Found another Kavanaugh quote I can use. This one I like. From earlier in this thread:
"So, why not take an Uber to the club, grab a few drinks and try to find an adult who can explain how Jon Favreau became the guy who pitched the Mandalorian to Disney."
I'll get to the Kavanaugh quote in a moment. From my perch of 54 years, many who observe the young'uns with their phones, and apparent disinterest in present company, don't understand how they communicate and share. It's not that they are distanced from each other; they respond to one another as Ben Sims mentioned above, based on a framework that was handed to them. Another framework was handed to the Greatest Generation of Brokaw, and it responded. Still another was handed to the Beatles generation, and it responded.
So, too, with golf. Foot golf might be fun for soccer players, but regular golf, not in the slightest. Ball and stick athletes (lacrosse, baseball, field and ice hockey, cricket) are much more likely to take up golf; they have the mindset and kinesthesia for hitting something with something else. Then you get the NBA golf junkies...how do we explain that?
I found the points about no longer writing off membership; burden of a massive clubhouse and the expectations for staffing, upkeep and offerings that come with it; and the idea of golf not having to be bigger than four letters, to be salient points and worth repeating.
Back to the quote. The Uber is being picked out of the millenial basket, and used for purpose. No one says you have to accept all the millenial offering, so why should millenials be compelled to accept all the X, Y, Z, Boomer offerings? Next, the drinks might be any pursuit offered at the club, but they need to be valuable enough to extract one from a place/space of comfort, even with a Lyft available. Third, find an adult...why an adult? Some folks are simply comfortable speaking with their generation, or with someone to whom they would grant membership in their generation. In contrast, some older peoples seek the company of younger peoples, because they miss/envy/value the spirit and enthusiasm of youth. This is communicated by the topic of conversation: a program currently streaming on Disney+, a spin-off from a movie series that captivated kids from the late 1970s/early 1980s, the late 1990s/early 2000s, and the 2010s.