Fun fact:
-
Fun fact:
Here in Iceland, if you ask someone their age, they're likely to tell you what "model" they are instead (young people especially).
Like: "I'm a 2001 model" instead of "I'm 25"
-
Fun fact:
Here in Iceland, if you ask someone their age, they're likely to tell you what "model" they are instead (young people especially).
Like: "I'm a 2001 model" instead of "I'm 25"
@thordis is that because of the language or just a trend?

-
Fun fact:
Here in Iceland, if you ask someone their age, they're likely to tell you what "model" they are instead (young people especially).
Like: "I'm a 2001 model" instead of "I'm 25"
I like that
-
Fun fact:
Here in Iceland, if you ask someone their age, they're likely to tell you what "model" they are instead (young people especially).
Like: "I'm a 2001 model" instead of "I'm 25"
@thordis officially bringing this to the US!
-
@thordis is that because of the language or just a trend?

@aunger It's a trend that's been spreading over the past decade or so. I'm not sure why it's mostly young people though, when it is the middle aged and older who actually lose track of how old we are.
️ -
@aunger It's a trend that's been spreading over the past decade or so. I'm not sure why it's mostly young people though, when it is the middle aged and older who actually lose track of how old we are.
️@thordis maybe the good ol' "wanting to appear older when we're young" sort of thing...
I'm a 1992 model

-
@thordis maybe the good ol' "wanting to appear older when we're young" sort of thing...
I'm a 1992 model

@aunger Plausible!
-
Fun fact:
Here in Iceland, if you ask someone their age, they're likely to tell you what "model" they are instead (young people especially).
Like: "I'm a 2001 model" instead of "I'm 25"
@thordis I feel mildly disturbed by this trend...
-
P pearl22@troet.cafe shared this topic