Episodios

  • Ep. 99: Rockabillies
    Mar 30 2026

    “Rockabilly” is a portmanteau of the words “rock” and “hillbilly” that originally described a subgenre of rock and roll music in the 1950s. This week’s episode of Silent Generation focuses on the rockabilly subculture: a modern interpretation of rockabilly that combines 1950s nostalgia with alternative staples like hair dye, piercings, and tattoos. Nathan and Sebastien start out by discussing traditional rockabilly music that was popularized by the likes of Elvis Presley, Janis Martin, and Wanda Jackson. The two then theorize why people are drawn to the rockabilly subculture and identify what characteristics they share. They then detail rockabilly fashion before concluding with a discussion about rockabilly values and whether or not those values still feel transgressive.

    Links:

    Rockabillies Pinterest board: https://www.pinterest.com/silentgeneration/rockabillies/

    The Best of Rockabilly Playlist

    Bang Bang by Janis Martin

    Fujiyama Mama by Wanda Jackson

    Rockabilly - Aesthetics Wiki Page

    Rockabilly resurgence: A rocking revival in the 90s by 034zakia.bessaa2008

    What Is Rockabilly Style? Everything You Wanted To Know by Bonnie

    It's a Rockabilly World (2016)

    Guys Episode 37 - Rockabilly Guys with Brace Belden

    Reviving the 1950s - Exploring Tokyo’s Rockabilly Culture by Melanie Gelo

    Nothing to Worry About by Peter Bjorn and John

    Viva Las Vegas

    VLV 25 Car Show

    LisaTV @ the Rockabilly Convention

    Rockabilly Duo: Your Scene Sucks

    Child of Rockabilly Couple Constantly Wondering What the Fuck Is Going On by Keith Buckley

    Drake Bell Made a Rockabilly Album?

    r/Rockabilly

    Is Rockabilly alive and well or is it a dying culture?

    ”Rockabilly” on Google Trends

    Ep. 68: Historical Dressing & Reenactment

    Artwork:

    Rockabilly women, featuring Sailor Jassie

    Recorded on 3/23/2026

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    1 h y 1 m
  • Ep. 98: Art Deco
    Mar 23 2026

    Art Deco is an art and design style relevant from the 1920s to 1930s that is best characterized by its use of metallic colors, geometric patterns, futuristic forms, and references to ancient civilizations. It is the most celebrated of all of the design styles that can be grouped under Interwar Modernism, but what makes it so popular? On this week’s episode of Silent Generation, Nathan and Sebastien begin by charting Art Deco’s emergence in France to its eventual dissemination at the 1925 International Exhibition of Modern Decorative and Industrial Arts in Paris. They then detail two Art Deco skyscrapers (the Carbide & Carbon Building and the Guardian Building) before delving into a conversation about Art Deco and American identity. The episode rounds out with an analysis of Art Deco in three pieces of media: Bioshock (2007), Nightmare Alley (2021), and Metropolis (1927).

    Links:

    Art Deco Pinterest board: https://www.pinterest.com/silentgeneration/art-deco/

    Art Deco of the 20s and 30s by Bevis Hillier (1968)

    Art Deco Architecture: Everything You Need to Know as the Style Turns 100 by By Katherine McLaughlin and Elizabeth Stamp

    Art Deco: Everything You Wanted to Know

    Ep. 110: Consumer Aesthetics Research Podcast w/ Evan Collins

    A History - Vienna Secession

    Secession Building

    Stoclet Palace

    Carbide and Carbon Building

    The History of The Guardian Building: An Art Deco Landmark

    Lobby murals at Buffalo City Hall

    Sen̓áḵw

    Bioshock (2007)

    Nightmare Alley (2021)

    Metropolis (1927)

    North & Pulaski

    Artwork:

    The "Spirit of Light" sculpture on the Niagara Mohawk Building in Syracuse, NY

    Recorded on 3/16/2026

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    1 h y 20 m
  • Ep. 97: Early Skyscrapers
    Mar 16 2026

