I'm the grandson of a Cuban immigrant, so cigars, not pipes, were the only form of tobacco consumption visible in my family. Yet, cigars never caught on with me. I've tried a few, but never found the same level of enjoyment that I find in pipes. So I slept right through the boost in cigar popularity that took place in the 90s.
What happened? How did cigars become so popular across different generations in the 90s? And what would have to happen for pipes to experience a similar popularity boost?
@midcentry you brought up a few good points in you comment; not the least of which is Brian Levine's advice to "be seen" with your pipe in public. Unfortunately, the laws where I live are strictly prohibitive, and lunting is, in almost all public places, not allowed. So I feel like there would first have to be a change in restrictive laws before public pipe smoking could return.
Final thought: I would like pipes and pipe tobacco to be separated, somehow, from cigarettes in the eyes of law makers. Unlike cigarettes, pipe smokers don't litter spent butts on streets. And (opinion) pipe tobacco smoke doesn't produce an offensive smell, like cigarettes. But as long as tobacco consumption laws group pipes and cigarettes together, we will be subjected to the same restrictive legislation.