Baby Boomers vs. Generation X vs. Millennials

Message Bookmarked
Bookmark Removed
Not all messages are displayed: show all messages (859 of them)

cool -- i was fonder of rob lowe and emilio so we are not in hypothetical bad boy competition

sarahell, Saturday, 25 July 2020 20:39 (three years ago) link

The Mission Earth Dekalogy!

Fuck the NRA (ulysses), Saturday, 25 July 2020 21:20 (three years ago) link

I read the Thrawn trilogy and some other Star Wars novels before I saw any of the movies, they were disappointing in comparison.

Donald Trump Also Sucks, Of Course (milo z), Saturday, 25 July 2020 21:39 (three years ago) link

At one point I found a Bobbsey Twins book lying around my grandparents' cabin and I swear to God, the plot was that their uncle had gone off sailing with a teenage boy he wasn't related to (referred to as his "boy friend") and now they'd disappeared? So the entire Bobbsey family got on a boat and went off looking for them on deserted islands??? Do you remember this one?

― Lily Dale

no, i have mercifully repressed all memories of anything that actually happened in the books. i had kind of assumed that nothing, in fact, happened in them.

i can't remember if i read any clavell or not. i think i mostly just watched the tv miniseries, which again, i have no idea why any of that would be of the slightest bit of interest to me. i think i tried reading some michener. maybe a little "clan of the cave bear".

my favored tween doorstoppers were steven king books. even then, though, i think i drew the line at "the dark tower", although that might have been because there were only two of them at the time.

Kate (rushomancy), Saturday, 25 July 2020 21:58 (three years ago) link

The only age when it’s appropriate to read the end of IT

Donald Trump Also Sucks, Of Course (milo z), Saturday, 25 July 2020 21:59 (three years ago) link

Kind of wish IT was the read another book touchstone for dorky libs tbh

That or the pike book about the aborted baby ghost slasher limbo town

Rishi don’t lose my voucher (wins), Saturday, 25 July 2020 22:12 (three years ago) link

I saw a revisionist take that that book wasn't actually anti-choice but I call bullshit.

Donald Trump Also Sucks, Of Course (milo z), Saturday, 25 July 2020 22:33 (three years ago) link

The transition between RL Stine and Christopher Pike is an important moment in a young person's life.

Donald Trump Also Sucks, Of Course (milo z), Saturday, 25 July 2020 22:34 (three years ago) link

I remember a Pike story about a haunted song on a cassette, a teenage deathwish, it was really spooky and scary and I had nightmares about it for a while.

blue light or electric light (the table is the table), Sunday, 26 July 2020 00:04 (three years ago) link

a lot of my reading material came from the public library in the small town where i grew up and I read so much Hardy Boys and Nancy Drew and Agatha Christie

― sarahell, Saturday, 25 July 2020 19:03 (yesterday) link

This was me exactly. I read so many of the blue hardcover Hardy Boys and the small, pocket-sized Agatha Christie with the scary hardcovers in the early 80s.

Tōne Locatelli Romano (PBKR), Sunday, 26 July 2020 00:22 (three years ago) link

yes!!!!

sarahell, Sunday, 26 July 2020 05:00 (three years ago) link

As a 70s Australian kid my tastes were pretty Empire heavy: Doctor Who novelisations and the works of Capt. W. E. Johns:
https://cdn2.bigcommerce.com/server5900/7o6312a/products/3854/images/48678/P1350709__48399.1505115014.1280.1280.JPG

assert (MatthewK), Sunday, 26 July 2020 05:14 (three years ago) link

oh in retrospect i definitely did read huge chunks of agatha christie. and i think a lot of the james bond novels too, even though the only one i really remember is the one about baccarat, and also the one where fleming talks about trans people in japan doing the inguinal tuck (which is a good way of getting a hernia and is not generally a good idea)

read some doctor who novelizations as well - i remember "invasion of the dinosaurs" from the printings that had an utterly idiotic speech by harlan ellison from the '70s as a preface - but my only exposure to the biggles books is monty python's mention of "biggles combs his hair"

honestly "biggles combs his hair" seems hardly less exciting than "biggles flies to work". i'm imagining him trying, and failing, to get to sleep during an in-flight movie on the way to a sales conference.

Kate (rushomancy), Sunday, 26 July 2020 09:15 (three years ago) link

Roald Dahl, Tintin (and to a lesser extent Asterix, although I suppose that would be the hip choice now), Douglas Adams, Asimov, 2000AD are among the main stuffs I remember reading. Younger sibling born in '76 was mostly into novels with dragons and that on the (reflective) covers.

I watched that one HP film because Cuaron and it was notgood.

Stanley Halfbrick (Noel Emits), Sunday, 26 July 2020 10:10 (three years ago) link

Erik Davis has made a good point about how Gen Xers grew up surrounded by culture created by heads.

