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-   -   Gen X is sick of your bullshit (http://cellar.org/showthread.php?t=26146)

footfootfoot 10-22-2011 08:22 AM

Gen X is sick of your bullshit
 
Mildly amusing essay at Gizmodo:
http://gizmodo.com/5851062/generatio...-your-bullshit


Quote:

But Generation X is tired of your sense of entitlement. Generation X also graduated during a recession. It had even shittier jobs, and actually had to pay for its own music. (At least, when music mattered most to it.) Generation X is used to being fucked over. It lost its meager savings in the dot-com bust. Then came George Bush, and 9/11, and the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. Generation X bore the brunt of all that. And then came the housing crisis.

Generation X wasn't surprised. Generation X kind of expected it.

Aliantha 10-22-2011 07:04 PM

Nice...and true.

STFU gen Y and beyond!

jimhelm 10-22-2011 07:10 PM

Which gen am I?

ZenGum 10-22-2011 07:11 PM

I really need to get a place with a lawn so I can tell those damn whippersnappers to get off it.

Clodfobble 10-22-2011 08:17 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by jimhelm
Which gen am I?

What year were you born in?

monster 10-22-2011 08:40 PM

1970

Undertoad 10-22-2011 08:51 PM

Gen X is roughly 1961-1981

Clodfobble 10-22-2011 08:54 PM

Yes. Depending on who you ask, the opening date is anywhere from 1960 to 1966, and the closing date is 1980 to 1982.

Technically I am Generation X, and my brother is Generation Y (aka the Millenials.) And given our personalities, this actually fits us.

zippyt 10-22-2011 09:47 PM

what about 1963 ??

Aliantha 10-22-2011 09:50 PM

That makes you nothing Zippy. Sorry. ;)

zippyt 10-22-2011 10:03 PM

Gee thanks ,
I Always thought of my self as a Late Bloomer baby boomer

Undertoad 10-22-2011 10:15 PM

Yer an Xer... like me 1963

Trilby 10-23-2011 06:00 AM

I don't feel like an Xer. I feel like the shit end of the Booomers. 1964.

Undertoad 10-23-2011 06:45 AM

Which do you like better: the Beach Boys, or the Cure?

Trilby 10-23-2011 07:22 AM

The Cure.

but when I was 12 I DID own Endless Summer. I've never owned any Cure. (of course, I was married by the time I was 24, so...)

eta: I was a faithful reader of Creem and Crawdaddy magazine. Those were some awesome rags.

Pico and ME 10-23-2011 09:43 AM

I'm on the Boomer/Gen X cusp. I'm a tweener. Our music came from the late 70's - Fleetwood Mac
Talking Heads, Boston, Journey, Kansas, Springsteen, Billy Joel, The Bee Bees - Saturday Night Fever, Jackson Brown, Cheap Trick, The Cars, Commodores, The Eagles, The Doobie Brothers. And Disco.

DanaC 10-23-2011 09:58 AM

Apparently, as I was born in '72, that puts me slap bang into Generation X. 'The Me Generation'

Sundae 10-23-2011 11:03 AM

Snap Dani.
I never felt like one though. Comes from starting work at 16.
I was already 30 by the time I was legal drinking age.

I never really got to be part of the E generation either, or experience Madchester, Cool Brittania, living for the weekend.
Too worried about getting arrested, getting up for work, how I was going to get home. And how my finace would react, because he was anti-drug and a teetotaller.

I can't really complain. I did have what I wanted when I was in my early twenties. I just wasn't happy.

Undertoad 10-23-2011 03:31 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Brianna (Post 766199)
The Cure.

It was a trick question. If you're familiar with the Cure enough to say one way or the other, you're a GenXer.

DanaC 10-23-2011 05:55 PM

Oh I totally felt like a Generation Xer at the time.

Aliantha 10-23-2011 05:57 PM

I thought Gen Y was the 'me generation'.

DanaC 10-23-2011 06:03 PM

I think they both get called that. 'Me Generation' was originally coined for the GenXers, but has been subsequently applied to the GenYers.

We've also been called the boomerang generation, because so many people ended up back in their parent homes in their 20s and 30s (myself included :p)

footfootfoot 10-24-2011 10:46 AM


DanaC 10-24-2011 01:38 PM


ZenGum 10-24-2011 10:10 PM

Oh and you Gen Y sooks, harden up. Terrorism? Pah! You're afraid some loonie is going to stage an attack and kill maybe a hundred, maybe a thousand people, with a tiny chance you or someone you know might be one of them. Pfft. Back in MY day, kiddo, we lived with the constant fear of near-instant global nuclear annihilation. That's right, five minutes from go to stop, 3 billion killed in the first wave, the rest dying horribly over the next six months, end of civilisation, Earth uninhabitable.

All this with an onion tied to my belt, mind you.

[/grandpa rant]

monster 10-24-2011 10:16 PM

We live in the midwest. We're more worried about our generators....

HungLikeJesus 10-25-2011 07:26 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ZenGum (Post 766483)
Oh and you Gen Y sooks, harden up. Terrorism? Pah! You're afraid some loonie is going to stage an attack and kill maybe a hundred, maybe a thousand people, with a tiny chance you or someone you know might be one of them. Pfft. Back in MY day, kiddo, we lived with the constant fear of near-instant global nuclear annihilation. That's right, five minutes from go to stop, 3 billion killed in the first wave, the rest dying horribly over the next six months, end of civilisation, Earth uninhabitable.

