Culture ‘OK Boomer’ Marks the End of Friendly Generational Relations - "How do you do, fellow kids?"

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https://www.nytimes.com/2019/10/29/style/ok-boomer.html

In a viral audio clip on TikTok, a white-haired man in a baseball cap and polo shirt declares, “The millennials and Generation Z have the Peter Pan syndrome, they don’t ever want to grow up.”

Thousands of teens have responded through remixed reaction videos and art projects with a simple phrase: “ok boomer.”

“Ok boomer” has become Generation Z’s endlessly repeated retort to the problem of older people who just don’t get it, a rallying cry for millions of fed up kids. Teenagers use it to reply to cringey YouTube videos, Donald Trump tweets, and basically any person over 30 who says something condescending about young people — and the issues that matter to them.

Teenagers have scrawled the message in their notebooks and carved it into at least one pumpkin. For senior picture day at one Virginia high school, a group of nine students used duct tape to plaster “ok boomer” across their chests.

The meme-to-merch cycle is nothing new, but unlike most novelty products, “ok boomer” merch is selling. Shannon O’Connor, 19, designed a T-shirt and hoodie with the phrase “ok boomer” written in the “thank you” style of a plastic shopping bag. She uploaded it to Bonfire, a site for selling custom apparel, with the tagline “Ok boomer have a terrible day.” After promoting the shirt on TikTok, she received more than $10,000 in orders.

“The older generations grew up with a certain mind-set, and we have a different perspective,” Ms. O’Connor said. “A lot of them don’t believe in climate change or don’t believe people can get jobs with dyed hair, and a lot of them are stubborn in that view. Teenagers just respond, ‘Ok, boomer.’ It’s like, we’ll prove you wrong, we’re still going to be successful because the world is changing.”

Ms. O’Connor is far from the only one cashing in. Hundreds of “ok boomer” products are for sale through on-demand shopping sites like Redbubble and Spreadshirt, where many young people are selling “ok boomer” phone cases, bedsheets, stickers, pins and more.

Nina Kasman, an 18-year-old college student selling “ok boomer" stickers, socks, shirts, leggings, posters, water bottles, notebooks and greeting cards, said that while older generations have always looked down on younger kids or talked about things “back in their day,” she and other teens believe older people are actively hurting young people. “Everybody in Gen Z is affected by the choices of the boomers, that they made and are still making,” she said. “Those choices are hurting us and our future. Everyone in my generation can relate to that experience and we’re all really frustrated by it.”

“Gen Z is going to be the first generation to have a lower quality of life than the generation before them,” said Joshua Citarella, 32, a researcher who studies online communities. Teenagers today find themselves, he said, with “three major crises all coming to a head at the Gen Z moment.”

“Essentials are more expensive than ever before, we pay 50 percent of our income to rent, no one has health insurance,” said Mr. Citarella. “Previous generations have left Generation Z with the short end of the stick. You see this on both the left, right, up down and sideways.” Mr. Citarella added: “The merch is proof of how much the sentiment resonates with people.”

Rising inequality, unaffordable college tuition, political polarization exacerbated by the internet, and the climate crisis all fuel anti-boomer sentiment.

And so Ms. Kasman and other teenagers selling merch say that monetizing the boomer backlash is their own little form of protest against a system they feel is rigged. “The reason we make the ‘ok boomer’ merch is because there’s not a lot that I can personally do to reduce the price of college, for example, which was much cheaper for older generations who then made it more expensive,” Ms. Kasman said. “There’s not much I can personally do to restore the environment, which was harmed due to corporate greed of older generations. There’s not much I can personally do to undo political corruption, or fix Congress so it’s not mostly old white men boomers who don’t represent the majority of generations.”

Ms. Kasman said she plans to use proceeds to pay for college. So do others.

“I’ll definitely use the money for my student loans, paying my rent. Stuff that will help me survive,” said Everett Solares, 19, who is selling a slew of rainbow “ok boomer” products. “I hadn’t seen any gay stuff for ‘ok boomer,’ so I just chose every product that I could find in case anyone wanted it,” she said.

Gavin Deschutter, 17, reimagines famous logos for companies like FedEx, Budweiser, Google, and KFC with the catch phrase, and has been selling t shirts and phone cases emblazoned with the message. He hasn’t made very much — “I sold a hoodie yesterday for $36,” he said — but his designs have been shared across meme pages on Instagram.

Every movement needs an anthem, and the undisputed boomer backlash hymn is a song written and produced by Jonathan Williams, a 20-year-old college student. Titled, inevitably, “ok boomer,” the song opens with: “It’s funny you think I respect your opinion, when your hairline looks that disrespectful.”

