Whilst Baby Boomers waved Give Peace A Chance placards and Generation Xers philosophized about world hunger whilst watching The Breakfast Club, Millennials found themselves reared on rapid - fire Internet connections, waving handhelds, pressured to succeed academically and at work, wrapped up in a world of virtual relationships via social networking, and with little time for a real social
Whilst Baby Boomers
waved Give Peace A Chance placards and Generation Xers philosophized about world hunger
whilst watching The Breakfast Club, Millennials found themselves reared on rapid - fire Internet connections, waving handhelds, pressured to succeed academically and at work, wrapped up in a world of virtual relationships via social networking, and with little time for a real social
whilst watching The Breakfast Club, Millennials found themselves reared on rapid - fire Internet connections,
waving handhelds, pressured to succeed academically and at work, wrapped up in a world of virtual relationships via social networking, and with little time for a real social life.
Its undeniably fun to
watch these sequences where the youths are acting up with their gangland dialect,
waving their hands around making gang signs, virtually behaving like cartoon characters
whilst being dressed like bums.
Offering a world - first permanent night surfing installation, you can sit back and
watch the local Boardriders clubs put on a show
whilst you sip on a Bintang or three, or if you're brave enough, book a night surf yourself and hit the
waves at twilight.