0 low in quality and cheap in price; relating to or intended for people who are poor or not educated: --
It was too downmarket for them.
Dylan satirically crosses this accessory's high-fashion image with leopard-skin material, perceived as considerably more downmarket and vulgar.
Most often, successful start-ups begin with low-end or downmarket customers with low income and low costs.
However, if it maintains its share through going downmarket it compromises its unique public service broadcasting status so making the licence fee again hard to justify.
It can and must avoid the trend to downmarket scheduling so apparent—and sadly increasing—elsewhere, especially in satellite but also in terrestrial television.
My view is that the situation is quite the reverse of how it is sometimes portrayed in the downmarket media.
Logically, intervention price reporting should reflect only the intervention prices, not the lower downmarket prices of other animals not in intervention.
Films go downmarket and even classic films cannot be expected to command a premium price year in, year out.