Beats by Dr. Dre - why?

The reasonable side of me thinks it's nuts as well for the Beats Solo (reg $179.99) but it's the #1 thing my DS wanted.

Being the "bargain shopper" that I am, I used my Cartwheel app on Thanksgiving night at Target for the light blue ones (the one he wanted thankfully) and saved 10% and they were on sale for $119 so not bad (LOL) for $100 total.

He loved the sound of them and has tried them out every time we have gone into Target.

Heather
 
DD12 has them on her xmas list. Buying the $ 179 pair fir $116 with my target discounts. Earbuds hurt her ears and shes tried many pairs. .
 
Thanks to people here (the budget board), I got my DD Beats Solo for $99. :)
 
My theory on presents is that if my kid wants something, and it is within the Christmas budget, they can have it. Now, if my Christmas budget is $400, and she wants $200 headphones, she'll be warned that that's half her Christmas budget. She can make the call.

But I was the kid whose mother always bought some cheaper item that was "as good as" what I wanted and it never was. Either I wanted it for the status (in my day it was Coca Cola sweatshirts) or because it _was_ a good quality product. And it hurt my feelings that even if I knew what I wanted was ALL I'd get, that's what I really wanted. My mother would do things like say the $75 item I wanted was too expensive (even if I said that was ALL I wanted) and then spend $150 on a bunch of little stuff I didn't want because she liked having "more stuff under the tree" with no thought to what *I* wanted. And I felt like she was wasting her money for some sort of idea of what Christmas morning should "look like" rather than spending her hard-earned money on something I would actually use and enjoy.
 

My theory on presents is that if my kid wants something, and it is within the Christmas budget, they can have it. Now, if my Christmas budget is $400, and she wants $200 headphones, she'll be warned that that's half her Christmas budget. She can make the call.

But I was the kid whose mother always bought some cheaper item that was "as good as" what I wanted and it never was. Either I wanted it for the status (in my day it was Coca Cola sweatshirts) or because it _was_ a good quality product. And it hurt my feelings that even if I knew what I wanted was ALL I'd get, that's what I really wanted. My mother would do things like say the $75 item I wanted was too expensive (even if I said that was ALL I wanted) and then spend $150 on a bunch of little stuff I didn't want because she liked having "more stuff under the tree" with no thought to what *I* wanted. And I felt like she was wasting her money for some sort of idea of what Christmas morning should "look like" rather than spending her hard-earned money on something I would actually use and enjoy.

For me it depends on what the item is. We don't have a fixed Christmas budget and I'm willing to splurge on items that I think are worth it or that really matter to the kids. I don't buy junk but I also don't encourage the kids to blindly buy into tween/teen status symbol trends. I want them to learn to think about what they really value because I believe not "keeping up with the Joneses" is a mindset that starts early.

So when my daughter wants a particular North Face jacket because of features X, Y, and Z I'm happy to buy it - yes, it is a status symbol but it is also very functional and meets a need. When my son says he wants Beats but really means any foldable noise-cancelling headphones with good sound, I'm not going to pay extra for the brand if I can get the same/better performance from another brand for less money - the Beats name is pure status at a premium price, while some of the less expensive alternatives provide superior function.
 




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