taken form trustthedj.com
America?s ?babyboomer? generation of people born between 1945 and 1963 have refused to grow out of their ?wayward, irresponsible ways? and now lead California?s petty felony crime statistics as well as HIV infection, the Sunday Times reported this week.
?Today?s California drug addict is more likely to be 45 than 20,? the paper revealed in an interview with US author Mike Mills about his new book Boomergeddon.
?No-one wants to hear it,? Mills added, ?but we?ve got a problem with the middle aged.?
Despite being some way outside the babyboomer demographic, superstar DJ Sasha found himself facing tough related questions from US journal Newsweek this week, who demanded to know if he thought he?d at some point get too old to DJ.
?Yeah, of course,? the 36 year old spinner admitted, ?I mean, I?m not thinking about retiring any time soon but, um, yeah, I?m sure there will be a day when maybe my ears will pack up.?
The definitive superstar DJ also brushed off comments about DJs indulging in ?drugs, alcohol, sex?, saying ?I really don?t know about that? and drew the line when Newsweek reporter Vanessa Juarez mentioned Ecstasy.
?You know, I?d really rather not talk about drugs at all, especially not to
Newsweek,? Sasha snapped.
?I think it?s a really, really touchy subject. I think everyone has personal opinions about it, and it?s just not really somewhere I feel comfortable talking about. I just think the way it looks on paper, it never reads well,? he complained.
Sasha & John Digweed Present Delta Heavy DVD is out now. Sasha also headlines Global Gathering?s first festival at the Miami Winter Conference (March 1 and the Bonnaroo festival in Nashville Tennessee in June, spinning alongside Beck, Tom Petty and Radiohead (June 16-18, Manchester, Tennesse)
America?s ?babyboomer? generation of people born between 1945 and 1963 have refused to grow out of their ?wayward, irresponsible ways? and now lead California?s petty felony crime statistics as well as HIV infection, the Sunday Times reported this week.
?Today?s California drug addict is more likely to be 45 than 20,? the paper revealed in an interview with US author Mike Mills about his new book Boomergeddon.
?No-one wants to hear it,? Mills added, ?but we?ve got a problem with the middle aged.?
Despite being some way outside the babyboomer demographic, superstar DJ Sasha found himself facing tough related questions from US journal Newsweek this week, who demanded to know if he thought he?d at some point get too old to DJ.
?Yeah, of course,? the 36 year old spinner admitted, ?I mean, I?m not thinking about retiring any time soon but, um, yeah, I?m sure there will be a day when maybe my ears will pack up.?
The definitive superstar DJ also brushed off comments about DJs indulging in ?drugs, alcohol, sex?, saying ?I really don?t know about that? and drew the line when Newsweek reporter Vanessa Juarez mentioned Ecstasy.
?You know, I?d really rather not talk about drugs at all, especially not to
Newsweek,? Sasha snapped.
?I think it?s a really, really touchy subject. I think everyone has personal opinions about it, and it?s just not really somewhere I feel comfortable talking about. I just think the way it looks on paper, it never reads well,? he complained.
Sasha & John Digweed Present Delta Heavy DVD is out now. Sasha also headlines Global Gathering?s first festival at the Miami Winter Conference (March 1 and the Bonnaroo festival in Nashville Tennessee in June, spinning alongside Beck, Tom Petty and Radiohead (June 16-18, Manchester, Tennesse)