What is Generation X? It’s Complicated.

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 20 тра 2024
  • The birth years for Generation X have changed quite a bit over the years, according to people who make these decisions. So, who really is a part of Gen X? I went down a bit of a rabbit hole. Here's what I found.
  • Розваги

КОМЕНТАРІ • 75

  • @chatwithaninja
    @chatwithaninja 2 місяці тому +8

    All of the entertainment at the time brought our generation together.
    All of the entertainment now drives us apart.
    I was working as a chef in fine dining in Atlanta in the early 90's and we were all excited about the Mission Impossible film, so we played a "guess the movie line" game for about 3 hours. NO ONE missed a movie quote. Females, males, younger bussers, older head chef, and even foreign maitre D's were getting in on it.

  • @jodywinter8171
    @jodywinter8171 Місяць тому +8

    1971 baby here. I was born in and grew up in New Zealand but many of the cultural references in this compilation describe Kiwi Gen Xers. I highly recommend Chuck Klosterman's book The Nineties (I listened to the audio book twice). It really helped me to understand how lucky my generation was and is. We grew up in such a (relatively) quiet time in history and we benefited from growing up pre-internet yet were young enough to fully embrace it once it really took off in the early 2000s. And I think growing up with the fear of nuclear war and AIDS shaped our approach to life in many ways.

  • @tohafi
    @tohafi 2 місяці тому +10

    Man, those old interviews are depressing...nothing is new. Every 10-20 years the same conversations...

  • @NickyByloo
    @NickyByloo 2 місяці тому +6

    Excellent work as usual. My childhood had both my parents working, the satanic panic era, T.V., VHS, collecting A-Team cards, He-Man figures, BMX, ATARI, coin-op machines at the local store, and drive-ins.

  • @WickedScott
    @WickedScott 2 місяці тому +5

    Awesome video! Love the archival footage. I myself was born in 1969, so people think my usernames are naughty, but it's my birth year! What's funny about this is seeing childhood and adolescence etc in a historical context. It's just stuff that happened but looking back makes it all look so strange and distant yet familiar and comforting.

    • @mysocalledgenxlife
      @mysocalledgenxlife  2 місяці тому +4

      I completely agree. I considered putting more of an essay at the end talking about that…but I opted to just let the footage speak for itself. And lucky you with the naughty usernames 😂😂

    • @WarPanda
      @WarPanda 2 місяці тому +2

      As someone born in the same year you speak of I hear your pain and share your occasional smirks.

  • @Theospeak1
    @Theospeak1 2 місяці тому +3

    Another great video Natalie, nailed it! A formal dress and 30 seconds in front of a news set with a professional projector behind you and you're better than Connie Chung, Leslie Stahl, or any of the current news aggregator / commentary correspondents (a la 60 Minutes). Dead serious. You're one of the few true aggregators / commentators still left in our nation. I hope you see this as a calling and never stop making these videos! You and Benny Johnson are pretty much my news and commentary now.

    • @mysocalledgenxlife
      @mysocalledgenxlife  2 місяці тому +3

      Thank you so much! I will start doing some on camera work soon. But I really like the idea of curating and aggregating vintage media. I think that’s my ultimate goal with this channel.

  • @cebukid70
    @cebukid70 Місяць тому +2

    I am ever do grateful to have lived life in the 80s, 90s, and 00s, when life and society was relatively normal. 1970 here

  • @Darthhusker
    @Darthhusker Місяць тому

    I was born the same year as yourself. My father lived in a home without running water and now my sons live in an age where the collective knowledge of the planet is in the palm of their hand. I'm proud that I'm part of the generational bridge between the old world and the new. Thanks for this retrospective.

  • @constantlyenthused336
    @constantlyenthused336 2 місяці тому +2

    Everything changes and yet nothing changes at all. Superb video.

  • @ultimateformulations
    @ultimateformulations 2 місяці тому +2

    This is awesome!
    I had a similar logo and thought it would be funny. Seriously is a good vid !

  • @gator7082
    @gator7082 2 місяці тому +2

    That was quality work, it really does paint a picture.

