My father falls into that majority, and I was surprised that he did not start singing one of their songs when I was interviewing him. Upon asking him about his teenage years, he immediately started raving about how the music industry expanded and how television sets started to come with remotes. Evidently, his teens were more memorable than his childhood. Moreover, my father went on to explain to me that Stereo 8 tapes replaced vinyl in the mid-1960s. He believed, “The sound quality was much different. It felt like a new kind of experience altogether.” After saying this, my father explained to me that he even had a reel-to-reel player along with his cassette tapes, which he used both …show more content…
He checks his email more than I do, since he declares that it is required for his job. Plus, he is frequently watching the news, which was not always aired 24 hours a day during the sixties and seventies, according to him. During the interview, my father also told me that he feels intimacy has been lost between him and his clients. He believes that technological advances have taken over face-to-face communication. Still, my father does own a smartphone; he owns an Android. With that, he is persistently stating that he has detected a decline in grammatical structure when he is speaking to younger clients through text messages. He has noted, on multiple occasions that customers genuinely become aggravated by him not understanding what they are trying to get across in a text message. Even now, he still feels that digital photo uploading and emailing systems have made his job much more