All this with an onion tied to my belt, mind you.

[/grandpa rant]

I remember that, and the survivors of the nuclear fire called the war Judgment Day.

Sundae 10-26-2011 05:01 AM

Gen Y would think Threads was lame. But then they didn't get sat down to watch it by a teacher who explained this was what would really happen when the bomb dropped. When.

Also they didn't grow up on a diet of truly horrible Public Information Films like The Finishing Line or Apaches.

No wonder some of Gen X are at heart nihilists.
Sadly, the older Gen Xers are reproducing and therefore bringing up a generation of nihilists-without-a-cause.

Blame the parents.
Always.

:p:

BTW - check out the above films if you have a time. It would be a serious time commitment to watch all three - I'd recommend Finishing Line, but Threads is the most seminal. I don't think shock tactics worked, but they are a reasonable reminder of how children were treated when I was a child.

Trilby 10-26-2011 06:21 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Sundae (Post 766793)
No wonder some of Gen X are at heart nihilists.

No, Donnie, those Gen Xers are cowards. /lebowskireference/

Quote:

Originally Posted by Sundae (Post 766793)
Blame the parents.
Always.

They fuck you up, your mum and dad.



:D

DanaC 10-26-2011 11:47 AM

They don't mean to but they do...

The most scary thing I recall being taught / scared witless by were the aids awareness ads.

Sundae 10-26-2011 12:24 PM

After posting this I watched Threads again.
First time in years.

It was still extremely creepy - I'd forgotten how it drew you into individual characters' lives. But almost as much as that it was a snapshot of my childhood. Eighties cars and attitudes, casual sexism and snobbery. I have a tendency to think things haven't changed much, because the change happened slowly all around me. Simple things like old cars and telephones and pubs really bring it home.

And no, I didn't watch Life on Mars :)

DanaC 10-26-2011 02:31 PM

You didn't?

You really should. It's bloody marvellous!

Sundae 10-26-2011 03:21 PM

I have limited television time, living with the 'rents.
And although I fare pretty well on the internet, I have to be able to cede control at a moment's request.

Committing to a whole series is tricky. I can manage when motivated (Dr Who, Psychoville, Torchwood etc) but even a critically acclaimed drama series isn't enough of a draw for me given my limited time frame*

I do like Philip Glenister though. Of course. Completely my type.
Prefer him gingery and a bit gone to seed of course. And he could be rounder.

* Luckily the 'rents loved Sherlock. So I get to indulge freely in that next year.
Benedict Cumberbatch, Martin Freeman and the lovely Mark Gatiss. Why wouldn't you?

DanaC 10-26-2011 04:08 PM

You'd have liked him in Hidden then :P

Undertoad 10-27-2011 08:51 PM

Gen X is Balanced and Happy, who knew

BigV 10-27-2011 08:59 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Sundae (Post 766858)
After posting this I watched Threads again.
First time in years.

It was still extremely creepy - I'd forgotten how it drew you into individual characters' lives. But almost as much as that it was a snapshot of my childhood. Eighties cars and attitudes, casual sexism and snobbery. I have a tendency to think things haven't changed much, because the change happened slowly all around me. Simple things like old cars and telephones and pubs really bring it home.

And no, I didn't watch Life on Mars :)

I also watched.

Horrid. It took me a couple days to make my way through it. I found it very upsetting. Agonizing. I kept waiting for the time to accelerate. The anticipation was very unpleasant.

I can't really say thanks, only that I'm glad it's over.

::shivers::

wolf 10-28-2011 01:17 PM

I've always regarded Threads as one of the better post-nuke films, much more thoughtful and less scene-chewing than The Day After, but more broadly drawn than Testament.

infinite monkey 10-28-2011 01:19 PM

I looked for that movie on Amazon (I had never heard of it) but the only one I could find was DVD format but not US/Canada DVD format. I don't know what that means.

I'd love to see it though.

BigV 10-28-2011 01:54 PM

it likely means that the dvd was produced for display on tvs that use the PAL format, unlike domestic/North American televisions which use the NTSC format.

If you have the time and the bandwidth, you can stream it via youtube from the link Sundae posted. It runs just under two hours, though it feels much longer.

glatt 10-28-2011 02:03 PM

DVDs have different regions. It's an intellectual property rights issue rather than a screen resolution issue.

Edit: If you google your particular DVD player, you may find that there is a cheat code that you can use to play DVDs from a different region. For example, on my old Magnavox DVD player, if you push the number 1 on the remote four times, it will play DVDs from all regions. Or so I've been told. I've never had a need to try it.

wolf 10-28-2011 02:10 PM

Dammit. Two weeks ago I was a Boomer, now you're telling me a Gen-Xer, and previously I was happily part of the generation without a designation.

Undertoad 10-28-2011 03:17 PM

Which do you like better: the Beach Boys, or the Cure?

BigV 10-28-2011 03:35 PM

Boomer, baby.

Griff 10-28-2011 05:10 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Undertoad (Post 767480)
Which do you like better: the Beach Boys, or the Cure?

Trick question don't answer!

Griff 10-28-2011 05:11 PM

Boomers are the disease Gen X is The Cure.

DanaC 10-28-2011 06:04 PM

And Gen Y is the side effect


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