Someone asked a question about how frequently young people have time to socialize and it made me think about what people do with their evenings. I recently asked my son to go to a concert (free ticket to see a band i know he likes) and he declined because it was an hour away on a weeknight. If we invite our kids or niece/nephew to dinner they always want to go at 6/630 which feels so early. Edit: Kids are 30ish.

  • SanguinePar
    link
    851 year ago

    Not young anymore, but when I see the price of live music, alcohol, etc, and combine that with things like student debt, low income jobs and the pressure of potentially being humiliated via social media, I wonder how on earth young people ever go out.

    I feel incredibly lucky to have been in my late teens/early 20s during the late 90s and early 2000s. I suspect a lot of my generation dodged a fair few bullets, and never even realised it at the time.

    • @[email protected]OP
      link
      fedilink
      151 year ago

      So so glad i grew up without social media!! My bad decisions would be meme warnings for future generations.

    • Turkey_Titty_city
      link
      fedilink
      12
      edit-2
      1 year ago

      parental money and credit cards.

      my work hires lots of 22 year olds. most of them are getting an extra 1-2K from the bank of mom and dad per month, and loading up on debt. i’ve seen their statements that they download onto their work computers. kid making 40K a year has 15K in CC debt. (of course this same kid got fired because they were doing personal shit on a work computer).

      poor kids live at home with their folks to have any semblence of a life.

    • Flying Squid
      link
      41 year ago

      I remember seeing P. Funk for $20 in the 90s.