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What sounds like the logline of a ’90s sitcom is reality for Lars, a college instructor in her late thirties whose boomer parents didn’t save enough for retirement.
With homes in foreclosure and careers in limbo, more kids are moving back in with their parents.But not recent college graduates: No, the new boomerang kids are moving back in with mom and dad ...
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In Western culture the Boomerang Generation refers to the generation of young adults graduating from high school and college in the 21st century. [1] [2] [3] They are so named for the percentage of whom choose to share a home with their parents after previously living on their own—thus boomeranging back to their parents' residence.
[21] While interviewing emerging adults, Arnett found that moving back and forth from college to a legal guardian's home, becoming independent, or moving because of involvement with a romantic partner characterizes this stage of life. During this stage of life, work, school, and love are very unstable and susceptible to change.
Boomerang was created as a new home for these and similar programming, originating as a programming block on Cartoon Network that launched on December 8, 1992 until October 3, 2004. With Cartoon Network downplaying its archival programming in favor of newer original series, Turner launched the Boomerang cable channel on April 1, 2000.
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Boomerang is a pan-Asian cable and satellite television channel owned by Warner Bros. Discovery International. Like the original US version , this localization first began as a programming block that aired on Cartoon Network Asia (from 2001 to 2005), before becoming its own channel in 2004.