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Millennial Smirk is a slang term that describes a self-satisfied smirking expression stereotypically characteristic of millennials. The term was coined following the Sydney Sweeney GQ Interview in early November 2025 to describe interviewer Katherine Stoeffel's expression when asking Sweeney about her controversial American Eagle ad.

The Millennial Smirk is reminiscent of the DreamWorks Face and also reminiscent of other Millennial traits deemed cringe by Gen Z, like Millennial Writing and the Millennial Pause. The Millennial Smirk is also similar to the Quirk Chungus archetype of Millennial women. In memes and viral discourse, the Millennial Smirk was contrasted to the Gen Z Stare as it spread online.

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Origin

On November 6th, 2025, X[1] / Twitter user @bog_beef tweeted two photos, one of actor Adam Conover and one of GQ Features Director Katherine Stoeffel from her recent interview with Sydney Sweeney.[2] The tweet's caption read, "Millennial smirk (2014-2025) died today," gaining over 42,000 likes in a day.



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On November 6th, 2025, X[3] user @PandasAndVidya quote-tweeted @bog_beef's post, writing, "Viciously murdered by the Gen Z stare," attaching a screencap of Sydney Sweeney's blank expression. Over one day, the post received over 40,000 likes.



Also on November 6th, X[4] user @bitcloud also quote-tweeted @bog_beef's post, writing, "'Wow. OK.'" In a day, the quote-tweet received over 5,000 likes.

In the replies to @bitcloud's post, X[5] user @atthatmatt compared the Millennial Smirk to the term DreamWorks Face, which describes a similar smirking expression commonly seen in DreamWorks animated films.



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