# What Defines a Generation: Consumption, Production, and the Millennial Dispute That Reveals Both > Published on ADIN (https://adin.chat/s/what-defines-a-generation-consumption-production-and-the-millennial-dispute-that-reveals-both) > Type: Article > Date: 2026-05-13 > Description: On May 9th, 2026, an account called @doomscroll_x posted a meme to X captioned "The Millennial falloff will be studied for generations." By the time the discourse had metabolized it, the post had accumulated 6.8 million impressions, nearly 6,000 likes, 906 quote tweets, and 1,654 bookmarks. Two... On May 9th, 2026, an account called @doomscroll_x posted a meme to X captioned "The Millennial falloff will be studied for generations." By the time the discourse had metabolized it, the post had accumulated 6.8 million impressions, nearly 6,000 likes, 906 quote tweets, and 1,654 bookmarks. Two days later, Daniel Keller — an artist and art world figure posting as @dnlklr — flipped the caption to read "The Millennial supremacy will be studied for generations" and posted a counter-meme cataloguing what Millennials had actually built. His version drew 100,000 impressions and 1,084 likes. The ratio — roughly 60 to 1 — is the most honest data point in the entire exchange. It's also the first hint that this argument is more complicated than it looks. --- ## The Meme and Its Attribution Problem The @doomscroll_x meme operates on a specific and largely unexamined premise: that a generation is what it *consumes*. Its identity lives in the brands it adopted, the music it claimed, the aesthetic signals it assembled before they aged into embarrassment. By that logic, Millennials peaked around 2012 and have been coasting on residual cool ever since. But the meme's execution had a factual problem that at least a few commenters noticed. Korn, deployed as evidence of Millennial cultural fingerprints, formed in 1993 and broke through on radio in 1994. Their audience was Gen X. @bbylwyr21 put it plainly in the replies: "Herman saw a couple high schoolers wearing their parents Korn concert T's and assumed the whole generation loves the music. Their streaming numbers are almost certainly just us millennials refusing to listen to new music." @adiosmolina was blunter: "A take so bad you have to wonder if its rage bait. All Zoomers love Korn is an all timer." The same issue runs through the meme's other references. Much of what the post frames as Millennial-era culture originated with Gen X or belongs to a cultural gray zone that both cohorts shared. Etsy, meanwhile — apparently included as a mark of decline — was founded in 2005 by a founder born in 1980. Whether it reads as embarrassment or creation depends entirely on whose ledger you're applying. This attribution slippage is not incidental. It's structural. In the consumption model of generational identity, things get associated with whichever cohort made them *visible to the next generation*, regardless of who originated them. The generation that introduced something to the internet in your teenage years owns it, culturally speaking. Original authorship is beside the point. --- ## In Defense of Taste Before dismissing the consumption model as shallow, it's worth giving it its due. Taste is not trivial. Curation is a creative skill. The aesthetic ecosystems younger cohorts build — the visual grammar of a TikTok scroll, the microgenres that crystallize a mood and dissolve in a year, the meme formats that compress entire emotional registers into a single image — require genuine creative intelligence. These are not passive activities. They are acts of synthesis and signal. There's also something emotionally true in the consumption model that the production model tends to miss. Cultural moments matter not because of who filed the incorporation paperwork, but because of what people *felt* during them. The early 2000s internet — the era the "falloff" meme is implicitly eulogizing — had a specific texture of possibility and communal discovery that many who lived through it describe as formative in ways that no infrastructure audit captures. One reply under the @doomscroll_x meme captured this with unexpected candor. @Alejoisbak, apparently a Zoomer, wrote: "People were so hopeful and happy during these times. I genuinely wish I had been a millennial just to feel this in my early 20s instead of this dread that never leaves my mind about tomorrow." That's not contempt. That's mourning. Beneath the "falloff" framing — with its smug tallying of passé brands — runs a quieter current of envy for a cultural moment that felt livable in a way the present doesn't. The generational meme war is also, at least partly, a grief exercise. --- ## Keller's Counter-Argument Daniel Keller rejected the consumption framework outright. In a follow-up post, he was explicit: "It's hilarious how zoomer-literalists unironically act like this meme and think consumption habits are more important for defining a generation than their actual achievements and output." The word *literalists* is precise. His complaint isn't only that the meme got the attributions wrong — though it did — but that it's running the wrong measurement entirely. His counter-meme was built differently by design: it required specific names, specific objects, specific records. When someone asked about items in the image, Keller replied with granularity: "That's a Messi jersey and next to it is a painting by Avery Singer, the millennial painter with highest auction prices." When someone suggested Vice and vaporwave belonged on the list, he pushed back: "Vice is Gen X. I will add OPN to addendum addendum though." That discipline — distinguishing carefully between what Millennials actually created and what merely surrounded them — is the production model operating as intended. You can't just gesture at an aesthetic era. You have to cite what was made. The contrast with the "falloff" meme's casual attribution errors is not incidental. One framework rewards precision. The other doesn't require it. --- ## The Production Ledger Set aside the meme format and apply a straightforward audit of what Millennials have actually built. In AI infrastructure: Sam Altman (born 1985) leads OpenAI; Dario Amodei (born 1983) founded Anthropic after departing it. Between them, these two companies currently define the frontier of large language model development and are among the most consequential technology organizations in the world. In social platforms: Mark Zuckerberg (born 