Stanley Halfbrick (Noel Emits), Sunday, 26 July 2020 10:28 (three years ago) link

I was obsessed with the Tintin books as a kid too.

blue light or electric light (the table is the table), Sunday, 26 July 2020 11:39 (three years ago) link

xp

This is very true. I think my parents looked at it as kind of normal that I would look at stuff like Freak Brothers comics or related 80s indie comic stuff when I was a kid, even though it was all wildly inappropriate. I suppose the fact that their formative years were in the 60s and 70s gave them a weird perspective on what was in retrospect pretty anomalous cultural artifacts.

Mario Meatwagon (Moodles), Sunday, 26 July 2020 13:00 (three years ago) link

kate he was the pilot do u see

assert (MatthewK), Sunday, 26 July 2020 13:23 (three years ago) link

Same with my parents and movies... I was lucky enough to grow up near a video store with a huge cult and foreign film section, and so naturally, I'd rent very weird films and my parents would be like 'oh sure, that played when I was in college' and in the meantime I was ten and watching Zabriskie Point.

blue light or electric light (the table is the table), Sunday, 26 July 2020 14:28 (three years ago) link

Erik Davis has made a good point about how Gen Xers grew up surrounded by culture created by heads.

― Stanley Halfbrick (Noel Emits)

i mean, i grew up with g.i. joe. the trippiest shit i knew as a kid was, like, c.s. lewis, who was not particularly a head that i know of. madeleine l'engle may possibly have been a head, i don't know, but childhood entertainment has always had a healthy dose of the surreal.

Kate (rushomancy), Sunday, 26 July 2020 14:31 (three years ago) link

I read all the Narnia books and never picked up that they were supposed to be Christian allegories until adulthood. To me they were just stories about kids in an imaginary world. And my mom dragged my brother and me to (Catholic) church every Sunday. I guess I just wasn't a particularly close reader...

but also fuck you (unperson), Sunday, 26 July 2020 14:40 (three years ago) link

Sid and Marty Krofft to thread.

santa clause four (suzy), Sunday, 26 July 2020 14:40 (three years ago) link

I imagine that was a common experience with CS Lewis, although my parents were pretty vociferously lapsed at the time. Not even sure if I was baptised come to think of it.

That reminds me when I read The Holy Blood And The Holy Grail I thought they seemed to have taken the whole thing from the Foundation series.

Stanley Halfbrick (Noel Emits), Sunday, 26 July 2020 16:02 (three years ago) link

Erik Davis has made a good point about how Gen Xers grew up surrounded by culture created by heads.

Heh, I met the dude a few times back in the late 90s -- he struck me as the kind of guy that tends just to focus on things that support his ideas -- more of an advocate than an analyst (Culturally we need both, so not a dig on the dude)

sarahell, Sunday, 26 July 2020 17:08 (three years ago) link

as in, I don't think his point is a good generalization for the entire generation though I'm sure it's true for a number of ppl

sarahell, Sunday, 26 July 2020 17:11 (three years ago) link

I think it's practically a truism tbh. Whether you personally picked up on overt freak culture stuff as young child (more likely as teens) or not. How can you not say that stuff wasn't around or influencing culture in the 70s unless you lived in some renunciate commune. Those youth cultures were simply (a major part of) the ones that immediately preceded our own.

He might have been a bit more (or less) to what he said, it seems an interesting bit of context to think about anyway.

Stanley Halfbrick (Noel Emits), Sunday, 26 July 2020 17:45 (three years ago) link

* There might have been

Stanley Halfbrick (Noel Emits), Sunday, 26 July 2020 17:46 (three years ago) link

I read all the Narnia books and never picked up that they were supposed to be Christian allegories until adulthood. To me they were just stories about kids in an imaginary world. And my mom dragged my brother and me to (Catholic) church every Sunday. I guess I just wasn't a particularly close reader...

― but also fuck you (unperson)

no, i think lewis was just bad at writing children's books. "hey, kids! allegory! subtext!"

if you'd told me aslan was supposed to be jesus when i was reading those books i would have told you that was stupid and that jesus wasn't a lion.

and that's what makes c.s. lewis tolerable for me, i try to read his stuff now and there's all this bloody awful subtext to everything and it's shit.

"That reminds me when I read The Holy Blood And The Holy Grail I thought they seemed to have taken the whole thing from the Foundation series.

― Stanley Halfbrick (Noel Emits)"

i read a lot of asimov too, he really wasn't a very good writer, "foundation" in particular is so much "whig history IN SPACE" bullshit

the main thing that gets me about holy blood, holy grail is that the guy who wrote it co-wrote the original yeti serials for doctor who (the second one was also a knockoff, this one of the film "zulu"), and then tanked his career with the show by doing an awful piece of anti-hippie tripe called "the dominators"

Kate (rushomancy), Sunday, 26 July 2020 18:51 (three years ago) link

We are gonna be the meanest and the crankiest.

Not saying the millennials don't have potential though.

https://i.imgur.com/24lxeho.jpg

pplains, Saturday, 8 August 2020 15:20 (three years ago) link

Yes Asimov was a pretty bad writer I eventually had to admit. I haven't gone back to any of that stuff but some of the short story ideas stick with me.

