into spectacle, training us to measure ourselves against an airbrushed elite. What was once aspirational now feels punitive: if you don’t match the feed, you’ve failed.

Meanwhile, the millionaires next door are invisible. In places like Arlington, Virginia, they’re ex-government workers who did 30 years, maxed their retirement accounts, and bought houses decades ago. They drive Camrys, cook at home, and quietly cross the million-dollar mark on paper. But that doesn’t trend. It isn’t cinematic. Our culture keeps inflating the definition of success—first $1 million, then $10 million, now $100 million—as if stability itself no longer counts.

And here’s the second lie: that burn rate doesn’t matter. We’re told that buying Starbucks every day doesn’t block you from owning a home. But it does. Small habits compound, just like savings and compound interest. The “millionaire next door” built wealth by living modestly, not by chasing Instagram lifestyles. That truth is boring, so we bury it under envy and excuses.

So we are trapped between two illusions: the fantasy of instant luxury and the consumer gospel that spending freely is harmless. Both erase the modest, achievable dream that once defined America. The tragedy isn’t that the Dream died. It’s that it was replaced with one that has no ladder. A chicken in the pot and a car in the driveway were never glamorous, but they were real. The penthouse in Malibu and the private jet to Tulum are not just unreachable—they are designed to be.

Without a ladder, a dream is only a taunt.

  continue reading

409 episodes

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