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1[[quoteright:508:[[WesternAnimation/{{Futurama}} https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/stevecastle.png]]]]
2 [[caption-width-right:508:"It's all about appearances. That's why it's time to update our company's stodgy image and give it the sleek, dazzling veneer of the 1980s."]]
3
4->''"Members of an overpriced household in an overpriced area with overpriced possessions, none of which are prepared to clean their own toilet, or put out the trash."''
5-->-- '''Website/UrbanDictionary'''[='=]s [[https://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=Yuppie definition]] for "yuppie"
6
7"Yuppie" is an acronym of "'''y'''oung '''u'''rban '''p'''rofessional". The term first appeared in the media in 1982 and came to be one of the more characteristic period tropes of TheEighties.
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9Yuppies were members of the later Baby Boom generation, or [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Generation_Jones "Generation Jones",]] who became successful (or at least well-paid) [[WhiteCollarWorker white-collar workers]] in their twenties and thirties, usually in finance, law, sales, architecture, or management consulting. In the era's StandardOfficeSetting, yuppies stood out because they were often young for their rank, typically {{workaholic}}s, and obsessively materialist. The men were [[SharpDressedMan sharply dressed]] in suits made for Wall Street financial types, and the women made such [[TheFashionista fashion statements]] as [[LadyInAPowerSuit power suits]] with [[ShouldersOfDoom large shoulder pads]], [[EightiesHair voluminous]] or [[BoyishShortHair slick]] hair, and work-appropriate makeup that was also heavy and striking.
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11Outside of the office, yuppies tended to live in pricy, and often gentrified, inner-city apartments or restored older homes. More affluent ones could be classified as NouveauRiche since they were prone to displays of ConspicuousConsumption, albeit usually of the SimpleYetOpulent variety. Until such devices became commonplace, the yuppie's most distinctive attribute was the use of the StatusCellPhone, which allowed them to become a ClockKing with a meticulously planned work schedule. As [[TechnologyMarchesOn technology marched on]], other attributes came to define them, such as trendy physical exercise (including yoga and advanced weight machinery), novelty electronic devices, a CoolCar (usually [[MadeInCountryX a German one]][[note]]In the '80s, American luxury brands like Cadillac and Lincoln were considered passé and [[AudienceAlienatingEra a long way from their glory days]], and usually driven by the yuppies' older bosses. On the other hand, German luxury automakers like BMW, Mercedes, and Porsche were going through something of a golden age in the '80s.[[/note]]), and [[MustHaveCaffeine caffeine addiction]], with an [[OvercomplicatedMenuOrder elaborate taste for exotic kinds of coffee]]. Quite a few had [[WorkHardPlayHard wild personal lives]].
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13Despite their material wealth, it was common in [[DeconstructedTrope deconstructive works]] to have yuppies facing failure in their personal lives with such problems as substance abuse, marital strife, or [[WhenYouComingHomeDad lack of family commitment]]. Their perceived [[ItsAllAboutMe self-absorption]], along with other potentially off-putting qualities (insufferable trendiness, snobbery, latent class anxiety, [[TheHedonist decadence]], smugness, and fixation on making money), also made them easy comic targets, or even [[HateSink outright villains]], in many works during the '80s and '90s. In a SlobsVersusSnobs conflict, yuppies would definitely be the snobs, unless they were coming up against an even snootier old-boy network.
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15And on that note, since they looked similar upon first glance, especially in their taste in fashion, it was easy to confuse a yuppie with [[WhiteAngloSaxonProtestant a preppy]]. However, there was one key difference between the two: yuppies were [[NouveauRiche New Money]] while preppies were OldMoney. There was also some slight overlap between the yuppie and the archetypal SelfMadeMan, except that the latter grew up lower-class in economically stressful circumstances while the former grew up middle-class in comfortably stable surroundings.
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17The yuppie trope was at its strongest during the '80s and early '90s, but is now becoming a DeadHorseTrope with the aging of the Baby Boomer demographic group. By the mid-late [[TheNewTens 2010s]], the concept of yuppies had evolved into {{Bourgeois Bohemian}}s and {{Hipster}}s, who are similar but whose media depictions emphasize their lifestyles rather than their careers, and {{Tech Bro}}s working for or running Silicon Valley tech companies.
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19Asian equivalents were the {{Salaryman}} and the OfficeLady.
