Anonymous wrote:I wonder if dinner parties died.
They are dead for Gen Xers in the lower reaches of the Upper Middle Class. Everyone meets at restaurants.
When I was a kid, my parents socialized like the old sitcoms - inviting the boss over, having work people and kids over for parties. My generation doesn't do any of that.
I tried once and gave up. I was hosting 3 couples. One cancelled same day. Another, the wife was pregnant and didn't tell me so she couldn't eat most of the expensive food. They left early. The third left because the 2nd couple left early.
After that, I only did restaurant meals.
I haven't been invited to a boss or manager's house for an event/evening since around 1995. The hosts were Silent Generation and Boomers. To the manner born.
Anonymous wrote:I wonder if dinner parties died.
They are dead for Gen Xers in the lower reaches of the Upper Middle Class. Everyone meets at restaurants.
When I was a kid, my parents socialized like the old sitcoms - inviting the boss over, having work people and kids over for parties. My generation doesn't do any of that.
I tried once and gave up. I was hosting 3 couples. One cancelled same day. Another, the wife was pregnant and didn't tell me so she couldn't eat most of the expensive food. They left early. The third left because the 2nd couple left early.
After that, I only did restaurant meals.
I haven't been invited to a boss or manager's house for an event/evening since around 1995. The hosts were Silent Generation and Boomers. To the manner born.
Anonymous wrote:It doesn't exist anymore for the most part aside from Kalorama and Juleanna Glover's house. But not sure she is even into that anymore.
We are a divided city and country. People don't have manners or civility anymore. The Republican VP of our age spends his evenings s***posting on twitter, not at cocktail parties with Democrats and WP reporters.
Anonymous wrote:There are still loads of these people in Chevy Chase (MD and DC) but most of them are now over 60. The younger generations haven't really clustered geographically in the same way.
Anonymous wrote:I wonder if dinner parties died.
They are dead for Gen Xers in the lower reaches of the Upper Middle Class. Everyone meets at restaurants.
When I was a kid, my parents socialized like the old sitcoms - inviting the boss over, having work people and kids over for parties. My generation doesn't do any of that.
I tried once and gave up. I was hosting 3 couples. One cancelled same day. Another, the wife was pregnant and didn't tell me so she couldn't eat most of the expensive food. They left early. The third left because the 2nd couple left early.
After that, I only did restaurant meals.
I haven't been invited to a boss or manager's house for an event/evening since around 1995. The hosts were Silent Generation and Boomers. To the manner born.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Cosmos Club
Ha, ha, ha. You forgot to add …in 1975.
Right? The only Cosmos Club members I know are either really old or couldn't get into Metropolitan or Sulgrave.
Eh, at least w/CC you have to have impressive academic chops, not just A5 Japanese Kobe beef chops.
It's 2025 though, are academic chops still impressive?
Anonymous wrote:Curious to hear your thoughts on where the modern version of the old “Georgetown set” lives and socializes today. I'm thinking of the mix of journalists, national security types, political operators, diplomats, and establishment-adjacent intellectuals who clustered in Georgetown in the Cold war era. The crowd that orbited the Kennedys, Grahams, Bradlees, Harrimans, etc.
I’m less interested in where wealth lives (plenty of that in McLean, Potomac, etc.); more where those with foreign policy influence and proximity to power tend to congregate these days. If you go to a dinner party filled with (non-MAGA) NSC staffers, Foreign Affairs contributors, and think tank luminaries, where is that likely to be?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Cosmos Club
Ha, ha, ha. You forgot to add …in 1975.
Right? The only Cosmos Club members I know are either really old or couldn't get into Metropolitan or Sulgrave.
Eh, at least w/CC you have to have impressive academic chops, not just A5 Japanese Kobe beef chops.