I found a couple of
things interesting about this map:
1) Some
states prefer artists that are from there, such as Bruce Springsteen in New
Jersey or Dave Matthews Band from my home state of Virginia. However, somehow The Grateful Dead wound up
clear across the country from where they began.
What a long, strange trip.
2) Neither
Florida nor Georgia prefer country group Florida Georgia Line, but rather
Ohio. This seemed odd to me.
3) I
like the fact that Jack Johnson and Wisconsin rhyme (maybe that’s why they like
him there so much).
4) I
can’t personally picture anyone in Kentucky listening to Fall Out Boy, but I
guess they do. Maybe they jam out with
their cousin/spouse to “My Songs Know What You Did in the Dark.”
5) South Carolina
thinks they are holier than the rest of us because they chose Hillsong
United. Well played.
6) I think it’s
funny that Rush has the ultimate niche market, Rhode Island.
7) What year is it
in West Virginia that they are still listening to Matchbox Twenty?
8) The farther West
you go, the more I have no idea who the heck the artist is that they are
listening to.
There is a spiritual
truth that we can pull from observing this map as well, and it connects to the way
that each one of us is unique. As people
we are not just some homogenous crowd, but we are individuals that God has
placed unique souls into. We are hand
crafted, and we all bring something special into the world. While there are many qualities that we share,
you have something to offer that no one else has, and that is what God put you
here for. So today, embrace your uniqueness.
Don’t try to be like everybody else, just be the person that God made you to
be.
And if you live in Texas,
blast some George Strait if you want to.
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