20
21----
22
23!!Examples:
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25[[foldercontrol]]
26
27[[folder:Comic Strips]]
28* ''ComicStrip/TheFarSide'': Parodied in one installment with a "yussie" (young urban scientist) who tries to show off by flaunting his car microscope.
29[[/folder]]
30
31[[folder:Films -- Live-Action]]
32* Carter Burke in ''Film/{{Aliens}}'' is a yuppie in space, a young [[CorruptCorporateExecutive junior executive]] for [[MegaCorp Weyland-Yutani]] who serves as the company's liaison on the military expedition to Hadley's Hope. He initially presents himself as a friend to Ellen Ripley, [[spoiler:but [[BitchInSheepsClothing it turns out]] that he's [[SuitWithVestedInterests actually there]] to collect a sample of the xenomorph for Weyland-Yutani to study. The Marines nearly kill him right then and there when they find out, and when a xenomorph takes him out, [[AssholeVictim nobody mourns]].]]
33* ''Film/AmericanPsycho'': Just like its source novel, the film is set in the world of New York investment banking, with most of its characters either affluent and soulless office workers or bohemians. The VillainProtagonist himself is also a [[spoiler:possibly fantasizing]] SerialKiller in his downtime.
34* ''Film/{{Beethoven}}'': Brad and Brie are two venture capitalists who try to swindle family patriarch George Newton out from under his nose. They’re smug, snobby, and notedly don’t like kids. They get their comeuppance [[HeroicDog thanks to the Newtons’ titular dog]].
35* ''Film/{{Beetlejuice}}'': The Deetzes, obnoxiously eccentric urban folk with tacky art preferences who move into a nice house in the country, which is still haunted by the ghosts of its prior inhabitants.
36* ''Film/DieHard'':
37** Harry Ellis is a young businessman working for the Nakatomi Corporation who is [[EstablishingCharacterMoment introduced]] snorting cocaine off of Holly [=McClane's=] desk and hitting on her, even though she's married (albeit separated) with kids and her husband John is in the room with them. Later in the film, Ellis tries to sell John out to the BigBad Hans Gruber, not realizing that Hans and his men aren't terrorists but a CaperCrew, [[spoiler:and gets shot dead for the trouble despite John warning him how stupid he was being]]. It's saying something that, in a film whose villains are planning to murder dozens of people as part of their getaway plan, he still comes off as [[HateSink the biggest scumbag in Nakatomi Plaza]].
38** Holly herself is a more neutral example, having separated from John and moved to Los Angeles with the kids to pursue her career. When they reunite, it's clear that John didn't take it well, and that there is a serious rift between them due to their values.
39* ''Film/FatalAttraction'' typified the subgenre occasionally referred to as "yuppies in peril". Dan is an example of a yuppie who has (in theory) chosen family life, as a Manhattan lawyer who lives in a refurbished suburban house with his young daughter and stay-at-home wife. Dan uses his city, corporate existence to sleep with Alex Forrest. She lives in a swanky, gentrified apartment, and she is an apparently happily single, independent publishing executive (and she's a huge fan of shoulder pads). Except her supposedly "bohemian", open-minded lifestyle is actually a front because she goes absolutely crazy in her pursuit of Dan's suburban lifestyle.
40* ''Film/Ghost1990'': Sam and Molly. Sam is a Wall Street financier and Molly is a potter, and they live together in Soho, and Sam is murdered [[spoiler:because of his friend/co-worker Carl's greedy money laundering scheme.]]
41* In ''Film/{{Hunk}}'' (1987), Bradley achieves success by writing (or rather claiming credit for) a computer program called 'The Yuppie Program' which helps yuppies make decisions such as which wine to buy. The program becomes hugely popular and gains him a large bonus and a paid summer off to write anything he wants. Bradley spends his entire bonus renting a run-down beach house in Sea Spray, a very high-end part of California coastline, where he tries (and fails) to fit in with his yuppie neighbours. The film's focus on the yuppie lifestyle has turned it into an UnintentionalPeriodPiece.
42* ''Film/IComeInPeace'' has The White Boys, a gang of yuppie drug dealers. Then again as the movie involves a space alien harvesting humans for their endorphins, we're probably not meant to take this concept too seriously.
43* ''Film/KramerVsKramer'': Arguably an UnbuiltTrope, as the two main characters fulfill the definition of yuppies already in 1979, just before TheEighties. The main plot is however not about career, but describes their personal sacrifices, as they divorce and struggle for their son.
