Generations (17)

Jul 15, 2023 3:03 PM CST Generations
Each one of us comes from a different generation. I am considering the generations here in the USA as follows:
The Greatest Generation – born 1901-1924.
The Silent Generation – born 1925-1945
The Baby Boomer Generation – born 1946-1964
Generation X – born 1965-1979
Millennials – born 1980-1994
Generation Z – born 1995-2012
Gen Alpha – born 2013 – 2025
Please comment on what makes your generation so unique, grandparents, parents, friends.....
As you know generations are the lens through which society changes. By the way, I am a Baby Boomer. Thanks.
typing
Jul 15, 2023 4:51 PM CST Generations
Boomer here too. Although they have better musical instruments today, better music was made in our day. wave
Jul 17, 2023 4:39 PM CST Generations
Thanks Bemy for your comment. seems that not many are interested in commenting. SM
Jul 18, 2023 6:58 PM CST Generations
Packersbabe1
Packersbabe1Packersbabe1Green Bay, Wisconsin USA3 Threads 16,777 Posts
I'm generation ×
I had so much fun in my days, going to
clubs, stuff being cheap, listening to great music
like old school music, which I still do
Jul 18, 2023 9:17 PM CST Generations
Hooha
HoohaHoohaFlagstaff, Arizona USA14 Threads 2 Polls 95 Posts
Joe Biden is the only President from the silent generation
Jul 19, 2023 9:17 AM CST Generations
CossackCat
CossackCatCossackCatSomewhere, Maryland USA492 Threads 45 Polls 9,137 Posts
Hooha: Joe Biden is the only President from the silent generation
Oh the temptation conversing to elaborate is almost overwhelming innocent
Jul 19, 2023 12:02 PM CST Generations
I am a baby boomer, we are around 69.6 million still alive followed by the Millennials with 72 million.
Elvis Presley and Marilyn Monroe were our eras. We had idols like John Lennon and Bob Dylan. Entertained by Superman and James Bond. We were an economically influential generation b/c of our numbers. We were loyal to our beliefs and families. Still, remember the Flinstones and Winnie the Pooh.
We Marked a surge in women in the workforce. The invention of the PC, the internet. So many things to say...
Thank you, Packer, Hooha, and Cossack for your comments...
Jul 19, 2023 4:06 PM CST Generations
CossackCat
CossackCatCossackCatSomewhere, Maryland USA492 Threads 45 Polls 9,137 Posts
southmiami4321:
We were loyal to our beliefs and families
bouquet

Raised by parents, 2 sets of grandparents and other extended family, (most who lived within an 8 block range) who experienced the effects of wars and The Great Depression. Who knew, the future is uncertain but carried on and valued and appreciated what they had, and each other.

But stocked up for winter or a rainy day or another Depression or war.

Oh the shelfs of coffee, foil, toilet paper, can goods, in my elders houses laugh As a child I thought they were selling it laugh

But they knew what they were doing. They were doing what THEIR ansestors did. And today, the media and political figures call it prepping doh And look down on it, and even blame people for preparing for an uncertain future.

I fear for the younger generations, their dependency on the Government and State and Entitlement Thinking... Is their enemy.
I think they, and America itself ...are in for quite a shock.
Jul 19, 2023 4:17 PM CST Generations
Yes Cossack, the younger generations is into a tough future how things are turning on this moment. The fear for them is there...SM
Jul 20, 2023 12:43 AM CST Generations
Hooha
HoohaHoohaFlagstaff, Arizona USA14 Threads 2 Polls 95 Posts
How Do Generations Get Their Names?
Hannah Keyser| Apr 6, 2018
iStock
iStock / iStock

We all know what a Millennial is. There are stereotypes about what Millennials do and do not like, how lazy they may or may not be, and how often they check their Twitter feeds—all because we're comfortable using this single term to refer to an entire age demographic of the population. Millennial is a powerful word, and not because of the age group it refers to, but because of just how useful it is—just like Gen X or Baby Boomer.

There is no single or even typical way that generations historically get their names, because lumping everyone who's roughly the same age together is a relatively new phenomenon.

