Boomers in the 80s and 90s were fucking depressed. They described their lives as a boring, soul-crushing existence where they did the same hollow shit day in and day out. They hated their bosses, they hated their jobs, their kids, their wife/husband. People had "Mid-life crises" where they tried to fill the void with "a fast car and a young hot fling." things capitalism told them would make them happy. It didn't.
Seriously listen to any media made by boomers when they were in their 30s-50s. It's all jokes about how fucking mundane life is.
Even at its peak, life under capitalism was hollow and soul crushing.
They were basically taught "as long as you keep your head down and play the game, we won't hurt you financially"
Sure, (if you were white and male) you had money, but it took everything else away. Community, friendship, family. Trapped them in a gilded cage. Having to watch their children having even that promise of financial stability ripped from them. And don't get me started on how terrible it was if you weren't a white dude.
I have to wonder if the "selfish, childish boomer" stereotype is something of a coping mechanism. Maybe some boomers are like that because thats their jokerfication.
"Why, yes, my favorite brand name soda is OK Soda. This marketing is definitely not a reflection on the je ne sais quoi of our generation. I'm OK. We're OK. Stop asking." -Boomers in the 90s
He's seen some shit.
MF has tit eyes.
Many, many GenXers became junior boomers and still are.
Well now I just feel bad for Gen X too.
Massive, massive "has a laptop with this fucking symbol on it which was a warning sign that the bearer was probably an insufferably pompously apathetic asshole" energy.
Everything else about this sounds awful but the flavor seems, dare I say it, OK
My favorite thing about OK Soda is that it never made it to mass market, which means they probably thought the marketing campaign was too cynical even by marketing ghoul standards. The band Dillinger Four made a song about OK Soda and realized that most people were confused because it was only available in some test markets, so most people had never even heard of it at the time.