In this important announcement, Joseph shares his plans to leave Silent Generation and Nathan shares his plans to continue it. The podcast will relaunch in two to three months with a new co-host that is familiar to the community. Nathan also shares that he is open to adding other regular contributors, and that a Discord member named Juniper is going to make a commemorative zine for the first iteration of the podcast. Links: Nathan’s Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/nathan_knize/ Silent Generation’s Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/silent.generation/ Recorded on 12/3/2025
Nevada (also known as Nevadastyles on Instagram) is a hair artist from New York City who has lived a bicoastal lifestyle for the last half decade. For the majority of that time she has lived and worked in both New York City and Los Angeles, but her career as a hair artist has brought her all over the world. On this week’s episode of Silent Generation, she joins Nathan for a conversation about why she and other creatives aspire to live bicoastal lifestyles. They begin with a conversation about the pros and cons of New York City and Los Angeles, focusing on key geographic and cultural differences. Nathan then argues that the rise of bicoastal living represents the latest stage in the elite’s drift toward rootlessness and cosmopolitanism, a pattern described by Christopher Lasch in The Revolt of the Elites. The episode concludes with a discussion about whether having roots (and not being bicoastal) is a status symbol and the common traits shared by big city natives. Links: @nevadastyles - Instagram Profile https://www.nevadaraffaele.com/ New Data Tool and Research Show Where People Move as Young Adults by Nathaniel Hendren, Sonya R. Porter and Ben Sprung-Keyser The Death and Life of the Great Lakes by Dan Egan The Revolt of the Elites by Christopher Lasch The messy, viral fight over America's fourth 'major' city by Tessa Mclean What are the 4 major US cities? The internet can't decide. Vote for your picks by Melina Khan Artwork: New York 1971 by Hans-Peter Balfanz CC BY-SA 3.0 <https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0>, via Wikimedia Commons Boyle Heights, 1979 by John Humble Recorded on 11/19/2025
Adult contemporary is a radio format and marketing category originally created by Billboard magazine. It has encompassed many genres, starting with easy listening in the 1960s. What could be considered adult contemporary changed over the decades as genres like rock and roll and electronic music grew older, and older listeners found their sounds more palatable. But what does “adult contemporary” mean, and why do the songs that get grouped into the category appeal to adults so much? This week’s episode of Silent Generation focuses on adult contemporary music in the 1990s and 2000s. Joseph and Nathan begin by outlining the history of the radio format before discussing the common features of adult contemporary songs. They then review the music of U2, Vanessa Carlton, The Verve, Zero 7, Ivy, and After. The episode concludes with a discussion of what happened to adult contemporary, focusing on why the radio format no longer has a distinct sound. Links: Adult Contemporary Spotify Playlist: https://open.spotify.com/playlist/… Adult Contemporary Music Guide: What Is Adult Contemporary? The Adult Contemporary Billboard Chart When Rock Bands Become Adult Contemporary (part 1) by Eduard Banulescu 90s Adult Contemporary - Totally 80s and 90s Recall Clocks by Coldplay Beautiful Day by U2 A Thousand Miles by Vanessa Carlton Bitter Sweet Symphony by The Verve Destiny by Zero 7 Disappointed by Ivy Deep Diving by After Most craziest American Idol contestant ever, Mary Roach U2:UV Achtung Baby Live at Sphere The Story of 'A Thousand Miles' by Vanessa Carlton White Chicks (2004) - A Thousand Miles Terry Crews Scene The greatest songwriting theft of all time - David Hartly Ivy Talks Making the Seminal Y2K Dreampop LP ‘Long Distance’ by Myke Dodge Weiskopf Meet After, the L.A. Duo Making Y2k-Inspired Pop That Feels Like Right Now by Jeff Ihaza You’re deep diving - @aftertheband Gen X Soft Club - CARI page List of Billboard Adult Contemporary number ones of 2025 Adult Contemporary 100 week of 11/09/2025 Where Have All the Adult Contemporary Artists Gone? - Daniel Montoya Jr. Artwork: U2 at the Charles de Gaulle Airport, Paris, Summer 2000 Recorded on 11/12/2025