    On this week’s episode of Silent Generation, Nathan and Sebastien explore the early development of skyscrapers in Chicago, beginning with the construction of the Home Insurance Building in 1885. They note that nine early Chicago skyscrapers have been nominated for UNESCO World Heritage Site status and examine two in depth: the Monadnock Building and the Auditorium Building. The episode also traces the life of Louis Sullivan, whose tripartite theory shaped skyscraper design for generations. Finally, they examine several early skyscrapers in Sebastien’s hometown of Buffalo, New York (the Guaranty Building, the Ellicott Square Building, and the Dun Building) before debating the extent to which skyscrapers are monuments to capital.

    Links:

    Skyscraper | Encyclopedia Britannica

    Early Chicago Skyscrapers (UNESCO)

    The Monadnock’s original Egyptian Revival facade

    The Chicago Auditorium, an Architectural Pride

    Center for New Deal Studies

    The World's Tallest buildings in 1930

    It looks like a fairy tale city, perhaps the Emerald City or smth like that [Historical photo of the Chicago Loop]

    Artwork:

    Guaranty Building, 1895 Church and Pearl Streets, Buffalo (NY, USA). Dankmar Adler et Louis Sullivan, architectes. © Wayne Andrews / Esto

    Recorded on 3/2/2026

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    1 h y 11 m
  • Introducing Sebastien
    Mar 16 2026

    In this special announcement, Nathan welcomes Sebastien as the newest cohost of Silent Generation! Nathan begins by noting that Sebastien will be the main cohost until Breanna officially moves to Chicago. Nathan then interviews Sebastien about his background (his life in Buffalo, his passion for photography, and his interest in urbanism) before outlining the future of Silent Generation.

    Links:

    Sebastien’s Instagram

    sebastienbowen.com

    Artwork:

    Photographed by Katie

    Recorded on 3/2/2026

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    11 m
  • Ep. 96: Fine Dining
    Mar 12 2026

    On this week’s episode of Silent Generation, Nathan and Breanna begin by discussing how fine dining transitioned from an activity enjoyed at home to an activity enjoyed at restaurants. They then survey primary figures in the world of fine dining (A. Boulanger, Marie-Antoine Careme, Eugénie Brazier, Ferran Adria, Rene Redzepi, Joel Robuchon, and Gordon Ramsey) before discussing the pillars of fine dining. The two then detail the history of the Michelin Guide before reflecting on their recent dining experience at a restaurant in Dallas that was awarded one Michelin star, Mamani. The episode concludes with a discussion about where they want to see fine dining go moving forward.

    Links:

    Origins of the Restaurant

    Boulanger and the restaurant: the snowballing of a myth

    Eugénie Brazier: The legendary 'mother of French cuisine' by Anna Richards

    Bazaar Classics: Liquid Olives

    What Is Molecular Gastronomy!?

    The MICHELIN Guide 101

    What Is The MICHELIN Bib Gourmand Award?

    Eating at Alinea. Chicago. 3 Michelin Stars. An Amazing 9 Course $345 Tasting Menu

    Culinary Theatre at Alinea in Chicago | World's Best Restaurants | Our Taste

    Chef’s Table - Season 2 Episode 1 (2016)

    Jiro Dreams of Sushi (2011)

    American Psycho, Fine Dining, and Scams

    VSauce - Molecular Gastronomy

    Artwork:

    Etrusca restaurant in San Francisco

    from Restaurants in California (Restaurant Design 3) (1993)

    Recorded on 2/15/2026

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    1 h y 22 m
  • Ep. 95: Dinner Parties
    Feb 16 2026

    On this week’s episode of Silent Generation, Nathan and Breanna discuss all things dinner parties. The two begin by discussing what they like about dinner parties and their personal experiences hosting and attending them. They then review common features of traditional dinner parties (cocktail hour, place settings, multiple course meals, and after-dinner entertainment) before detailing how they have changed over time. Amongst other things they discuss how Emily Post and Martha Stewart presented competing visions of the high-effort dinner party, how the depreciation of dining-related antiques demonstrates the decline of dinner parties in America, and how modern dinner parties emphasize a relaxed approach that is best demonstrated by Allison Roman’s Nothing Fancy.

