Current:Home > InvestWhen we grow up alongside our stars -WealthPro Academy
When we grow up alongside our stars
View
Date:2025-04-17 21:19:05
Like many people who routinely suffer FOMO, I've drained a ridiculous portion of my bank account to secure tickets for Beyoncé's Renaissance tour, which officially kicked off last week in Sweden. This will be my third time seeing Queen Bey live; I last saw her when she was touring for Lemonade in 2016. But before that, it had been even longer between my IRL sightings: 17 years(!), when Destiny's Child (pre-Michelle Williams) opened for TLC during the FanMail tour.
I was 11 years old. Back then, I had no idea that that same lead singer with a unique name would become such a dominant force in every era of my life: my teens (the "Crazy in Love" era); college (the "Single Ladies" era); my 20s (4, Beyoncé, Lemonade), and now, my 30s. I had no clue that decades later, I would pay a pretty penny to watch her put on one of the biggest tours in my lifetime.
For many people my age, Beyoncé's always been a part of our lives. Her combined level of stardom and critical esteem is exceptionally rare; more than 25 years into her professional career, she's arguably bigger than ever. But this has got me thinking about other cultural figures and the generations of fans who have grown up and older alongside them. This year marks 20 years since Kenan Thompson joined Saturday Night Live, though as a millennial raised on a steady diet of Nickelodeon, he was a part of my life long before then, as a star on the kid shows All That and Kenan & Kel. (I've been watching Kenan on my TV since I was six years old!)
For Gen-Xers, Weird Al is one of those guys; as my lovely co-host Stephen Thompson recently observed, the prolific musician-comedian's debut album dropped 40 years ago, and he's never stayed away too long in all that time since. (Just last year, a bonkers pseudo-biopic about his life was released.) Frank Sinatra, the Beatles, Michael and Janet Jackson, Oprah, Mariah Carey, Steven Spielberg, Leonardo DiCaprio and Will Smith – all mean something special to the ones who were young when they first came up, too.
To be clear, this is different from purely nostalgia-fueled artists who remain stuck in the collective memory primarily for whatever they did many years ago. (Sorry, Backstreet Boys.) And it's also not quite the same experience as having grown up with the pop culture that older generations hand down. However, part of occupying this unique cultural space does require multi-generational longevity.
Instead, it's about how every generation has its stars who hit it big just as that generation is coming of age and honing its tastes in art and who never seem too far from that cohort's consciousness even as they age. I think it creates a unique bond that's harder to break, for better or worse; you may find it difficult to accept and/or reconcile their faults. It can lead to dumb intergenerational tiffs. (Don't even get me started on the under-30-somethings who try to argue Chris Brown is anywhere close to being on the same level as Usher.)
It can also feel like a personal evolution, where you can pinpoint each phase of your life and map it alongside that artist's oeuvre. It connects you to those who vividly remember being in high school when they saw a young Tom Cruise in Risky Business during its original release. Now, here you are all these years later, watching an old Tom Cruise scamper across rooftops and train a new generation of fighter pilots. You've grown up together, in a way.
The careers of these generational figures ebb and flow like all careers do, and that generation's relationship with them probably ebbs and flows, too. And yet they're a constant, reliable presence. When I catch Beyoncé in August, the audience's age range will be all over the place, and that's part of her enduring appeal. But I also know that certain older songs will hit some of us way different than they do others, with clear memories of a much younger Beyoncé and our much younger selves dancing furiously and with precision – there's no other way with Beyoncé – in our minds.
This piece also appeared in NPR's Pop Culture Happy Hour newsletter. Sign up for the newsletter so you don't miss the next one, plus get weekly recommendations about what's making us happy.
Listen to Pop Culture Happy Hour on Apple Podcasts and Spotify.
veryGood! (94)
Related
- Intellectuals vs. The Internet
- Drug cartels are sharply increasing use of bomb-dropping drones, Mexican army says
- 29 Cheap Things to Make You Look and Feel More Put Together
- Oklahoma man charged with rape, accused of posing as teen to meet underage girls,
- Rams vs. 49ers highlights: LA wins rainy defensive struggle in key divisional game
- Gun control already ruled out, Tennessee GOP lawmakers hit impasse in session after school shooting
- New York governor urges Biden to help state with migrant surge
- Launch of 4 astronauts to space station bumped to Saturday
- Intel's stock did something it hasn't done since 2022
- Carbon Offsets to Reduce Deforestation Are Significantly Overestimating Their Impact, a New Study Finds
Ranking
- Backstage at New York's Jingle Ball with Jimmy Fallon, 'Queer Eye' and Meghan Trainor
- Kristin Smart's killer hospitalized after prison attack left him in serious condition
- Washington OKs killing 2 wolves in southeastern part of state after cattle attacks
- Epilogue Books serves up chapters, churros and coffee in Chapel Hill, North Carolina
- Small twin
- New York Police: Sergeant suspended after throwing object at fleeing motorcyclist who crashed, died
- Journalism has seen a substantial rise in philanthropic spending over the past 5 years, a study says
- For Trump, X marks the spot for his social media return. Why that could really matter
Recommendation
Meta releases AI model to enhance Metaverse experience
Nike to sell replicas of England goalkeeper Mary Earps' jersey after backlash in U.K.
'Well I'll be:' Michigan woman shocked to find gator outside home with mouth bound shut
Vincennes University trustees vote to expand Red Skelton Performing Arts Center
Juan Soto praise of Mets' future a tough sight for Yankees, but World Series goal remains
Nike to sell replicas of England goalkeeper Mary Earps' jersey after backlash in U.K.
Mets to retire numbers of Darryl Strawberry, Dwight Gooden, who won 1986 World Series
North Carolina woman lied about her own murder and disappearance, authorities say