It’s As Much Smashing Pumpkins As Smashed Avocado

 | May 11, 2018 12:52

Originally published by Cuffelinks

There is no greater accolade for a social commentator than having an idea enter the national lexicon. So it was with due pride that demographer Bernard Salt showed his unmitigated delight at the way his ‘smashed avocado’ reference now sums up an entire generation of Millennials and their spending habits. Salt was speaking at a Colonial First State Global Asset Management Forum on 1 May 2018, and he explained how media companies from all over the world have contacted him to discuss his smashed avos.

Salt’s reference to $22 avocado on toast for breakfast in the has become a touchpoint on housing affordability and even intergenerational conflict. He said of young people:

“Shouldn’t they be economising by eating at home? How often are they eating out? Twenty-two dollars several times a week could go towards a deposit on a house.”

However, at the panel discussion, he said the real purpose of the column was misunderstood, as he subsequently wrote:

“It was intended not as a criticism of youth but as a parody of middle-aged moralisers, using the setting of a hipster cafe to showcase the conservatism of middle-aged thinking.”

h2 The mistaken message has more merit/h2

Notwithstanding most people mistaking the original interpretation, the incorrect meaning surely carries more gravitas. This struck me while attending a concert at the ICC Sydney Theatre a few days after hearing him speak. It was the highlights from the BBC series, Planet Earth II, ‘live in concert’ with the Sydney Symphony Orchestra playing an original score to match the action. The theatre holds about 9,000 people, and the only empty seats were the cheap ‘bronze’ sections at the side.