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Entries in Gen Y (4)

Tuesday
22Dec2009

Has the Internet Made Gen Y Nicer Than Gen X?

We kinda call bullshit on this one -- but then again, we're jaded and snarky! According to Allison Mooney, "vice president of emerging trends" at a consulting firm called Mobile Behavior, Gen Xers have a harder time coming across well on the internet because we're too mean. To wit: "I think Gen X is a very sarcastic generation, and sarcasm doesn't really translate online. Gen Y has grown up interacting with people online. They've developed different social skills, a different rapport. Being sort of dry, sarcastic, snarky — that's not going to get you any friends online. Social currency is only built around positive interactions."

Whatever. We bet you're a real ball of laughs, Allison. [via NY Mag]

Tuesday
08Dec2009

The Exploding Whale: Touchstone of a Generation?

We were only recently introduced to this footage of a quite extraordinary news broadcast showing the dynamiting of a dead whale back in 1970 in Florence, OR.  The footage in its original form was probably only seen by less than a 100,000 people, but via YouTube, it became the fifth most viewed viral video of all time, with over 350 million views, and is claimed as something of a touchstone for the Echo Boomers who helped pass it around. Asylum tracked down the original reporter, Paul Linnman, who's apparently proud to have become a late-in-life web sensation. It makes sense that Gen Ys touchstones are going to be, well, 9/11 (for us too), the iPod, and YouTube. But what will the web do next, besides delight, disgust and amaze us?

Saturday
05Dec2009

A Further Attempt At Defining What Makes Generation X Different

How do you define a generation while they're still in their prime? Though the subject deserves to be tackled in essay form, and has certainly inspired many an essayist and blogger, we may have to turn to a bulleted list right now just in the interest of time and outlining. It's a complicated subject, and on some level, especially when it comes to relating the generation to John Hughes, it starts to feel like it's about class -- specifically that Gen X, as it's been defined, is a white middle-class phenomenon. But it's not.

We suppose that a generation's defining characteristics arrive, necessarily, from their cultural output. With filmmakers like John Hughes, Richard Linklater, and John Singleton; writers like David Foster Wallace, Dave Eggers, and A.M. Homes; and musicians like Kurt Cobain, Eminem, and The Smiths, one starts to see a specific picture emerge that's about non-conformity, disaffection, and a search for authenticity.  But weren't most of those characteristics also true of the Boomers who became hippies? The true defining edge for Gen X might then have to be irony, humor, and not a small degree of cynicism inherited from the failed revolution that preceded us.

Click to read more ...

Tuesday
18Aug2009

Why Generation X Rocks and Generation Y Sucks

First of all, we're older and wiser. Second of all, it wasn't as impossible for us to get into college, so we didn't have to become neurotic, over-achieving, community-servicing 17-year-olds in order to get into decent schools. Third of all, according to this strange website for elderlies called Baby Boomer Care, we're apparently more reliable, less prone to violence, and tend to be easier to work with overall.

Also, there is a whole industry trying to market booze to Generation Y, and as this link shows, they have cheap taste.  Allow us to say that insofar as we will cover booze, wine and cocktails here at John Hughes Is Dead, our tastes tend to be a little expensive, so we apologize in advance.