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I'm Sorry Millennials, But There's Absolutely Zero Chance You Will Be Able To Pass This Quiz...Plus Four More Quizzes You Might Do Well On

I'm Sorry Millennials, But There's Absolutely Zero Chance You Will Be Able To Pass This Quiz...Plus Four More Quizzes You Might Do Well On

Buzz Feed28-06-2025
The aim of these quizzes is to distinguish all the millennials out there from Gen Z, Gen X, or cuspers on either end. Nobody's saying any one generation is better than the other, only that there are certain things the millennial mind will remember a bit better.
I'm Sorry Millennials, But There's Absolutely Zero Chance You Will Be Able To Pass This Quiz
In theory, millennials shouldn't do so great on this quiz unless you were particularly observant and have a great memory. Are you up for the challenge? Take the quiz here.
Only Millennial Women Will Remember What These Specific Products From The '90s And 2000s Are
These products were incredibly popular among teenagers in their heyday, so if you're the right age you'll definitely remember them. Take the quiz here.
You're Officially An Elder Millennial Or Young Gen X'er If You've Done Half Of These 48 Things (Unless You Lie And Say You Did)
This quiz won't ask you to recognize any more ancient artifacts, but it will ask you to admit if you ever did something as embarrassing as drawing a fingerstache or wearing a fedora. Take the quiz here.
Only Millennials Will Be Able To Correctly Answer These Real Jeopardy! Questions About 1990s Movie Quotes
Really, anyone with good taste should recognize these movie lines. But millennials should find these Jeopardy! questions especially easy. Take the quiz here.
Sorry Millennials, If These 31 Films Aren't On Your Watched List, Are You Really One Of Us?
No right or wrong answers here. We just want to know if you're familiar with these cinematic touchstones of millennial culture. Take the quiz here.
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Gen Z women are using Hinge to get their furniture built by matches — for free
Gen Z women are using Hinge to get their furniture built by matches — for free

