Cherie Brooke Luo
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
Or how do we break through and either speak to the youngest generation, Gen Alpha, and or create products for them?
Or is it very similar to creating products for millennials?
Yeah, they're 13 now.
Like skibbity toilet riz.
Like you've heard that.
I'm like, what is that?
You know, I need someone to.
Definitely heard that.
I need someone to, you know, define that for me and also translate.
tools for creativity uh and and that's what i love love the most uh growing up yeah that reminds me of you yeah i i was on um i don't know it wasn't the internet but i used a lot of creative tools as like a third or fourth creator like remixing my own songs and designing like garage band like clips and stuff that i'd share with gene and be like wait should you like burn these cds for me of like 30 minute long songs and i would like listen to the whole thing it was well looking back on it now it sounds horrible but it was like creative
creative outlet for me.
Oh, yeah.
The reason why I'm like I can edit.
Well, I think one of the reasons why I can edit our podcast and, you know, create the audio for it and like audio mix and all that stuff is because I've been doing it since like the third or fourth grade through those tools.
Thank you, Apple.
Yeah.
Well, it's interesting that we're talking about, I guess, like our early days with technology because we had Rahm Emanuel on our podcast maybe around three weeks ago and we were talking to him about technology and obviously social media came up.
And there's a ton of people like Rahm that are saying that we should ban social media for technology.
young people, people under 16 years old.
There was also a New Zealand article about this.