We always hear about Millennials ruining things. From the demise of the high street to being tagged as cereal killers, we’re always being blamed for something. But now, in the digital age, has our habit of streaming come at the cost of traditional cable TV?
Last Saturday, Paris’ Arc De Triomphe, an elegant monument and revered tourist attraction, was swarmed with thousands of raging protesters who torched luxury cars, set houses alight, mobilised stun grenades, raided shops, and confronted teargas firing riot police in one of the French capitals most affluent districts. This was the second week in a season of activism, or what the organisers of the movement coined, “Act 2”.
This year somebody has won a staggering 123 million on the British National Lottery. My mind began to wander. What would I even do with that kind of money?
If hip hop was a person, it just turned 46 years old this year. It's been around to sneak into the clubs underaged, receive ridicule by its supervisors like popular governments and mass media, and then become the prodigal son to the same political officials and marketing execs for campaign trails and Christmas jingles advertising ugly sweaters on television.