logo
What do these kids even want? A five-course lament on Gen Z over dinner and despair

What do these kids even want? A five-course lament on Gen Z over dinner and despair

Economic Times4 days ago
There are few places better suited for reflecting on the grand decline of civilisation than a fine-dining restaurant with five courses, seven opinions, and no clear dessert of conclusion. The boardroom had moved to Indian Accent for dinner, following the successful end of a conference. The original agenda? The future of content, and Gen Z's fast-changing relationship with it. But - as is tradition with gatherings of people seasoned in life and sufficiently marinated in media - the conversation swiftly veered to the real existential question of our times: 'What do these kids even want?'
Not that anyone asked it out loud. We began, as dignified veterans do, with mushroom chili cheese toast and a civilised chat about shrinking attention spans, and how algorithms now decide not just our content diets, but possibly even our romantic ones. But by the time the Rajasthani mangori curry arrived, we were knee-deep in familiar lament: Gen Z - the therapy-frequenting, feedback-seeking, dopamine-chasing generation that believes the universe owes them clarity, closure, and preferably a trigger warning. There was near-unanimous agreement that we, the noble Gen X-Y sandwich generation, had it tougher. We survived dial-up internet, arranged marriages, and the trauma of never being praised for just showing up. We didn't have 'safe spaces' - unless you count the time-out corner after a solid scolding. We drank from garden hoses and waited 30 minutes to download a song. Our personalities were forged in buffering screens and budget constraints.Then came the inevitable segue into relationships and resilience. Divorce rates, for instance. Officially just 1% in India - unless you live in a metro, in which case it's 20%, or more, if you count the couples who remain legally married but emotionally outsourced. And as one well-marinated board member noted between bites of goat cheese dahi vada, 'Men need to be more vulnerable.' A long pause followed, as if vulnerability might be available on the menu, but only after prior reservation.Some reminded us that today's financially independent Indian woman is rewriting the script. 'Earlier, women compromised,' someone said with the wistfulness of a veteran soap opera viewer. 'Now they leave.' A beat. 'And take the dog.'Talk turned to therapy, boundaries, emotional bandwidth, and our collective flammability in the age of AI. 'We're the generation that stayed married for the children,' someone offered. 'Gen Z won't even stay for Wi-Fi.'By the time the crispy lotus root and avocado bonda made their appearance, we'd moved into the inevitable zone of self-diagnosis. We, too, were a little broken. We crave validation, but can't ask for it. We use work to dodge feelings. And we quietly believe that anyone under 30 who cries at work should probably be in sales.The fifth course - a smoky, ambiguous creation that claimed to represent fusion - arrived like a metaphor for our collective midlife confusion. It became clear that this was no longer a dinner, but a group therapy session with silverware and shared delusion.And then came the twist. As we clinked glasses and compared vitamin D levels, one question lingered: if Gen Z were at this table, what would they be complaining about?Probably this: 'Look at these Gen X uncles and aunties cribbing about us again. Can't cry, can't quit, can't communicate. They romanticise trauma, glorify burnout, and think downloading a PDF is a personality trait.' Touche.And so we left - well-fed, mildly enlightened, and deeply convinced that every generation thinks the next one is doing it all wrong, just with better lighting and worse attention spans. But perhaps that's our true legacy: the sacred art of dinner-table judgment, passed lovingly down, one course at a time. (Disclaimer: The opinions expressed in this column are that of the writer. The facts and opinions expressed here do not reflect the views of www.economictimes.com.) Elevate your knowledge and leadership skills at a cost cheaper than your daily tea. Paid less than plumbers? The real story of freshers' salaries at Infy, TCS.
Can medicines inject the vitamins Amazon is missing?
Can victims of Jane Street scam be compensated by investor protection funds?
We prefer to have idle pilots than grounded planes: Akasa CFO on losses, funding hiccups, Boeing
What if Tata Motors buys Iveco's truck unit? Will it propel or drag like JLR?
How private ARCs are losing out to a govt-backed firm dealing in bad loans
Stock picks of the week: 5 stocks with consistent score improvement and return potential of 13 to 45% in 1 year
Short-term valuation headwinds? Yes. Long-term growth potential intact? Yes. Which 'Yes' is more relevant?
F&O Radar| Deploy Bull Call Spread in Nifty to gain from a 'buy-on-dips' stance
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Meet actor who became an overnight star with his debut, did over 200 films; his daughter is a swimmer, son-in-law is a cricketer, he is…
Meet actor who became an overnight star with his debut, did over 200 films; his daughter is a swimmer, son-in-law is a cricketer, he is…

India.com

time21 minutes ago

  • India.com

Meet actor who became an overnight star with his debut, did over 200 films; his daughter is a swimmer, son-in-law is a cricketer, he is…

There are many actors and actresses in Indian cinema whose kids did not follow their parents' footsteps and chose a different path for themselves. From R. Madhavan's son Vedaant Madhavan to Sanjay Dutt's daughter Trishala, many star kids chose a life away from glitz and glamour. Today, we will discuss an actor who became a star right after his debut movie. Despite this actor being one of the known stars in the industry, his kids did not choose the same line. If you are wondering who we are talking about, then this star is none other than Thalaivasal Vijay. Who Is Thalaivasal Vijay's Daughter? Thalaivasal Vijay made a special place in the audience's hearts with his strong presence in Tamil cinema. He has acted predominantly in Tamil and Malayalam films. He made his debut with the film Thalaivaasal (1992), which became part of his stage name in Tamil cinema. Over the years, he gave several hit films and made a name for himself in the industry. Despite being one of the leading actors, Thalaivasal Vijay's daughter did not become an actress. His elder daughter Jayveena is a professional swimmer. She won a medal in the South Asian Swimming Championship in Kathmandu, Nepal. Jayveena has also received the title of 'India's fastest swimmer'. She has represented India in many international competitions. Baba Aparajith is Jayveena's husband and Vijay's son-in-law. He is an important part of the Tamil Nadu cricket team and has also played in the IPL. He made his Ranji Trophy debut at the age of 17 and was also part of the Indian team that won the 2012 Junior World Cup. Thalaivasal Vijay's family is filled with talented members who have not been limited to cinema.

