Baby boomer
From Wikinfo
A baby boomer is someone born in a period of increased birth rates following World War II. In the United States, demographers have put the generation's birth years at 1946 to 1964, despite the fact that the U.S. birth rate (per 1,000 population) actually began to decline after 1957. William Strauss and Neil Howe, in their book Generations include those conceived by soldiers on leave during the war, putting the generation's birth years at 1943 to 1960. Interestingly, the birth rate actually began to climb in 1940: From that year through 1943, the U.S. birth rate rose four years in a row for the first time since at least the beginning of the 19th Century; following a brief interruption due to the wartime absence of would-be fathers, the "boom" picked up where it left off after World War II ended.
In Canada, the Baby Boom is usually defined as the generation born from 1947 to 1966 � Canadian servicemen were repatriated later than American servicemen, and Canada's birth rate did not start to rise till 1947, and most Canadian demographers prefer to use the later date of 1966 as the boom's end in that country.
Whatever year they were born, Boomers were coming of age at the same time across the world, so that Britain was undergoing Beatlemania while people in America were driving over to Woodstock, organizing against the Vietnam War, or fighting and dying in the same war, Boomers in Italy were dressing in mod clothes and "buying the world a Coke", Boomers in India were seeking new philosophical discoveries, American Boomers in Canada had just found a new home after escaping the draft south of the border, Canadian Boomers were organizing support for Pierre Trudeau, and Boomers in Mexico were discovering new hallucinogenic drugs and rediscovering old ones. Although the term "Boomer" has fallen into global use, the generation is also known in Europe as the Generation of 1968.
The term is derived from a historically significant rise in the birth rate following the Second World War. Several factors have been credited with this rise, among them a general sense of relief at the war's end, and the resurgent economic conditions of the period. At the time this spike in the birthrate was named the "baby boom."
Boomers' typical grandparents were of the Lost Generation; their parents were of the G.I. Generation and Silent Generation. Their children are of Generation X and the Generation Y and their typical grandchildren will be of the generation that follows the Millenials (born circa 2004-2025).
Unlike the previous generation (the Silent), Boomers lack any childhood recollection of World War II. Unlike the next generation (Generation X), many American Boomers fought in Vietnam or organized opposition to it, or were reaching adolescence or lingering in "post-adolescence" (a term coined for them) as the Vietnam War drew to a close. See also Generation gap.
Celebrities born during the years 1943-1960 include:
- 1943 Arthur Ashe (died 1993)
- 1943 Janis Joplin (died 1970)
- 1943 Joe Namath
- 1943 Oliver North
- 1944 Angela Davis
- 1944 George Lucas
- 1945 Steve Martin
- 1946 Bill Clinton
- 1946 George W. Bush
- 1946 Steven Spielberg
- 1946 Sylvester Stallone
- 1946 David Stockman
- 1946 Donald Trump
- 1946 Gilda Radner (died 1989)
- 1947 Kareem Abdul-Jabbar
- 1947 Mark Rudd
- 1947 David Letterman
- 1947 Arnold Schwarzenegger (born in Austria, holds dual citizenship)
- 1948 Al Gore
- 1948 Samuel L. Jackson
- 1948 Jerry Mathers "The Beaver"
- 1949 George Foreman
- 1949 Bill O'Reilly
- 1949 Bruce Springsteen
- 1950 Julius Erving
- 1950 Jane Pauley
- 1950 Jay Leno
- 1951 Lee Atwater (died 1991)
- 1951 Rush Limbaugh
- 1951 Luther Vandross
- 1952 Jimmy Connors
- 1954 Chris Evert
- 1954 Matt Groening (creator of The Simpsons)
- 1954 Patty Hearst
- 1954 Howard Stern
- 1954 John Travolta
- 1954 Denzel Washington
- 1954 Oprah Winfrey
- 1955 Steve Jobs
- 1955 Bill Gates
- 1956 Larry Bird
- 1956 Mel Gibson (born in US, moved to Australia at age 12, dual citizen)
- 1956 Joe Montana
- 1956 Martina Navratilova (born in today's Czech Republic, US citizen)
- 1957 Scott Adams (creator of Dilbert)
- 1957 Gloria Estefan (Cuban-born US citizen)
- 1957 Spike Lee
- 1958 Michael Jackson
- 1958 Madonna
- 1958 Prince
- 1959 Magic Johnson
- 1959 John McEnroe
- 1960 John Elway
- 1960 Greg Louganis
- 1960 Cal Ripken, Jr.
Two U.S. Presidents were born during the years 1943-1960: Bill Clinton and George W. Bush. It is estimated that the Boom Generation will hold a plurality in Congress until 2015, the White House until 2021, and will have a majority in the Supreme Court from 2010 to 2030.
Non-U.S. peers of the Boomers include Lech Walesa, Mick Jagger, George Harrison, U2 frontman Bono, Daniel Ortega, Charles, Prince of Wales, and former Pakistani Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto.
Their cultural endowments have included the following:
- Doonesbury (comic, Garry Trudeau)
- All the President's Men (book, Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein, later a movie)
- The Fate of the Earth (Jonathan Schell)
- The Color Purple (Alice Walker)
- Cathy (comic, Cathy Guisewite)
- "American Pie" (song, Don McLean)
- Saturday Night Live (television show)
- Close Encounters of the Third Kind (film, Steven Spielberg)
- Strawberry Statement (James Kunen)
- Green Rage (Christopher Manes)
- Vietnam Veterans Memorial (Maya Lin)
- Do the Right Thing (film, Spike Lee)
References
- Adapted from the Wikipedia article, "Baby_boomer" http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baby_boomer, used under the GNU Free Documentation License

