Can someone explain to me why this is consumerism? I'm not going into YouTube to watch, due to the ads, but I have one of these (not a Stanley but very similar) and it has actually helped me buy less drinks and drink more water.
Think of stamp-collecting, but instead, you start collecting algorithmically controlled limited-edition thermos flask. The goal of these bottles were to be reusable, but people have started buying them as status symbols, just like Nike - they're not going to be used, they'll "rot" on the shelves. People are not buying them because they care about the environment, but because FOMO.
Blaming a gender or ethnicity for something that was clearly a result of consumerism culture, and a marketing tactic that exploited this manufactured culture. You're missing the point here entirely.
You can look at the massive pickup trucks that are so common in North America and say "men once again being a blight on this planet", and it will be the same type of problem.
I would be interested in one of these… but only in the default/traditional Stanley Green. Call me square, but I really do prefer to run unobtrusively stock, at least from a visual perspective. If I get one, it will be purely for the quality of it’s build and it’s functional attributes. I wouldn’t even care to be noticeably seen with one, I would just care that it works and fulfils its functions in an exemplary manner.
45$ is way too expensive - I can't figure out why Stanley and Hydro Flask are on the expensive range. 25$ is more than enough for a high-quality vacuum thermo-flask. I got myself two 1l bottle from Borosil for about 755₹ (9$) per bottle. It's been more than six years, there's a few dents and scratches, but it works just fine.
I got myself a Milton Aura 750 ml last week for ₹850 offline, great. Does Borosil not get rust on the top end where cap screws? I saw many Amazon 1 star complaints with photos.
My household growing up was drowning in thermoses and water bottles. In large part due to having two kids in competitive high school sports and one in competitive highschool arts and sciences.
It's one thing to have a bunch of kids who need and use water bottles on the regular, but it's entirely another thing when all these institutions simultaneously declared, "Trophies? Ribbons? Placards? Those utter wastes of space? We should be giving these kids useful prizes for winning their events!" Cue racking up four or five cheap, flimsy water bottles and other assorted crap per kid per year...
Fads and trends and novelties aren't anything new. The speed and prevalence that they spread today has been propelled because of TikTok and YouTubers and other "social media" either specifically promoting things or generating content in order to capitalize on existing trends. So, when you search the internet or YT for "Stanley Tumbler" because you want to know why it's a thing, content creators can make money off of your curiosity.
Consumerism is certainly a big part of this but there's also something driving us to want to belong to (or not be left out of) a group/trend. And Capitalism is right there hovering over us waiting to take advantage of it and spread the story even further for their own gain.
It's an obvious formula. If you're not in favor of it, how do you propose we deal with it?
Edit: I don't want to speak badly against reusable containers though. This particular one isn't my "cup of tea", so to speak, but refilling a container with (filtered) tap water is vastly better than getting a case of single-use plastic water bottles from the grocery store. The thing is, I don't know why but I feel like the same people collecting these tumblers are the same people who buy bottled water. Consumerism / capitalism / marketing have convinced a lot of Americans that tap water is gross or dangerous. Granted, Flint Michigan and articles like this haven't helped tap water's reputation.
some of us are (very) slow drinkers but still want hot coffee. i usually make my coffee at 9am and don’t finish it until just before noon.
granted, i don’t have one of these tumblers. i do make my coffee in one of their camping french press thingies though, then move it to a different thermos vessel for drinking.
I got a Stanley classic trigger a few years ago because the job I was in was so frantic I'd never get to drink a hot drink hot otherwise. It's been doing we great since.
I can't understand collecting the damn things though!
I just got an insulated bottle from Owala a bit ago because it's a cool NASA themed one and I liked it. Apparently there's kind of a cult behind these too though... I just wanted a water bottle for work lol
There's nothing wrong with getting an insulated and reusable thermos. In fact, that's probably a great thing to do and should be encouraged. What people are rejecting is the trend of collecting them as status symbols or buying multiple in different colors to match your outfit. That behavior has real and negative consequences.