A war is waging online between generations over the Gen Z Stare. While Millennials blame a lack of social skills, Gen Z are blaming insufferable customer requests – but who is right?
Has your recent request for an extra napkin, complicated coffee order or even just polite âhelloâ been met with a blank, listless stare of late? Donât feel bad, itâs not you and you didnât just murder someoneâs dog. Thereâs now a name for it: the Gen Z Stare â and itâs causing a fierce intergenerational clash online.
Thousands of TikTok’s have been cropping up over the past month documenting the same phenomenon: being met with a stare by Gen Z employees after initiating simple social interaction. Some have even described it as witnessing a kind of âbrain staticâ, as the Gen Z in question attempts to process the interaction. Others have described it as ârudeâ and âoff-puttingâ.
In one viral TikTok, Riley Despot, a self-identified millennial, documented her experience with the stare after taking her daughter to a golf lesson. She attempted to thank the younger instructor for agreeing to teach her daughter. However, she said she was met with a blank look and a confused, âyeah?â in response.
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But, despite the criticism, younger Gen Zâs have been defending the stare: largely pointing to absurd customer requests and past trauma from âBoomers crashing outâ. As one TikTok user puts it: âThe gen Z stare is us thinking of a proper response that wonât get us fired.â
However, itâs not just a customer experience. Customer service workers are complaining that theyâre also on the receiving end of the Gen Z stare from their patrons. @maybesantana explained: âThe Gen Z stare is the stare that customer service workers receive instead of a response to anything.â She then used the example of asking a customer how they were doing and being met with an open-mouthed mildly-stunned look.
So, customer service workers and customers alike are documenting the same phenomenon. But whatâs the cause? TikToks have been pointing to everything from social anxiety, to duress under late-stage capitalism, to bad parenting. Older Gen Zâs, or âzillenialsâ (roughly those aged 26 to 31), have also distanced themselves from the phenomenon, claiming itâs a âyounger Gen Z thing.â
One major theory floating around is that itâs related to the effects Covid pandemic. Gen Z who were still in secondary school during this time purportedly missed out on key social development milestones. TikTok user @tryingmayabest, herself a Gen Z, explained: âYoung people spent a large portion of their formative years in isolation and our primary form of communication became texting⊠Not actually conversing with someone, but sending something out and waiting for a response.â
Tam Kaur, a leading Gen-Z self help expert and Forbes 30 under 30 honouree also believes that the Gen Z stare is a symptom of something deeper. She says: âWeâre the first generation to grow up with our faces constantly on display in selfies, stories, video calls, with everything being scrutinised online. That creates a heightened sense of self-consciousness and a fear of being judged, even in the smallest interactions.
She adds that there is also increased pressure on women to appear polite. She says: âFor many of us, especially women, itâs not that weâre rude or disengaged. Itâs that weâre navigating social anxiety and burnout from living in hyper-visible digital spaces.â
âPrevious generations didnât have to think about how they looked from every angle or whether they sounded awkward saying hello, but Gen-Zâs do,â she continues. âGen-Zâs face the real work in building that inner confidence so theyâre not afraid to show up, make eye contact and connect, especially in customer-facing roles.
âUltimately, the Gen-Z stare isnât always about not having manners, itâs showcasing that some Gen-Zs need more time to grow in confidence than previous generations and thatâs something we should make space to support.â
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