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#millennials
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Sharpeipup
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Agreed.

TheBookHippie Yes! 8mo
dabbe #hailthebail! 🙌🏻 8mo
36 likes1 stack add2 comments
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monalyisha
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My husband played a Presidents of the United States of America cover set tonight to benefit Amos House (homelessness & poverty) & Riot RI (a non-profit using music creation, critical thinking & collaborative relationships to foster collective empowerment & the development of healthy identities in girls, women, trans, & gender-expansive youth & adults). When I say that listening to the tagged beforehand was the right choice, I REALLY mean it. 👇🏻

monalyisha 1/1: Another femme-fronted band covered Everclear and HOLY SHIT. The nostalgia was *next level!* “I Will Buy You a New Life” sung with angry feminist post-capitalist angst just hits differently. This inner-city gal with divorced parents wanted to sob openly to honor her teenaged self. After one margarita & two glasses of red wine, I am very much in my feels. ❤️ (The third band covered Stone Temple Pilots and it truly felt like Millennial church.) 11mo
Librarybelle That sounds like an incredible night! 11mo
Meshell1313 That‘s awesome! 90‘s alternative is my JAM! ❤️ 11mo
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TheKidUpstairs This is amazing. Sounds like a fantastic night! 11mo
inthegreensandblues That must have been awesome 🤓❤️ 11mo
monalyisha @Librarybelle @Meshell1313 @TheKidUpstairs @inthegreensandblues Yes! It‘s such a great event. The holiday cover shows are held annually (every December) & local musicians form “supergroups” with their friends to cover their favorite bands. The choices are usually super nostalgic (I once saw “The Spice Girls”). They choose new foundations to donate the proceeds to every year. 💝 11mo
61 likes1 stack add6 comments
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monalyisha
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Pickpick

Speaking of ONE in a Milennial, this is the ONE and only time I‘ve ever had to slow down an audiobook‘s playback speed — and I, too, came of age alongside Rory Gilmore! I‘m only a year older than Kennedy, so this was obviously nostalgic for me. She‘s great with wordplay but sometimes *too* verbose (which…pot, kettle). The AIM chapter was my fave. Would not recommend to folks outside of our generation (I think a lot of it would be unintelligible!).

monalyisha Fun & thoughtful but not tight. Still, I‘d totally seek out her podcast if I were a podcast person! Our styles diverged once I/we hit middle & high school. I wore Rancid t-shirts under my Catholic school uniform while she shopped for Vera Bradley. Despite that, I found her (mostly) relatable, transparent, and genuine. I‘ve never been a stickler for adhering to one “scene” and her message to like what you like resonates; it IS a (mini) rebellion. 11mo
61 likes2 stack adds1 comment
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monalyisha
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“AIM…was a place that allowed me to transcend my social awkwardness in pursuing friendships and flirting with boys, where I could wow people with what I knew to be my strength even at a young age: words.”

…Also, just putting this out there: I loved this Ben Harper song way too much for someone who was afraid to smoke pot. 😅

TheKidUpstairs Oh my God, the song lyrics as away messages! I would put way too much thought into finding the perfect lyrics. But I used ICQ more than AIM 😉 11mo
Chelsea.Poole Yes this book! And I also used ICQ @TheKidUpstairs —we were just talking about it at our family gathering. It‘s where alllll the flirting happened! 11mo
yourfavouritemixtape Comic Sans 11mo
Larkken Oh, wow. This is a throwback in such a good way! 11mo
53 likes5 stack adds4 comments
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monalyisha
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“With America Online…you were forced to withstand…the [unique] sound of dial-up: after nearly five minutes of listening to combinations of beeping, screeching, & scratching, it began to sound like two machines in a cat fight. I don‘t know how to best describe it other than what I assume it would sound like if a melody of insanity sampled a smoke detector that desperately needed its batteries replaced & then hurled itself into a garbage disposal.”

Aims42 🤣🤣🤣🤣 11mo
Leftcoastzen I‘m old enough to remember! 😄 11mo
Deblovestoread Yep, our very first computer and the internet. Talk about annoying. 11mo
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dariazeoli Sometimes I still hear it in my dreams 🤣 11mo
BarbaraJean 😂 😂 I can hear this picture!! 11mo
Librarybelle Me too, @BarbaraJean ! 😂 11mo
52 likes6 comments
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Erin.Elizabeth10
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Pickpick

This was a fun and humorous nostalgic book all about growing up millennial. The author uses her life experience to reminisce, but also do insightful cultural criticism of the millennial childhood and teenage years. It was fun and funny, with some heartfelt and important insights along the way.

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Chelsea.Poole
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Pickpick

I‘m the exact audience for this audio and so much of it hit! I was born the same year as the author so the cultural references (God must have spent a little more time on you 🎶) were so relatable. As a huge memoir fan, I was also totally fine with the MANY personal asides, which is honestly what I was expecting. Spice girls, weirdo purity rings, early 00s mean girls/sleepovers, a fellow swiftie🫶, and much more. Honestly, I could‘ve written this.

66 likes1 stack add
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Megabooks
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Pickpick

This was just a fun romp through millennial nostalgia. As a young GenX I don‘t have the exact same cultural reference points (I was in my early 20s when the author was a teenager), but Kennedy kept things fun and funny including silly poems and asides. A good #borrownotbuy!

britt_brooke As an Elder Millennial, I had some overlap, but I‘m older than her, too. Very fun, though! 1y
Chelsea.Poole We‘re so in sync! I am almost halfway through this one. Pretty relatable for me so far; the author was born the same year I was. 1y
75 likes3 stack adds2 comments
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AvidReader25
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Mehso-so

This one was exhausting. I impulse read it because I thought the millennial references would be hilarious. Those parts were fun and I loved the puns and word play, but the rest was just a lot. I felt like we were working through childhood trauma and societal expectations, but with no real end game. It could have been edited down. It‘s not bad, I just felt like a disjointed trip through her childhood that was pretty stressful.

BennettBookworm I couldn‘t agree more! I started out loving all of the relatable pop culture references, but then it just got too heavy for me the further I went along, and the blanket statements stopped being relatable to me and felt more concerning. 1y
AvidReader25 @BennettBookworm Yes! It felt like it took a hard turn away from the original intentions. 1y
28 likes2 comments
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bio_chem06
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Another big summer read and another bail for me. I guess I‘m just not the nostalgia obsessed person like my peers.