Why Boomers Love Facebook So Much


Last Updated on October 14, 2025 by Michael

The Great Digital Migration of 2009 (And They Never Left)

Remember when Facebook required a college email? When your biggest worry was whether to list yourself as “in a relationship” or “it’s complicated”?

Yeah, those days are dead. Your parents killed them.

The invasion started innocently enough. One day in 2009, your mom created an account to “see what all the fuss was about.” Within 72 hours, she’d tagged you in 47 photos from your awkward phase, commented “LOVE THIS!!!” on a funeral announcement, and somehow joined a group called “Bring Back the Old Recipe for Heinz Ketchup.” Dad followed shortly after, primarily to monitor mom’s online activities and accidentally share pornographic spam links to his entire contact list.

Now look where we are. Facebook has become a boomer terrarium – a carefully controlled environment where they can thrive, sharing medical misinformation and sunset photos in equal measure. They’ve colonized every corner of Zuckerberg’s empire with the determination of conquistadors who just discovered a land full of unmoderated comment sections.

The rest of us? We’re just refugees in our own digital homeland, watching in horror as they turn status updates into novellas and treat the laugh react like it’s appropriate for death announcements.

The Top 10 Reasons Your Parents Can’t Quit The Zuck

  1. They finally figured out their password (it’s their pet’s name plus 123, and yes, hackers, they use it for everything)
  2. Every other platform is “too complicated” (translation: doesn’t have a massive SHARE button)
  3. 46,000 blurry photos from that Alaska cruise aren’t going to host themselves
  4. The font is large enough to read without their “good glasses”
  5. Free surveillance on their children, grandchildren, and that neighbor they don’t trust
  6. It’s basically replaced their entire social life and they’re fine with that
  7. Those “I bet I won’t get even ONE share” posts aren’t going to share themselves
  8. The algorithm knows them better than their spouse (honestly, it might)
  9. Where else can they get medical advice at 3 AM from someone who sells essential oils?
  10. Zuckerberg personally reads their feedback (nothing will convince them otherwise)

The Sacred Boomer Facebook Activities

Activity Frequency Enthusiasm Level Chance of Mortifying Their Children
Commenting “LOL” thinking it means “Lots of Love” Constantly Supportive but confused 87%
Sharing year-old news as BREAKING Daily Full panic mode 94%
Posting sunsets with quotes from people who never said them Sunset o’clock Spiritually awakened 62%
Congratulating targeted ads Every sponsored post Genuinely happy for them 99%
Using your full government name in comments Always Proud parent energy 100%
Debating strangers about things they know nothing about Round the clock Expertly confident 91%
Posting in groups for cities they left in 1973 Forever Nostalgic rage 45%

The Minion Meme Industrial Complex

Look, nobody wants to talk about this, but we have to.

Sometime around 2014, every boomer in America woke up and chose violence. That violence came in the form of small yellow pill-shaped creatures making jokes about wine, coffee, and the sanctity of marriage. These weren’t just memes. This was a cultural revolution led by your aunt Linda and that guy from church who still owes you $20.

The transformation was instant. People who hadn’t expressed an emotion since the Reagan administration suddenly found their voice through a CGI character that speaks gibberish. Your father, who communicates primarily through grunts and sports statistics, started posting minions holding tiny wine glasses with captions like “Don’t talk to me until I’ve had my coffee!” He drinks decaf. He’s had one cup of decaf every morning since 1978.

But here’s the truly disturbing part – they don’t even know these things are from a movie. Ask your mom about Despicable Me and she’ll think you’re having a stroke. To her, minions are just “those Facebook guys who understand how Mondays work.”

Scientists have tried to explain this phenomenon. Anthropologists have written papers. The CDC considered declaring it a public health emergency. But nothing – nothing – can stop your relatives from posting a minion meme that says “I’m not arguing, I’m just explaining why I’m right” under a news article about local water shortages.

The Art of the Boomer Comment

Every boomer comment follows a sacred structure passed down through generations of people who still print out emails:

The Unnecessary Context Opening: “Well, as someone who lived through the Carter administration and once met a man who knew someone who worked at NASA…”

The Completely Unrelated Personal Story: “This reminds me of when my hip gave out at the Piggly Wiggly in ’97. The produce manager – nice boy, went to school with my nephew’s dentist – he said something that really stuck with me…”

The Caps Lock Disaster: “ANYWAY WHAT I’M TRYING TO SAY IS THAT KIDS TODAY DON’T KNOW WHAT REAL STRUGGLING IS AND ALSO WHY IS MY TEXT SO BIG HELP”

The Email Signature: “Best regards, Robert Thompson Sent from my iPhone Please excuse any typos God Bless America P.S. How do I delete this”

And yes, Robert, everyone can see your full name. It’s literally right there. Above your comment. Where Facebook puts it. Every time.