Didn't know about the Dr. Who connection with HBHG (THB&THG in the UK). Dr. Who always felt literally close to home because I was at school with the children of one of the main 70s through early 80s writer / producers and later an actual Doctor (perhaps not one of the more feted ones) was also a parent.

Basil Ker-ching (Noel Emits), Saturday, 8 August 2020 16:45 (three years ago) link

one month passes...

Kevin Fallon @kpfallon
I asked Dylan Gage, the 14-yr-old actor who plays Gabe on #PEN15, what he felt is the biggest difference between kids in 2000 and kids today.

https://pbs.twimg.com/media/EioUA8CWkAAlQH6?format=png&name=900x900

mookieproof, Thursday, 24 September 2020 18:53 (three years ago) link

That feeling on late Sunday afternoons when there is nothing good on TV and you have nothing to do, lost forever.

好 now 烧烤 (Camaraderie at Arms Length), Thursday, 24 September 2020 18:58 (three years ago) link

30 years ago a child would kick a ball on the street.

OrificeMax (Old Lunch), Thursday, 24 September 2020 19:06 (three years ago) link

at the risk of being "ok millennial" there is a huge-ass citation needed on "casual derogatory phrases"

like, I’m eating an elephant head (katherine), Thursday, 24 September 2020 19:08 (three years ago) link

Gage, btw, is spectacular on that show; really a great acting job.

Fuck the NRA (ulysses), Thursday, 24 September 2020 19:18 (three years ago) link

The nature of boredom changed permanently at some point during the past 20 years. In the 20 years prior, the technology of personal distraction had changed very little. In the '80s, people already had cable TV, the Walkman, video games, VCRs. By 2000, little had really changed: more channels on TV, Discman instead of Walkman, better video games, DVDs instead of VCRs - but basically the same set of options. Who'd have thought nostalgia for boredom would be a thing.

o. nate, Thursday, 24 September 2020 19:30 (three years ago) link

I was very bored as a teen 20 years ago

despacito ergo sum (jim in vancouver), Thursday, 24 September 2020 19:38 (three years ago) link

you want real straight-from-the-bottle boredom let’s get into the 1880s

Li'l Brexit (Tracer Hand), Thursday, 24 September 2020 19:42 (three years ago) link

Krakatoa tho.

sock solipsist (pomenitul), Thursday, 24 September 2020 19:44 (three years ago) link

you see the lengths they had to go

Li'l Brexit (Tracer Hand), Thursday, 24 September 2020 19:46 (three years ago) link

Man, I don't remember ever being bored as an early-to-mid-'90s teenager. And I lived in two different assholes of the world in high school, where there was quite literally nothing for people my age to do.

OrificeMax (Old Lunch), Thursday, 24 September 2020 19:46 (three years ago) link

'Dicking around in the woods' was a popular option, as was 'trespassing in various buildings that should by all rights have been condemned'.

OrificeMax (Old Lunch), Thursday, 24 September 2020 19:47 (three years ago) link

some things are still the same

https://azure.wgp-cdn.co.uk/app-table-top-gaming/posts/battletech-82204.jpg

sound of scampo talk to me (El Tomboto), Thursday, 24 September 2020 19:52 (three years ago) link

it was raining heavily most of the time, I didn't always have good books to read, I would be finished with all my computer games, tv sucked.

just got drunk and high, but was still bored

despacito ergo sum (jim in vancouver), Thursday, 24 September 2020 19:53 (three years ago) link

if only you'd had memes to share

mookieproof, Thursday, 24 September 2020 19:56 (three years ago) link

And a 200+ game backlog on Steam that only exists to beget guilt.

sock solipsist (pomenitul), Thursday, 24 September 2020 19:58 (three years ago) link

Sounds to me like you should've gone fishing, jiv. You're still bored, but you're recreationally bored.

the unappreciated charisma of cows (Aimless), Thursday, 24 September 2020 19:59 (three years ago) link

I'm reading "We Pointed Them North", recollections of a guy who has on cattle drives in the 1870s and he talks about the supreme boredom of winters, after the drive was done but he and a few other cowboys would stay a couple of dozen or so miles from the nearest small town in a tiny cabin. Entertainment: A deck of cards, perhaps someone could play harmonica or guitar, maybe you had a good storyteller there. After a week you'd have already told and heard every story and asked every possible question of your companions. Even the meals were monotonous. Trying to imagine what that'd be like gives me the creeps that is only surpassed by imagining being in "The Hole" in a prison for months at a time.

A True White Kid that can Jump (Granny Dainger), Thursday, 24 September 2020 20:00 (three years ago) link

some things are still the same

Nah, new Battletech minis are one-piece plastic instead of metal you have to glue together (also kind of crap looking).

Donald Trump Also Sucks, Of Course (milo z), Thursday, 24 September 2020 20:19 (three years ago) link


You must be logged in to post. Please either login here, or if you are not registered, you may register here.