Lol 'drink water' reminds me of this:
The water thing is to help avoid a hangover because alcohol dehydrates you not to stop you choking. I basically never sleep on my back but I had that on mind when I got really drunk (but I only got really drunk once.) It didn't happen though (I threw up in the street etc,) but I was really ill for like a week and it didn't help that the whole thing ended up overlapping with my period.
"Smoking cigarettes is bad for your skin and lungs etc and also I nearly died days ago choking on alcohol."
LOL.
That sums up the British millennial attitude perfectly worrying about second hand smoke while binge drinking when we were young.
Only he's weirdly gen z and most of them don't drink from what I've heard. And they all vape or whatever. I mean I guess he's a 'zillenial' and also these terms are all still nonsense lol but yeah.
Pretty sure I'm going to be a zillenial when they finish whatever they're doing lol:
But they changed the definition of millenial a bunch of times already and gen x is so small in range it's like 1967-1980 or something so I guess it makes more sense.The exact date range of this micro-generation is not specifically defined. Avery Hartmans, writing for Business Insider citing a study on U.S. consumers, defines a Zillennial as anyone born between 1990 and 2000.[17][18] Boston University sociologist Deborah Carr defines zillennials as those born "roughly" between 1992 and 2002.[19] Authors Hannah Ubl, Lisa Walden, and Debra Arbit define the cuspers as those born between 1992 and 1998, as does Mary Everett, writing for PopSugar[7] and Vogue.[20] A WGSN case study on the cohort similarly notes this date range.[3] Others have defined zillennials as those born from 1993 to 1998, including Deon Smit (HR Future),[13] Maisy Farren (Vice),[21] Lindsay Dogson (Business Insider Mexico),[22] and MetLife.[23] Ketchum defines GenZennials as those born from 1992 to 2000.[14] Fullscreen defines the cusp group as those born from approximately 1993 to 1999 in their research.[10] Author Mary Donahue defines the cuspers as those born from 1995 to 2000.[24]
I also think there's a case to be made that my uni experience (I was born in 1991 so started uni in 2009,) was like the last one before social media + online dating really took over completely (which to me is the defining factor of gen z) and even then it was the early days of Facebook and you couldn't go out without people taking photos and uploading them to Facebook. So it was hugely influential but people were communicating without apps still and dating people they met irl and Facebook was people you knew irl at least in a distant way.
But like literally after I graduated that was over. So yeah 1994 and later is very gen z coded. And people in that in-between period found it difficult to adapt imo because if they didn't meet someone in uni they were kind of screwed (and also most of gen z are very mentally ill as well.) And that also goes a long way in explaining weird millenials and the first wave of incels were mostly people in my age range too I think. And then there's this lol:
Which I guess is technically the liberal millennial musical number lol? It's funny because it came out during lockdown and he's in his 30s but yeah. I guess that's usually how it goes. Green Day created American Idiot in their 30s.
There's also the thing where approximately my generation especially of university students invented like the knee sock thing and the trans programmer/early femboy stereotype but not really while at uni. There was one trans woman when I was at uni but everyone else mostly was closeted and came out later. But the building blocks were there and people had started talking about that stuff online. It was also more socially acceptable in the US. There are also some older millennials incl. some in the UK who are now in their late 30s but they were often people who went to uni late or were otherwise involved in fandom culture or something like that so in a bit of a time loop. Also this video still cracks me up:
I guess that's quintessentially zillenial. Also Tina from Bob's Burgers even though she's trapped eternally in kid mode like a Simpsons character. Also aside from one reference in one episode there's no mention of smart phones on this show it's stuck in some weird hauntological time loop where they try to make the time period as vague as possible. Bob and Linda also fit into this kind of ambiguous thing where it seems like Linda was in high school in the 80s but Bob is really into 70s music etc.
Going to start using that. 'Dysfunctionally ambivalent.' That scene is great:Tina also embodies a common millennial quirk. She's dysfunctionally ambivalent--in the whole length of the parking lot, she can't make up her mind which way to turn to avoid a collision--but, even in inaction, seldom tongue-tied. "Time for the charm bomb to explode," she says, awkwardly flipping her hair, in a widely shared screencap. She's also a decidedly moral person: After she crashes the car, she won't let her dad leave without writing a note for the owner of the other car.
There's a lot of music on the show now which I think annoys a lot of people. I don't mind it though.
