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Generation Y… or Generation Doom?

Posted by casey on 05-22-2008

Last week Radar reporter Robert Lanham (author of "The Hipster Handbook") published "Generation Slap… a call to arms against Millennials." After being described as "naive, self-important, and perpetually plugged in," 22-year-old Gawker writer Alex Pareene found it necessary to step in and defend his generation.

The smartly-written response does a great job standing up for what Lanham calls the "doom generation." Yes, we read gossip sites and twitter our work days away, but we were the first generation to grow up with the means and the ability to do that kind of multitasking. Yes, we post party pictures on Facebook, but that's because we're trusting … and fun. And yes, a quick Google search yields a lot of personal history, but that doesn't mean we're the first to make young, naive mistakes — we're just the first to have our young, naive mistakes published on the net.

From Pareene's follow-up:

Their moment is over. Finally. They got more than they deserved, considering that Millennials outnumber them by nearly 50 million. There are more of us Millennials than there were Baby Boomers! We threaten to overshadow everything Generation X fought so hard for. Like Adam Sandler movies and extreme sports.

"They think updating a spreadsheet while simultaneously posting to a Twitter account about the latest gossip on perezhilton.com is an essential corporate skill," Lanham insists. "And, like Kevin, they're always doing stupid shit, but rarely getting called on it." To the contrary, Millennials are the first generation whose every dumb mistake is archived forever on computer networks. We're the first Googleable generation! (Just ask Kevin Colvin, who, unless he changes his name, will have to carry around this minor indiscretion forever.)

Gen Y's permanent records are instantly accessible by anyone and everyone with a MacBook. Or a smart phone. Maybe it's healthier that way. I certainly don't love the culture of microblogging every 40-ounce consumed, but I'll entertain the controversial opinion that it's not the end of the world. It may, in fact, make Millennials less screwed up about navigating social spheres. You won't find us wringing our hands about the dissolving borders between public and private life. We've never differentiated between the two. Yes, we overshare. But we also don't drop our monocles every time someone updates their Facebook relationship status.

When it comes down to it, both articles take a fascinating look at generational gaps and both writers present convincing cases. Do you agree with either?

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