Mahavatar Narsimha Collection Day 5: Ashwin Kumar's movie beats Hanuman, tops as highest-grossing animated Indian film
Mahavatar Narsimha Collection Day 5: Ashwin Kumar's movie beats Hanuman, tops as highest-grossing animated Indian film

Mint

time21 minutes ago

  • Mint

Mahavatar Narsimha Collection Day 5: Ashwin Kumar's movie beats Hanuman, tops as highest-grossing animated Indian film

Mahavatar Narsimha Box Office Collection Day 5: Ashwin Kumar's epic animated action drama continues to show strong performance at the box office. After surpassing the lifetime earnings of VG Samant's Hanuman (2005), Mahavatar Narsimha emerged as the highest-grossing animated Indian film of all time. Produced by Silvertoons, Hanuman reportedly did a business of ₹ 7.68 crore during its lifetime. Meanwhile, Mahavatar Narsimha produced under the banner Kleem Productions did a business of ₹ 7.41 crore net on Tuesday, July 29, according to industry tracker Sacnilk. Surprising cinephiles with unexpectedly high footfalls, the movie collected ₹ 29.47 crore net during its 5-day run in theatres. Recording 23.50 percent uptick in earnings on Day 5, the movie registered an overall 40.35% Telugu and 47.61% Hindi occupancy. This pan-India movie is available in in 2D and 3D formats in multiple languages, including Telugu, Kannada, Hindi, Tamil and Malayalam. After a blockbuster weekend, when it collected ₹ 14.1 crore net over the two days, the movie refused to slowdown even during weekdays. Made on a budget of ₹ 15 crore, the Sandalwood movie opened to ₹ 1.75 crore net at the box office on July 25. Film Trade analyst Taran Adarsh in a post on X stated, "The Tuesday numbers are HIGHER than Friday, Saturday, and Monday – exceptional trending... While the discounted ticket initiative did boost Tuesday's numbers, it also led to an overall increase in footfalls. #MahavatarNarsimha is clearly here to stay and is expected to continue its strong run, despite two prominent releases this Friday – #SOS2 and #Dhadak2." As Hindi version dominates its revenue flow followed by Telugu screenings, the film raked in around ₹ 9 crore on its first Tuesday — becoming the second biggest grosser for the day in India. As per Sacnilk, the Mahavatar Narsimha did a business of ₹ 34.50 crores gross ( ₹ 29 crore net) during its 5-day run in theatres, and it is eyeing ₹ 50 crore gross mark in the first week at the domestic box office.

Emily Blunt channels her inner Madonna in first look from Devil Wears Prada 2 — and she's a redhead!
Emily Blunt channels her inner Madonna in first look from Devil Wears Prada 2 — and she's a redhead!

Hindustan Times

time42 minutes ago

  • Hindustan Times

Emily Blunt channels her inner Madonna in first look from Devil Wears Prada 2 — and she's a redhead!

Emily Blunt is back! Emily Blunt returns to the Devil Wears Prada world for sequel — and the red hair is GIVING!(Photos: X, Instagram) And how! When a proper big banner sequel for 2006 cult classic The Devil Wears Prada was confirmed back in May, we could have bet our bottom dollar on the fact that Anne Hathaway's Andy Sachs and Meryl Streep's Miranda Priestly were going to steal the show. The film kicked into production earlier this month and while everyone believed the scale and 2-decade long wait for the film were sign enough of the proceedings (especially the looks) being guarded to doesn't seem to be a case at all. The marketing team seems to be on an overdrive of delivering instant gratification to the public, a new drop making its way to the internet every single day. It started with Andy, debuting her business casz style with a touch of Gen Z, footage of her running around New York still as flustered as the first film, giving us an IRL vibe check. Then came Miranda in her layered bob, sleek trench and intimidating 1000-yard stare. An absolute win, no notes. Shortly after, Stanley Tucci's Nigel was spotted dressed dapper, as he always did, really upping the knob on nostalgia. But, Emily seems to have taken the cake, baker and the whole bakery. A crisp Dior shirt with a pinstriped Jean Paul Gaultier power suit cinched in with a Wiederhoeft bustier, and a sleep sour red long bob. That's it. That's the look. And we fear it ate — not just in general, but the others' too. Emily Blunt is THAT girl as she returns to The Devil Wears Prada universe(Photos: X) Now coming to the plot, what's going on? There's a shot of Miranda and Emily entering separate cars that has really got the internet guessing. While there are clips of Andy running around after Miranda, pretty much like the first film, it seems like Emily isn't Miranda's errand girl anymore. As a matter of fact, this shot is giving nemesis energy. Take a look. Are Miranda and Emily at odds in The Devil Wears Prada sequel?(Photo: X) Besides the OGs reprising their roles, The Devil Wears Prada sequel has also cast Lucy Liu, Justin Theroux, BJ Novak and Pauline Chalamet in undisclosed roles. Kenneth Branagh has been cast as Miranda's husband with Patrick Bremmall being brought in to play Andy's boyfriend. The film is eyeing a May Day release next year.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store