New York Post

time39 minutes ago

  • New York Post

Gen Z women are using Hinge to get their furniture built by matches — for free

Move over, Mr. Right — Gen Z gals are looking for Mr. Fix-It. Savvy single ladies in NYC and beyond are treating the dating app Hinge like a handyman service —updating their profiles on the trendy pair-off platform to say they can be 'won over' by a man who can help them install, well, hinges. Dinner and drinks? Later for that — these practical women on the prowl say the ideal 'first date' includes hex keys and hammer drills. 'I feel like guys need a little job or mission, and then they feel so happy. They're like a golden retriever [dog] — they accomplished something and are happy to help,' Hinge habitué Storm Halestrap, 24, of Prospect Lefferts Gardens, Brooklyn, told The Post of the 'Bob the Builder' trend. 6 Forget cocktails — these no-nonsense bachelorettes say the hottest first date involves hex keys, hammer drills, and hanging shelves, not out at bars. Donald Pearsall / NY Post Design The professional photographer participated in the handyman-hustling Hinge hack on social media, posting a video —albeit a cheeky one — back in April that showed a man crouched on the floor assembling a wooden table with a drill. 'POV: You get your Hinge date to build your new TikTok shop furniture,' the caption read. It turns out that the man featured is her current boyfriend, whom she did meet on the popular app, Halestrap told The Post, though she didn't nab him while looking for Mr. Fix-It. However, the impetus for her video was that she previously had multiple successes meeting similarly service-minded suitors on Hinge. During her senior year at Parsons School of Design, Halestrap matched with a finance bro shortly after moving to Midtown — and casually mentioned that her dark, tiny bedroom needed some sprucing up. 'I remember telling one of my Hinge matches about this and how I wanted plants to brighten up my room, and he said, 'Well, I think we have to do that for our first date — I'll buy you all the plants you need to fill your room,'' she recalled. @lily_halest This video made me realise that actually none of the furniture in my room has been put togther by me :) ♬ I'm a Princess – Moey's Music Party The two got drinks to loosen up, then stumbled into Home Depot on the Upper East Side, where he filled her cart with greenery and helped haul it all back. A year earlier, while living in the East Village, she invited a different guy over who zeroed in on her bare bedroom walls and immediately offered to hang her frames — even insisting on buying nails and a lamp to brighten the space. 'I thought it was funny how I brought this guy into my bedroom, and his first thought was to start fixing things and telling me what I needed to fix in my room,' Halestrap recounted. 6 'I feel like guys need a little job or mission, and then they feel so happy,' Storm Halestrap (above) told The Post of her creative Hinge hack. @storm_halestrap 6 Halestrap sent this image to a potential handyman suitor to show him where she needed some prints expertly hung. Experts say the chivalry-tinged trend taps into a post-pandemic shift: ladies want utility — not just chemistry. 'It mimics the most traditional dynamic — the man fixes, the woman asks for help,' Dr. Jennifer Gunsaullus, a sociologist, speaker and founder of The Center for Courageous Intimacy, told The Post. 'The men get to impress through action — not just words — and show off problem-solving skills right from the jump,' she explained. Hinge declined to comment when contacted by The Post. 6 Experts say the 'Bob the Builder' dating trend reflects a post-pandemic pivot — women now want usefulness, not just butterflies. AntonioDiaz – The stories are popping up all over TikTok these days — with allegedly satisfied users showing off everything from built bed frames to hung cabinets. And after a Post reporter added a call for shelf-and-curtain-rod removal to their own Hinge profile, offers of help came hammering in — with get-it-done guys declaring their willingness to work before, during or after a date. 'I think this trend is super cute and nice to know that the guys want to help out. It shows that they're a good sport about it and the kind of person they are,' Teana Heys, 23, of Seattle, told The Post. Heys' TikTok telling of her own experience went viral last September, showing her former roommate in Phoenix and a Hinge match getting down to business — with a power drill. In the clip, the man is seen preparing to mount a TV on their wall as the cheeky caption declares: 'We're just girls utilizing our resources.' Heys told The Post that the roomie had proudly listed 'looking for a handyman' in her Hinge bio — and was met with enthusiastic prospects. 'A lot of guys actually responded to it, asking her what she needed fixed,' she said. Another Seattle resident, Rimika Banerjee, 24, had similar success reaching out for help after a recent move. 'I was anticipating having to build all the furniture myself — it was stressful,' Banerjee told The Post. 'I remember thinking, 'This is a situation where it would be nice to have a boyfriend,' but I didn't, so I just went straight to Hinge.' 6 After a Post reporter swapped flirty banter for a call to yank shelves and curtain rods, Hinge handymen came hammering — eager to work it before, during or after a date. Banerjee said the handyman hook was her hottest Hinge prompt yet — racking up more matches and messages than any flirty one-liner ever could, resulting in her ideal meet-up. 'He helped build my bed frame and was one of the nicest guys I've met on Hinge,' she said. 'It felt like getting the boyfriend experience on a first date.' Banerjee said building furniture together took the pressure off, created instant chemistry, and helped break the ice — and even though the pair didn't end up dating, it made what would have been a chore into a happy experience. 'These tasks can be annoying, but if you have an attractive guy around, they can be more fun,' she explained. 'It mimics a real-life partner situation.' But while relationship expert Gunsaullus applauded the 'authentic' nature of the DIY dates, calling them 'refreshing,' they're not without risks, she warned. 'Letting someone into your home on a first date is serious. You should ask yourself: Do I really trust this person?' she said, recommending at least a few meetups — preferably three — before inviting anyone in for a home project. 6 Relationship guru Gunsaullus called these DIY dates 'authentic' and 'refreshing' — but warned they're not exactly screw-up proof. Monkey Business – Gunsaullus also raised concerns about men feeling exploited, particularly if they're unaware they're being filmed for social media clout. 'I would hate for a man to just feel used … like he was handy and social media fodder,' she said.

