Scholarship table
Just flew for 7 hours over the atlantic, my seat mate, a millennial, said, "hi".
That is so cool. Insanely jealous. I hope you enjoyed the peace and tranquility and used the time to rest and ponder life's big questions.
He spent 7 hours playing video games and he was in his early 20's. My wife speaks Italian, I don't, all I do is eat real food without additives, ponder life's big questions and listen to the bell's tolling.
Wow, I'm very concerned for Benny. Being able to mimic Myron Medcalf's writing so closely implies an oncoming case of dementia.
Very stressed apparently Slow WiFi and broken phones, having to sit in traffichttps://www.studyfinds.org/survey-millennials-life-more-stressful-than-ever-before/
You mock. But life is tough out there.https://www.barstoolsports.com/barstoolu/sorority-sisters-raise-money-for-poor-friend-to-upgrade-to-coachella-vip-passes
Breaking news: Maslow's Hierarchy has been updated:
To be fair this is something that is for everyone, not just gen y and gen z. Heck last summer I had to tell my mom to stop texting during a wedding ceremony.
Exactly, its funny to see phone obsession be chalked up to a millennial thing when they certainly aren't the ones posting endless mobile updates to Facebook and charging stations in public areas/restaurants/airports/etc... are certainly not catering to a singular age demo.Can also guarantee that when you heard a phone beeping or ringing in a quiet area where it should be not, odds are its not a millennial or younger.
Nike understands. Last year, it released an ad featuring Colin Kaepernick, and while the inclusion of the controversial quarterback-turned-activist initially spooked investors, the shares have since rebounded. And there are indications that ads have helped boost sales.
...spooked by the relative small number of angry consumers screaming, "I'll never buy another Nike product!"
To what extent is the mirroring of Millennial "interests/obsessions" by older generations potentially the result of the "middle-age crisis" or related phenomenon? In other words, to what extent is a 50 year-old's Facebook/Instagram obsession being triggered as a coping mechanism vs. being an actual interest? When I used to hang out at Aladdin's Castle in my teens, I never recall seeing anyone in there over 30... but walk into a Starbucks, and half the people in there hashtagging are just a few years away from being hooked up to a catheter.
Who, six months later, quietly replaced the Nike shoes they had burned in protest, thus boosting Nike’s sales.
IMO. The universality of the connected lifestyle is the primary culprit. We are only still a matter of years into most citizens having access to high speed internet and optimized content on their smartphones - a device through which a person consumes most of their advertising and learns most about what interest them. The lifestyle of a typical elderly person used to be quite different than their younger counterparts, and now, not as much. I wouldn't say it has to do with a lust for "mellenial lifestyle".All of the primary tech players research and invest heavily across all age demographics. This wasn't always the case as computer literacy used to be highly focused among younger people.
Or, in my case, made Nike the first place I looked when I needed new shoes/polo/etc before moving on to other places if I couldn't find what I wanted through Nike. Just to tick off the people I knew it would tick off.