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‘OK Boomer’ Is Now On Official Record Because Of Course

  • November 07, 2019
  • Technology

 

OK, so tell me what does ‘OK boomer’ means?

Let’s start with “boomer” – which has become shorthand for the “baby boomers” generation, usually defined as those born between 1946 and 1964. 

With “boomers” now aged somewhere between their mid-50s and early 70s, it’s a group that are also currently heavily represented in leadership roles in both business and government. 

The phrase, which has picked up in popularity online over recent weeks, is typically used by “Gen Z” (those born from the mid-to-late 90s onwards) to dismiss members of the aforementioned generation – particularly when it comes to arguments over topics such as the economy and climate change. 

“Boomers” are seen as responsible for the varied and unending messes the world seems to be in right now, whether its a resurgence in the far-right, melting ice caps, or the inaccessibility of the housing ladder. 

It’s become so ubiquitous that dictionary.com even attempted to pin it down as a: “viral internet slang phrase used, often in a humorous or ironic manner, to call out or dismiss out-of-touch or close-minded opinions associated with the baby boomer generation and older people more generally”. 

Essentially, it’s used to shut someone down by calling them irrelevant – a tactic it turns out that some more mature members of society are not fond of. 

It’s 2019 and everyone is outraged about everything apparently, so it almost goes without saying we’ve seen a fairly impassioned response to the two-word phrase – a conservative radio host in the US was widely derided earlier this week after tweeting that “ok boomer” was “the n-word of ageism”.

 

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