02-23-2022, 01:30 PM
(02-23-2022, 12:35 PM)sbarrera Wrote:(02-23-2022, 10:26 AM)David Horn Wrote:(02-23-2022, 09:45 AM)JasonBlack Wrote: The thing that bothers me though is that 20-40 year old millennials still sexually differentiate themselves in a way that seems like girls and boys rather than women and men. Millennial men still don't have a grasp of how to truly be dignified, authoritative or decisive. Millennial women still don't have a grasp on how to be sultry, graceful, motherly, etc.
OK, but then Boomers and Xers didn't at that age either. I think it has to do with how we've learned to interact since the loss of formality in the '70s.
I agree; there's been a general loss of formality in our culture. Just look at how people behave in a period show like The Gilded Age and compare it to every day interactions today.
I think you guys have a point. I think the informality was fine as far as it went in the 1970s, and even into the 80s. Nowadays it has gone overboard. I watch the new quiz shows, and I am bothered by how unruly all these phony "celebrities" are, loud and obnoxious, and they seem to think we are interested in anything they say just because of who they are. I compare them with the real celebrities on the buzzr quiz show oldies channel, with shows from the 1950s to the 80s, and I long for the old days. The paragon of formality, who insisted on such manners, was John Daly, original host of What's My Line. And panelist Arlene Francis was the epitomy of charm and grace, and she could still be seen on shows in the 1980s. And of course we will all miss Betty White.
Still, Alex Trebek was great, the new hosts of Jeopardy are great, as is Pat Sajak, but these 2 shows just have regular people on and they seem fine. So it's also pretty hard to generalize. There are plenty of people around who still have some sense of decorum and respectfulness. On the other hand, Family Feud's host, its contestants and the questions are somewhat too riske, you could say.