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Article created by: Mantas Kačerauskas

Quick! When I say the word ‘millennials,’ what’s the first thing that pops into your head? Do you attach a whole bunch of small stereotypes after you imagine young professionals who prioritize leisure over their work?’ Or do you get confused what the differences between millennials and zoomers are? You might not be alone. Millennials tend to get stereotyped a lot in the media and online, but what’s even more frustrating is just how these stereotypes don't go away no matter how old millennials get... and the word gets used as a catch-all phrase for anyone young and wild and dumb.

Redditor NukeEnergy, who has an absolute top-tier name that we wish we thought of first, asked the elder millennials on the site to share what stereotype aggravates them the most. And the responses were enlightening, showing just how different generations look down on millennials in (often not so) subtle ways. Have a scroll through some of the best responses, upvote the stereotypes that you think should never happen in the first place, and if you’re millennials yourselves, dear Pandas, join the conversation and share your thoughts below. Bored Panda reached out to the original poster of the thread, redditor NukeEnergy. Check out what they had to say below, as well as for analysis of what makes each generation unique.

#1

Close-up of a laptop screen showing YouTube interface with recommended videos about stereotypes millennials hate. When we are looked down upon for needing to use YouTube, etc. for learning tasks (e.g. changing a tyre) that our parents were taught by our grandparents but the former never took the time to teach us.

ScoutyBeagle , NordWood Themes Report

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    #2

    Person holding a coffee mug and reading a business magazine about success and growth in an informal workspace setting. That we're entitled. Having worked with the general public for over a decade, I can assure you the overwhelming majority of entitled and rude behaviour comes from the over 50s crowd.

    beeinbris , Austin Distel Report

    #3

    Person holding a tray with two gourmet burgers and fries, illustrating stereotypes millennials hate to be associated with. “You must go to college and get a degree. You don’t want to be flipping burgers or changing the oil in some rich guy’s car.” does that, incurs a lot of debt “These irresponsible millennials and their elitist liberal educations! If they’d been smart, they’d go to community college and transfer/go to trade school. They won’t just take a job, any job to pay the bills. They could flip burgers. Why should we pay for their mistakes?”

    fishmom5 , Peter Dawn Report

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    #4

    Three millennials working on laptops and laughing together in a cozy cafe, discussing stereotypes they dislike. “Millenials” has just become a term for “young person with ideals I don’t agree with.”

    KayMaybe , Brooke Cagle Report

    #5

    Person holding a large raw diamond, referencing millennials and stereotypes they hate about finances and spending. Being blamed for not buying things. Like, Milennials are killing X product line. Welp, the Boomers who won't retire are clinging to the top level jobs, so we don't have the opportunities they did to move up and earn more money, so we have to be choosy about the things we spend our money on. Not to mention, most of us are trying to be mindful of our consumerism as a whole, not buying tons of stuff for the sake of having tons of stuff.

    SteadyRiot Report

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    #6

    Older man in a business suit using a smartphone near large windows, symbolizing millennials stereotypes in communication. I kinda laugh when boomers call us snowflakes when they seem like the bigger bunch of wimps in history. Anytime they get a taste of their own medicine they act like it’s a assault on their freedom.

    Fallout541 , Jim Reardan Report

    #7

    "Oh you millennial kids just want trophies for everything" Bruh i was 6, you were the parents who organized the league, made it so no one kept score, and ordered, bought, and handed out the trophies. We had literally no part in you living out the fantasy that your kid was good at something. You lived vicariously through us then blamed us for the results of your shifty desicions.

    Notmybestusername3 Report

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    #8

    Colorful laundry detergent pod on reflective black surface, illustrating stereotypes millennials hate to be associated with. As a younger millennial, I hate ppl bringing up that I eat tidepods. Ma’am ppl my age were out of college and in the working world by the time tik tok challenges were a thing.

    theprozacfairy , Erik Binggeser Report

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    #9

    A large suburban house with a wraparound porch and well-maintained lawn, illustrating millennial stereotypes about homeownership. That people don't own a house because they're "lazy". I have taken the time to explain the loss of buying power, stagnant wages, automation, contract employees, lack of job security, cost of living in other areas, etc. play way more into it.

    lazarus870 , todd kent Report

    #10

    that i'm a young kid, we're in our 30s now.

    brelincovers Report

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    #11

    Person relaxing with feet up near vintage radio, representing millennials sharing stereotypes they hate to be associated with. I, for one, am tired of hearing about the things we've "killed". Tastes change all the time, this is not new.