  • @brenthays6539
    @brenthays6539 2 місяці тому +6

    Remember when we only had a 4.5 trillion dollar debt? Good times.

  • @thomasciuffreda8783
    @thomasciuffreda8783 2 місяці тому +3

    My oldest cousins are Gen X, born in the '70's, my brother and I are Milllenials,. My oldest cousins' kids are Gen Z My youngest cousins are now having kids. So mind-blowing that their can be so many generations in families now. The sheer size of media and tech avaiable to the new gen is insane compared to Gen X. I think they won't really have a set identity because the Internet has transformed how we consume entertainment,

    • @mysocalledgenxlife
      @mysocalledgenxlife  2 місяці тому +3

      I agree about the generational identity and the changing consumption of entertainment. I’ve been kicking around a video about it. It’s almost like movies and tv ended with Gen x. Or at least it’s cultural domination

  • @jillyfae4895
    @jillyfae4895 28 днів тому +1

    Born at the end of 1960, I don't remember Kennedy's assassination, I do remember the moon landing, but couldn't understand the fuss. I don't remember Nixon's resignation (I was an early teen but politics weren't important) and I resent being considered a Boomer because of being in limbo at the end of a year. "Oh, she was born in 1960, she's a Boomer." Nope! I had divorced parents, was a latchkey kid etc, etc. To decide Gen X started in '65 rather than '61 is stupid. In fact, Gen X should actually start in '60. I agree with you completely! Your videos are great and totally resonate with me!

    • @joanhoffmann871
      @joanhoffmann871 3 дні тому +1

      I was born in ‘65 - my older sister was born in ‘63 and she’s the very definition of Gen X. Our Boomer parents raised us with zero empathy, she rebelled by becoming a social worker. No way is she a Boomer.

  • @wvu05
    @wvu05 Місяць тому +1

    8:46 And if you're a late Generation Xer who went to grad school, unless you want to live in an economically depressed era or somehow manage to get something way below market price, you're not getting any house.

  • @1walicki
    @1walicki 2 місяці тому +1

    When my class entered 1st grade (‘80/‘81) the school discovered we were trouble because we broke all the rules and didn’t care.. ‘they’ had a very difficult time controlling and keeping us inline.
    Many new rules were created after we young Xers schooled the adults… we were the Best but also the Worst; and we loved every minute playing with our environment!

  • @sjeangilles1
    @sjeangilles1 2 місяці тому +1

    This is awesome!

  • @dwayneeutsey8162
    @dwayneeutsey8162 2 місяці тому +3

    I was born in 1964 and I have never felt I was part of the Boomer generation. Growing up in the shadow of The Counterculture (TM), the Boomer ethos had an influence on me, of course. However, I actually hated a lot of Boomer icons when i was growing up in the late '60s/'70s and didn't understand what the hell happened in Vietnam, Watergate, etc., until I was almost out of high school. My sensibilities were always more in line with Gen X in the late '80s/early '90s, although I wasn't in the thick of all that, either. Honestly, the older I get the less I think these generational labels really mean much of anything at all.

  • @Poppaea-Sabina
    @Poppaea-Sabina Місяць тому

    I used to call my mom at work at least 4 times when I came home after school. I was a latchkey kid from age 9, and I was totally OK with being home alone by age 12.

  • @ultrablue2
    @ultrablue2 2 місяці тому +3

    I remember at the end of the ‘80’s/ early ‘90’s all of these news stories (read almost entirely by boomers) about “who is Gen X and what are they all about?” I remember all the movies and shows they made to try and pander to us, and it always irritated me. I remember all the 90’s (grunge) music and how the lyrics portrayed how fractured and tortured they were and thinking “this isn’t who I am, is my entire age group this broken?”, while the rest of the music seemed plastic and artificial. I also recall all the “edgy” products and marketing from the ‘90’s all aimed at what others thought I wanted, all of it trash. It seems that for much of my life the prior generations tried to define and package what I and the entirety of Gen X is, and in the process completely miss the mark.

    • @mysocalledgenxlife
      @mysocalledgenxlife  2 місяці тому +3

      I am starting to realize this now as I look back on all this vintage media. I must confess, I didn’t realize it at the time. I was their ultimate consumer.