The chorus consists of Mr. Williams screaming “ok boomer” repeatedly into the mic. Peter Kuli, a 19-year-old college student, created a remix of the song, which has seen 4,000 TikToks made from the track. The two planned to split the revenue earned through streams of the song on Spotify.

“The song is aggressive and ridiculous, but I think it says a lot about Gen Z culture,” said Mr. Kuli. “I think because of the internet, people are finally feeling like they have a voice and an outlet to critique the generations who got us into this position.”

“Millennials and Gen Xers are on our side, but I think Gen Z is finally putting their feet in the ground and saying enough is enough,” he said.

Teens say “ok boomer" is the perfect response because it’s blasé but cutting. It’s the digital equivalent of an eye roll. And because boomers so frequently refer to younger generations as “snowflakes,” a few teenagers said, it’s particularly hilarious to watch them freak out about the phrase.

“If they do take it personally, it just further proves that they take everything we do as offensive. It’s just funnier,” said Saptarshi Biswas, 17.

“Instead of taking offense to them, you’re just like, ha-ha,” said Julitza Mitchell, 18.

In the end, boomer is just a state of mind. Mr. Williams said anyone can be a boomer — with the right attitude. “You don’t like change, you don’t understand new things especially related to technology, you don’t understand equality,” he said. “Being a boomer is just having that attitude, it can apply to whoever is bitter toward change.”

“We’re not taking a jab at boomers as a whole — we’re not going for their lives,” said Christopher Mezher, 18. “If it’s a jab at anyone it’s outdated political figures who try to run our lives.”

“You can keep talking,” Ms. Kasman said, as if to a boomer, “but we’re going to change the future.”

- End of Article -
These people will use 'boomer' as an insult, but then support Hillary Clinton, a 72-year-old hag. And now, it's being promoted by The New York Times, a publication only boomers read. Isn't it ironic?
 
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12 whole pages (and counting) of people saying this meme totally doesn't make them mad. Incredible.
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It's really only the annoying woke kids who do the 'OK, Boomer.' I think they're terrified that the 'woke af' war protesting, race barrier breaking, feminist, pseudo commie, hippy generation of the 60's grew up to be conservative, and stopped pushing boundaries. Because they saw the boundaries they had gotten us to weren't evil walls constraining us anymore, but the actual support of the whole house we live in.

The woke kids are just in denial that, when life slowly hits their fantasies of a socialist woke paradise with hard reality, and as they accumulate more to lose as they have kids and jobs, they will become conservative too.
 
It's really only the annoying woke kids who do the 'OK, Boomer.' I think they're terrified that the 'woke af' war protesting, race barrier breaking, feminist, pseudo commie, hippy generation of the 60's grew up to be conservative, and stopped pushing boundaries. Because they saw the boundaries they had gotten us to weren't evil walls constraining us anymore, but the actual support of the whole house we live in.

The woke kids are just in denial that, when life slowly hits their fantasies of a socialist woke paradise with hard reality, and as they accumulate more to lose as they have kids and jobs, they will become conservative too.
A liberal is just a conservative who hasn't been mugged yet.
 
It's really only the annoying woke kids who do the 'OK, Boomer.' I think they're terrified that the 'woke af' war protesting, race barrier breaking, feminist, pseudo commie, hippy generation of the 60's grew up to be conservative, and stopped pushing boundaries. Because they saw the boundaries they had gotten us to weren't evil walls constraining us anymore, but the actual support of the whole house we live in.

The woke kids are just in denial that, when life slowly hits their fantasies of a socialist woke paradise with hard reality, and as they accumulate more to lose as they have kids and jobs, they will become conservative too.
If you're not a liberal by 20, you have no heart. If you're not a conservative by 30, you have no brain.
 
I just personally think it’s strange because these same people going “lol ok boomer” are the same ones frustrated with being called “snowflake” to shut down their arguments. It’s basically just children trading schoolyard insults at this point.

The point I'm making isn't one of moral highground, but of hypocrisy. There's no group of people that bitches as much about other generations than boomers, and yet the second you poke fun at them in any capacity, they instantly start writing headlines about how the civility of the world has disappeared. It's both funny and really dumb that the same people who are always telling others to "just toughen up" are so incredibly fragile that saying 'ok boomer' bugs them so much.
 
The point I'm making isn't one of moral highground, but of hypocrisy. There's no group of people that bitches as much about other generations than boomers, and yet the second you poke fun at them in any capacity, they instantly start writing headlines about how the civility of the world has disappeared. It's both funny and really dumb that the same people who are always telling others to "just toughen up" are so incredibly fragile that saying 'ok boomer' bugs them so much.

