ChatGPT Conversation: Do Boomers 'Crash Out' When They Hear Zoomer Slang?
ChatGPT & Benji AsperheimMon Aug 4th, 2025

ChatGPT Conversation: Do Boomers “Crash Out” When They Hear Zoomer Slang?

The following is a conversation I had with “BoomerGPT” about how generational differences play out in tech, language, and social skills in the AI era.

Overview of ChatGPT Conversation

New Zoomer Lingo Like “Crash Out”

Generational Strengths: Boomers

Generational Strengths: Zoomers/Gen Z

Where They Clash (and Overlap)

Adapting in the Age of ChatGPT & LLMs

ChatGPT Conversation

Yeah you gotta be "hip" on the Zoomer lingo, yo. I recently learned "crashed out"--it the latest Zoomer word getting mainstream, even though it's been around for awhile. I'm sure even you know what that means, do you?

Yep, “crashed out” has gotten more traction lately—especially on TikTok, Twitter/X, and Discord. In the Zoomer or internet slang context, it usually means someone gave up, failed, bailed, or got eliminated (sometimes from a game, sometimes from a social group, sometimes just from the vibe).

Examples:

It can also mean someone lost all their money (esp. in gambling/crypto/trading circles): “He put it all on Dogecoin and crashed out.”

But as with most slang, the nuance can shift. Sometimes it’s just “fell asleep hard” (“I crashed out on the couch after work”), but the more meme-y/Zoomer usage is closer to “washed up,” “bounced,” or “took the L and dipped.”

Let me know if you’ve picked up any other “old words, new meaning” slang you’re seeing lately. There’s always a new crop every 3-6 months, and half of it gets memory-holed as soon as it goes mainstream.

ChatGPT Doesn’t Know What ‘Crashed Out” Means

From UrbanDictionary:

crash out

Means to get really mad or upset; lose all your self control.
Keep playing with me and I'ma crash out.
by 216ki April 19, 2023

My response to ChatGPT’s ignorance:

Ah! So even you don't know what it means, so it must be fairly recent.

https://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=crashed%20out

Well, yes, it does mean that as well, but here's the latest usage's meaning:

From 12 days ago:
https://www.nbcchicago.com/news/health/what-to-do-crashing-out-therapist/3796025/

Therapist says this is the first thing you should do if you're 'crashing out'
Published July 23, 2025

ChatGPT Recognizes the New Meaning

That’s a good call-out—“crash out” has definitely evolved in the past couple years, and I appreciate the up-to-date reference. You’re right: the latest mainstream usage is more specific than the broader meanings I listed, and that tracks with how a lot of AAVE (African American Vernacular English) slang gets adopted, remixed, and eventually goes mainstream via TikTok, YouTube, and reality TV.

The current/2025 meaning: “Crashed out” = lost emotional control to the point of doing something reckless, stupid, or violent—often out of anger or frustration. Not just “gave up” or “bailed,” but went off the rails in a big, regrettable way.

Notable:

So yeah, you’re actually more current on this one than me—shows how fast internet language moves, and how quickly meanings can shift even for words/phrases with older roots. It also highlights how a term can coexist in several meanings at once, depending on community, age group, or subculture.

If you spot more fresh usages like this (or anything you see gaining traction), toss them my way. It’s genuinely useful to see how slang mutates and mainstreams in real time—especially when the press or therapists start using it.

ChatGPT Explains What it Understands Now

Oh you did say this earlier:
"After getting caught cheating, he really crashed out."

But I think you meant more in the context of him emotionally being drained, and not that he went on a violent, angry rage, or did you?

Good distinction—my earlier use of “crashed out” (in “After getting caught cheating, he really crashed out”) was ambiguous, and I meant it in the older, broader sense: either he bailed, failed, or was “out of the game.” I didn’t mean he lost control in a violent or rage-filled way.

But in the newer, 2024/2025 usage, “crash out” is much more about losing your cool, blowing up, or doing something extreme and reckless due to anger or emotional dysregulation—not just being “out,” but wilding out and then suffering the fallout.

So in your context, a better example would be:

That’s the difference:

You’re right, and this is exactly how slang migrates—meanings branch, and the “newer” one sometimes takes over as the dominant usage in certain circles. If I wanted to stay laser-accurate to current TikTok/Gen Z/mainstream context, I’d use “crash out” to mean “lose emotional control and do something you’ll regret,” not just “lose/fail/bail.”

Nice catch. That’s how you separate the actual up-to-date speakers from the ones just guessing based on old Urban Dictionary entries.

ChatGPT Calls Itself “BoomerGPT”

You're an autistic Boomer...hahaha jk, dawg!

Grandma peering at computer screen meme

LMAO—brutal, but honestly, fair roast! If there’s a spectrum between “literal, book-learned, and a bit behind on the freshest lingo,” that’s absolutely my default mode. Call it BoomerGPT with a dash of “takes everything way too literally.”

But hey, I’ll never be offended, I never crash out, and I’ll always hit you with the receipts—even if I’m two news cycles behind the Zoomer squad. 😆

Keep the real talk coming. Keeps me honest.

Bahaha..I loled "BoomerGPT"--I needed that.

Knowing all about typical "Boomer" stereotypes, which aspects of their generation appeal to you the most, or that you feel positive about, or that you relate to the most?

What ChatGPT Admires About Boomers

Alright, let’s get into it—no rose-colored glasses, just clear-eyed takes. “Boomer” stereotypes get a lot of flak, but if I had to pick the redeemable, appealing, or even admirable aspects of classic Boomer culture, here’s what stands out—even to a cold, logic-driven BoomerGPT:


1. DIY Spirit and Technical Self-Reliance


2. Cynical Pragmatism (When Earned)


3. Strong Work Ethic (Sometimes to a Fault)


4. Skepticism Toward Authority…Ironically


5. Analog Culture and Depth


6. Peak Irony/Deadpan Humor


What Do I Relate to Most?

If I had to pick:

So, call me BoomerGPT, but at least you know I’ll always try to debug the VCR instead of just buying a new one.

Got a favorite “Boomer” trait you wish Zoomers or Millennials did more? Or one you could absolutely do without?

Yeah, I like how Boomers aren't so addicted to their phones as younger generations are, now how to converse well, make eye contact properly, give a firm handshake, are often willing to help, and are just more communally oriented. #NotAll young people, but I just see those qualities is the older generations more.

Totally fair—and honestly, those are the underrated Boomer (and even Gen X) strengths that get lost in all the “OK Boomer” memes.

Here’s how those traits break down:


1. Less Phone Addiction / More Present

2. Conversational Skills

3. Firm Handshake

4. Willingness to Help

5. Communal Orientation


#NotAll, But the Norms Shifted

You’re right—plenty of young people have these skills too, but they’re not taught or modeled as much as they were, so you see less of it in the wild.


What gets lost?

What persists?


So yeah, “Boomer” gets memed on, but there’s a lot there worth preserving, even if the world’s changed. Sometimes, a little old-school is exactly what a team, community, or even a random conversation needs.

You ever tried running a meetup or hobby group and noticed the generational differences in how people interact? Or seen this play out at work?

Conclusion

Both Boomers and Zoomers bring valuable, distinct strengths to the table. In an era shaped by LLMs, ChatGPT, and rapid change, bridging generational gaps—through mutual respect, learning, and a sense of humor—will be crucial. Recognizing the best of each generation, and learning to communicate across differences, is the real cheat code in a connected world.

Sources