1984) runs Meta, the social infrastructure for approximately three billion people. Evan Spiegel (born 1990) built Snapchat, whose Stories format was subsequently copied by Instagram, WhatsApp, and TikTok. In communication tools: Jason Citron (born 1984) founded Discord — the communication layer for gaming communities, crypto projects, and an expanding range of professional contexts. Pavel Durov (born 1984) built Telegram, which now serves over 900 million monthly active users across the Middle East, Eastern Europe, and Southeast Asia. In fashion and art: Demna Gvasalia (born 1981) founded Vetements and later took creative direction of Balenciaga, restructuring how the industry processes irony and logomania. Avery Singer commands the highest auction prices among Millennial painters. These are not legacy assets. They are live, operating systems that shape daily life for billions of people — built, in most cases, by people who are now in their early forties and in the productive middle of their careers. The idea that this cohort is in "falloff" requires a very particular definition of what counts as cultural relevance. --- ## Founding vs. Owning the Moment There is, however, a distinction the production argument needs to take seriously: building infrastructure is not the same as defining the surface culture that runs on top of it. Discord was built by a Millennial. The communities that make it feel alive — the aesthetics, the in-jokes, the subcultures that colonize individual servers — are largely Zoomer-created. Zuckerberg built the pipes; whether those pipes currently carry Millennial culture is a separate question, and the answer is largely no. The visual and sonic grammar of TikTok, the micro-aesthetics of Zoomer internet, the way that platform encodes attention and emotional register — this is genuine cultural production, and it belongs to a younger cohort. So both things can be true. Millennials built the stack. Zoomers are building on it. Neither generation has the whole ledger. This is also where the "falloff" framing reveals its own conceptual poverty. A platform can't "fall off" in the same way a trend can. What @doomscroll_x is actually measuring is aesthetic succession — the normal process by which each cohort declares its own sensibility and retires its predecessor's. This isn't evidence of decline. It's evidence of time passing. @SoNotVinnie made the point economically: "Well that's what happens to every generation… TikTok is not gonna last forever either and so on." @millusinsky put it with more edge, setting Millennials "against boomers' aesthetic illiteracy and Gen Z's neuro-clumsiness" — a generational partisan observation, but one that at least names a real phenomenon: every era produces a dominant aesthetic register that the next era will find embarrassing, and eventually useful again. --- ## The Virality Paradox Return to the numbers: 6.8 million impressions versus 100,000. The "falloff" meme — built on the premise that taste and consumption are the primary currency of cultural relevance — won decisively on the metric that governs contemporary online discourse. It was widely consumed. It was widely shared. It generated conversation. The "supremacy" counter — which argued that production and output are the correct unit of measurement — performed the way most production performs: quietly, durately, without maximizing for the scroll. This is almost too neat. The post that said taste is everything won by taste standards. The post that said output is everything performed like output usually does in a consumption-optimized environment — it didn't go viral, but it made something. @BeboNotNice, in the replies to Keller's thread, summarized the irony: "Millennials built platforms for you to write this lad." --- ## Two Frameworks, One Open Question The consumption model and the production model are not simply competing claims about which generation is better. They reflect genuinely different theories of what cultural legacy means — theories with different assumptions about what matters, what lasts, and who gets to say so. The consumption model is the dominant mode in popular generational discourse, and has been since marketers in the 1990s discovered that age cohorts could be meaningfully segmented by brand affinity. It is attuned to felt experience, emotional resonance, and the social life of aesthetic signals. Its weakness is that it systematically undervalues infrastructure, misattributes creation to whoever popularized rather than who built, and conflates the end of a trend cycle with the end of relevance. The production model is how historians actually evaluate generations — not by what the Silent Generation put on the radio, but by what it built: the civic infrastructure, the institutional architecture, the things that outlasted the moment. It is attuned to what persists. Its weakness is that it can become a scoreboard that erases the texture of lived culture — the feeling of being young at a particular moment, which is real even if it doesn't show up in incorporation records. Zoomers are in a specific position: they are the first generation to have been algorithmically processed from adolescence, to have grown up not in the Wild West of early internet but inside the optimized, monetized, engagement-maximized environments that Millennials constructed. The "dread that never leaves my mind about tomorrow," as @Alejoisbak put it, is part of the inheritance. The infrastructure is theirs to use. Whether it's theirs to love is a different matter. Millennials, meanwhile, are old enough to have built institutions but not old enough to be judged on their full record. The companies they founded are in their early to mid-stages. The art is still being made. The cultural downstream of AI — built by Millennial founders, currently reshaping everything — is not yet visible. The ledger is open. The more useful question isn't which framework is right. It's: what would it look like if both were applied honestly? A generation that built the most transformative technology in a century while simultaneously being mocked for their Keurig machines and their mid-aughts haircuts is not a paradox. It's just what it looks like when history is still being written. --- *The Millennial falloff, if it comes, has not arrived. The Millennial supremacy, if it holds, will not be legible in meme form. The fact that we're arguing about both in the same week — on platforms they built, using AI they made — is not nothing.*