Prior episodes of Silent Generation have focused on secular social movements that emerged around the turn of the 20th century. Fraternities technically predate this era, but they occupy a similar niche, and Joseph shares an important connection to them as a former fraternity brother. Why did they first emerge, and why do universities continue to tolerate them on campus? This week’s episode of Silent Generation addresses those questions. The boys begin with a survey of the history of fraternities and related groups (social fraternities, professional organizations, secret societies, and fraternal orders). They then discuss commonalities between fraternities, the architectural characteristics of fraternity houses, the prevalence of hazing and hazing deaths, and the 1978 sex comedy Animal House. Links: Fraternity by Alexandra Robins The Founding of the North-American Fraternity and Sorority System Fraternity and Sorority Mies van der Rohe’s Forgotten Frat House Design Is Resurrected and Repurposed by Lauren Moya Ford The Sorority Quad at Northwestern University by Fran Becque Join HOTEL KAPPA for PC ‘25! - #RushTok IN DG WE TRUST: Empowering Community Engagement - #RushTok Lorax - #Sorority - #RushTok Mr. Bobinsky Halloween Costume Tik Tok Video It's Time for Congress to Ban Fraternities—Sororities, Too by Matt Robinson Here’s how much more money you could make just from joining a frat by Yoni Blumberg Why Colleges Tolerate Fraternities Houses of Horror: Secrets of College Greek Life (2024) My son was blindfolded, led to the basement and left to die on a couch by Ruth Bashinsky Animal House (1978) Gay History of Men’s Fraternities Image archive of the Theta Chi chapter at Penn State University Artwork: Theta Chi of Penn State - Spring 1988 Initiation Recorded on 11/5/2025
Full episode available on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/SilentGeneration The field of cryptozoology emerged in the mid-20th century as people began to investigate sightings of mysterious creatures like Bigfoot and the Loch Ness Monster using pseudoscientific methods. On this week’s episode of Silent Generation, Joseph and Nathan begin by theorizing that cryptozoology emerged as a way for the United States and other Anglosphere countries to generate their own folklore. They delineate why it is a primarily American phenomenon, pointing to the country's huge swaths of undeveloped land. They then discuss several famous cryptids such as Bigfoot, Mothman, the Michigan Dogman, the Flatwoods Monster, the Loch Ness Monster, and Thunderbirds. They conclude with a discussion of how paranormal media “slopified” cable television in the early 2010s, and how the rise of AI has made photo and video evidence of cryptids even less believable. Links: What is a cryptid? Cryptomundo The Cryptid Zoo: Satyrs (or Fauns) in Cryptozoology On the Track of Unknown Animals by Bernard Heuvelmans The Discovery of the Okapi, Part 1 Backwoods Horror The Maryland Snallygaster: Devil of Racist Politics by Jake Seboe The racist roots of Maryland’s mythical Snallygaster monster by Julie Scharper Patterson-Gimlin Film HD 60fps The Mothman Prophecies by John A. Keel The Mothman Revisited - Unsolved Mysteries Episode 14: Chicago Tales - Otherworld podcast Ep. 113: The Michigan Dogman Pt. 1 - Otherworld podcast Ep. 114: The Michigan Dogman Pt. 2 - Otherworld podcast #70: Flatwoods Monster - Cryptonauts podcast Flatwoods Monster - Cryptid Wiki The Flatwoods Monster The Cryptid Collector’s Trio Scooby-Doo and the Loch Ness Monster (2004) Thunderbird - Cryptid Wiki MonsterQuest (2007-2010) Dragons: A Fantasy Made Real (2004) The Truth is out there” the Alan Champagne Morro Bay Disappearance by Katya Cengel Artwork: unknown Recorded on 10/29/2025