According to Peter Francese, a demographic and consumer markets expert, Baby Boomers were the first named generation to exist. (Those that came earlier, like The Greatest Generation that fought in World War II, were named retroactively.) It all started when the Census Bureau referred to the years between 1946 and 1964, during which birthrates rocketed up from around 3 million a year to over 4 million a year, as the "Post War Baby Boom." As the kids born in this boom started to grow into adults (and thus, consumers), ad agencies found traction by marketing their products to so-called Baby Boomers. This would be the first (and so far last) time a generation's "official" name would come from a government organization.

Eventually—as will inevitably happen to all of us, even the most maturity-challenged Millennials—the Baby Boomers got older and thus less appealing to companies with something to sell. The ad agencies wanted another catch-all term for the new members of their target age group and began shopping around different terms.

"They throw stuff at the wall and see what sticks," Francese says. "And in some of the meetings, they don’t stick." That's how Generation Y, a proto-term for Millennials, went in and out of fashion. "Generation Y was too difficult to say, too hard to brand, it didn’t have the cachet, it didn’t have the spark of Millennials," Francese says.

Not sticking is a matter of whether or not media organizations start using the term. And not just any media organization. "I’m talking about the Associated Press or Reuters—people who are syndicated that produce lots and lots of editorial content that they send out to various organizations," Francese says. As for determining the dates for Millennials, it all came down to demographics, and the old adage of comparing apples to apples.

"In 2010, which is when they did the census, Baby Boomers were all 45 to 64 years old," Francese explains. "Now, in order to compare Millennials to the Baby Boomers, because they're the next boom, you have to have what? Twenty years. And so in 2010, Millennials are people between 15 and 34. And then they work back from there to figure out when they were born."

If it seems like we're skipping over a generation, that's because we are. And for the most part, ad agencies did too. In 1991, Douglas Coupland wrote his book Generation X: Tales for an Accelerated Culture about the anonymity he and his contemporaries felt growing up in the shadow of the Baby Boomers. They were products of a 10- to 12-year downturn in birthrates sandwiched between the Boomers and the Millennials, and although the term stuck with the general population, the generation was the wrong size to matter much to marketers.

It seems unlikely ad agencies will take such a passive approach again.

"The ad agencies have a mission and an imperative to bring to their clients news of what’s going on in the marketplace," Francese says. " And so, inevitably, they segment the American populations into various groups. The necessity to do that means that they sit around and they come up with names."
Jul 20, 2023 4:56 AM CST Generations
CossackCat
CossackCatCossackCatSomewhere, Maryland USA492 Threads 45 Polls 9,137 Posts
The missing Americans: Unprecedented US mortality far exceeds other wealthy nations. A new study found that more than one million US deaths per year — including many young and working-age adults — could be avoided if the US had mortality rates similar to its peer nations…

Early death in the United States—1933–2021
Jul 20, 2023 1:16 PM CST Generations
Cossacks, I am not here to find the why names of these generations or to be a specialist in a census population. Thought this topic can bring in comments about each person's generation. I think each one is unique in their timing and we all can learn from their experiences.
Unfortunately, 30 years of my life was not lived here in the States, I was taken out not on my will (1965)and to be back (1995) and see the difference was a big experience.
Being born a New Yorker in the fifties in New York City my childhood was a happy one. I was able to play in the streets, in summer and splash the water hoses like all the kids in the parks freely. I had all kinds of friends from different cultures. Three decades will pass with all their transformations, and my old neighborhood was not the same. I am happy to be back and be part of this country again. SM
Jul 20, 2023 4:24 PM CST Generations
CossackCat
CossackCatCossackCatSomewhere, Maryland USA492 Threads 45 Polls 9,137 Posts
southmiami4321: Cossacks, I am not here to find the why names of these generations or to be a specialist in a census population. Thought this topic can bring in comments about each person's generation.
I understand. Yes it's quite different here than the blogs smile
southmiami432:
I think each one is unique in their timing and we all can learn from their experiences.
Unfortunately, 30 years of my life was not lived here in the States, I was taken out not on my will (1965)and to be back (1995) and see the difference was a big experience.
Being born a New Yorker in the fifties in New York City my childhood was a happy one. I was able to play in the streets, in summer and splash the water hoses like all the kids in the parks freely. I had all kinds of friends from different cultures. Three decades will pass with all their transformations, and my old neighborhood was not the same. I am happy to be back and be part of this country again. SM
WOW Culture Shock and a Time Warp.