    Links:

    Etiquette in Society, in Business, in Politics, and at Home by Emily Post

    How Dinner Parties Became the Fuzzy Blanket of Adulthood by Alissa Wilkinson

    The Dinners That Shaped History by Brenda Wineapple

    Eating Together : Food, Friendship and Inequality Alice P. Julier

    The Pleasure of Your Company (but No Gaucheries, Please!): Dinner Parties in 19th-Century America by mansionmusings

    Entirely Entertaining: Dishing Dinner Party Trends Through the Decades

    I Tracked Down The Company Ruining Restaurants

    The Art of Entertaining

    Why Dinner Parties Still Matter

    Entertaining by Martha Stewart

    Martha (2024)

    Martha Stewart wheelbarrow clip

    The Exterminating Angel (1962)

    The Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoisie (1972)

    Fantastic Mr. Fox (2009)

    Why the dinner party is a declining art by Harmeet Kaur

    Politics on the menu in Seoul as Donald Trump dines on shrimp from disputed waters and 360-year-old soy sauce by Nicola Smith

    Cameron praises Obama at lavish state dinner by Mark Madell

    Presidents at State Dinners: A Historical Overview

    Nothing Fancy by Allison Roman

    Alison Roman’s “Nothing Fancy” and the Art of the Unpretentious Dinner Party by Michele Moses

    With 'Nothing Fancy,' Alison Roman Aims To Rebrand Having People Over For Dinner by Wynne Davis

    Artwork:

    Charlie Chaplin, Buster Keaton (and others) at a party given for Rudolph Valentino

    Recorded on 02/08/2026

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    1 h y 16 m
  • Ep. 94: Soft Colonial Wanderlust
    Feb 10 2026

    Soft Colonial Wanderlust is a Victorian-inspired consumer aesthetic that was popular from the late 1980s to mid 2010s. It consists of black and white photographs, hand-colored photographs, antiquated technology, chinoiserie, japonisme, and general orientalism. Nathan and Breanna detail the aesthetic in this week’s episode of Silent Generation, from its murky origins in ‘60s/‘70s British animation to its eventual identification by CARI in 2017. They discuss how Twee is the “girl version” of Soft Colonial Wanderlust, how hand-colored photographs serve as the foundation for the aesthetic’s color scheme, and how Soft Colonial Wanderlust differentiates itself from Steampunk by eschewing digital technology.

    Links: Soft Colonial Wanderlust Pinterest Board: https://www.pinterest.com/silentgeneration/soft-colonial-wanderlust/ Soft Colonial Wanderlust CARI Page Soft Colonial Wanderlust Aesthetics Wiki Page What is Soft Colonialist Wanderlust? Facebook Group Soft Colonialist Wanderlust Are.na Page https://anemptyblissbeyondthisworld.neocities.org/CARI/soft-colonial The surprising evolution of hipsters in the 2000s The Mysterious Geographic Explorations Of Jasper Morello

    Artwork: Hendrick's Gin "Escape"

    Recorded on 01/31/2026

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    1 h y 19 m
  • Introducing Breanna
    Feb 10 2026

    In this special announcement, Nathan welcomes Breanna as the newest cohost of Silent Generation! The two kick things off by reflecting on their time in Dallas and the activities they shared the day before. Nathan then interviews Breanna about her background (who she is, where she has lived, and what lenses she uses for cultural analysis) before outlining the future of Silent Generation.

    Links: Breanna’s Instagram Labyrinth of Art Breanna’s TikTok Breanna’s Letterboxd

    Artwork: Photograph by Studio Solaire

    Recorded on 01/31/2026

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    17 m