I came across this lovely article thanks to Yahoo! homepage today. It's written by an almost 22-year-old for Huffington Post, which although not the Washington Post or Wall Street Journal, to me is still somewhat of an upstanding publication. That being said - my brain hurts after reading this and is leaving me to wonder: Is there where journalism and publication is heading? Is this how the general population of our youth thinks?
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/jackie-oshry/i-finally-understand-why-they-call-that-store-forever-21_b_6076940.html?ncid=txtlnkusaolp00000592
Re: NWR: Is this what you thought of 21? Is this journalism in America now?
When I was 21 (which was not all that long ago) I wrote about philosophy, social issues, and working through conflicts. I also had friends to discuss it with, so it's not like our whole generation is completely inane.
I do think articles like this are becoming more commonplace, perhaps because it is so easy to put it out on the internet. People also like to read about things that relate solely to themselves, which is what this type of writing is capitalizing on. I also think that because it is such a "crowd pleaser" type of article, better articles get lost in translation at times.
On a related note: the Young Adult book sections now in stores make me sad.
I never thought this way. I will be 24 in a little over a month. What I do think is that at 21 you (read:I was) are more likely to try to impress your peers by going with the norm. This obiously isn't true fo everyone, but maybe the writer is trying to connect with a younger audience. Sadly, I know a few 21-year-olds and this is exactly something they would agree with/say.
You can ditch that friend of yours who you're only friends with because she looks 35 and her identical-looking older sister gave her a foolproof ID to use. You don't need her anymore.
I wanted to smack the writer into reality, morality, and any -ity imaginative right there. Who does this?