The Privacy Settings Paradox

These are people who put tape over their laptop cameras because “the government is watching” but will simultaneously post:

  • Their complete medical history (“The rash is back!”)
  • Full home address (in complaints to Walmart)
  • Mother’s maiden name (those fun quizzes!)
  • Social Security number (almost happened last week)
  • Bank account details (getting warmer)
  • Password hints (it’s definitely their dog’s name)

Try explaining privacy settings?

“Nobody wants to steal MY identity!”

Karen. KAREN. You just posted your credit card because you couldn’t figure out how to pay for that crochet pattern. The entire internet knows your checking account number. A Nigerian prince has already sent you three friendship requests.

The “Is This Real?” Investigation Unit

Things Boomers Believe Without Question:

  • Facebook will start charging $5.99 next month
  • Bill Gates will personally send them money for sharing a post
  • That video of a shark swimming down a flooded highway
  • Whatever their hairdresser’s cousin posted about vaccines
  • The Onion (every single article)
  • Those “Type AMEN if you love Jesus, ignore if you love SATAN” posts

Things Boomers Think Are Deep State Propaganda:

  • Fact checkers
  • Actual facts
  • Their children gently explaining it’s a scam
  • Snopes (communist organization, apparently)
  • Wikipedia (anyone can edit it!)
  • Reality

You know what’s beautiful? They’ll share a warning about hackers stealing their data, then immediately click on “Which Golden Girl Are You?” from a page called “Definitely-Not-Russian-Hackers.biz.”

The Marketplace Haggling Championships

Facebook Marketplace isn’t just a place to buy and sell. For boomers, it’s a competitive sport where the rules are made up and punctuation doesn’t matter.

“is this item still available” – No question mark. Questions are for the weak.

“$3 take it or leave it” – For a working refrigerator.

“will you deliver to [town 4 hours away]” – Gas is your problem.

“HELLO IS THIS AVAILABLE I AM VERY INTERESTED” – Ghost. Vanished. Dead to the world.

“Trade for used dentures?” – Someone always offers a trade. It’s always something insane.

The Group Membership Situation

Group Name Real Purpose What They’re Doing There
“[Hometown] Memories – If You’re From Here You Know” Casual racism disguised as nostalgia Fighting about whether the old Dairy Queen was better
“Prayer Warriors Unite “ Competitive prayer posting Claiming everything is “God’s plan,” including parking spots
“Millennials Destroyed America” Therapeutic rage outlet Blaming young people for industries they killed
“Lost Pets of [Area Code]” Paranoid surveillance network Reporting all animals as suspicious, including their own
“Is It Just Me Or…” Validation seeking No, Patricia, it’s not just you who thinks music was better when it was racist

Why They’ll Never Leave

Look, you want them to try Instagram? These people still have AOL email addresses. They print out Google Maps directions. Your dad thinks the cloud is just weather.

Facebook is their final form. This is it. This is where they’ll die, probably mid-comment on a local news article about bike lanes ruining America.

All their friends are here – all 73 people from high school, including that kid who definitely went to prison but nobody talks about it. Their entire social validation system runs through Facebook’s servers. Those three likes on their blurry bird photo? That’s what gets them through the day. That “Happy Birthday” post from someone they haven’t spoken to since 1987? That’s their social security blanket.

The Final Boss: Your Parents on Facebook

Here’s the thing nobody tells you: Your parents are having the time of their lives. While you’re stressed about Instagram aesthetics and TikTok algorithms, they’re on Facebook calling strangers “sweetie” in arguments about parking regulations and sharing recipes that should be classified as biological weapons.

They’ve created an entire ecosystem where facts are optional, typing in all caps is acceptable, and everyone pretends to understand what blockchain is because their nephew mentioned it once.

And honestly? Good for them.

Let them think the Facebook algorithm is their personal friend. Let them believe Mark Zuckerberg reads their suggestions. Let them share that same warning about hackers every three months like it’s breaking news.

Because here’s the secret: They won Facebook. They turned it into exactly what they wanted – a place where they can be technologically incompetent and overly confident at the same time. A digital space where nobody questions why they’re sharing an article from 2012 like it happened yesterday.

The rest of us are just tourists in their kingdom now, occasionally dropping by to untag ourselves from unflattering photos and watching in awe as they turn every comment section into a therapy session about their medical problems.

Your mom just liked this article. She’s sharing it right now with the caption “SO TRUE!!!” She’s tagging you. She’s tagging your siblings. She’s tagging someone named Gerald you’ve never heard of.

The comments are already starting. “LOL HELEN THIS IS US.” “SHARED!” “How do I copy this to my wall?”

This is their world now.

We’re just living in it.

Michael

I'm a human being. Usually hungry. I don't have lice.

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