Microsoft employee slammed for time spent on breaks and grabbing snacks: ‘Pretending to work is more stressful than actually working'
Microsoft employee slammed for time spent on breaks and grabbing snacks: ‘Pretending to work is more stressful than actually working'

New York Post

time2 hours ago

  • New York Post

Microsoft employee slammed for time spent on breaks and grabbing snacks: ‘Pretending to work is more stressful than actually working'

Working hard — or hardly working? Mansi Singhal, a 24-year-old software engineer, has gone viral several times over after she revealed what a day in her life at a Microsoft office — where she works in Hyderabad, India — looks like in an Instagram reel. Between a 45-minute breakfast break, a dessert run and a quick gaming interlude, Singhal's representation of office life has many people baffled and wondering when she gets any work done — while being simultaneously jealous of the wild variety of snack offerings. Advertisement Social media users analyzed her video intensely, and given the timestamps included, many suspect that her day is made up of more breaks than the average office worker. One commenter suggested that 'the most generous read is 6h15m of work and 3h10m of breaks,' though others thought that was quite a benevolent take indeed — and guessed Singhal's actual work time was just around three or four hours. Advertisement 3 Many large tech companies like Microsoft offer communal working spaces, like this one in Microsoft's Gurgaon office, to boost productivity, creativity and collaboration among coworkers. Hindustan Times via Getty Images 3 'That's why Windows always has problems,' one commented quipped under Singhal's original Instagram post. Hindustan Times via Getty Images Modern tech and Silicon Valley-style offices have garnered reputations for wild office environments, with many buildings offering amenities ranging from free lunch to cold brew on tap to hammocks to relax in — but social media users seem to think Singhal's daily in-office routine takes the madness to the next level. Advertisement 'This woman started her lunch at 1:00 and didn't resume work until 2:15? Unless she's trying to eat an entire ham by herself, that's crazy,' one X user wrote. 'The 'adult day care' label is more than earned. I'm surprised there's no designated nap time.' 'I would be SO fried there. Pretending to work is more stressful than actually working,' continued the same user, referring to the 'ghostworking' trend sweeping across burned-out Gen Z corporate employees — AKA, fake it 'til you make it. Some users have stumbled across the video have also wondered how Singhal has managed to hold onto her job — especially amid the tech company's recent layoffs, which impacted 9,000 employees — but the software developer recently posted on her Instagram account, celebrating two years at Microsoft, so she must be doing something right. 'This is the schedule of a hard worker at Microsoft,' vouched a former employee under a post on X. 'The slackers are coming in at 11 and leaving at 4.' Advertisement In a post made since she shared the viral day in the life video, Singhal did admit that she tends to show the 'good side of dev life,' and said that it tends to be a lot more chaotic and difficult than it seems through the screen. 3 Singhal said that she arrives at the office by 9 a.m. and leaves by 6:30 p.m. Instagram/ Other Microsoft 'day in my life' style videos have gone viral over the years, indicating that despite what Singhal's post suggests, software engineers do actually work. With all the amenities, flexible working opportunities and breaks taken throughout the day, some social media users have labeled office environments like Singhal's 'actual adult daycare,' but other corporate employees say this kind of treatment is the bare minimum, especially in an era where many jobs can be done from home. 'For full RTO, if they want workers to go back to pre-COVID, the office needs to go pre-COVID too,' one X user explained, emphasizing that the right benefits are a big push in boosting in-office attendance. The Post has reached out to both Microsoft and Singhal for comment.

A new restaurant rating app is luring young Bay Area diners away from Yelp
A new restaurant rating app is luring young Bay Area diners away from Yelp