Witch house is a music genre and internet aesthetic that emerged in the late 2000s as bands combined occult imagery and sounds. On this week’s episode of Silent Generation, Joseph and Nathan begin by noting that it was the very first internet aesthetic, with the earliest example being the 2005 blog Runawaytoday. They then talk about common witch house aesthetic elements such as horror, “the woods,” and occult symbols (particularly inverted crosses). The conversation then shifts to music, with a survey of several witch house bands such as SALEM, Pictureplane, CRIM3S, and Crystal Castles. The episode concludes with discussion of witch house’s legacy and what it was trying to express. Links: Pinterest board: https://www.pinterest.com/silentgeneration/witch-house/ witch-house.com Witch House - Aesthetics Wiki OG Witch House Spotify Playlist True Witch House Only Spotify Playlist Sick by SALEM Trapdoor by SALEM Better Off Alone by SALEM Goth Star by Picturplane Hyper Real by Picureplane Salt by CRIM3S Pumpkin Pumpkin by Zombelle Runawaytoday (2005) GODBLESS - Untitled (2008) by Ponyboy Guest List: Best of 2009 by Tyler Grisham Got any witch house? Why I'm on the genre-mongers' side | Music by Tom Ewing https://www.blairwitch.com/ Making of The Blair Witch Project— From a $35k Budget to $250 Million Box Office Phenomenon The surprising evolution of hipsters in the 2000s - Brad Troemel Alek Morgan’s Facebook page (NVRMND archive) Witch House Band Iceberg Infographic Witch House Music History Lana del Rey/ Jack Donoghue Cook County Penitentiary photo SALEM: The Midwest's Most Wanted (Documentary) This is the CRIM3S Biography Tik Tok video CRIM3S SQUATT RAVE @Rourotfan Rou Rot and Alice Glass MTV CRIBS: pictureplane gives a tour of Rhinoceropolis shout out to male producer female lead witch house duos Reddit post Witch House: The Ghostly Genre of The Music Industry by Clara C. Steemer Which house for witch house? Pictureplane’s goth beats are taking flight by P. J. Nutting Witch House: An Intro To The Microgenre That Influenced Everyone From Tyler, The Creator To ASAP Rocky by Kyle Garb The Occult Genre Known As "Witch House" - Pad Chennington Whatever happened to witch house? by Al Horner Artwork: Mexico City’s Dark Electronic Music Project Ritualz Releases Dual Video Premiere for “Nothing” and “Testify” by Alice Teeple Recorded on 10/22/2025
The United States once had the best public transportation system in the world. Private companies built subway, elevated, interurban, trolley, and long distance train lines with passenger service in mind. But as the automobile rose in popularity, ridership declined, and the country’s transit systems eventually became publicly run. But what made privately owned rail during that era so great, and what does modern private passenger service look like? On this week’s episode of Silent Generation, Joseph and Nathan begin by detailing some of the things that were better about the Chicago ‘L’ 100 years ago: more stations, more express service, and better frequency. They then talk about Brightline and JR Railways before examining how those companies invest in real estate to increase profits. The episode concludes with a discussion about privately owned freight rail and how Class I railroads are poorly managed. Links: The Lost Subways of North America by Jake Berman New York Subway Operator Life 1980s vs 90s vs Today chicago-l.org Ridership Reports - Performance metrics - CTA Why Chicago's Express Train Isn't Really Express - Car Free Keith Car 553 First new private rail passenger service in over 100 years by Terry Spencer and Daniel Kozin Killer Train by Brittany Wallman, Aaron Leibowitz and Shradha Dinesh Killer Train Podcast Brightline rolls out expanded services from Orlando to Miami by Jaclyn Harold High Speed Rail in Florida and the History of Brightline - Alan Fisher Brightline West Las Vegas doesn't have a purpose anymore as the designated area for American vices How Japan Builds Suburbs That Don't Suck - Car Free Keith Why Japanese Railways Win - Wendover Productions Japan Kept A Train Running For Years Just For One Girl, The Inspiring Story Will Move You by Nikhil Pandey Should Amtrak be Privatized? by Car Free Keith Katrina: Come Hell or High Water Freight Rail Overview - US Department of Transportation How America's Largest Railroads are Ruining our Supply Chains - Alan Fisher US rail companies grant paid sick days after public pressure in win for unions by Steven Greenhouse Artwork: Jamaica Ave El Recorded on 10/12/2025
