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Posts Tagged ‘Alex Steed’

Millennials Changing America: Feeling the Pinch

Tuesday, November 18th, 2008

The young people I’ve spoken with thus far are varying levels of worried by the issues facing the global economy. A few days back, I talked with FORGE, an organization staffed by mid-20-somethings and concerned primarily with refugee issues in Africa. They reported being in crisis mode due to failure to meet a series of fundraising goals set earlier in the year. They’re handling the issue in an interesting, new-school manner by being absolutely transparent about the issues they are facing. As it had been explained to me by a social entrepreneurship blogger before my meeting with them, Sean Stannard-Stockton’s from Tactical Philanthropy “has a big axe to grind about transparency and started creating a whole world/web of resources around it. A professional consultant is now helping forge on the condition that Sean blogs brutally and realistically about it.” Mission Recognition takes a look at the approach here.

I have noticed, however, that fears on the West Coast seem a little less extreme than those based in the East (New York especially) where there exists an air of economic fear in the air everywhere you turn. Presumably, this could ultimately be related to the financial bases of both locales (Wall St., devastated, lies at the heart of New York while Silicon Valley is still chugging along in San Francisco), but both New York and California are facing substantial budget shortfalls and post-election elation is starting to slip back onto a sense of grim realism for those whose budgets and salaries are contingent of the the public’s ability to give.

Meredith at Ypulse takes a look at this very issue and suggests that despite our collective worry, we’re optimistic: “While millennials are certainly aware of the dire financial times we live in, our general attitude towards the future remains optimistic.”

As far as I can tell in my experience, yes, we are worried. Perhaps we’re optimistic, but we’re certainly cautious about said positivity. New Yorkers appear to be sweating a bit more than those in L.A. and San Francisco Bay, but we all know that we’re in for a pinch. I’ll keep you posted as we get a better collective sense of which way, exactly, the wind is blowing.

Tags: Add new tag, Alex Steed, Millennial Generation, Millennials Changing America
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Millennials Changing America: Garbologists on authenticity.

Monday, November 3rd, 2008

Hello, all!

We’re presently on our way to Portland, Oregon so that we can check out the Bus Project’s Trick or Vote event. We’ll be following folks around and talking with them about how the massive GOTV effort was put planned, organized, and executed.

To digest upon in the meantime, here we feature video of our talk with Gabriel Brown, a Spokane, Washington-based performance artist and Americorps volunteer. We spoke with him for a bit last night. He talked a bit his art — he panhandles, dumpster dives, and begs for high-end consumer goods — and the responses his efforts evoke. Considering talk about a generational embrace for “authenticity” gets thrown around a lot with regard to this particular age-group (applying more, so far as I can tell, to those on the elder end of the generational spectrum), Gabriel’s commentary on trying to display a modern — or “real” — value system by projecting an absurd and ironic image of a feeling of necessity onto high-end consumer goods is an amazingly apt articulation of what is talked up as a generational desire to get to the bottom of what is “real.”

We’ll have more on this, and a ton of fun stuff from Portland coming soon…

Be sure to check out the site in the meantime.

Tags: Activism, Alex Steed, Garbology, Millennials Changing America, Performance Art, Spokane, Washington
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Millennials Changing America: An Update from Ann Arbor

Thursday, October 23rd, 2008

Hello, y’all!

Here’s a brief video update taken at a gas station outside of Ann Arbor.

Things are surely coming along and we’ve got a huge couple of days in Chicago where we’ll meet with The Interfaith Youth Core (which I embarrassingly refer to as “Interfaith Youth Council” here), high school students at a public school, a couple of meetups devised by Justin Massa from MoveSmart and Dorothee Royal-Hedinger of See3 Media, and much more.

The next time I connect with you all, I’ll be out West. Thanks so much for keeping up in the meantime, and I look forward to reporting more.

Tags: Alex Steed, Interfaith Youth Core, Justin Massa, Millennials Changing America, MoveSmart, See3
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Millennials Changing America: An Update

Thursday, October 16th, 2008

I am happy to report that the Millennials Changing America Tour is chugging along, and that we’re talking with some phenomenal people along the way. Despite facing some moderate car trouble, we look forward to spending tomorrow and Saturday in Washington, DC, and then heading West of the Mississippi shortly thereafter.

Thus far, I’ve reported on a Changeblogger from New York, an eAdvocate from Maine, and a seemingly-inadvertently Millennial-free United Church of Christ in Connecticut. The bulk of my reporting thus far has been for NetSquared and Ypulse thus far, and I look forward to publishing on ePolitics, Future Majority, and other outlets in the very near future. I am also excited to talk with Anima LaVoy of Swing Semester, and meeting up with other folks in Cleveland, Ann Arbor, Chicago, and other locations along the way.

As for other news, I’ll be posting daily odds and ends about the trip over on Change.org’s new blog network, and a comprehensive index of all postings, articles, and coverage from the tour can always be found on our site. Further, I’ll be submitting weekly updates here. While you’re waiting for the next update, be sure to check out this coverage of replyforall over at NetSquared, another tour sponsor.

I hope this finds you all well, and I look forward to meeting and talking with you on the road.

Tags: Alex Steed, Anima LaVoy, blog network, Change.org, Changeblogger, DC, epolitics, Future Majority, GrowSmart Maine, Millennials Changing America, NetSquared, Swing Semester, United Church of Christ, Washington
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Hello from Millennials Changing America!

Wednesday, October 8th, 2008

My name is Alex Steed and I’ll soon be departing on the Millennials Changing America Tour. The project will bring me face-to-face with young people throughout the country who are putting the Internet to use towards creating positive social change. I will be posting tour updates on this blog every Thursday, and I am extremely grateful to replyforall for helping to sponsor this undertaking.

I’ve heard and read a lot of things about this millennial generation. We’re pinned as altruistic heroes or narcissistic villains. We’ll likely use our networking prowess to leverage our potential for good or we’ll become more likely to bully or be bullied, stalk or be stalked, become victims of the temptations of inflated senses of self-worth, etc. There are many things being written about this generation, and while some highlight the incredible power for good, social change, and civic engagement we now yield, much of the reportage, likely in order to adhere to mainstream doom and gloom narratives, suggests that coming of age in an era defined by the rise of communication technologies is a precarious and dangerous process.

Because the so-called mainstream media focuses almost exclusively on the negative, or the obvious, one might imagine that the characteristics of the millennial generation’s involvement with the Internet are defined by its use for experimenting with stupid things, its embrace of the erosion of their own privacy, and its penchant for giving Barack Obama’s campaign money. This is allowed to happen, in part, because we millennials are actually part of the biggest civic shift that’s been seen in nearly a century, but we’re so busy doing that we’re letting people outside of our generation speak for our activities. Millennials Changing America is about giving a voice to those who are using the Internet as part of creating positive social change. It’s about putting our voice out there, demanding to be heard, and breaking up the obvious monotony of reportage about who we are and what we do.

Again, we’ll be posting video, audio, and commentary from the road on this blog every Thursday. We look forward to sharing with you.

Tags: Alex Steed, Barack Obama, Millennial Generation
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