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One in a Millennial

On Friendship, Feelings, Fangirls, and Fitting In

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

INSTANT NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER
NATIONAL BESTSELLER

From pop culture podcaster and a voice of a generation, Kate Kennedy, a celebration of the millennial zeitgeist


One In a Millennial
is an exploration of pop culture, nostalgia, the millennial zeitgeist, and the life lessons learned (for better and for worse) from coming of age as a member of a much-maligned generation.
Kate is a pop culture commentator and host of the popular millennial-focused podcast Be There in Five. Part-funny, part-serious, Kate navigates the complicated nature of celebrating and criticizing the culture that shaped her as a woman, while arguing that great depths can come from surface-level interests.
With her trademark style and vulnerability, One In a Millennial is sharp, hilarious, and heartwarming all at once. She tackles AOL Instant Messenger, purity culture, American Girl Dolls, going out tops, Spice Girl feminism, her feelings about millennial motherhood, and more. Kate's laugh-out-loud asides and keen observations will have you nodding your head and maybe even tearing up.

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  • Reviews

    • Library Journal

      August 1, 2023

      Kennedy may be One in a Millennial, but the busy pop culture commentator comments broadly on her generation's experiences, registering how it has shaped her and how her cohort can deepen their lives (100,000-copy first printing). Prepub Alert.

      Copyright 2023 Library Journal

      Copyright 2023 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Publisher's Weekly

      October 16, 2023
      Be There in Five podcaster Kennedy debuts with a perceptive personal meditation on the late 1990s and early 2000s pop culture that shaped her childhood. Looking back on her “homogenous suburban Virginia” upbringing, she discusses feeling uneasy about conforming to consumerist visions of femininity during her preteen years, when she sought “self-improvement through consumption” by shopping at Limited Too and played such board games as Pretty Pretty Princess, “where you’re taught success means simply just collecting more jewelry.” Concerns about authenticity pop up in Kennedy’s account of repressing her personal style to adopt the posh, preppy aesthetics of her high school’s popular girls (she recounts buying and tailoring Ralph Lauren polos, whose logo was a vaunted status symbol, from the “little boys’ husky section” because the shirts were cheaper than those made for women). Elsewhere, she expounds on the pleasure of “pregaming” with friends before a night out (her “favorite mid-aughts bonding ritual” in college), the unrealistic romantic expectations she imbibed from NSYNC songs, and the misogynistic portrayal of Saved by the Bell character Jessie Spano. Kennedy provides memoir by way of cultural commentary, cleverly using her hybrid approach to highlight the ways in which trends and media popular during one’s formative years profoundly influence one’s identity. Told with wit and candor, this will strike a chord with Gen Yers.

    • Booklist

      December 1, 2023
      Kennedy was enchanted with girlhood: Limited Too fashions, AOL Instant Messenger, religious summer camps. She thrived at sleepovers, with gel pens, and with words. Millennial girlhood was marked by a commitment to fitting in and a fascinating, cultlike consumerism. Carrying her old-soul spirit to college was more difficult for Kennedy, who couldn't understand why she didn't feel happy doing what everyone else was doing (rushing sororities and drinking heavily). Thankfully, her bubbly spirit was renewed in the workforce, where a job in corporate market research further fueled her identity as a consumer observer. Kennedy left that gig when she accidentally invented a doormat that reminds you to turn off your curling iron--an entrepreneurial success story. Now, Kennedy's podcast, Be There in Five, has a solid following of fellow millennials who enjoy deep dives into the early 2000s zeitgeist. As Kennedy is always quick to point out, this is just one millennial's story, and the myriad of millennial experiences is what makes the generation a group of 72 million strong.

      COPYRIGHT(2023) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Library Journal

      December 15, 2023

      Pop-culture guru Kennedy (Twinkle, Twinkle, Social Media Star), host of the podcast Be There in Five, delivers a nostalgic look at what it was like growing up as a millennial girl in the 1990s and as a young woman in the early 2000s. Throwbacks to sleepovers in trundle beds, boy band lyrics, Spice Girl mania, and more are all incorporated into this book that will have readers laughing and crying in turns. Her narrative reads like a conversation between close friends, and the topics she explores get deeper as the book progresses. She discusses at length the perceived need to seek external validation, which was a prevalent message to girls growing up during that time period. She examines how that has impacted her and women today. Her descriptions of her own experiences challenge readers to celebrate who they are as individuals, even if they have interests that some in society look down upon. VERDICT Millennial patrons will love this title, but so will pop culture followers and fans of nostalgia and humor.--Katy Duperry

      Copyright 2023 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Kirkus

      April 1, 2024
      A deep dive into the psyches of American girls and their shared cultural experiences over the past two decades. Kennedy, host of the Be There in Five podcast, created her first online profile at the age of 10. "In the early days of AOL and MySpace," she writes, "having visibility into the personal lives of popular girls after school hours was an ideal way to perform some light discovery on how to infuse my personal brand with more desirable attributes." She identifies this intense pressure to conform as the defining feature of her generation, "whether you're a younger millennial who did so with Troy Bolton and the other Wildcats or an older one who got their start at the Peach Pit or The Max." If those proper names mean nothing to you--or if you've never had a personal brand--you are not Kennedy's target reader. Like the author's podcast, this collection of essays revolves around nostalgia, regret, and reevaluation of the formative references she shares with other women her age. Among the topics considered are popular-girl handwriting, a hand game called Quack Diddly Oso, Christian purity culture, and the malign effects of the hidden misogyny on Saved by the Bell. Kennedy reminds us that her generation did not actually come out of the womb texting; they had their own version of the pre-digital olden days. "It's like, yeah, I bet walking miles to school in the snow was hard," she writes, "but have you ever had to navigate an empty new-release VHS shelf at Blockbuster with a sleepover crew in tow that will never achieve rental consensus?" The author first entered the public eye as the entrepreneur behind a doormat for college girls that reminded them to turn off their curling irons: The skinny on that episode is here, too. Witty, earnest reading for fellow millennials.

      COPYRIGHT(2024) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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