Full episode available on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/SilentGeneration “Civil servants” are employees of the municipal, state, or federal government. Within cities they often live in far-flung areas that are colloquially referred to as “police neighborhoods" or “firefighter neighborhoods.” The tendency of civil servants to live amongst each other has caused them to develop a distinct set of customs and norms that can be described as “civil servant culture.” On this week’s episode of Silent Generation, Joseph and Nathan begin by discussing whether civil servants constitute their own subculture or social class. They then talk about the symbols they use to identify one another such as thin line flags, punisher symbols, and regional accents. They then survey the areas that civil servants tend to cluster in Chicago (Beverly/ Mt. Greenwood, Garfield Ridge/ Clearing, and Norwood Park/ O’Hare) and NYC (Staten Island, Breezy Point), before concluding with a discussion on the differences between public facing and administrative civil servants. Links: Residency Requirements for City Employees by Connie M Hager Mayoral challenger outlines plan to ease police staffing shortage by Fran Spielman The thin blue line: The history behind the controversial police emblem by David Hernandez The Thin Blue Line (1988) Thin Line Flags Infographic First Responder American Flag, 3 x 5 Feet Man walking to every CPD station to raise awareness for police mental health The Punisher Skull - 99% Invisible Italian cop in NYC Infographic: Where Cubs and White Sox Fans Live City Active Employees: Map and Census Data Hey Jackass’s 2025 homicide map "Cop neighborhoods" in NYC? Why is there no outrage over the Breezy Point Cooperative? Burn After Reading (2008) Toward a Theory of Street-Level Bureaucracy by Michael Lipsky Bangladeshis Build Careers in New York Traffic by Jodi Kantor How Stereotypes of the Irish Evolved From ‘Criminals’ to Cops by Livia Gershon Cops Rarely Pull Over Drivers In Their Own Neighborhoods, Data Shows. Motorists In Black Neighborhoods Aren’t So Lucky by Pascal Sabin Chicago’s first firefighters entrance exam since 2014 draws diverse pool, but rules have changed by Fran Spielman Artwork: ThrowbackThursday: Weekly Garbage Service - Eltham District Historical Society Recorded on 10/5/2025
In 2017 a new uniform emerged for men employed by the financial industry: fleece/ puffer vests, dress shirts, slacks, and dress shoes. The unadorned look was first documented by the Instagram account Midtownuniform, and it became the signature outfit of “finance bros.” Finance bros are the latest “corporate subculture” to come out of Wall Street, but they are far less fashionable than previous corporate subcultures like Yuppies. On this week’s episode of Silent Generation, Joseph and Nathan begin by delineating the elements of finance bro fashion before speculating where trends in casualization might lead things. They then note that “quants” (quantitative analysts) have even lower professional standards for their appearance. Amongst other things they discuss how finance bro fashion began to bleed into politics in the 2020s, how finance bros fueled the “bowl slop” trend in fast casual dining, and how the vulgarity of Finance Bros was depicted on Succession. Links: Finance bros Pinterest board: https://www.pinterest.com/silentgeneration/finance-bros/ Midtownuniform Then and Now: Wall Street Power Dressing by Pierre Schermann/ WWD Fleece Is In Full Bloom by George Chinsee/ WWD The Patagonia vest endures in San Francisco tech circles, despite ridicule by Bobby Allyn Patagonia Is Refusing To Sell Its Iconic Power Vests To Some Financial Firms by Katie Notopoulos Four lads in jeans meme “Deal Sleds” wtf is a “Quant”... (finance bro + autism) The House Painters by Gustave Caillebotte Who wears the power sweater vest better? Democrats or Republicans? by Marni Pyke Alpha Dads at their Son’s Game Alpha Dads at the Hardware Store "Be white collar, the money is insane" meme ‘Chipotle boys’ are rampant in NYC — and even the burrito chain has commented by Brooke Steinberg Chipotle Boy Bowl' Promo Is Aimed at Finance Bros - Business Insider by Dominick Reuter Why fast casual chains like Chipotle, Sweetgreen, and Cava are losing their freshness by Dominick Reuter The Executive Coloring Book Every Finance Bro Artwork: #Finnhall Recorded on 9/22/2025