San Francisco Chronicle​

time3 hours ago

  • San Francisco Chronicle​

A new restaurant rating app is luring young Bay Area diners away from Yelp

Zo Mendez didn't have a reservation at the hot new San Francisco restaurant Jules. So he arrived early, inconspicuously dressed in all black from his beanie to his Adidas high tops, and settled into a seat at the bar. While he hardly stood out from the crowd, Mendez is, by one measure, among the most powerful food influencers in the city. Mendez dominates on Beli, a restaurant rating app that's sending thousands of Bay Area foodies, particularly younger ones, into a frenzy. Beli users have left 3.6 million restaurant reviews in the Bay Area, said Chief Technology Officer Eliot Frost, who runs the company in New York City with his wife and co-founder, CEO Judy Thelen. Unlike other apps, such as the 20-year-old Yelp, where everyone sees ratings from strangers, Beli users only see their friends' reviews. But Mendez appears on the app-wide leaderboard — in San Francisco, he's the top-ranked user. 'It's tasty, dude,' he remarked after a waiter brought out a crudo appetizer with yellowtail, blood orange and capers. What pleased Mendez more, though, was the down-to-earth, satisfying pepperoni pizza. Per his 'pepperoni pizza rule,' he tries the trustworthy pie at every pizza restaurant he goes to, as a reference point. The meal at Jules ultimately earned an 8.2 rating out of 10, which Beli calculates for users by asking a series of 'this or that' comparisons to other restaurants a user has visited. For San Francisco's number one reviewer, Mendez is surprisingly minimal with his posts. Like all the reviews before it, the Jules review was barren, with no photos or descriptions — which the app allows — just a rating. He pays for all his meals himself, except for lunches delivered to the office of the company where he works. At 34 years old, Mendez said he's the oldest person he knows that uses Beli. The app doesn't collect age-related data, Thelen told the Chronicle in an interview, but it's 'relatively split' between a Gen Z and millennial audience. Powered by this younger user base, Beli boasts 70 million restaurant ratings worldwide — more than Yelp — Frost claimed. But most local owners told the Chronicle they'd never heard of Beli. Gerad Gobel of Rose Pizzeria, which is among Mendez's top-ranked restaurants, said it's unclear if Beli is impacting his business. Mendez recently awarded it a 9.8, causing 87 of his followers to bookmark the restaurant as one to try. But Gobel said it was more obvious when rave reviews from Chronicle critics and New York Times lists boosted reservations at his neighborhood restaurant. 'I don't know when we started getting reviewed on Beli, but I would say, in the past four or five months, you can definitely tell we're getting a more 20-something crowd,' Gobel said. Still, the app wasn't personally appealing to him. 'I'm a millennial with creaking bones now,' he said. 'I am currently out of the Zeitgeist.' Brandon Rice, chef-owner of the San Francisco restaurant Ernest, was also unfamiliar with the app. But he downloaded Beli for the first time to check it out. 'Ernest is pretty good on it,' Rice said, referring to the restaurant's 8.8 average rating across over 4,000 reviews. 'Judy apparently didn't like it,' the chef noted, referring to the Beli CEO: New accounts like Rice's are prompted to follow Thelen after registering, contributing to her follower count of over 730,000. She gave Ernest a 6.2. Thelen said Beli doesn't consider itself a review platform, but rather a 'social restaurant list-keeping app' — a difference she strongly emphasized. The app helps users remember where they've been and where they'd like to go next. This list-keeping element was what drew Stanford masters student Matthew Lee onto the app during his undergraduate years at UC Berkeley. Lee said he'd embarked on a mission to try every restaurant in his college town just around the time that Beli emerged as a 'bandwagon' trend among friends. 'It became maybe a little competitive, somewhere along the way,' Lee said. He seems to be winning that competition: he's now the top-ranked Beli user in Berkeley. Compared to the Beli, Yelp reviews come with pressure, Lee said, recognizing how much those reviews impact business owners and are viewed by strangers looking for their next meal. Beli, on the other hand, is mostly for friends. 'There's just stuff that would not make it to Yelp,' Lee said, 'like 'Oh my god, I was so big-backed,' with a picture of a completely demolished plate,' he went on, using a popular Gen-Z slang for overeating. For Frost and Thelen, the focus remains on growing Beli's user base and virality. The company has raised $12 million since its founding in 2021. Thelen told the Chronicle, but she doesn't want Beli to operate like a 'traditional consumer tech startup.' 'We run as lean as possible,' Thelen said, referring to Beli's current full-time team of just four, including her and Frost. The company has a partnership with OpenTable, letting customers book restaurants through the app. And the Beli Supper Club, which is an invite-only subscription to top-ranked users, brings in cash for the company, but is currently limited to New York City. Perks include partnership dinners at elusive restaurants. 'We get loads of requests to bring it elsewhere,' Thelen said, 'and S.F. is top of the list.'

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