As a proud Gen Xer, I’ve spent years watching the internet blame millennials for the downfall of just about everything. If a business struggled, a trend faded away, or consumer habits changed, somebody somewhere was ready to declare that millennials had “killed” it.
The funny thing is that many of these things weren’t actually destroyed by a generation. Most simply evolved as technology, lifestyles, and economic realities changed. Still, the list of things millennials supposedly ruined has become one of the internet’s longest-running jokes.
Before I get into it, I stress, this is according to the internet. I am with Millennials on most of these, except for the fabric softener. I use no less than 3 bottles per week.
Let’s take a look at some of the most famous casualties.
The Department Store
For decades, department stores were the heart of shopping. Families spent entire afternoons wandering through massive stores packed with clothing, home goods, cosmetics, and electronics.
Then online shopping arrived.
Millennials embraced the convenience of ordering from their couch, comparing prices instantly, and having purchases delivered to their doorstep. While younger shoppers certainly accelerated the shift, technology was already changing retail long before millennials had spending power.
As someone who rarely sets foot in a store anymore, I can’t exactly point fingers.
Shopping Malls
Remember when the mall was the place to be?
Teenagers gathered there on weekends. Friends met up at the food court. People spent hours browsing stores without buying a thing.
Today, many malls sit partially empty or have closed altogether. Internet commentators often blame millennials for abandoning malls, but rising retail costs, changing shopping habits, and e-commerce deserve much of the credit.
Besides, most Gen Xers eventually stopped hanging out at malls too.
Cable Television
Once upon a time, families planned their evenings around television schedules.
Miss your favorite show? Too bad. You’d have to wait for a rerun.
Millennials embraced streaming services and on-demand entertainment, helping reshape the entire industry. Now viewers expect to watch what they want, when they want.
Honestly, this is one “death” I’m perfectly fine with.
Paper Maps
Few things scream Gen X road trip quite like unfolding a gigantic paper map across the dashboard.
Getting lost was practically part of the adventure.
Today, smartphones provide turn-by-turn directions instantly. Millennials adopted digital navigation early, and paper maps became more of a novelty than a necessity.
While I occasionally miss the simplicity of old road trips, I certainly don’t miss arguing over which exit we missed.
Home Landlines
There was a time when every household had one phone mounted somewhere in the house.
Everyone shared it.
Everyone heard your conversations.
And everyone knew when you were talking too long.
As mobile phones became affordable and practical, millennials largely abandoned landlines. These days, many younger adults have never even had one in their home.
Chain Restaurants
The internet frequently accuses millennials of destroying casual dining chains.
Restaurants that once dominated suburban America have struggled as younger consumers increasingly prefer local eateries, food delivery, and fast-casual dining options.
Of course, rising costs and changing tastes probably played a bigger role than any particular generation.
Printed Encyclopedias
Every Gen Xer remembers searching through encyclopedia volumes for school projects.
If your family had the full set, you felt pretty fancy.
Today, nearly any piece of information can be found online within seconds. Millennials grew up during the transition to internet-based research and quickly left bulky encyclopedia collections behind.
Students everywhere are probably grateful.
Traditional Napkins and Fine China
Believe it or not, millennials have been blamed for reducing demand for formal dining products.
Previous generations often registered for expensive china sets, crystal glasses, and formal entertaining pieces. Many millennials opted for more practical purchases instead.
Considering how often some of those fancy dishes spent decades collecting dust, it’s hard to argue with the logic.
Diamonds
One headline after another claimed millennials were killing the diamond industry.
The reality is much simpler.
Many younger adults faced student loans, higher housing costs, and different financial priorities. Spending thousands on diamonds became less important than paying bills or saving for a home.
It’s difficult to blame people for being practical.
Golf
For years, articles declared millennials were ruining golf.
Participation declined among younger players, and many courses struggled to attract new customers.
However, golf requires both time and money, two things many younger adults found themselves short on. More recently, the sport has experienced something of a resurgence, proving reports of its death may have been greatly exaggerated.
Fabric Softener
Yes, even fabric softener made the list.
Apparently, millennials questioned whether they needed yet another laundry product and simply stopped buying as much of it.
Somewhere, a marketing executive probably blamed an entire generation for that decision.
The Motorcycle Industry
Several reports suggested millennials were less interested in owning motorcycles than previous generations.
Higher insurance costs, changing transportation needs, and urban living all contributed to declining sales.
Yet somehow, the internet simplified the issue into another example of millennials ruining everything.
Why Every Generation Gets Blamed
The truth is that every generation changes consumer habits.
Baby Boomers changed the world their parents knew. Gen X embraced technologies that transformed daily life. Millennials accelerated digital adoption. Gen Z is creating entirely new trends today.
When habits change, businesses either adapt or struggle. That’s not destruction. That’s evolution.
Still, it’s entertaining to scroll through those endless lists of things millennials supposedly killed. At this point, they’ve been blamed for everything from napkins to golf courses to chain restaurants.
Give it enough time, and future generations will probably get blamed for killing things we can’t even imagine yet.
As a proud Gen Xer, I’ll just sit back, enjoy the show, and be grateful nobody is currently blaming us for the downfall of fabric softener.
Lisa Crow contributed to this article. She is a true crime junkie and lifestyle blogger based in Waco, Texas. Lisa is the Head of Content at Gigi’s Ramblings and Southern Bred True Crime Junkie. She spends her free time traveling when she can and making memories with her large family which consists of six children and sixteen grandchildren.