Full episode available on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/SilentGeneration On this week’s episode of Silent Generation, Joseph and Nathan talk about father figures in their personal lives and in society more broadly. The episode opens with a discussion of familiar archetypes such as coaches, scout leaders, teachers, and bosses. The boys also note that children sometimes latch onto “parasocial father figures” like Mr. Rogers and Hank Hill in the absence of real-life ones. They then share observations about “daddy issues” (the negative traits that emerge in the absence of father figures) before deliberating whether daddy issues and mommy issues can arise independently of one another. Links: "Friendly Guy in a Pub" starter pack meme Sweet middle aged vietnamese ladies calling their customers handsome boy meme Various memes about the lunch lady calling you sugar Look Me In The Eyes (Air Jordan ad) The Joy of Six: US athletes' pushy parents by Les Carpenter The Slap (2011) Japanese adult adoption Best of Jenelle & Barbara (Part 1) | Teen Mom 2 The Jenelle Evans Dating Timeline - A Visual Guide Big Brother Big Sisters of America - History That Spans More Than A Century The Making of a Misogynist: How Andrew Tate inherited his father's toxic beliefs by Claudia Cockerell Artwork: https://www.pinterest.com/pin/417990409147457395/ Recorded on 9/14/2025
Nothing expresses the aesthetics of infrastructure as clearly as American rest stops. On this week’s episode of Silent Generation, Nathan is joined by artist and professor Madeline Rupard, whose paintings “consider the American landscape” and frequently depict rest stops. They begin by defining what constitutes rest stops (fast food chains, gas stations, motels, and plentiful car-oriented infrastructure) before surveying their aesthetics. Amongst other things they discuss how the history of rest areas differs from that of service areas, how America’s first transcontinental highway (the Lincoln Highway) was financed through private sources, how Buc-ee’s lures in customers with spacious and clean restrooms, and how Eden, Idaho is home to a spectacular Garden of Eden themed rest stop. Links: Madeline Rupard - Instagram Page Luxurydeptstore - Instagram Page https://www.madelinerupard.com/ Passages / Madeline Rupard An Interview With Madeline Rupard The sky at grocery stores meme The European mind can’t comprehend this meme The Real-Life Places Along Route 66 that Inspired Cars Before Route 66: The Story of America’s First Highway restareahistory.org Daniel Everett - Instagram Page What Internet Memes Get Wrong About Breezewood, Pennsylvania by Amanda Kolson Hurley Breezewood, Pennsylvania Is Not What You Think It Is by Classy Whale A “lost” photo set of sorts… Traveler’s Oasis “Garden of Eatin’” in Eden, Idaho The Store (1983) Nonstandard - A Documentary (2025) Why our buildings lost their soul by Pearlmania500 Artwork: Photograph provided by Madeline Rupard Recorded on 8/30/2025
The aesthetics of infrastructure are often treated as an expensive afterthought, noticed and appreciated only by artists. But can it even be beautiful to begin with? On this week’s episode of Silent Generation, Joseph and Nathan begin by discussing the four primary ways that infrastructure achieves beauty: engineering and design, paint, public art, and disguise (as is the case with stealth towers). Amongst other things they discuss how it is cringe when infrastructure is made to look like public art, how redesigned streets with painted bike/ bus lanes are a rare instance of society becoming more colorful, how many people assume that hostile design choices that impact homeless people are aesthetic ones, and how infrastructure built by the Works Progress Administration incorporated ornamentation and vernacular architectural traditions. Links: Around the Antenna Tree by Lisa Parks A Prehistory of the Cloud by Tung-Hui Hu How Infrastructure Works: Inside the Systems That Shape Our World by Deb Chachra Rust: The Longest War by Johnathan Waldman The Danger of Minimalist Design A Visual History of the British Telephone Box by Nick Sturgess The Hand by Jiří Trnka Places & Traces 'Ridiculous' Blue Seats Face Buildings, Don't Attract Shoppers, Critics Say by Mina Bloom Ampelmännchen Hall of Waters Artwork: Glenn Jackson Bridge aerial Steve Morgan, CC BY-SA 3.0 <https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0>, via Wikimedia Commons Recorded on 8/24/2025
