I struggle with people that complain about economic squeeze today and the complexity of life. For 45+ this guy has an amazing feed.
Fortunately, a lot of people understand why you struggle with anachronisms. Hopefully they also have empathy so they don't have to write you off as a simplistic idiot.
I’ve been fighting that gen my whole life. Exhausting being sandwiched between two shit tier generations.
Use of that word is hateful and narrow minded. But not surprised the so called woke generation still uses these types of slurs and stereotypes.
Normally hate you, but Augusta holla. She even went to Laney, not a great school.by any means so that makes this even better.
This is the part where somebody asks how many fewer it would have been if the name was Jennifer instead of Jakelia.
So the rust belt is absolutely going to be empty in like 30-40 years once the former factory workers/boomers die off right?
In this map it looks like some of the mid-western states are gaining Millennials and New York, New Jersey, Maryland are losing them.
Millennials still don't have that much money relative to other generations and NY/NJ/the Northeast is expensive as fuck.
Right so the idea that the rust belt is just going to die a horrible death is probably false if they try and market themselves as cheaper options with "millennial" like amenities and jobs.
I see lots of cold weather cities adding tons of jobs that appeal to younger people, revitalizing areas that were dying, and generally appealing to business and growth. Like, tech companies aren't just in silicon valley.
At my niece’s high school graduation last year, the principal made a joke about kids that age not knowing what an ampersand was. Then she asked them to raise their hand if they did, and about 20% raised their hand.
I think it's important to note that millenials youtube recipes a lot and the standards set by those cooking channels are absurdly high, whereas say our parents are probably just happy their eggs aren't black. Also olds order steak well done wtf
750 people seems like a very conclusive survey. Although I do have a friend who bough celery one time in college and thought they green onions because he read the wrong label. But he's a much better cook now idk. But seems like a lot of people just call butter knives "knives" and the small little specialized butter knives are less ubiquitous that they used to be outside of a set of silver or something.
Anecdotal, yea...but every Millenial I know can cook at least a little bit and would know what a butter knife is. Not sure I'm buying this very scientific and thorough analysis.
Good home cook used to mean "doesn't make shit from a box." Now it's like, are you even curing your own meats and pestleing your own aioli
Class of ‘10 — I know what it is, honestly didn’t know the word for it (always think of it as the “and” symbol).