    • @ultrablue2
      @ultrablue2 2 місяці тому +4

      @@mysocalledgenxlife The boomer generation has always bugged me, because for almost the entirety to their lives they have controlled their generational image; in the 1960’s they “rebelled” against society, created their own music and image. In the 1970’s their influences crept into the rest of the culture, corrupting it. In the 1980’s, they decided to grow up and take control, going yuppie and corporate. In the 1990’s and beyond they dug into politics and settled into being the ruling class as they slowly have aged out; but from on high, they tried to define all of the later generations in their eyes. I remember boomers on television programs looking at my generation and scoffing, saying we were “slackers”; I’m sorry, but wasn’t it you and your ilk in your twenties at Woodstock, sliding around in the mud minus your clothes talking about your “free love”? That seemed the epitome of irony. Generation X has had to deal with the results and the blowback of the boomers; the only good thing is that there millennial offspring seem to carry disdain for them and their ways. It’s a case of you reap what you sow.

    • @mysocalledgenxlife
      @mysocalledgenxlife  2 місяці тому +1

      @@ultrablue2 I think your comments here have inspired a future video 😊thank you so very much for sharing.

    • @kieraingeaney6437
      @kieraingeaney6437 Місяць тому +1

      @@ultrablue2 millennial here that last part of your comment is a generalisation that doesn’t apply to me, being born with a disability I’ve actually found more acceptance and tolerance towards me FROM the boomers and Xers I know than my own generation, however I’m the exception not the rule I realise that and I’m okay with that

  • @Idellphany
    @Idellphany 2 місяці тому +2

    Wow this is great! Thank you. I'm born in '81 so I've always looked up to my older Gen X cousins.

    • @mysocalledgenxlife
      @mysocalledgenxlife  2 місяці тому +2

      I’m starting a movement to include the early 80s babies again. 😂😂 you’re an Xer in my book.

  • @FionaEm
    @FionaEm Місяць тому

    I'm Australian, but an awful lot of these clips ring true. Gen X in Australia was the first generation since the Depression to experience job insecurity, particularly in the white collar sector where corporate takeovers and downsizing eradicated any illusions we may have had about 'jobs for life'. We learned there was no such thing as an 'entitlement' to an easy ride; the world didn't owe us a living. We had great pop culture though, which I'll always be grateful for 😊

  • @xandercruz900
    @xandercruz900 2 місяці тому +3

    Born in 78. I did find some of the news clips funny in how we all had the same issues that Zoomers had but we really just sucked it up and pulled it out of our arses. i mean, what good is whining going to do when you got bills to pay?
    My two older sisters and I were definitely those latchkey kids too. Mom worked from 6am-3pm, and dad worked from 3pm-1am, so we had from 2-4 to get home, get inside, make something to eat, and watch TV.

    • @mysocalledgenxlife
      @mysocalledgenxlife  2 місяці тому +3

      That’s what really got me too…how similar Gen x issues were to Gen Z. It was a bit surprising because I don’t really remember it that way. But maybe that’s because we didn’t really whine. We made it work.

    • @gator7082
      @gator7082 2 місяці тому +2

      @@mysocalledgenxlife I think they did the same thing back then that they do now, base all of their interviews in places like NYC or LA and project onto the rest of the country, the exception being the Wisconsin gal.

    • @mysocalledgenxlife
      @mysocalledgenxlife  2 місяці тому +2

      @@gator7082 excellent point. That could be an idea for a future video topic. Thank you!

    • @jonv570
      @jonv570 Місяць тому

      boy I could make some really good toast back in the day

  • @tomtravis3077
    @tomtravis3077 2 місяці тому +3

    Alright, no more Herbie Hancock as background music. I had to stop the video midway, get out some cardboard, and do some break dancing.

