University of Dissent Closes

Slide1When I was a teenager at the university, life became clear for the students around me. Each one was compelled to be a maverick in taking a new lifestyle back home. We invaded our communities with new concepts that disrupted the status quo. We shared our new radical ideas of respecting those who might be offended, while voicing our well thought out dissenting opinions.

Today’s university students have also become radicals in bringing new ideas to their communities. Their passionate lifestyle is about not offending anyone and punishing those who dissent or do not conform.

Yesterday morning, I read about a small church whose pastor worked a corporate job so the donations could pay the bills and go to the needy. He wrote blog entries to encourage his church attenders and shared biblical principles about love. Because his writings on love were not inclusive, a group of students felt he needed to be “punished.”

His corporation was bombarded with communications, each stating the importance of alignment with the LGBTQ community, so as to not offend anyone. Consequential threats accompanied each communiqué. The man was immediately fired to protect the company image.

The university students made it clear that any dissenting opinions would be punished. Unfortunately, they didn’t have a list of rules or allowances to follow, leaving everyone guessing if their next words would be safe or punishable.

The University I attended taught us how to think based on logic and laws. We were also taught how to consider abstract ideas and transform them into something real, tangible and measureable. In other words, we where taught how to give an opposing viewpoint with respect.

Today’s universities have closed the doors on dissenting opinions. All decisions are now filtered through the lens of not offending anyone. Hundreds of commencement speakers are cancelled each year once a search commit or a student finds that the speaker had a differing opinion twenty some years ago.

The best comedians of our day have been booed off university stages for using humor that makes fun of anything or anyone. The audiences are no longer able to discern any perspective except for the community based, politically correct viewpoint.

Public restrooms are now being called under the filter of the offense index. To make sure the LGBTQ community is not offended, pressure is being put on corporations and schools to allow people to choose the restroom they feel compelled to enter. Few dissenting opinions rise, as most people stay silent in order to keep their jobs.

Last weekend, a man suggested that to make sure 2% of the population is not offended, we offend 80% of the people who desire a safe haven while they take a bio break. Those not voicing a dissenting opinion, empower the 2% to come up with more things that will soon offend them. This will give them leverage to control and conform society to their ideals rather than to the ideals of the majority.

Historically, once a movement removes all the dissenters, only those in power take control, not the ones that put them in place – until the weak in society increase their numbers and regain their voice. The natural uprising historically turns the tables and brings the society back to reason and law, or it disperses the society in its collapse.

The only way to avoid this destruction is to give a good listen to all dissenting ideas, while only punishing those who break laws rather than arbitrary PC ideals. But, the universities no longer allow for free speech that promotes all opinions.

The days of speaking your mind and receiving respect are quickly evaporating. This is partially due to Millennials not understanding that respect only means acknowledgement, not the agreement of an idea. Until society once again realizes that acknowledgement and agreement is not the same thing, dissenting opinions will continue to be deemed guilty by those in power.

Copyright 2016 by CJ Powers

Gen Z Pushes Millennials Aside

Gen_ZChurches and Independent Filmmakers are now realizing they are late in gearing their presentations to the taste and needs of the Millennials. Both groups, which at one time drove our society, are playing catch up in shifting their attention to the next generation. Unfortunately, it’s too late.

Generation Z is now positioned to drive our society forward. They are a bigger group than the Millennials and the remaining Baby Boomers. They are currently the largest population group with the most disposable income at $40B annually.

In the church world, the structure or format of services is still geared toward Gen X. In the independent film world the movies are geared toward Baby Boomers. That’s not to say a handful of churches or movies weren’t made for the Millennials, but those organizations are in the minority. Regardless, both groups should be refocusing on Generation Z.

Millennials desired to learn the truth about living life from the Baby Boomers, but instead got inauthentic rhetoric. Gen X was too small to fill the role, so the Millennials did the best they could on their own. This led to watching less movies and not attending church. Only about a third of Millennials go to movies. Also, about a third attend churches. Neither of which is geared toward their needs.

But this year, Generation Z has now crossed the point of demarcation in being the largest population group and has the most disposable income. They haven’t yet determined their views on church, nor have they decided yet on making movies a part of their lives.

