Plus: 馃殬 The worst parking spot in Boston
It鈥檚 Tuesday, Boston.
馃ぉ If you were walking around the Financial District yesterday 鈥 You might鈥檝e caught a glimpse of Boston鈥檚 own Mark Wahlberg, who was in town filming a scene for his new movie, 鈥淲eekend Warriors.鈥 Hi, Mark!
馃攼 P.S. We鈥檙e dropping 20 FREE early-bird tickets to Select Markets鈥 massive Halloween Thrift Fest this weekend. Become a member, and then enter here!
馃憖What鈥檚 on tap today:
The worst parking spot in Boston
A Celtics icon leaves the building
The steaming kettle stays put
Up first鈥
OK BOOMER
The kids will *hopefully* be alright
Illustration: Gia Orsino
Resident 鈥渂oomer鈥 reporting for duty! I鈥檓 Larry Edelman, business columnist for The Boston Globe, filling in for Gia and Emily for today鈥檚 top story.
馃 I recently came across a term I鈥檇 never seen before: Generation Jones. ChatGPT filled me in:
馃 Generation Jones are Americans born between 1955 and 1965. They鈥檙e late boomers shaped by Watergate, stagflation, and Reagan-era politics, more skeptical and pragmatic than their older counterparts. That鈥檚 me: too young for Woodstock, too old to identify with Gen X. And then it got me thinking 鈥
馃 Gen Jones and Gen Z might have more in common than I thought. Listen, I may technically be a 鈥測oung Boomer,鈥 but I feel dated in a newsroom increasingly staffed by millennials and Gen Z. That said, with that age comes perspective. Growing up in Generation Jones meant facing some of the same challenges my younger colleagues now see: economic downturns, political disillusionment, and the uneasy balance between idealism and practicality.
So if you鈥檙e crashing out about the state of the world, let me share some perspective 鈥
鉂 Don鈥檛 panic. I know, easier said than done. On Oct. 19, 1987, the stock market crashed. There was uncertainty, even desperation in the air. Would there be another depression like 1929? Heading to work the next morning, I told my wife, 鈥淭hings could get ugly.鈥 I was wrong. The Dow rebounded quickly. There was no recession. I鈥檝e tried to 鈥渟tay calm and carry on鈥 during other scary times such as 9/11, COVID, and now.
鈴 Play the long game. When you鈥檙e young, time is on your side. The economy did get ugly during the early 1990s recession and the financial crisis of 2007-2009. But we kept saving and investing in our retirement accounts regardless of what the market was doing. We were lucky 鈥 we never lost our jobs, our student loans weren鈥檛 onerous 鈥 but having a cash cushion makes it easier to ride out ugly times.
馃憖 Stay skeptical but resist apathy. It鈥檚 hard not to be disillusioned after a half-century of political failures by both parties. Each swing of the electoral pendulum is more extreme, whipsawing the majority who long for a moderate, practical government focused on making life better for everyone. We鈥檝e seen this movie before. My father was revolted by Nixon as much as I am by Trump. Carter talked a good game but didn鈥檛 deliver. Obama and Biden fell short of expectations.
馃挱 Final thought. Abandoning hope isn鈥檛 the answer. R.E.M., a Jones Generation band if there ever was one, put it this way:
If wishes were trees the trees would be falling
Listen to reason
Reason is calling
Your feet are going to be on the ground
Your head is there to move you around
馃摑 The message: Stand up, take a fresh look, do something.
TOGETHER WITH THE BLUE CROSS BLUE SHIELD OF MASSACHUSETTS
Know where to go for care
馃彞 馃┖ Not every stomach bug, sprain, or 鈥渕ystery rash鈥 deserves a trip to the ER. Urgent care (or even telehealth) can usually handle it faster, cheaper, and with way less stress. For life-threatening emergencies, always call 911 or go straight to the ER. For everything else, know where to go for care with Blue Cross Blue Shield of Massachusetts 鈥 your time (and bank account) will thank you.
CITY
Quick & dirty headlines
Image: David L. Ryan/The Boston Globe
馃殫 We found the worst parking spots in Boston. In the past year, 311, Boston鈥檚 constituent service line, got over 60,000 complaints about parking, according to the Globe. And over 1,000 of them came from one, 200-meter stretch of the Seaport鈥檚 Congress and Summer streets, which has become something of a hunting ground for parking enforcement officers. A construction worker who works nearby said that once, he was ticked in the time it took for him to walk to the meter to pay. Check out all the city鈥檚 worst parking spots here.
馃槶 Another Celtics icon has left the building. On Sunday, veteran center Al Horford announced he鈥檒l be leaving the C鈥檚 for the Golden State Warriors, the latest in a series of offseason switchups. Horford has been in Boston for seven of the last nine seasons, playing a major role in the 2024 championship run, and delivering possibly the coldest dunk we鈥檝e ever watched live. 鈥淭his chapter in my career will hold a special place in my heart,鈥 he wrote in a post on X. 鈥淚 am forever grateful for the fans and the organization.鈥
馃殐 BOO! It鈥檚 time for more MBTA shutdowns. Another month, another series of T headaches, this time for Green and Orange Liners. Here鈥檚 the deal: Orange Liners can expect a weekend shutdown between North Station and Forest Hills from Oct. 11 to 13. But Green Liners have it worse. This weekend, the GLX will see a shutdown between North Station and Union Square as well as Medford/Tufts, and later this month, D branch riders can expect a seven-day shutdown between Kenmore and Riverside. Good luck out there!
馃泹锔 Maxxinistas: We鈥檝e got good and bad news. We鈥檒l start with the bad: T.J. Maxx announced that it鈥檒l be closing its iconic (to us, anyway) Newbury Street location by Jan. 3, 2026. Company reps confirmed that the closure will be a one-off, but the reason why is unclear, especially given the company鈥檚 solid financial footing. In better news: If you鈥檙e looking for a new go-to T.J.鈥檚, the Newton location was recently dubbed the best in the country for its discounted designer finds.
ONE LAST THING
The steaming kettle stays put
Image: Jessica Rinaldi/The Boston Globe. Illustration: Gia Orsino.
The Starbucks by Government Center might be OOO 鈥 But at least the giant brass steaming kettle above the door is here to stay.
After news broke that the location would be one of nearly 20 to close last weekend, in an act of stellar journalism, Boston.com inquired about the building鈥檚 giant steaming kettle (which, BTW, has a pretty wild backstory).
The building鈥檚 owner confirmed that the kettle 鈥渨ill be there forever,鈥 Starbucks or not. For his part, he鈥檚 surprised to see the coffee chain go (it鈥檚 been there since 1997), but hopes that the next tenants serve better food. Fair enough.
You can read the whole story here.
鈥 Written by Gia Orsino and Claire Nicholas
鈽 Thanks for reading! Petition for a cute local coffee shop to fill the space!
馃挏 Special shoutout to today鈥檚 sponsor, Blue Cross Blue Shield of Massachusetts, for supporting local journalism and helping patients access the right care at the right cost.
馃憱 The results are in: 62% of B-Siders say they know about the 鈥淏oston Uniform,鈥 though they鈥檙e split on how often they wear it. One reader said: 鈥淚 went over to my 93-year-old grandma from Southie鈥檚 house one time, and we were BOTH wearing the Boston uniform.鈥 LOL.