    • @mysocalledgenxlife
      @mysocalledgenxlife  2 місяці тому +2

      😂😂😂😂

    • @FionaEm
      @FionaEm Місяць тому

      That song was huge in Australia. Now it's stuck in my head again 😅

  • @TheInnerParty
    @TheInnerParty 10 днів тому

    Professor of economics across three decades here.
    Contrast this generation with GenZ, who increasingly actually have their mothers accompany them to the first day of university. This never used to happen, now at least once or twice each semester.
    Sometimes it even involves confrontation. I'm sorry mom, you can't sit in the class with your 18-year-old adult son. You haven't paid tuition. And I really think little Johnny could have found his way to the classroom by himself.

  • @kieraingeaney6437
    @kieraingeaney6437 Місяць тому +2

    i'm a millennial but most of (if not all) my friends are Gen X and boomers, i use records and tapes and i've seen the Challenger disaster and most of the movies i watched as a kid were from the 80s and early 90s i may be millennial by definition but spiritually i consider myself an X

    • @mysocalledgenxlife
      @mysocalledgenxlife  Місяць тому

      I consider you an honorary Xer. Did you ever drink out of a garden hose? 😊

    • @kieraingeaney6437
      @kieraingeaney6437 Місяць тому

      Probably when I was very little, I also remember a time without the internet and smart phones mobile phones (as we call them in in Australia) when I was little in the 90s were bricks that lasted you literal years my mother had a late 90s Nokia that she didn’t get replaced til around 2006

    • @mysocalledgenxlife
      @mysocalledgenxlife  Місяць тому +1

      @@kieraingeaney6437 if you remember life before internet and cell phones, then you are definitely an honorary Xer. Or maybe a Xennial like me? They are born 77-83. I’m a 77 baby.

    • @kieraingeaney6437
      @kieraingeaney6437 Місяць тому

      @@mysocalledgenxlife no I was born in 1992 but in the 90s my family (as well as many others) didn’t have the internet, we got dial up in 2002 right as broadband was coming in lol my oldest sister was born 1984 and by a lot of the new definitions coming out it sounds like she’s a xennial (barely as I’ve seen Xennial end as late as 1985)

  • @danielherrin
    @danielherrin 2 місяці тому +1

    I remember most of the stuff in this video.

  • @lavondabland3179
    @lavondabland3179 23 дні тому

    Okay chart and info at 16:05 is uh, no just no no no no no. Anyone else see it 😨?

  • @grayj7441
    @grayj7441 Місяць тому +1

    The children of Nam

  • @olw4196
    @olw4196 Місяць тому +1

    Hey you guysssss!🏴‍☠️

  • @dhtsoaedsdhtnadi9575
    @dhtsoaedsdhtnadi9575 26 днів тому

    part fact and part my opinion
    the lucky few came of age between ww2 and the cultural revolution of the 1960s. this period, at least in the united states, was marked by no significant change in geopolitics, technology, economy, or social values. i'm not aware of any subgroups here aside from those related to art and entertainment.
    boomers had an early, mid, and late period. the early boomers came of age during a culture revolution that divided the entire generation between conservative establishment and progressive anti-establishment. the middle boomers continued the revolution into the 1970s with the sexual revolution, which wasn't just about adventures in the act but the state of being and equal rights amendment. the two sides of the revolution continued in opposition to each other, with one side clinging to put a ring on it and women maintaining their place (not every woman was in favor of the amendment), and the other side experimenting with polyamory and demanding equal pay for equal work. late boomers in the early 80s saw a time that was less about change and more about battling over where the line would settle. the conservative establishment made their greatest gains at restoring pre-revolution order during this time, but ultimately failed, perhaps because it presumed too much.
    for gen x, the subgroups tend to be in 3-year increments as geopolitics, technology, economy, social values, and pop-culture shifted rapidly. gen x is not enough context. you pretty much have to give year of birth. this is perhaps truest of the cuspers called xennials, of which i'm a part. we were the target age for things like inspector gadget but we also got in on a-team when we were trying to keep up with the older gen-x, and as we came of age we were the target audience for shows like party of 5 but still watched bobby's world because we didn't want to grow up. much of the pop-culture we consumed was escapism from bickering boomers. in the states, i feel like we're the silent political middle. like, hey, equal pay for equal work ain't a bad thing, but maybe there are some jobs women excel at because they are women, and some jobs men excel at because we're men. these jobs shouldn't be closed off, but if you enter a job that is traditionally the domain of one or the other, maybe don't come in like you're invading normandy? and suddenly the great e.r.a. debate is solved (albeit moot since the amendment died). but no, boomers are still in control in DC and gen-x is marginalized, partly our own doing too since we're perhaps the most apathetic generation when it comes to voting.
    i feel like hawkeye chanting WE WANT SOMETHING ELSE

  • @DyenamicFilms
    @DyenamicFilms Місяць тому

    I call us Gen X'ers the "Korean War Veterans" of generations.