Pastors and filmmakers have a clean slate to build a new audience. Unfortunately, most have just caught on to the impact of the Millennials and might not catch on to the growing power of Generation Z until its too late. But for those who want to be ahead of the curve, I’ll share some of their characteristics…

Realistic Not Idealistic
Gen Z will not take hope from anyone based on an expressed set of ideals. Instead, they want the unadulterated truth about how to do real life. They are very realistic in what daily steps are required to succeed in this life and they don’t care about the media storm or the news drama filling the airwaves. They just want to know the simple truths necessary to live a good life.

Live in the Shadows
After watching the Millennials get into trouble with social media by accidental posts or the PC police chasing down the one wrong sentence someone uttered, Gen Z is standing back in the shadows. This generation has been walking away from top media sites like Facebook (lost 25% of Gen Z in last few years) to avoid being pulled in to the unwanted limelight.

Hard Working Entrepreneurs
Three fourths of Gen Z wants to be entrepreneurs. They are okay with hard work, as long as they get the direct benefit that comes with operating ones’ own business. They see the Millennials as lazy and accomplishing little, making the market ripe for Gen Z to take over. This will shrink large corporations and grow boutique businesses that will team on a project-by-project basis – Breathing life into a new kind of economy.

4D Thinkers
Gen Z is a hyper focused generation whose awareness is all encompassing. They are very much aware of what all generations are doing, how it affects them, and how to counter the negative effects. They are capable of piecing information together from multiple sources and coming up with new solutions that far exceed the Millennials.

Tech Savvy
To keep up with their rapid thought patterns and the development of their ideas, Gen Z sees technology as mandatory to survival. Most would put technology in the same category as air, water, food and shelter. This life pattern will mean more relationships developed over projects than in any other form.

These are the people the churches and filmmakers must learn how to interact with, teach, and entertain. Gen Z will be coming into power in about ten years, giving churches and studios time to ramp up to meet their needs. Unfortunately, many will miss the opportunity since they are just now focusing on the Millennials.

Copyright © 2016 by CJ Powers

 

When I met Prince

PrinceYesterday, when I heard about Prince having passed away, I reflected back on the day we met. It was at a party in La Crosse, WI. He came down from Minneapolis with a couple of his buddies to have the “college experience.” La Crosse was a college town with three universities and a mile long strip of bars.

Drinking started on Tuesdays with 99¢ beers. Wednesday nights were ladies nights. Thursdays were weekend pre-parties. And, Friday and Saturday were full blown party nights. Since Old Style Brewery was in town with the largest six-pack in the world (32,000 gallons per can), all bars served the same beer.

But on this night, there was a dorm party at Coate Hall at the University of Wisconsin. I had recently come off of a film shoot for CBS. I was hired as a cinematographer to shoot all location footage for a documentary titled The Chileda Institute. I was reviewing my up coming production schedule for The Wisconsin Television Network when a group of guys barged into my room.

The student had brought his new “friends” in to introduce me to Prince. He said we had to meet since we were both in entertainment. But, before the guy finished his introduction, the self-proclaimed head of Prince’s entourage introduced Prince as an up coming star that was putting an album together (For You) and it was destined to be a hit.

Prince was embarrassed by the over the top introduction. We shook hands, sat down and chatted. The other guys took off to find some “babes” to build excitement into the party.

It didn’t take long for our conversation to focus on art. Prince was a true artist and not much into the party scene in those days. Neither one of us had a drink in our hands, but we probably had more fun talking about art than anyone else did chugging the brew. A spontaneous conversation about art is far more appealing for artists than the overture any brew can make towards fun.

Our conversation was interrupted when his entourage returned with lots of women. One woman shoved a beer into his hand and pulled him toward the door. He told me that I should be a part of the music circuit during my production down time and he’d help make it happen. Then he disappeared into the crowd of women and that was the last time we’d meet.

Prince was true to his word. During that next week I received a call from the new venue in town and by the weekend I was a concert roadie. My tenure in the music industry was short lived, as I worked six days a week in television. But I did have the opportunity to work the John Denver World Tour and the Beach Boys Tour.

The experience opened my eyes to an entire world that I didn’t know existed. Some day I’ll take the time to share about it, but for now I’ll just say, “Thanks Prince, for our great chat and my intro into the music industry.”

Copyright 2016 by CJ Powers