I remember those childhood days. We could do more than kids today. Even playgrounds had more. We had "Rec Centers" with free classes, I had ballet, some girls had gymnastics. Boys had sport teams and tournaments.

And you could rent (by giving them a bracelet or personal object) a ball or jacks or cards or chess games and play outside.

All for FREE

Now... Police tape on monkey bars
Jul 20, 2023 7:31 PM CST Generations
secretagent09
secretagent09secretagent09New Jersey Girl in, North Carolina USA198 Threads 4 Polls 7,230 Posts
southmiami4321: Each one of us comes from a different generation. I am considering the generations here in the USA as follows:
The Greatest Generation – born 1901-1924.
The Silent Generation – born 1925-1945
The Baby Boomer Generation – born 1946-1964
Generation X – born 1965-1979
Millennials – born 1980-1994
Generation Z – born 1995-2012
Gen Alpha – born 2013 – 2025
Please comment on what makes your generation so unique, grandparents, parents, friends.....
As you know generations are the lens through which society changes. By the way, I am a Baby Boomer. Thanks.
I was born in the Silent Generation 1925-1945.

My family was very poor and there were six of us in one little house. My grandmother lived with us and she actually raised me which was difficult because she only had one arm and one eye. My grandfather chopped trees and sold the wood in the neighborhood driving around a horse drawn carriage. He chewed tobacco and had a spittoon which was disgusting. We hade four chicken coops with chickens. My father sold the chickens and eggs and I guess once in awhile we had fried chicken for dinner.

We didn't have a refrigerator but had an icebox. The ice man would bring a block of ice to our house. We owned a large piece of property next to our house that my father turned into a vegetable garden. You could name any vegetable and it was probably in that garden. I remember I had to go out in the garden and pick the stringbeans even on hot summer days. My mother canned tomatoes in Mason jars.

As a young child I had to scrub the kitchen floors on my knees and I had to do the family laundry with a ringer washing machine and then hang it outside. We didn't have a telephone or tv and when we got a tv it was a black and white one. One thing I remember clearly is the harsh snow storms when I had to shovel the driveway so my father could get out to go to work and that was before going to school. The walk to school was about three miles even in snow storms. Back then they didn't close school like they do now when a couple flakes come down.

Fun? I don't remember having fun. When it rained I would put my bathing suit on and go out in the street and dance in the rain. I used to sit in the street and black jacks by myself. I do remember having a bicycle that had big tires. The Silent Generation was literally silent for me. It was all about not talking at the dinner table and if somebody said something there was hell to pay. I once asked for seconds and was scolded. So then I thought I'll get around it and if my father didn't eat his second pork chop I would ask him if I could have it and my mother got mad about that.

Silence, I was to be seen and not heard.
Jul 21, 2023 1:04 AM CST Generations
Hooha
HoohaHoohaFlagstaff, Arizona USA14 Threads 2 Polls 95 Posts
I remember those childhood days. We could do more than kids today. Even playgrounds had more. We had "Rec Centers" with free classes, I had ballet, some girls had gymnastics. Boys had sport teams and tournaments.

^^^^

Let’s not go overboard, they still have this today, my daughter takes tennis lessons and ballet, and there is a park across the street with monkey bars and no police tape
Jul 21, 2023 2:49 AM CST Generations
CossackCat
CossackCatCossackCatSomewhere, Maryland USA492 Threads 45 Polls 9,137 Posts
Hooha: I
Let’s not go overboard, they still have this today,
MY experience is my experience
Hooha: my daughter takes TENNIS lessons and ballet, and there is a park across the street
Nice neighborhood. Lucky her
Hooha:
with monkey bars and no police tape
There certainly has been, with and without the plandemic
Jul 21, 2023 7:47 AM CST Generations
Secretagent, your generation lived through economic and political uncertainty. Families worked hard to support their families and their kids were forced to be self-reliant yet all this made them stronger for life.
They built the economy after the Great Depression, the Civil Rights movement, and fought in World War, these things make them admirable.
I also grew up with my grandmother from my mother's side here in the States. She was very special and my memories of her are so dear...My parents immigrated from Cuba after World War II and settled in NYC. They were hard-working parents in those years too.
You lived a tough silent childhood.
Thank you so much for your feedback.
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