"... sponsored by Comcast and Dollar Shave Club. ('How do I handle grooming below the belt?' the ad spot asks; mercifully, neither host is made to read it.)... As a cultural figure, the Boss sits in a cross-racial sweet spot, as an anointed idol for the coded white working class who pairs his aging denim with bright-blue politics. He is also comfortable playing the good white liberal without self-punishing overtures. His home town of Freehold, New Jersey, was 'your typical small, provincial, redneck, racist little American nineteen-fifties town,' he says plainly, without squeamishness.... Discussing the protests of last summer, Obama comes just short of infantilizing the activities of those who were on the ground. 'I think there’s a little bit of an element of young people saying, "You’ve told us this is who we’re supposed to be."' A guitar strums gently in the background. 'And that’s why as long as protests and activism doesn’t veer into violence, my general attitude is—I want and expect young people to push those boundaries.'... But I can understand the people who might still take comfort in hearing Obama right up against their eardrums, doing his host schtick, asking, 'Did you see the movie "Get Out"?,' referring to a memorable line that invokes his name."
From "Obama and Springsteen Are Here to Lull America" by Lauren Michele Jackson (The New Yorker).
The line in "Get Out" is: "By the way, I would have voted for Obama for a third term if I could." Read more about it in "Bradley Whitford didn't realize Get Out's Obama line was supposed to be a joke at first" (AV Club).
203 comments:
«Oldest ‹Older 201 – 203 of 203"Got a wife and kid in Baltimore, Jack. I went out for a ride and I never looked back."
That evil lyric haunts me in supermarkets.
I have to agree with those here who say that Obama is part of Generation Jones, between Boom & X. The original 1946-1964 Boomer definition has become widely-discredited, and is a bit of a joke these days with professionals who research these issues. No generation before or since was based on birth rates; generations stem from shared formative experiences, not head counts!
Google “Generation Jones” and you'll see that lots of top media outlets (e.g. New York Times, USA Today, NBC, WaPo, BBC, CNN, Time Magazine, etc.) now agree with this concept, and regularly use the GenJones term.
Born in 1961, Obama is well within the standard 1954-1965 GenJones definition. Obama himself has said: “I identify with this generation between the Baby Boomers and Generation X. My mother was a Baby Boomer, and I’m part of Generation Jones.”
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