4.2 • 5.5K Ratings
🗓️ 14 December 2021
⏱️ 32 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
The eldest millennials turned forty this year, and the producer Ngofeen Mputubwele comments on a sense of despair he finds in his generation, having to do with the state of the planet, the nation, the Internet, intolerance, and more. He set out to explore why millennials feel hopeless and how they can live with that feeling, in conversations with five writers: Kaveh Akbar, the author of “Pilgrim Bell”; Carlos Maza, the creator of the video essay “How to Be Hopeless”; Shauna McGarry, a writer on “BoJack Horseman”; Patrick Nathan, the author of “Image Control: Art, Facism, and the Right to Resist”; and the climate activist Daniel Sherrell, whose recent memoir is “Warmth: Coming of Age at the End of Our World.”
Click on a timestamp to play from that location
| 0:00.0 | This is the New Yorker Radio Hour, a co-production of WNYC Studios and the New Yorker. |
| 0:09.0 | Welcome to the New Yorker Radio Hour, I'm David Remnik. |
| 0:12.3 | The birth of the generation we call Millennial Spans from 1981 to 1996, according to the |
| 0:18.3 | Pew Research Center. |
| 0:20.2 | So the eldest of them turned 40 this year, and the youngest are in their mid-twenties. |
| 0:26.0 | The radio hours go fan and Poutou-Bouille sits close in the middle of that generation. |
| 0:31.3 | And lately he's been looking into what seems to be a tide of despair among millennials. |
| 0:36.1 | And it has something to do with the state of the planet, the state of the nation, and |
| 0:40.9 | the state of the internet. |
| 0:42.0 | Pretty much everything. |
| 0:43.0 | Here's Go Fan. |
| 0:56.7 | In the biblical story of the flood, Noah pulls the animals and his family onto the ark. |
| 1:04.6 | And when the waters come, they come from two places. |
| 1:08.5 | They fall from above, from the heavens gaping open, but also they gush forth from below, |
| 1:17.4 | from the great deeps. |
| 1:19.3 | It conjures an image in my mind of water inching up from below the ground, like a great swamp, |
| 1:27.0 | slowly engulfing the people. |
| 1:32.8 | I've grown up in the church. |
| 1:34.8 | I'm confirmed Catholic, spent years in a black Baptist church, but then from middle school |
| 1:40.4 | on have spent a lot of time in the white evangelical church. |
| 1:44.8 | And when I say spent, I don't mean I've visited or am familiar with. |
| 1:49.1 | I mean there is no part of evangelical life I don't know, Bible study and community |
... |
Please login to see the full transcript.
Disclaimer: The podcast and artwork embedded on this page are from WNYC Studios and The New Yorker, and are the property of its owner and not affiliated with or endorsed by Tapesearch.
Generated transcripts are the property of WNYC Studios and The New Yorker and are distributed freely under the Fair Use doctrine. Transcripts generated by Tapesearch are not guaranteed to be accurate.
Copyright © Tapesearch 2025.