  • @clarky417
    @clarky417 2 місяці тому +2

    i am 57 and definitely a latchkey kid. I love the 80s great time to be alive.

  • @johncollins1884
    @johncollins1884 Місяць тому

    @mysocalledgenxlife
    Natalie, do you have a degree in anthropology and or sociology? If not, you should. -
    Your presentations are thought-provoking and fascinating.

    • @mysocalledgenxlife
      @mysocalledgenxlife  Місяць тому +1

      Thank you! My degree is in journalism and business communications. But I did take a lot of sociology and culture classes in school and have a major obsession with 20th century American history and pop culture.

  • @nerd1858
    @nerd1858 Місяць тому

    Wow that Coupland author didn't know anything

  • @Sweetanabel17
    @Sweetanabel17 Місяць тому

    My Parents are gen x And this video reminds me what they Say about their childhood

  • @candybanks8717
    @candybanks8717 Місяць тому +1

    "Teach your kids to dial 911"? Isn't that just the last two words of the sentence? I'm an older X, so I remember before 911 and before all the moms went to work. Before that, if you had a horrible day at school, mom was waiting at home and had the power to make it all go away, even if you didn't tell her what happened. Most of us were prevented or killed by the Pill or abortion because we were "cramping their style". We were the first suicide generation, but our numbers were too low to make an impact nationally. I myself was profoundly blessed to have the parents and family I did. Many of my classmates weren't so lucky. For youngsters now, it's far, far worse. Social trauma doesn't end with the 3 0'clock school bell, with social media, it's just getting started. My heart breaks for them.

  • @ferdinandcastagnera794
    @ferdinandcastagnera794 Місяць тому

    The Millennial generation is born after the turn of the century, not before!! Generation Z is also born after the turn of the century & not before!!

    • @mysocalledgenxlife
      @mysocalledgenxlife  Місяць тому +2

      No…millennials are 1981 to 1996. And Gen z began before the turn of the century.

    • @ferdinandcastagnera794
      @ferdinandcastagnera794 Місяць тому

      @@mysocalledgenxlife Let's keep in mind two things: #1) Your stupid!! #2) I'm always right!!

  • @Elsewhen404
    @Elsewhen404 Місяць тому +1

    My age group, Natalie, the last one to have ANY common sense.

  • @prettypennyschannel
    @prettypennyschannel 2 місяці тому

    Are you aware that the author of Generation X is a Canadian Boomer?

    • @mysocalledgenxlife
      @mysocalledgenxlife  2 місяці тому +1

      Did you watch the video? I made it clear he was born in 1961 and the original definition of Gen x was 1961-1971.

    • @prettypennyschannel
      @prettypennyschannel 2 місяці тому

      @@mysocalledgenxlife Um, No. Actually that wasn't At first, it was 1965 to 1983, then it was changed to 1965 to 1980.

    • @mysocalledgenxlife
      @mysocalledgenxlife  2 місяці тому +4

      @@prettypennyschannel this video is literally about the changing definitions of Gen X over the years from different sources. If that’s what you believe, fine. But I spent hours researching this and reading tons of books, news articles, and watching hours of news footage from the 80s and 90s. The first person to call us Gen x was Coupland. Who defined it as 1961-1971. Then Strauss and Howe changed it to 1961-1981. Then it changed many times after. You can argue with me all you want, but I stand on the work I did to make this video. You obviously didn’t watch it and are here to make critical comments. Thanks for the engagement.

    • @jonv570
      @jonv570 Місяць тому +1

      ​@prettypennyschannel champ you're wrong, she's done a great job creating this video and you want to play whos got the biggest dik, well done.