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To: Mount Athos
The Great Indoors is burning through its Millennial joke material at a very high, um, burn rate, and I imagine that by episode six it will also be just another workplace sitcom with the Millennial bashing only occasionally mentioned.

I spent 40 years in industry, mostly under government contracts.
If the producers want to give me a call I could outline a couple of seasons worth of material over & above the predicted six shows.

6 posted on 12/05/2016 12:00:43 PM PST by norton
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To: norton

Scott Adams has been mining the cubicle world for material for decades with “Dilbert”. I suspect that the Millennials will provide rich ground for quite some time.


9 posted on 12/05/2016 12:03:01 PM PST by ClearCase_guy (Abortion is what slavery was: immoral but not illegal. Not yet.)
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To: norton

It’s funny how my attitude toward today’s Millennial hipsters is exactly the same as how I felt about hippies back during the 1960s and early 70s.

Mincing no words, I hated them and wanted to see them subjected to severe punishment just for existing.

I’ll never forget the summer between my 5th and 6th grades. Something very strange must have happened, because a fair share of my formerly normal classmates came back to school as junior pseudo-hippies. Why their parents allowed them to act out like this, I can only wonder.

I do know that by the time our class graduated high school in the spring of 1975, folks were starting to clean up their acts.

At 59, I am what I believe has been termed a “trailing-edge Baby Boomer.” According to some sources, my sub-generation’s values aren’t quite the same as those who were teens during the late 1960s.

One article I read several years ago stated that it was the younger boomers who rejected counterculture values and became the “Reagan Youth.”

Well, I’m not sure you can prove this. But from a common sense perspective, I agree.

Looking back on my memories of the late 60s, when I was 11, 12, 13 — all I saw was a lot of people a little older than me making fools of themselves and causing immense grief to their parents. Now, my parents and I had our ups and downs, but I never would have adopted an entire lifestyle calculated to spite them.

So, nothing has really changed 50 years on. Youth culture is basically nothing but a lot of narcissistic playacting.

Still, if the past is any guide, most of the rising generation will muddle through — although this generation looks uniquely unprepared for the trials of daily living we all must face.


21 posted on 12/05/2016 12:19:45 PM PST by Nothingburger
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