Actress Jodie Foster has no qualms about criticizing Generation Z. Young people at this age say In an interview with Watchman, can be “very annoying” as co-workers. “They say, ‘I don't feel like it today, I'll be there at 10:30 a.m.'” However, he praises this generation's representative, Bella Ramsey, whom he highlights as a “new transmitter of authenticity.”
Foster refers to young people born between 1997 and 2012, and they are part of the so-called “Generation Z”, which follows ““Millennials” (1981-96). The actress does not want to make destructive criticism, but she says that she cannot understand her colleagues in this age group. He gives concrete examples of “Z” situations: “We Email messagesIf I tell them that something is grammatically incorrect, and if they notice mistakes, they answer me: “Why would I do that?” Isn't that restrictive?
She herself started out in film at a young age, and says she felt a calling to help young actors find their way because “it was hard growing up” to achieve success. “They need to learn to relax, not think about it too much, and create something of their own,” he advises. “I can help them find that, which is more fun than being, with all the pressures behind it, the hero of the story.”
One of the young people who helped find this path is British Bella Ramsay, the heroine of the novel The last of usWho he met in a magazine deer In Los Angeles, it's reserved for women, where, he says, all the guests wore “high heels and false eyelashes.” Foster praises the young actress who was one of the speakers: “There are other ways of being a woman and it is very important for people to see that. Bella, who gave the best speech, was wearing the perfect suit and no makeup.
She admits that she has a courage and confidence that she did not have when she was twenty years old. “We were not free. And let us hope that this is what the transmission of authenticity that is happening offers – the possibility of true freedom.”
Jodie Foster, 61, is best known for her roles in film Silence of the Lambs or AccusedShe is a mother of two, and ensures that they are now “super feminists.” But it wasn't always that way, and he remembers how boys used to think they had to be bad towards women to be a “real” man. It ends with a warning: “This is not what being a man is!” “This is what our culture has been selling us all along.” Maybe Generation Z can change it.
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