SinclairGroupLLP
CEO
- Joined
- Oct 30, 2024
- Posts
- 472
The problem is that those of your readers who did NOT grow up in that specific culture may not understand the references, or even understand what the brands are.
This is certainly true, but I find it isn't that big of a deal.
I can only speak for myself, but my writing is absolutely littered with little references that I don't expect that average reader to understand. Movie quotes, song lyrics, locations - some details are absurdly precise because I have personal experience with them and somebody who does as well will recognize what I did, but 99.9999% of the population likely won't. They're like easter eggs in the story, and I love it when I get a note or a comment that says "I caught that egg" or "I see what you did there." Many folks won't get it, though.
That's okay - I like throwing in a few "if you know you know" kinds of things in a story and generally not getting it won't have a major impact. If somebody doesn't recognize a brand, they don't recognize a brand. If somebody has never heard of Applesin, for instance, but the story says the MC orders one and drinks it, it doesn't really matter if they're aware its an Icelandic brand of orange soda - it's a drink, it got drunk.
I don't think many stories are going to turn on whether a soft drink is a Coke or a Fanta or a Bickford's, so if folks don't catch the reference, it's probably not going to make much of a difference.