    Aztaris Report

    #12

    "Millennials don't know how to..." Please, I rewired a rotary phone and washed cat pee out of my grandmother's 28.8kbps modem. Older millennials had analog childhoods and digital adolescence. We can do nearly anything and expect the world to radically change every ten years max. Sorry we killed the diamond ring/luxury hat/blacksmithing/plastic straw industry, maybe you should have paid us reasonable wages and not crashed the housing market right as we graduated college.

    ElectionAssistance Report

    #13

    Two slices of avocado toast seasoned with pepper on a white plate, representing millennials' food stereotypes. We can't afford houses because apparently we spend too much on avocado toast. No, in the 80s and 90s houses were about 3 to 4 times the average annual income. Now it's close to 10 (at least in my part of the world).

    MeltingDog , Douglas Bagg Report

    #14

    Millennial lying on gray couch with glasses, resting head on pillow, illustrating common millennial stereotypes and feelings. I'm getting really tired of hearing about us lying around expecting handouts and not working. Especially when it's a situation where the person saying it is standing in a room with a lot of millennials, all of whom have jobs, which is every single time I've heard this said in real life. Like, who here is lying around doing nothing? Whose your example? Oh it's your neighbour's best friend's cousins son, he doesn't have a job and lies on the couch all day. Okay.

    12ed11 , Adrian Swancar Report

    #15

    Group of young men in basketball uniforms huddled together in gym, representing millennials sharing stereotypes they dislike. I've seen old people refer to generation x members down to junior high students as "millennials", it just means "person under 50 who I don't like", apparently.

    jessek , David Tran Report

    #16

    Teen millennial skateboarding on a stone ledge in an urban park, illustrating stereotypes millennials want to reject. The use of the term “millennial” to refer to the general 'young person.'

    Josh4Rsd , Harry Metcalfe Report

    #17

    Smartphone displaying a TikTok profile with videos, representing Millennials sharing stereotypes they dislike. When someone makes mention of some "challenge" teenagers are doing like eating tide pods and people are like "Ugg, millennials." Uhm, no. Just because 4-5 people did something stupid and then the news decided to take it and run with it and make it sound way more wide spread than it is, doesn't mean you get to generalize a whole generation. Secondly, millennials are practically the age of the parents of the tik tok generation. It's not a generic term for any young person doing something you don't like.

    AnotherLolAnon , Hello I'm Nik Report

    #18

    Snow-covered urban street at night with lit cafe and bare trees, illustrating millennials sharing stereotypes they dislike. I just shoveled like 20 of my elderly neighbors driveways this morning after snowpocalypse. By Wednesday, while chatting they'll talk about those lazy millennials like they're still 20 year olds. Bro, I'm 38 and got 4 kids and own the biggest house of this block. Am millennial. Can not convince them of this, ever.

    The_user_of , Josh Hild Report

    #19

    The lack of respect we get really. Older generations getting upset that we are starting to get into politics at the National level. Y’all realize we are in our mid-late 30’s now right? And we straddle the cultural divide. We grew up without the internet and cell phones. Sure, the more well off amongst us had a computer and internet maybe by the mid 90’s but the younger generation can’t grasp how different it was. We spent our formative years with a budding technology and a lot of us figured it out and embraced it. So, why shouldn’t we be the ones who are helping to move it forward? We see both ends, the magic of it because of how new it was and how ever changing, and we also know how to fix things. We started with command lines and UNIX, Atari’s and Nintendo’s, chat rooms, IRC, some of the first online multiplayer game’s (thank you half life and quake), but we also grew up being able to go outside with friends all day without anyone worrying about us. We were the last generation to get that experience.

    simonsb Report

    #20

    Millennial woman wearing casual clothes sitting and writing in a notebook, illustrating millennials stereotypes concept. When people call teens and early 20s millennials. That was like 10-15 years ago.


    Alokir , Jeswin Thomas Report

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