Im young and hip enough I get all the references.
I'm 41 and I got all but maybe 2 of them.
I tend to stay up on popular culture--although the recent celebutard culture is something I purposely avoid.
gamby wrote: I tend to stay up on popular culture--although the recent celebutard culture is something I purposely avoid.
This.
The easiest way to feel old is that people starting their first year of college/university were born in 1995. Makes it odd to be around campus sometimes!
Is it just me or are millenials prematurely nostalgic? Do you really feel old because you remember things a 14-year-old does not?
I have a couple things that freak me out about that article...
Fruitopia is gone? Hi-C is gone?
I miss Surge so much.
And a lot of those cereals are still around. French Toast Crunch, Oreo Os,
ShadowSix wrote: Is it just me or are millenials prematurely nostalgic? Do you really feel old because you remember things a 14-year-old does not?
I remember reading something about this recently. Basically, with the increased speed of technology adoption and rapid change over in pop culture, stuff that was cutting edge 6-12 months ago is old. After 3-5 years its ancient.
In reply to ShadowSix:
The problem is "millennial" covers from 1982-2000 thats folks from my age (31) up to 13 year old kids. I remember thinking 30 was old when I was 13. That and I don't remember pop culture from before the late 80s anyway. I think its just being hit with the fact that we're now the old guy from the movies we watched as kids. There's plenty of things a 45-50 year old could talk about that I wouldn't get.
In reply to Swank Force One:
I think they are talking about the flavors of Hi-C the Ecto Cooler flavor not Hi-C in general.
SVreX wrote: I'm too old to understand most of those references.
this .... I'm 50 yrs older than they are .... most of those have no meaning to me
Appleseed wrote: Berk the class of 2017. There I said it.
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I didn't give a rats ass about most of the stuff on this list even when it was new.
BTW, You can still get trip tiks from AAA online and print them yourself or go in and order them. Before our last big trip we wnet and bought a more up to date road atlas. What a smart phone, GPS can never do it give you that exanded look at what's coming up ahead or off to the side. When you've been driving 8-12 hours and are considering a place to look for a hotel a paper map is still ideal for scoping out the road ahead.
They probably have no idea what’s going on in this picture:
troof
...and my daily still has a cassette player in the dash. I listen to Beastie Boys tapes in it. Dolby Noise Reduction FTMFW!!! Now, get off my lawn.
moparman76_69 wrote: The problem is "millennial" covers from 1982-2000 thats folks from my age (31) up to 13 year old kids.
That makes me... the last of the Gen X'ers!
Actually, that makes lots of sense, because a few of my friends who are only 2-3 years younger than me have way different cultural memories.
'Extremely Upsetting'? Seems unlikely- let's see...
Nope. Some are amusing (Yes, I DO have MP3s older than some of them....), some I'm still WTFing at (What the berk is the 'Thong Song'?), some I snickered at (the Blue's Clues one- ex-wife was a big fan of the show...).
Final one does make me sad though... I still remember when gas broke $1/gallon. Several stations near me held out at $0.999 for a long time because it was more expensive to get a new sign than charge more for gas...
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