They made an album too lol from that episode where Gene and Bob go to that fake 70s band show with the lasers:
Parts of this are obviously based on 2112 lol:
Fun facts about Christmas lights song lol:
"Twinkly lights shine
If one them goes out, then none of them light
Or at least thet's how it used to be
Now the LEDs work a little bit differently
But you know what I mean"
"FINALLY a song about light bulbs"
Oh yeah this was cute too (I'm re-watching this show atm):
"Music's a lot harder to do when you're not good at it. We know that now."
So many quotable lines lol.
Also I discovered this song through the show lol:
Yes.Are millennials gender rebels or returning to tradition?
I think reddit has decided I'm a 'core millenial' lol.
Also just realised 1992 - 1994 mysteriously vanished here (along with most of the 80s.) Lol my brother and lots of kids I hung out with as a kid and one of my ex boyfriends maybe doesn't exist. I can't remember if my first ex was born in 1989 or 1988 now tbh. Might have been late 1988. 0r 1989. I could find out very quickly but I have a phobia of Facebook now lol.1995, 1996, and 1997 started kindergartner between 2000-2003. 2000s childhood.
1980, 1981 and 1982 started kindergarten in 1985-1987. 80s childhood.
1989, 1990, 1991 started kindergarten between 1994-1996 90s childhood.
Early, core, and late millennials all have a different frame of reference for their childhoods-adolescence because they spent their childhood in 3 different decades.
Do they know I had a tamagotchi in 1998 which is around when they first became popular lol? (The person posting this was born in 1997 according to their flair.) They were actually banned at my school.Yeah, kids today even use the same toys as we used back in the day. My sister used Tamagotchi in 2005 and 2006 and now my neighbour's granddaughter who's 8 even have Tamagotchi. It's more advanced one but still. Even clothing trends are repeated like chokers that girls used to wear around 2004. Overally I think that a lot of younger Gen Z and Alpha take inspirations from our childhood, in the early to mid 2000s especially. 90s things aren't that popular for them like 2000s things are.
Me with my mum as a kid:
Lol not really though I was never that entitled. But she did try to look after my cat one for a while (I had a couple of others later too which she didn't look after,) and she was working lol so they always died. They were actually a really bad invention for kids because obviously you can't have them at school/work. Also we never had actual cats or dogs as pets when I was growing up just fish mostly and then we looked after a rabbit for a year or less when I was in high school that was never really ours. Also looked after some gerbils at one point that I retconned into being our pets in memory but apparently they weren't lol. You have cat cafes now in London which were adopted from Japan because most people can't have pets in rented accomodation and also can't fit pets into their lifestyle (or kids hence you know. Nobody having kids.)
This is just like Pokemon where a bunch of people are arguing now over which Pokemon generation you grew up with first that defines you when it's just been the same Japanese game repackaged over and over again for two+ decades now. Here's how it works: you love the first 1-2 generations you grow up with, third is still fun, by the fourth you're losing interest unless you're really hardcore about it. You forget the details of every Pokemon game after that that you bothered buying and stop buying them after 5-6 gens. They also reboot old Pokemon games too early to maximise/exploit nostalgia imo. I was still a kid when fire red and leaf green came out which were the first reboots I think. I played red when I was like 7/8 or so and fire red when I was 13. Everything and nothing is changing simultaneously.
I'm never going to be a zoomer though. I refuse. The label is stupid.
Also I only watched like the first half of that video before where he talks about how he almost died but the way F1nn's audience on twitch are constantly trying to get him to say he's trans or come out as trans is deeply uncomfortable to me because he already has all that knowledge and is of an age where it's more socially acceptable so if he wants to he can and if he's not there's a good reason for it.
Also I say this as someone who has a feminisation fetish so that's how you know it's bad lol. Some of them seem relentless.
I also note the incredibly weird dynamic with social media audiences where if you don't say you're trans transphobes mostly ignore you and other people try to encourage you to transition, and when you do say you're trans you get lots of really negative transphobic comments especially if you make content outside certain bubbles and you get noticed by certain websites which tend to tear people apart for expressing vulnerability as I've said before (not just trans people.) Some of the [BEEP] I read in people's comments sections really bums me out at times.
If you haven't medically transitioned and you have a sizeable audience and make a video talking about something related to gender - especially if you give them even an inch by pandering to transphobes concerns - you just see a bunch of comments like 'everyone who medically transitions regrets it.' which isn't even true based on research. Coupled with - (if you're a trans guy or afab in general) 'you don't look like a guy' or 'I think you look better as a girl' ??? comments calling you a narcissist, delusional, every negative thing you can imagine really. Worse I think for older trans people on YouTube who are older than 35 and people whose content isn't generally about that topic but make one or two videos, but will happen regardless I think.