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PERSPECTIVE
Think Small--It May be a Trend
Signs abound that "supersize it" is yielding to a
less-is-more philosophy.
By MARY McNAMARA
Times Staff Writer
www.latimes.com
August 1 2002
When it rumbled onto the market in 1999, the Ford Excursion
instantly and breathtakingly symbolized the ever-expanding girth
of American excessiveness. Seven feet tall and 19 feet long, it
held nine people and looked like a Range Rover on steroids. It
didn't fit into most parking spaces, or garages, but it slid
right into a world order fueled by dot-com millions, CEO worship,
Martha-mosaiced swimming pools and triple-shot lattes.
Three years later, many pillars of that world have buckled under
the weight of their own excesses, and the Excursion, it seems,
may now be joining corporate double-dipping, 24-year-old Internet
billionaires and Martha Stewart in the cultural deleted-items
basket. Triple-shot lattes remain fairly popular.
Ford, which will not confirm or deny reports out of Detroit that
it will discontinue the manufacture of its $45,000 über-SUV,
would not pull the Excursion just because some people thought it
was ridiculous or, at 10 miles per gallon, scandalously wasteful.
Ford would pull the Excursion only because it wasn't profitable.
Which means perhaps not enough people are buying it. Which means
that in an arena often considered a bellwether of the economy,
the question of "How much is too much?" has finally
been answered. Half a city block, for a car, is too much.
Americans finally are pushing away from the table in other areas
as well. Like the pilot whales dying on Cape Cod, big business is
beached and blowing hard. The CEOs of Enron, WorldCom, Adelphia,
Tyco and Rite-Aid have gone from titanium-card members to social
pariahs, as a Republican president, flanked by Democrats, on
Tuesday signed legislation to bring the corporate sector back
into the realm of American jurisprudence. Larger-than-life
personalities have suffered more than minor deflation--Alan
Greenspan has misplaced his omnipotence, Colin Powell is tidying
up his résumé, Martha Stewart bared her teeth on TV and Mike
Ovitz, once considered the most powerful man in Hollywood, is
"spending time with his family" in the wake of a series
of failed business deals and a bout of foot-in-mouth disease.
On a more individual level, the gleaming, fat stock portfolio,
which loomed large in public priority and imagination during
recent years, is, in most cases, withering along with many
grandiose dreams of early retirement and large lives of leisured
luxury.
During the past several years many pundits and economists have
commented on the supersizing of the American Dream. Ever since
Lewis and Clark noted to then-President Thomas Jefferson that,
hey, there might be a lot more there there than we first thought,
Americans have prided themselves on thinking big. Anything not
originally available in extra-extra large--cows, corn, breasts,
profit margins, pickup trucks--we are more than happy to
genetically alter, augment, inflate or redesign.
Not everyone likes this character trait. Internationally, it is
said to have contributed to the hatred that felled the World
Trade Center--perhaps the most visible symbol of our size-matters
psychology. Domestically, we fret over side effects ranging from
spiritual emptiness to obesity in children.
But now it would seem that Americans are reconsidering the
importance of size. The possible loss of the Expedition is just
part of a post-SUV trend toward smaller luxe autos--precious
versions of Mercedes and squeezed Cadillacs race around with the
Mini Cooper and the Toyota Matrix like so many high-priced
Matchbox cars, while the "biggest" development is the
new Bentley GT coupe, which seats four.
But it goes way beyond wheels. The fast-food industry, which
invented the term "supersize," is being publicly blamed
for the excess weight that contributes to 300,000 deaths each
year and costs the country $117 billion in health care. Critics
are calling for legislation that would require restaurants to cop
to the often quadruple-digit calorie count of every meal.
Meanwhile, individually packaged, single-serving snack and
breakfast foods, developed for children on the go, have expanded
into adult fare and become the fastest-growing segment of the
food industry. Many restaurants now offer half-portions as a
remedy for the 2-inch growth of the average restaurant plate.
As the housing market booms, buyers find themselves forced to
settle for fewer square feet. Which is often how a scaling-down
trend begins.
"Houses will probably get smaller," says Linda
Castrilli, a trend director at Consumer Eyes in New York.
"People get less and so they assume they need less."
All trends are cyclical, says Castrilli, so it isn't surprising
that after the pumped-up '90s, a new trend favoring the sleek and
compact would follow. Big, statement-making purchases like SUVs
were popular for a while, she says, but convenience is the new
buzzword, and "people are realizing that those big clunkers
are just hard to get around in."
There is a backlash against big, she says, a swing to the smaller
end of the stick. "In things like cell phones and stereos
and makeup, it's always been, 'How small can you get it?' "
We've pared down culturally, too. Grim, if slightly manipulated,
reality has replaced the over-the-top nighttime soap opera on
television--glitzy "Knots Landing" is out, low-budget
"Big Brother" is in. The new version of
"Lifestyles of the Rich and Famous" is MTV's
"Cribs," a look at the often less-than-palatial digs of
rock stars.
Money, of course, is at the bottom of everything. Consumer
confidence dropped precipitously as the economy, perhaps the
biggest whale on the beach, threatens to go from relapse to
terminal. Faith in the power of MBAs to steer the ship is waning,
and the public is returning to more traditional, less highflying
symbols of success.
Proponents of simplicity have always provided an undercurrent to
the living-large trend, but lately their murmuring has gained
volume. Even Oprah Winfrey, who is not so much a captain of
industry as her own industry, promotes simpler living. In a
landscape less littered by enormous SUVs, inflated expectations
and oversized personalities, that message might become even more
clear.
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