09-01-2024, 02:36 PM
Apparently, those who are generation Z have managed to annoy quite a few people.
 (Those born from 1997- 2012, aged 12 to 27)
https://www.stuff.co.nz/life-style/30103...rest-of-us
"If there was one industry youÔÇÖd imagine would suit┬áGeneration Z┬ádown to the ground, one place where the younger members of the workforce should find themselves in a ÔÇ£safe spaceÔÇØ where they can really, as they would put it, ÔÇ£live their truthÔÇØ, it would surely be Hollywood. Nowhere accommodates the egocentric quite like La La Land.
The actress has deemed working with Gen Z to be, in a word, ÔÇ£annoyingÔÇØ. While she applauds the ÔÇ£authenticityÔÇØ younger generations often embody, and celebrates the ÔÇ£possibility of real freedomÔÇØ they are able to enjoy, Foster admits to finding their┬áattitudes to work hard to swallow. ÔÇ£TheyÔÇÖre really annoying, especially in the workplace,ÔÇØ she told The Guardian. ÔÇ£TheyÔÇÖre like, ÔÇÿNah, IÔÇÖm not feeling it today, IÔÇÖm gonna come in at 10.30am.ÔÇÖÔÇØ
The trouble with the young, Foster says, is that they are all too in their heads. ÔÇ£They need to learn how to relax, how to not think about it so much, how to come up with something thatÔÇÖs theirs.ÔÇØ
This is a generation that completed university degrees in their childhood bedrooms. For them, working from home is the norm.
 (Those born from 1997- 2012, aged 12 to 27)
https://www.stuff.co.nz/life-style/30103...rest-of-us
"If there was one industry youÔÇÖd imagine would suit┬áGeneration Z┬ádown to the ground, one place where the younger members of the workforce should find themselves in a ÔÇ£safe spaceÔÇØ where they can really, as they would put it, ÔÇ£live their truthÔÇØ, it would surely be Hollywood. Nowhere accommodates the egocentric quite like La La Land.
Not so, it seems, on Jodie FosterÔÇÖs set.
The actress has deemed working with Gen Z to be, in a word, ÔÇ£annoyingÔÇØ. While she applauds the ÔÇ£authenticityÔÇØ younger generations often embody, and celebrates the ÔÇ£possibility of real freedomÔÇØ they are able to enjoy, Foster admits to finding their┬áattitudes to work hard to swallow. ÔÇ£TheyÔÇÖre really annoying, especially in the workplace,ÔÇØ she told The Guardian. ÔÇ£TheyÔÇÖre like, ÔÇÿNah, IÔÇÖm not feeling it today, IÔÇÖm gonna come in at 10.30am.ÔÇÖÔÇØ
She doesnÔÇÖt think much of their grammar either. ÔÇ£In emails, IÔÇÖll tell them ÔÇÿThis is all grammatically incorrect, did you not check your spelling?ÔÇÖ And theyÔÇÖre like, ÔÇÿWhy would I do that, isnÔÇÖt that kind of limiting?ÔÇÖÔÇØ
The trouble with the young, Foster says, is that they are all too in their heads. ÔÇ£They need to learn how to relax, how to not think about it so much, how to come up with something thatÔÇÖs theirs.ÔÇØ
She wouldnÔÇÖt be the first A-lister to have a problem with Gen Z. Whoopi Goldberg came under fire last year for┬ásuggesting they might be work-shy.┬áÔÇ£IÔÇÖm sorry, if you only want to work four hours, itÔÇÖs going to be harder for you to get a house,ÔÇØ she said in a discussion about why Gen Z are in a more precarious financial position than their parents. ÔÇ£We had to bust our behinds because we didnÔÇÖt have the option of going back,ÔÇØ she added.
This is a generation that has a vastly different expectation of what constitutes a work-life balance to their employers.They are demanding new things: the flexibility to work remotely, more time off, better perks and higher pay. And while the generation before them was naturally ambitious (a PwC survey conducted in 2011 found millennial workersÔÇÖ top priority was career progression), this generation is focused on two things: pay and pleasure.
This is a generation that completed university degrees in their childhood bedrooms. For them, working from home is the norm.
Some say itÔÇÖs all evidence of laziness, others that this generation is simply refusing to comply with a working culture established by Boomers. Forty-one years have passed between the first of the Boomer generation and the youngest of Gen Z entering the workforce. ItÔÇÖs perhaps not so surprising that attitudes and expectations will have changed in that time."
I'm not so sure about that. My younger grandkids fit into that category; one has  been working to put himself through uni (including doing his masters) because his parent's income is only just above the limit which means he couldn't get student allowance; he's about to start a good, but demanding job next month.
Another is working full time while contining to write & intends to go to uni in the future.
And I really don't think,going by what I've heard from other parents/grandparents, that their generation is invariably as described.
in order to be old & wise, you must first be young & stupid. (I'm still working on that.)