Full episode available on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/SilentGeneration This week’s episode attempts to address how and why many American cultural practices and institutions have been replaced by those of Disney adults. Nathan is joined by his friend Tiffany Wright, a Disney theme park aficionado with a deep knowledge of the community, to discuss the topic. They begin by defining “Disney adult” and note their psychological motivations. They then survey several Disney resorts (Disneyland, Disney World, and Disneyland Abu Dhabi) and popular Disney influencers like Dear and Darling. Amongst other things they discuss Disney adult critiques and defenses, the enduring relevance of Mickey Mouse in fashion, and the phenomenon of adult infantilization more broadly through Funko Pops and Labububus. Links: Tiffany Wright - Instagram page Tiffany’s Disney adult Halloween costume Disney Adults: Exploring (and Falling in Love With) a Magical Subculture by AJ Wolfe The ‘Disney Adult’ Industrial Complex by Amelia Tait Three Maligned Modern Tourists Defend Themselves by Amelia Tait How ‘Disney Adults’ Became the Most Hated Group on the Internet by EJ Dickson Don’t Judge Disney Adults. Try to Understand Them by Jodi Eichler-Levine What Exactly Is the Magic of Disney World? by Kathryn Jezer-Morton K-HOLE #5: A Report on Doubt Disney’s FastPass: A Complicated History - Defunctland A Deep Dive Into Disney Adults - Kurtis Connor Disney Adult (Urban Dictionary definition) Grown woman who cried upon meeting Goofy Tik Tok video The Segregation of Social Desire: “Religion” and Disney World by William Arnal Disneyland Abu Dhabi Would 'Never Work' Outdoors Says Park Boss by Caroline Reid Dear and Darling Dear and Darling Pluto story Bad Influence: The Dark Side of Kidfluencing Pokemon scalper cleans out entire shelf of destined rivals etb in front of kid Once Upon A Time: The Pop Culture Impact of Mickey Mouse Watches by Rhonda Riche The enduring appeal of Mickey Mouse: Why the fashion industry is still interested by Anya Georgijevic Disney adults when they're not at Disney? Artwork: Britney Spears Once Went On an INSANE Disney World Shopping Spree by Alessia Dunn Recorded on 8/17/2025
On this week’s episode of Silent Generation, Joseph and Nathan discuss all things men’s fragrances. They begin by weighing the reasons men typically wear fragrances (“sex sells,” general presentation) versus why they might not (fragrance sensitivity, “men should smell like men”). They then review several fragrances: Dior Sauvage, Bleu de Chanel, Paco Rabanne Phantom, 4711 Original Eau de Cologne, Greenbriar by Caswell Massey, Maii Bogue, Weekend for Men by Burberry, and Knize Ten. They round out the episode by discussing Jeremy Fragrance’s career as “the number one fragrance icon that follows the teachings of Jesus” before reflecting on the totemic qualities of fragrances. Links: Smellmaxxing Studio Ready Teen Spirit in Pink Crush Fragrance sensitivity: why perfumed products can cause profound health problems by Sirin Kale Last of the NYC Leathermen Fragrance Concentration Guide Everything You Need To Know About Fragrance Concentration Levels - EDT, EDP, Parfum, & MORE Official cologne flowchart of the 4chan fragrance board Fragrance Groups 101 fragrantica.com Dior Sauvage - Fragrantica page Bleu de Chanel - Fragrantica page Paco Rabanne Phantom - Fragrantica page 4711 Original Eau de Cologne - Fragrantica page Greenbriar Caswell Massey - Fragrantica page Maai Bogue - Fragrantica page Weekend for Men Burberry - Fragrantica page Knize Ten - Fragrantica page Dior Sauvage in 2015 according to The History of the Hero: Dior Sauvage by Sarah Karmali I Wore The World's Oldest Cologne For a Week Bogue Profumo Maai: Valkyrie Chypres & Vintage Animalism Knize Ten - A Masterpiece from 1925 Kniže & Co.: A First-Hand Look at Vienna’s Most Storied Tailor by Sven Raphael Schneider Jeremy Fragrance: The Smell of Success Jeremyfragrance - Tik Tok page How Abercrombie, Victoria’s Secret and Vitamin Shoppe use smell to get you to spend more Say Goodbye To The Scent Of Fierce In Abercrombie & Fitch Stores by Christopher Luu Subway: What the Hell Is That Smell? by Joel Burrows The Woman Who Wants to Give Birth to a Shark by Nikhil Roy Gabriel O’Hara (niche fragrance brand inspired by Chicago streets) Artwork: Knize Ten Eau de Toilette Recorded on 8/11/2025
