It’s Not Just About Acme Feed & Seed. It’s About The Soul of Nashville

Nashville has a choice, and it’s one with major implications on how the city will be perceived heading into the future, its economic viability as a tourist destination, and how the musicians and the music fans who actually live in Nashville will be both supported by the city, and be able to enjoy the city they call home.
In late December of 2025, the U.K.-based travel agency Insure and Go conducted an in-depth study into the most “authentic” and “inauthentic” cities and tourist destinations in the world. As most any country music fan probably knows, “authenticity” is one of the hallmarks of the country genre, and thus, of Music City. Is an artist perfecting a put-on, or are they being true to themselves? Turns out that cities and towns can be judged similarly.
Insure and Go analyzed over 1.3 million online travel reviews for how often travelers described restaurants, attractions, shops, museums, and cultural venues as ‘authentic’ or ‘traditional’ in over 140 cities. They then calculated how many times locations were referred to as ‘tourist traps’ or ‘inauthentic.’ Then they created an ‘Authenticity Score’ from 1 to 100 to diagnose the cities offering the most authentic experiences around the world, and those offering the most inauthentic.
Where did Nashville rate on that scale? It came in at the 4th most inauthentic city in the entire world, and the 3rd in the United States behind Chicago and Las Vegas with a deplorable score of 3.8 out of 100.
The study concluded, “Known as the ‘Country Music Capital of the World,’ Nashville has been a standout destination for those who want to get immersed in the music genre’s history for quite some time. However, the famous Broadway strip has lost a bit of its shine the more it curates for visitors. Branded bars and polished venues overshadow the more organic local music scene, contributing to its lower authenticity score according to those who’ve been there.”
There might not be a better way to introduce the battle the Lower Broadway venue Acme Feed and Seed is currently undergoing to stay alive—one they seem to be losing, and very quickly. The response from Nashville’s mayor has gone viral and enraged many, especially local musicians who rely on the venue for regular gigs, and local residents who make the venue their regular Lower Broadway haunt, along with the tourists in search for authentic Nashville.
Though all of Lower Broadway tends to be painted with the stereotypical brush of tipsy bachelorette parties on pedal taverns, and cover bands belching out Def Leppard covers from multi-tiered bars named after mainstream country music stars, those who know how to navigate Lower Broadway understand where the pockets of authenticity still linger.
There’s Robert’s Western World, dubbed Nashville’s “Undisputed Home of Traditional Country Music.” There’s AJ’s right across the street owned by Alan Jackson, which also has a surprising list of actual country music artists performing on stage on a nightly basis. There are other bars that also get overlooked, like Layla’s located right next door to Robert’s. And at the very end of the entertainment corridor is Acme Feed and Seed located at 101 Broadway.
But it won’t be located there for very long, unless something changes. Acme Feed and Seed is one of the few Lower Broadway businesses that actively invites in locals as well as tourists, only features original artists as opposed to cover bands, and has been a mainstay stage for country music preservationists such as The Cowpokes.
Acme Feed and Seed operated as an actual feed store for 56 years before it closed in 1999. The building itself dates back to the 1890s, and was opened to be a music venue and restaurant in 2014. Current owner Tom Morales has also helped preserve Nashville’s beloved Loveless Cafe, as well as the city’s historic Woolworth building. Preservation has always been his motivation over profit, but for these historic places to remain open, a profit needs to be turned.
The biggest impediment to turning a profit moving forward is the recent tax hike the business has incurred that will almost immediately put it out of business. “It’s our property tax,” Morales says. “It went from $129,000 a year to $600,000 a year. That’s more than our rent and net profit combined. We can’t pay it. It’s punitive.”
When Morales approached the mayor to at least have a meeting about the nearly half million tax increase in one year, his request was denied. When the local FOX affiliate talked to Mayor Freddie O’Connell, his response was, “It’s not up to me whether he keeps that business open. The market evolves. New businesses start even as beloved old businesses close.”
Mayor Freddie O’Connell’s statement has since set off a firestorm, at least among the local musicians, music fans, and preservationists in Nashville and beyond.
Tom Morales goes on to say, “The way we survive as a city is embracing what is authentic. Tourists see through make-believe. They see a $17 drink and think ‘tourist trap.’ There are towns across America that wish they were Music City — and we’re trying to be Las Vegas. Why?”
This takes us back to the authenticity study out of the U.K. that verifies exactly what Tom Morales asserts. Though Nashville might be getting fat and sassy in the short-term off of $17 drinks and Def Leppard cover bands, they are undermining the authenticity that makes people want to come to Nashville in the first place, and not just from the region, but from all over the world.
Related: Why The Re-Opening of the Ernest Tubb Record Shop Failed
A town like Nashville probably needs businesses and locations that also appeal to a more generalized audience that doesn’t necessarily care about authenticity. The bachelorette parties that locals and other tourists complain about also import a significant amount of revenue into the city that allows local businesses and the music performers they employ to be supported.
