I'm a huge proponent of the History Channel. Sometimes there's nothing better after a long day of toiling over mind-numbingly exhaustive classes than sitting down and letting the History Channel pander its infinite wisdom to me, without even asking me to read a few hundred pages after the show ends.
Recently, a special came on regarding the ""Greatest Generation"" and the hardships they endured to ensure that you and I can shove double cheeseburgers down our throats while Facebooking until our eyeballs bleed. For those of you who aren't too keen on your generational knowledge, let me fill you in: If you're in college right now, your grandparents were most likely born into the Greatest Generation.
Essentially, most members of this generation grew up on gruel and pissed in the woods during their childhood in the Great Depression, saved the world by slaying Nazis and the Japanese in WWII and in the years that followed set up the greatest economic infrastructure the world has ever seen. I'm pretty sure they also invented the Missionary Position.
Sure, it's an impressive resumé, but what about other generations—including us? Why should a few small achievements achieved sixty years ago by a bunch of old farts merit the esteemed title of the ""Greatest"" generation? Well, our parents and their ""Baby Boom"" generation created and promoted some of the best music ever seen in the 1960s and '70s, spearheaded sexual freedom and introduced massive amounts of marijuana to college campuses across the U.S.
These are all luxuries enjoyed by future generations (including ourselves), but let's be honest. None of these accomplishments merit granting them the title of the greatest generation. Naturally, then, the only other feasible candidate for the title of the greatest generation that ever lived is none other than our generation. In the following list I have compiled a number of reasons for the official change from our current title of the Millennial Generation to the highly envied title of the Greatest Generation.
Instant Gratification: This is something I'm sure all generations desired, but only we in the Millennial Generation have achieved. My parents would tell me that getting what you want, when you want it, makes you a compulsive, impatient asshole. I disagree. Letter writing, telegraphs and catalog shopping were the sad attempts of prior generations to do what we have done with the Internet, cell phones and cable TV. If I want a beer bong shaped like a pink flamingo, a five pound cheese wheel or a giant life-sized cutout of Jessica Alba, Ebay can assure it will be in my eager fingertips within days. Plus, who needs to finally get around to breaking up with their significant others through a tear-stained letter when you can just text your heartbreaking words in half the time?
Electronic Entertainment: The only thing more fun than liberating the world one Nazi dog tag at a time is doing so from home. I can do everything that my grandpa did on the shores of Normandy from my couch, late at night, all while enjoying Taco Bell and a Coke.
Sure, our parents tickled their video game fancy with Pong, but we made the real stuff. Throw in an HDTV and some Surround Sound and you've got an entertainment experience fit for kings, pioneered by none other than our thrill-seeking generation.
Music: It's easy to disregard our generation's popular music as inferior to what our parents grew up with, but do not be deceived. The Millennial Generation has systematically streamlined music as we know it, incorporating our much-coveted notion of instant gratification into our music-making process.
Don't have the time to learn how to sing or play an instrument? No problem. Auto-Tune and synthesized drums, strings and background vocals have side-stepped this issue. With the leaps and bounds made in songwriting recently, all you really need is a Macbook, an attractive face and a slim midsection—wrap your big lips around that, Mick Jagger.
Plus, if you run out of ideas for a catchy melody, you can always go the way of Kid Rock and just throw a couple of classic tunes from dead '70s singers together, sing a couple of lyrics about drunken summer nights and sell it as your own.
We Elected the First African-American President: I know my conservative, veteran grandpa and all of his poker buddies didn't vote for Obama. Clearly this alone undisputedly deems us the most ethical generation.