Gorpcore is a hiking-inspired aesthetic that was first identified in a 2017 article published in The Cut. On this week’s episode of Silent Generation, Joseph begins by interviewing Nathan about his gorpcore-esque wardrobe. The boys then detail the various elements of the aesthetic (outerwear, technical fabrics, face concealment, and high definition landscapes) before introducing a vintage sub-aesthetic they call “lindy gorpcore.” Towards the later half of the episode they discuss Death Stranding 1 and its recent sequel Death Stranding 2: On the Beach, which are standout examples of the gorpcore aesthetic in gaming. Links: Gorpcore Pinterest Board: https://www.pinterest.com/silentgeneration/gorpcore/ Lindy Gorpcore Pinterest Board: https://www.pinterest.com/silentgeneration/lindy-gorpcore/ r/Gorpcore A Guide To: Gorpcore Everything to Know About Gorpcore, the Outdoorsy Trend Celebs Love The Origins of GORP by Ashley Brown First Came Normcore. Now Get Ready for Gorpcore by Jason Chen Rihanna Lookin' like a Pokemon gym leader meme pride month outfit meme Gorpworld - Instagram page Gorpcore.jpeg - Instagram page Gorpcore.world - Instagram page Outdoorrecarchive - Instagram page Presta94 - Instagram page Dimi_tt7 - Instagram page The Story of Fleece by Rachel G Clark The Darkside of Gorpcore by Wrong Trousers Oze’s Mighty Bokka Porters Hideo Kojima and Yoji Shinkawa Open Up About Death Stranding 2: Connection, Creativity, and Walking Through Loneliness by Ralph Check Out This Sick $1700 Death Stranding 2 Jacket You’ll Never Get by Alyssa Mercante Death Stranding 2 Photo Session with Fragile, Tomorrow and Rainy Artwork: Source unknown Recorded on 8/2/2025
Full episode available on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/SilentGeneration This is the third and final installment of Silent Generation’s three part series on Bohemianism. In this week’s episode, Joseph and Nathan finally address the most popular definition of “bohemian”: the trope of the impoverished artist living on the fringes of society. They detail how the combined impacts of the French and Industrial Revolutions caused bohemians to first emerge in Paris during the 1830s, and how the cultural figure was defined and popularized by Henri Murger’s Scenes of Bohemian Life and Giacamo Puccini’s La Bohème. They conclude by discussing other 19th century cultural figures (flaneurs, dandies), the movie Moulin Rouge!, and boho-chic fashion. Links: Scenes of Bohemian Life by Henri Murger La bohème by Giacomo Puccini Bohemians: A Very Short Introduction by David Weir Bohemians: The Glamorous Outcasts by Elizabeth Wilson Bohemianism - In Our Time (BBC) Cross-section of a Parisian house in the 1850s Mexico City Gentrification Towertown: LOST COMMUNITIES OF CHICAGO Nabe ni Dangan wo Ukenagara (manga that features Chicago) “Water only” family Tik Tok Labelle - Lady Marmalade Bo-ho Chic/ Whimsicraft Designs from Bohemian Style (1999) Decorating Cents worst designs Tik Tok Artwork: Photos of Bohemian Partiers in New York’s Greenwich Village, 1910-1920 Recorded on 7/28/2025
On this week’s episode of Silent Generation, Joseph interviews Nathan about his recent trip to Poland and the Czech Republic. He recaps his travels to Gdansk, Warsaw, Krakow, and Prague. Amongst other things he discusses how Gdansk was once a city-state known as the Free City of Danzig, how Warsaw’s Museum of Communism is above a KFC, how one of Krakow’s largest tourist attractions is a salt mine in the town of Wieliczka, and how Prague is home to the largest European castle still in use. This is the second installment of a four part series that explores the cultural figure of the Bohemian and its origins. This segment briefly explains how “Bohemia” is a region and kingdom that is now part of the modern day Czech Republic. Links: Prague is a Parody of Europe Artwork: Exploring Prague in May, 1991 Recorded on 7/13/2025
Manouche jazz is a musical genre (or musical idiom) pioneered by Django Reinhardt, a French-Romani jazz guitarist and composer who lived from 1910 to 1953. He developed manouche jazz in collaboration with Stéphane Grappelli after being inspired by American jazz musicians, and the genre is notable for its percussive guitars, virtuosic lead guitarists, and reliance on acoustic instruments. Joseph and Nathan are joined by Kelly from the Significant Lovers podcast to discuss the genre. This is the first installment of a four part series that explores the cultural figure of the Bohemian and its origins. The French believed that the Romani people came from Bohemia when they first arrived in their country, and the term “Bohemian” meant “Romani” for several centuries. “Bohemian” came to be associated with all of the stereotypes of the Romani people (positive and negative) before coming to only be associated with positive Romani stereotypes by the end of the 20th