JD Vance, Donald Trumpâ€
In 2005, while serving as a combat correspondent in Iraq, he started a blog. In 2012, he created his first public Spotify playlist, “Making Dinner,� which featured Backstreet Boys, Justin Bieber and Florence + The Machine. His Venmo account was public too, according to a report by Wired (his “friends� on the payment app included Tucker Carlson). He tweeted (and deleted). He Yelped. He started a second blog.
As the first major-party vice-presidential nominee from the millennial generation, Vance, who turns 40 on Friday, is also the first who grew up with the option of posting his every thought and feeling — his favorite music, his reviews of random businesses (“one of the best restaurants in Cincinnati or anywhereâ€�), even his reflections on Game of Thrones (“Iâ€
And like other millennials, Vance was a sort of internet pioneer, embracing new platforms (Financial transactions can be shared with friends? Cool!) without much apparent trepidation.
Younger Americans — members of Gen Z and Gen Alpha — were born into a world shaped by social media. But Vance and his contemporaries were born before social media existed, joined it as teens or young adults, and became the first generation to discover how what they posted could affect their lives and careers decades later.
Now Vance is becoming the first millennial to discover what itâ€
“Millennials have been moving through the professional world with this long digital trail. People have managed to make careers for themselves despite all the weird stuff they did when they were younger,� said Whitney Phillips, assistant professor of digital platforms and ethics at the University of Oregon. “But having this be a vice-presidential nominee is a very different kind of job than your average job. It raises the stakes, it raises the visibility.�
Many internet users — including some of the more “tech savvy and smart� millennials — began making more of their online content private around 2016, according to marketing generalist consultant Carissa Estreller.
Vance didnâ€
The Republican vice-presidential nominee has faced criticism in recent weeks for his past comments on childless Americans and his transformation from a Trump critic to the former presidentâ€
“Part of the reason that people are scouring his online data trail is because of some of the more political positions heâ€
Perhaps the most notable examples of Vanceâ€
Vance and his wife, Usha, adopted the puppy during their time at Yale Law School, said Dan Driscoll, a friend who overlapped with the couple for several years at Yale and now serves as a senior adviser to Vanceâ€
“Iâ€
Driscoll recalled the pair as extraordinarily devoted to the dog, heading home in the middle of every day to walk him and stepping in without complaint to clean up the pupâ€
“Casper … would just throw everything up on the floor, it made their house stink and it was constant,� Driscoll said. “I just remember [JD] constantly on his hands and knees cleaning that up.�
According to Vanceâ€
Vance rated a veterinary clinic in Cincinnati one star for its handling of a “sudden, seriousâ€� issue, calling it “one of the worst customer service experiences in the city.â€� (Vance didnâ€
Casper is also, apparently, well read. A Goodreads account connected to Vance is named for the German shepherd. Among Casperâ€
The abundance of online material available from Vanceâ€
But in reality, “we might actually know less, because weâ€
Meryl Kornfield, Hannah Natanson, Aaron Schaffer and Chris Dehghanpoor contributed to this report.