I am very conscious of this.
I don't use the FPI widget. Or the popular images widget actually. (I've also hidden the Competitions menu item in a userscript, and I don't use the Games group -- I want to see more variety so I just have the Recent widget and more rows of that.)
But I just took a look at the first page of the current FPIs. A fair amount of plastic skin as normal, a set of common themes, but some lovely things and some at least extremely well-executed things that don't appeal to me personally.
About as usual.
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FPIs have a prevailing aesthetic*, just like coffee shops do. I know I will be told they don't by the people who vote for them, and I know I will be told that the mechanism for narrowing them down doesn't drive the development of an aesthetic, but it's fairly obvious, and it isn't really surprising at all.
The most important thing to understand is that really any identifiable or self-described "category" like this leads to sameness:
https://medium.com/knowable/why-everything-looks-the-same-bad80133dd6e
Other sites, magazines and competitions have their own prevailing aesthetics -- 1x did for years, to the point of being absolutely reductive. Magazines do; the Taylor Wessing Prize has had one.
The thing about shared aesthetics is that you have to find yourself somewhat outside them to notice them at all. But you can't step outside every influence, deliberately or accidentally.
So if you reject over-editing or focus on SOOTC or only shoot film or whatever, you're likely just stepping into another common aesthetic; it just happens not to be the prevailing one. (It's more likely to be just an earlier one.)
And those of us who reject a prevailing aesthetic may consciously or unconsciously have one of our own that is at least as banal. I'm sure that's how some people will think about my own "style", if it's even defined enough to see.
In short: if you don't like the "beauty edit", or you prefer not to use micro-dodge-and-burn like about a fifth of the FPIs do, then don't do those things. But it is useless to rail against being ignored/outnumbered by those who are participating in that prevailing aesthetic.
Ignore it yourself, or consciously reject it in what you do. Hide the widget entirely! Do your own thing. Put your energies into your own approach.
* it's probably actually a blend of two common genre aesthetics
Edited by Unfocussed Mike