On being stylish, cheap, but not old
By John MacIntyre
STYLE YOURSELF
Percentage of Americans who agree that personal style has more to do with being comfortable in your own skin than about dressing to impress, according to a survey by Old Spice: 66%
OLD IS RELATIVE
Age at which Americans ages 18 to 29 believe that the average person becomes "old," according to a Pew Research Center Social and Demographic Trends survey on aging: 60
Age at which middle-aged respondents put this threshold: 70
Age that respondents ages 65 and above call "old": 74
CHA-CHING STARS
Ranks of Will Smith, Johnny Depp, Brad Pitt and Tom Hanks as the most bankable male stars, according to the Ulmer Scale: 1, 2, 3, 4
MORE LONELY
Percentage of Americans who say there is more loneliness in today's society than there used to be, according to research by Kodak: 67%
Percentage who feel it is easier to connect with friends and family today than it was five years ago (a result of e-mail, texting and social networks): 80%
WAGELESS TEENS
Current teen unemployment rate, according to Employment Policies Institute: 24%
Percentage increase from earlier this summer: 12%
For every 10 percent increase in the minimum wage, the associated percentage decline in teenage employment in small businesses, according to research from the University of Georgia: 4.6% to 9%
TIGHTWADS R US
Percentage of Americans who are cutting back on their spending, according to a Gallup Poll: 71%
Percentage of Americans who say they have enough money to satisfy their basic needs: 78%
BIKINI BOMBSHELL
Year that designer Louis Reard had his models display a skimpy, two-piece bathing suit named for a Pacific atoll where atomic bombs were tested, according to the U.S. Census Bureau: 1946
Number of women's clothing stores that now carry the bikini, once viewed as scandalous and expected to be a short-lived fad: 47,000 (sales now more than $31 billion a year)
IDLE THOUGHT
"We have not passed that subtle line between childhood and adulthood until we move from the passive voice to the active voice — that is, until we have stopped saying, 'It got lost,' and say, 'I lost it.' "
— Sydney J. Harris, journalist