century: artsy, creative, free-spirited, and prone to wanderlust. Links: Significant Lovers Spotify Significant Lovers Instagram Manouche Jazz Playlist: https://open.spotify.com/playlist/5yZf7mGsSpZteSa41sUD84?si=0da77b26e481443c Rendezvous A Paris (Starbucks) playlist: https://open.spotify.com/playlist/0Z8SiyBtkpaHaB3LFHC9wf?si=4de387e2bb20429e Gypsy Jazz: in Search of Django Reinhardt and the Soul of Gypsy Swing by Michael Dregni #8 Michael Dregni - The Life and Times of Django Reinhardt Stéphane Grappelli - His Life and Legacy: Part One. Gypsy Jazz Violinist with/after Django Reinhardt Wish You Were Here by Pink Floyd Bohemianism - In Our Time (BBC) Artwork: Django Reinhardt Recorded on 6/29/2025
Full episode available on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/SilentGeneration On this week’s episode of Silent Generation, Joseph and Nathan discuss one of the biggest culprits of car-oriented development in the mid-20th century: malls. The boys begin by surveying several malls in Chicago (900 N. Michigan, The Water Tower Place, Block 37, and Ford City Mall) before delving into the largest malls in the country (Mall of America, American Dream Mall, and King of Prussia Mall). They then discuss a multitude of mall brands, noting the mall goth feedback loop generated by Hot Topic and the toxicity of Bath and Body Works. They conclude by discussing the urbanist critique of malls and what should be done with dying ones. Links: The Economics and Nostalgia of Dead Malls by Nelson D. Schwartz The Great American Shopping Mall: Past, Present, and Future by Spencer Li The Perfectly Optimized Building for Late Capitalism - Stewart Hicks Opening of Minnesota's Southdale Center 99 Percent Invisible: Meet me by the fountain How Malls Are Evolving In The U.S What Is a Class A Mall? Why Restaurants Have Become So Important To Shopping Malls Water Tower Place ‘Past Its Prime’ As A Mall — But Mag Mile Recovery In Full Swing, Backers Say by Melody Mercado The Only Thing To Do in a Dying Mall by Edward Robert McClelland What is The Metropolitan? What to know about the new urban village in Phoenix by Taylor Seely Meet the ‘Queen Spinner of Shell Shock,’ a local celebrity at MOA by Nicole Ki Spencer’s Gifts existed back in the ‘40s as a mail order catalog that sold donkeys Yankee Candles Levels of Abstraction Mall Chicken Made Me Feel More American by Su Jit-Lin Luxurydeptstore Instagram account The Great Places Erased by Suburbia - Notjustbikes What We Should (Actually) Do with Dying Malls - Chuck from Strong Towns Artwork: 1990s aerial photo of Glendale Galleria and pre-Americana Recorded on 6/22/2025
On this week’s episode of Silent Generation, Joseph and Nathan detail all of the garments men wear to the beach and the various ways they make men look attractive. They begin with beachwear bottoms (speedos, jammers, box leg trunks, swim trunks, boardshorts), before discussing tops (tank tops, Hawaiian shirts, button downs, Italian knits), and accessories (straw hats, sandals, dive watches). Afterward, the boys examine how the version of preppy style common in coastal Southern states naturally resembles beachwear, citing the Ratliffs from the most recent season of The White Lotus as their primary example. They then discuss beachwear in additional TV shows and movies (The Beach, Seinfeld, and Magnum PI) before concluding with an exposé on shirtlessness. Links: Beachwear Pinterest board: https://www.pinterest.com/silentgeneration/beachwear/ Bitches from Wisconsin be like BEACH DAY meme Bitches from Chicago be like BEACH DAY meme Milverine A cool guide about swimwear color safety Interview: The Designers of Chubbies Shorts by Geoffrey Brown Men's Swimwear Guide - Bathing Suits for Gentlemen: Trunks, Briefs & Speedos 1970’s Men’s Swimwear Tik Tok video Macy's Beachwear June 2025 - Chicago, IL You can’t arrest me my dad is a lawyer meme Mike White Teases Location For Season 4 Of ‘The White Lotus’ by Peter White The White Lotus Costume Designer Alex Bovaird on Season 3's Designer-Loving Blondes, the Catalog-Worthy Ratliffs, and Chelsea's DIY Expat Style - Who What Wear Podcast BONUS: Alex Bovaird Returns! The White Lotus Costume Designer on Every Fashion Easter Egg in Season 3 and the Impact of Her Costumes - Who What Wear Podcast Duvin Design Vacation Brand Sunscreen Orlebar Brown Frescobol Carioca Chubbies Artwork: Surfers Recorded on 6/15/2025