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Is the ‘Gen Z stare' real? We asked the experts: our interns.

Is the ‘Gen Z stare' real? We asked the experts: our interns.

Washington Post6 days ago
Arts & Entertainment
Is the 'Gen Z stare' real? We asked our interns.
July 21, 2025 | 5:59 PM GMT
The emotionless expression teens and young adults sometimes make if someone inconveniences them by saying 'hi,' tries to engage in small talk with them, or tries to take their food order finally has a name: the Gen Z stare.
Why the Gen Z stare has every generation talking
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Hulk Hogan Real American Beer is selling out after WWE wrestler's death
Hulk Hogan Real American Beer is selling out after WWE wrestler's death

Miami Herald

time20 hours ago

  • Miami Herald

Hulk Hogan Real American Beer is selling out after WWE wrestler's death

Only a pro wrestling legend like Hulk Hogan could beat the alcohol sales slump. Real American Beer, co-founded by Hulk Hogan, is quickly selling out across stores nationwide following the news of his death. He passed away on July 24 after suffering a cardiac arrest at his home in Clearwater, Florida. Don't miss the move: Subscribe to TheStreet's free daily newsletter From his recognizable bleached-blond hair, signature mustache, and iconic bandanas, Terry Gene Bollea, known in the entertainment industry as Hulk Hogan, was one of the most legendary professional American wrestlers in history. He rose to fame for his time with WWE and World Championship Wrestling (WCW). Founded in 2024, Real American Beer is the official beer and sponsor of Real American Freestyle, a new pro wrestling league co-founded by Hulk Hogan in April. Related: Guinness beer partners with ice cream brand known for wild flavors The demand for the beer has been so high that the official website now has an announcement with the following message to customers: "We're experiencing high order volume and working hard to get every package out. Shipping may take 2-4 weeks to begin tracking." Real American Beer has become Hogan's fans' way to commemorate his legacy. Following the passing of Hulk Hogan, Real American Beer took to Instagram to honor him with a heartfelt post. "When we set out to launch Real American Beer one year ago, it was with Hulk's vision and mission. He said he believed that Real American Beer and its message to America could leave an even bigger legacy than his wrestling career," the post stated. Related: Netflix makes another major change subscribers will hate Hundreds of Hulk Hogan fans flooded the Instagram post with messages about the beloved pro wrestler and his beer brand. A netizen commented, "I will be drinking a few today in his memory. Rest easy, Hulkster, we love you." Another user commented, "Now we bring his legacy to every bar, every billboard, and every beer-drinking American in his honor!! My condolences." A loyal fan even revealed he would be breaking his sobriety by commenting, "I don't drink at all, but I will be going to the supermarket today to get a case and have one for him." Alcohol sales have fallen since their peak during the COVID-19 pandemic, as economic uncertainty and rising inflation have led consumers to reduce their spending, and now tariffs have become yet another factor affecting the already challenged alcohol industry. Additionally, changing consumer habits are reshaping the market. Younger generations, particularly Millennials and Gen Z, are becoming more health-conscious, driving a 6% year-over-year increase in non-alcoholic beverage consumption in the U.S. U.S. beer products and imports declined by 1% in 2024, while craft brewer volume sales dropped 4%. This has slightly reduced small and independent brewers' share of the U.S. beer market by volume to 13.3%, according to data from the Brewers Association. Beer sales might be down overall, but the success of Real American Beer is a testament to Hulk Hogan's strong influence and long-lasting legacy. Related: Veteran fund manager unveils eye-popping S&P 500 forecast The Arena Media Brands, LLC THESTREET is a registered trademark of TheStreet, Inc.

We have seen better days, San Francisco
We have seen better days, San Francisco

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timea day ago

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We have seen better days, San Francisco

It's the midpoint of a long, cold summer, and San Franciscans are restless. San Francisco seems to have lost its edge. Now is the summer of our discontent, as Shakespeare might say. If Shakespeare were here, he'd be worried, too. The arts are in trouble, community theaters have lost their audiences, museums are closing or cutting staff, the Opera is having problems, and Esa-Pekka Salonen has left the S.F. Symphony. Even the venerable Mountain Play skipped a season on Mount Tamalpais this year for the first time in 80 years. The audience wasn't there. San Francisco's formally fabled nightlife has gone dark. The gloom is widespread: D'Arcy Drollinger, the city's Drag Laureate, plans to close Oasis, a fabled drag club. 'We've been struggling, like a lot of other venues,' he said. 'Our margins are razor-thin.' Ben Bleiman reopened Harrington's, an old school bar in the Financial District, on the theory that the city was on the rebound. 'The fact that we are breaking even is a miracle,' he said. He should know. He's the president of the city's entertainment commission. The main question now is to find someone, or some group, to blame for this situation. The current thinking is that it's the young people — Gen Z, those born starting in 1997 and mostly in their 20s now. They drink tap water and Red Bull instead of craft beer and martinis, according to experts. Or maybe it's Gen X who are to blame for ruining things. Or the millennials, born after 1980, the children of Baby Boomers. They are old enough now to know better. One thing is clear: San Francisco is not what it was. It's those new people. They don't understand. My father used to talk that way, too. He used to say San Francisco was a lot better years ago — it was a golden age, he said. It was only later that I realized it wasn't a golden age for San Francisco so much as it was a golden age for him. It was like what they said about Lefty O'Doul: He was here at a good time, and he had a good time when he was here. You don't know Lefty O'Doul? You must be new in town. I was thinking of those times one day last week when I rode the 1-California bus from an appointment out in the Richmond heading downtown. Through the Western Addition, down California Street, switched to Sacramento Street, over Nob Hill, through Chinatown to Portsmouth Square, through the oldest part of the city. It was remarkably unchanged; the buildings looked the same, and the city had that hard-to-define San Francisco feel, as if something interesting might happen at any time. The city is full of high tech and AI is next, but on Kearny Street near Sacramento, two women were making dumplings by hand in a restaurant window. Enough of the familiar San Francisco. I thought. So I headed south, south of Market, south of the ballpark, to Mission Bay. It's a new city down there, all square glass buildings, not a breath of the old city. I am reminded again of the story Herb Caen told about the San Franciscan who died and went to heaven. 'It's nice,' he said. 'But it's not San Francisco.' I had lunch at Thrive City and watched a lunch hour exercise class, men and women stretching, bending, reaching for the sky outdoors in the plaza. Not the graceful tai chi programs you see at Washington Square in North Beach. Something new. Crowds of people, much younger than the usual city crowd, streamed by. The area around Chase Center is full of new restaurants, new parks and new people. Only a few years ago, this area on the edge of the bay was derelict, like the seacoast of nowhere — the railroad yard was empty, the ships had sailed, and weeds grew wild. A few remnants remain, including a dock where barges carrying freight cars tied up, like an artifact from the industrial past. Next to that is the clubhouse of the Bay View Boat Club, where salty San Franciscans come to drink beer and tell stories about the good times. Lady Gaga played Chase Center that night. A sold-out crowd. She had a show people wanted to see. Maybe all is not lost. So maybe this is the future of San Francisco, a mix of an older city and the new one. All glass and clean living mixed in with the city and a lifestyle we all came to admire. That's the way of cities: Tastes change. The best of the past survives, but something better usually comes along. Old-timers remember the scent of roasting coffee on the Embarcadero, but Hills Bros. could not compete with Starbucks. Maybe Gen Alpha — the only generation to live entirely in the 21st century — will adopt the philosophy of Marine Gen. O.P. Smith, a graduate of UC Berkeley. When asked whether his troops were retreating, he said: 'Retreat, hell! We're just attacking in another direction.'

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