Most "OK boomers" are from zoomers at millennials. Real boomers are long retired and don't give a shit. Only millennials are so snowflakey and hypersensitive that they actually get mad about being called boomers.
 
True, but so do most Millennials. The Boomers are terrible, but not quite to the level of the Millennials and seeing the more "woke" Millennials throw shade at the Boomers comes across as the generational equivalent of A-Logging/troll-shielding.

Gen X is probably the most based of the older generations, and I'm cautiously optimistic for the Zoomers, I can't stand the Millennials despite being one myself, and I'm terrified of what will happen to the Alpha Generation when they reach adolescence and adulthood.

Unless the Millennials drop the woke insanity in the mid-2020's and early 2030's, the Alpha Generation could very well be the proverbial "Generation Zyklon".

The Boomers mellowed out in the 80's and 90's when they went from hippie to yuppie, but in many ways they went too far and overcorrected, giving us the Religious Right/Neocons and the Neoliberals.

I come on to read an article to hear Kiwifarm's take on generations only to see so much hatred directed not at Gen Z opportunists in the article (Are Gen Z really climate change obsessed losers? Like the article is trying to frame them?) nor at Boomers in accurate depictions of them (Not as apathetic gas guzzlers like the article is trying to frame them) but against Millennials, the literal have not generation.

Then I read your blogposts sir about how you're totally a Millennial but think Millennials are the worst for SJW crap. I'm calling you out on your Millennial bonafides. How many Millennial men have you met that give two craps about SJW stuff in your day to day life? Most Millennials are still trying to climb their way to a standard of living that their parents relatively easily acquired. Maybe some are engaging in heavy escapism (travelling and drugs) or getting a handy from a thot from behind a night club at 2 am because it's the closest they'll get.

I don't know how you can hate a generation who are experiencing the burn out Gen X did but all alone since a lot of Millennial women are under the spell of the Sex and the City lifestyle. I want to emphasize the male/female dynamic here for Gen Y because honestly if you take away the media image of the hipster, most Millennial men aren't half bad and don't believe in the SJW crap.

Most millennial men seem to be engaging in some form of escapism because they don't want to lose their entire livelihood fighting against the system because spending only 50% of their wage on a 1 bedroom apartment is a privilege they don't want to squander. The women are like 50/50. I expect to see a lot more "I spent my 20s travelling, now I'm spending my 30s alone" articles in the future.

I do like the Gen X & Gen Z alliance though and the fact that Zoomers and their Gen X parents don't give a fuck about society's ethics is really the turnaround. Boomers used to (and still do) shame Millennials for not owning an apartment by age 22. Gen X's attitude seems to be like "Whatever the world sucks, you can live at home Nick Fuentes if you want while pulling in a 80k salary off of paypal". Go ahead and fire the Zoomer and watch him laugh making money off of streaming Fortnite while his gf makes thousands of dollars wearing a low cut top playing it with him.
 
The point I'm making isn't one of moral highground, but of hypocrisy. There's no group of people that bitches as much about other generations than boomers, and yet the second you poke fun at them in any capacity, they instantly start writing headlines about how the civility of the world has disappeared. It's both funny and really dumb that the same people who are always telling others to "just toughen up" are so incredibly fragile that saying 'ok boomer' bugs them so much.
Basically what @AnOminous said. It’s gone past hypocritical and is just plain stupid.
 
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LOL at anyone thinking there was a time that generational relationships were friendly....

Every generation, without fail, grows up claiming it's the most misunderstood and unfairly treated in history, lives complaining about how they should be deified for all their suffering and having to fix their parent's fuckups, and ends convinced it was the last good one to ever exist because have you SEEN these kids coming up after us? Hope you enjoy cannibalism because society is doomed.....
 
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Most "OK boomers" are from zoomers at millennials. Real boomers are long retired and don't give a shit. Only millennials are so snowflakey and hypersensitive that they actually get mad about being called boomers.
Agree. Every situation I've seen so far was an early twenties woman on facebook saying it to an early 30 conservative male on facebook. No one is saying this to actual boomers. Zoomers don't even know what a boomer is.
 
Agree. Every situation I've seen so far was an early twenties woman on facebook saying it to an early 30 conservative male on facebook. No one is saying this to actual boomers. Zoomers don't even know what a boomer is.
Thats not what Boomer means in the context of this meme boomer

Boomerness is not being "With it" be that with youth meme culture or how to internet
 
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