Golden Bachelor Beauty Secrets Revealed
Understanding what motivates and inspires Boomers and Gen X since 2022
“The good thing about being old is not being young.”
– Stephen Richards
The women of The Golden Bachelor reveal all their beauty secrets
They got real about plastic surgery, Botox, and the products that helped them look so damn good in high definition. We asked 18 of the women you know and love from The Golden Bachelor to share their beauty secrets. Boy, did they deliver: They got real about plastic surgery, Botox, and their favorite fillers. They also shared the concealers, foundations, lipsticks, and root touchup sprays that they used to appear in hi-definition on the yacht outings, horseback rides, and hot-tub sessions that come with reality TV dating. And here’s where we have to note: Other than on night one, there are no hair and makeup teams. Every loose wave and smoky eye you see is self-made, so these product recommendations are the real deal.
30 hilariously unhinged things boomers seem to love
Different generations have their own unique interests and preferences, and sometimes it can get pretty hard for one age group to understand the other, especially when we’re talking about the things they love. Here are some funny and unusual things young people believe boomers absolutely love. Bored Panda has collected the top 30. Like loving a really good leather phone case. Or boomers love to send you and email and then text you to let you know that they sent you an email. Read on for 28 more.
Boomers are dominating the economy and benefiting from historic rate hikes.
BofA explains which stock trades to make as millennials struggle. We're in the middle of a "Boomer boom," as the wealthier older generation of Americans spends big on a wide range of goods and services. Millennials, meanwhile, are spending less as they struggle through a tough macro environment—and there's a playbook to trade off the differences in economic fortunes between the two demographics, according to Bank of America. In a note published in October, BofA analysts wrote that investors should go "long Boomer stocks" and "short Millennial stocks."
Tom Smothers, one half of the Smothers brothers, dies
When “The Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour” debuted on CBS in the fall of 1967, it was an instant success, to the surprise of many who thought the network’s expectations were so low that they placed their show opposite with “Bonanza” ranking highest. But the Smothers Brothers would prove a turning point in television history, with a keen eye for pop culture trends and young rock stars like the Who and Buffalo Springfield, as well as bold sketches mocking the establishment, criticizing the Vietnam War and portraying members of the era’s hippie counterculture as gentle, fun-loving spirits, found an immediate audience with young people. The show reached 16th place in ratings in its first season. It also attracted the attention of network censors, and after years of fighting with the brothers over the show’s creative content, the network abruptly canceled the show in 1970, accusing the brothers of failing to submit an episode in time for review by censors.”
Number of older workers doubled from 1987
Nearly double the amount of U.S. workers ages 65 and older are employed today compared to 35 years ago, finds a new report by the Pew Research Center. The growth of older workers is likely linked to the sizable baby boomer population, many whose higher education levels, health factors, and retirement readiness have incentivized them to work for longer periods of time, notes the report. “Numbering roughly 11 million today, the older workforce has nearly quadrupled in size since the mid-1980s,” writes the Pew Research Center. “The increase is driven in part by the growth of the 65-and-older population. The bulk of the Baby Boom generation has now reached that threshold.”
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