"Ashes" has been a common word in the E generation, which is roughly equivalent to "till death do us part", "died in the line of duty" and "martyr" used by "we" to express a series of "top" praises to a cause, such as great loyalty, never going back on our word and never betraying. Nicholson, a famous Hollywood actor, is a famous super fan of the Lakers. A newspaper reported: "As a die-hard fan of the Lakers and the best actor, Nicholson once said that NBA managers and coaches are the best actors in the world." Helpless, "it's not that I don't understand, it's that the world is changing too fast!" It is really difficult for my generation to associate "ashes" with lofty praise. Although online language is still a "patent" for young people, as they step into society and become the backbone of all walks of life, this "online language" that "non-netizens" can't understand will more and more openly enter the "mainstream" media. There will be "two languages" in the same society to a considerable extent. Many times, talking to each other is just a saying that "chickens talk with ducks", which is either incomprehensible, misunderstood or even violent, which is not a blessing to social harmony. This "ashes" incident is proof. The misunderstanding and conflict between coach Jiang Xingquan and young media reporters may be more manifested as "generation gap", intergenerational differences and conflicts, and the negative impact of intergenerational barriers and frictions on society may not be too great. If the same generation has such a situation, the consequences are particularly worrying.
Jiang Xingquan, the coach of Liaoning team and the respected coach of China basketball, was furious at the press conference after the away game in Linyi, Shandong Province, and sternly reprimanded a reporter. Didn't Liaoning win this away game against Shandong by 1 1? There must be some unpleasant reasons for being so angry after winning. It turned out that a local media called him "the ashes coach"! At the press conference, of course, he will "theorize" with the reporter and the newspaper: "I read the newspaper today, and they actually called me' the ashes coach'! I have no idea what they mean. I've never heard of such a statement. I'm afraid there is no such thing as a hard-core coach in the world. This young man, you speak so openly in the newspaper, but it's my life! " The young reporter repeatedly explained, "Not that. We say this to respect you. " "What? Is anyone so respectful? Ashes, that's for the dead. Let's get this straight. It is not certain who will die first! You say that I am highly respected, but you can't say that I am ashes? "