Showing posts with label generations. Show all posts
Showing posts with label generations. Show all posts

Saturday, February 26, 2011

I don't want to grow up.

Wow. Talk about tickling my Gen-X nostalgia.

Facebook friend Candace shared this amazing photoset by Argentinian photographer Irina Werning.

Her explanation:

"I love old photos. I admit being a nosey photographer. As soon as I step into someone else’s house, I start sniffing for them. Most of us are fascinated by their retro look but to me, it’s imagining how people would feel and look like if they were to reenact them today... A few months ago, I decided to actually do this. So, with my camera, I started inviting people to go back to their future."

These are some of my favourites from the set. You can see them all at Irina's Facebook gallery.

(All are copyright 2010 Irina Werning. The captions are mine.)

Never outgrow your inner nerd.

Never outgrow your exotic tastes.

Never outgrow your sense of wonder.

Never outgrow your defiance.

Never outgrow your love of learning.

Never outgrow wanting to stand out.

Never outgrow your rockin' style.

Never outgrow the things you love most.

Never outgrow your intimacy.

Never outgrow your innocence.

Never outgrow your mom's love.
And never outgrow your imagination.
I'd love to have someone do a portrait of me like this, because as a creative dude I am one of those lucky people who never really grew out of anything fun. And why should I? My inner child is way to much fun to hang around with.




UPDATE: e-mail response from Irina

Hi thanks for your email. Im very happy that you like my pictures. I work alone on my personal projects and the fact that you liked it and decided to write means a lot to me!

This is an ongoing project and I will be uploading new pictures regularly on my site.

I will be in NY and Boston in April; and May in Europe and am looking for people who want to go back to their future, so please drop me an email if you want to take part...

Monday, May 18, 2009

Generation On-Demand

Our business involves a lot of discussion about demographics, to the point at which my coworkers and I tend to see generational differences wherever we look. Our agency is a classic multigenerational crucible: owned by a classic Traditionalist/Silent Generation husband and wife, senior management driven by Boomers, a handful of Gen-X managers struggle with the uncool idea of being bosses, and the Gen-Y/Millennials forming the advancing ranks inspire and shock us with their fast-track world of confidence and entitlement.

But what about the next generation? Today's kids. My son and his ilk.

Nobody will really know how they turn out for another decade or so, as the first ones come of age. (And even then, my own generation was pretty much written off as a bunch of slackers in the early '90s.) But it's still fun to speculate.

As a parent, the biggest change I see in my son's childhood world from my own is the immediacy and customization of it all. He's four years old, and has grown up watching most of his "shows" on DVD, because he likes to watch them over and over again. He struggles with the idea of a TV show, or a song on the radio, that can't be replayed. (We don't have a DVR yet.) Everything is on-demand.

Contrast this with how my wife and I grew up. She used to cry every time Mr. Dressup ended, because she would have to wait a whole day for the next episode. I still recall, after seeing Star Wars in the cinema, spending hours and hours trying to recreate that movie with action figures, comic books, and even record albums. Without TV rights or a video release, I didn't see that movie again in its entirety until the '80s.

But my son will never know the exquisite pain of waiting for the next release, and relishing the memories of a single viewing. He sees everything on-demand.

Of course, this is just entertainment. How much of their "real" life will be on-demand? School will always impose some kind of structure, but even there children today are faced with lesser consequences for misbehaviour, and individualized lesson plans for their diagnosed specialness. Outside of school, overscheduled soccer moms give up their own lives to drive the minivan from activity to activity, totally focussed on their child's personal needs. And many parents (not us, IMHO) even customize their kids' meals, allowing increasing fussiness as they make each plate to order.

There have been plenty of crusty editorials written about the spoiling of the upcoming generation, but every generation provokes those. What I'm wondering is how — for worse and for better — the customized and immediate world of my son's cohort will influence their attitudes as adults.

I can foresee some even more demanding and impatient individuals entering the workforce in another 15 years. Each of them will want an individualized and accelerated career path from day one, making HR a real challenge. At the same time, they may display a kind of individualism and independent thought that we haven't seen before, because they'll be so totally "empowered" (although I hate that word) by a world that was made to fit their needs. But are we in danger of making them the most selfish adults ever? As the world becomes more crowded and stressed, their individualized needs will inevitably bump up against those of billions of others. Let's hope we instill a sense of respect for others in them, as well as self-esteem.

Anyone have other predictions for "Generation On-Demand"? And how will the Millennials complain about them?