But if Lower Broadway and Nashville in general become a monoculture awash in such establishments, it will doom the tourist boom for the city in the long-term, limiting it’s greater appeal to people from all over the world looking for the real deal country music experience locations like Acme Feed and Seed serve up, along with some of the best food on Lower Broadway, incidentally.
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February 18, 2026 @ 12:21 pm
Chicago being the #1 inauthentic city in the world surprises the hell out of me. Ahead of Vegas seems crazy. On that list I have been to Chicago, Vegas, and Vancouver. I thought Vegas and Vancouver were worse than Chicago for sure. In fact, putting anywhere ahead of Vegas makes me question the results. Vegas sucks (there are great things about it, but it sucks).
February 18, 2026 @ 12:47 pm
I had that same thought too initially, but I think what’s baked into that is that Chicago used to be a big tourist destination for Europeans, and has probably fallen off dramatically over recent years due to the crime and such. Also, Chicago also does have some pretty hack tourist trap stuff like The Bean.
Chicago also has some of the best art museums between the coasts and other great stuff. But I took the score as a reflection on Chicago the tourist destination, not necessarily how “authentic” the town is.
February 18, 2026 @ 1:18 pm
That makes sense. And as I think about Chicago it was like 30 years ago I was there. Shit changes.
February 18, 2026 @ 12:28 pm
I’ve never been there and never will go there. It’s called Nashvegas for a reason. The city made a choice to be what it is. When the CMA Awards moved out of the Opry to Bridgestone Arena, that told me everything.
February 18, 2026 @ 12:30 pm
Mayor Freddie O’Connell is an LGBTQ Democrat.
February 18, 2026 @ 12:53 pm
From what little I read online a city mayor cannot directly control property tax rates. My guess is that the value of the Acme building with it’s large square footage has increased exponentially and thus influenced the property tax rate. You would think elected officials would care about maintaining the culture of the city and try to keep some elements of Nashville true to it’s roots – but the gay pride events will persist nonetheless, and the musicians who are decrying this issue will sooner pack up and go back to Ohio than vote for a Republican mayor. You can say “Well the Republicans would do the same!” Maybe but considering who is in power now and how things currently are…what does that tell you?
February 18, 2026 @ 1:01 pm
What in the world does *anything* written about here have to do with gay rights and pride events?! You might want to put aside your own bizarre, brain-scrambling bigotry long enough to try to formulate a coherent sentence.
February 18, 2026 @ 1:21 pm
It’s very obvious but I will explain it like you are in 7th grade. O’Connell’s remarks in regards to Acme’s survival was essentially that he didn’t give a damn. He ran for office as the Nashville Progressive option for the mayoral position and he closely aligned himself with LGTBQ causes. While the culture and music that made Nashville is slowly being suffocated, the gay pride events will be as big as ever.
February 18, 2026 @ 1:33 pm
“…brain-scrambling bigotry…”
Having an opposing view is not bigotry. 🙄
February 18, 2026 @ 1:04 pm
The mayor likely does not have the unilateral authority to issue a property tax exemption. He’s also the most powerful man in the city government, and the first person you would want to talk to in an effort to alleviate the problem. It doesn’t make sense to me that taxes would nearly quintuple over one year as opposed to going up moderately like everything else. That is what has made this so existential. Requesting some dispensation to a more reasonable hike seems to me to be a reasonable solution. If you have abandoned buildings all throughout your city because of intrusive tax codes, that doesn’t help anyone.
February 18, 2026 @ 1:18 pm
My numbers will be off some but roughly calculating the $600,000 property tax means the ACME property is valued at around 100 million. Finding a way to mark certain establishments as culturally relevant seems to be the only way out.
O’Connell’s remarks directly contradict this puff piece in 2023.
https://tennesseelookout.com/2023/09/18/a-bloody-clipboard-and-biodiesel-car-the-story-behind-freddie-oconnells-rise-to-nashville-mayor/
February 18, 2026 @ 1:02 pm
I mean, they don’t call it Nash Vegas for nothing. Having lived somewhat near Nashville and in Las Vegas, before that, the comparison isn’t a hard one to make. While being a party city isn’t bad for business in the short term, it can be pretty problematic in the long run as people start to look for more authentic – and cheaper – ways to spend their time. Not living near there anymore, I have no intentions of ever going to Nashville voluntarily ever again.
February 18, 2026 @ 1:20 pm
With the influx of people moving to the area from out of state, Nashville’s culture has been watered down. Now it doesn’t feel any different than every other big city. I used to go to Nashville annually starting around 1990. Stopped doing that about 15 years ago when it got too touristy. That being said, I understand why the present version appeals to more people. Frankly, authentic Nashville was a dump.
February 18, 2026 @ 1:37 pm
Who gives a shit what a UK company has to say? Lol. Nashville will be fine. The tax hike is insane, and should be dealt with. I’m sure there are legal actions Mr. Morales can pursue. The fact that the mayor wouldn’t talk to him should be alarming to all business owners.