44* ''Film/LicenceToKill'' has Truman-Lodge, who serves as [[BigBad Franz Sanchez]]'s [[TheConsigliere financial advisor and accountant]], handling his financial schemes to conceal his drug money. In a deleted scene, Pam Bouvier mentions to Film/JamesBond that Truman-Lodge is wanted in the United States for insider trading on Wall Street, presumably in the 1987 Stock Market crash.
45* ''Film/{{Metropolitan}}'' is about college-age upper class New Yorkers who are basically pre-yuppies. In fact, a RunningGag is that one of them doesn't think the term "yuppie" really describes their class very well, and [[ForcedMeme tries to push]] UHB ("urban haute bourgeoisie", pronounced "ubb") as an alternative.
46* ''Film/NationalLampoonsChristmasVacation'': The Griswolds' contemptuous next-door neighbors, Todd and Margo, are yuppies who often suffer collateral damage caused by the many misfortunes Clark creates during the film. However, they are both so shallow, smug, self-absorbed, and hipper-than-thou (they find Christmas "dirty and messy and corny and cliched"), that it's hard to feel sorry for them.
47* ''Film/RealityBites'': Michael is a young, successful go-getter who wears suits and has his life in order. He's a foil of Troy, who is much smarter than Michael, but a directionless drop-out.
48* In ''Film/VampiresKiss'', Creator/NicolasCage plays a young, affluent literary agent in '80's New York who balances out his business days with hedonistic nights filled with casual sex. His character then comes to believe he's turned into a vampire, a metaphor for the predatory nature of uncontrolled capitalism and the yuppie class.
49* ''Film/WallStreet'' is arguably the TropeCodifier, where the younger yuppies in their 20s are drones to a CorruptCorporateExecutive, [[Creator/MichaelDouglas Gordon Gekko]], who's an older yuppie around 40.
50* The antagonist in ''Film/WaynesWorld'' is Benjamin, a handsome young TV executive with a swanky apartment in the big city, a cool car, and good taste in wine and suits. He goes up against the [[SlobsVsSnobs slobby metalhead protagonists]] for creative control of their TV show and the love of Cassandra.
51* ''Film/WorkingGirl'' is an archetypal yuppie film, about the warfare that breaks out between a lower-class secretary, Tess, who poses as her (young, corrupt) "head of mergers and acquisitions" boss while she's out sick with a broken leg.
52* ''Film/TheWolfOfWallStreet'' deals with the life of crooked Wall Street broker Jordan Belfort and portrays him as the embodiment of the worst of Yuppie {{greed}} as he trains his employees to sell bogus stocks while being [[ExecutiveExcess fueled]] by a healthy diet of [[HookersAndBlow hookers and cocaine]].
53[[/folder]]
54
55[[folder:Literature]]
56* ''Literature/MyBestFriendsExorcism'': As a dark AffectionateParody of all things '80s, Gretchen's parents are yuppies. It's never made clear what they do, but they are noticeably younger than Abby's (poor) parents, are religious Republicans who live in a huge house in Charlestown, and have enough money to take Gretchen and Abby on vacation.
57* ''Literature/TheseWordsAreTrueAndFaithful'': When Ernie first looks up Sam's apartment building, he sees that it is "marketed to young professionals, within walking distance of both the {{gayborhood}} and the main campus of Uxbridge University, well-appointed, and not cheap." Later, when Ernie writes his personal ad to find someone different from Sam, he specifies, "No workaholics, yuppies, or college students."
58* ''Literature/WeNeedToTalkAboutKevin'' (book-only). Eva and Franklin are yuppies, which Kevin senses by calling Franklin "Mr. Plastic." Although published in the early 00s, it is set in the mid-1990s and takes place around the 80s. Eva runs a travel company from when she's young, and Franklin sets up his own materials business and they live in New York City, which Eva loves until Franklin pressures her to move out to the suburbs when she's pregnant. The teacher who would later be murdered by their son Kevin even says that she thinks the problem of Kevin and the other kids is that they are extremely comfortable and have nothing to rebel against.
59* In "Totally Trashed" by Creator/RozKaveney, part of the ''Literature/{{Temps}}'' shared universe, Lenora's ex-boyfriend Michael is a yuppie, and her effect on his pristine London flat is a major source of their break-up. As she waits for the replacement bus service, because the trains are always cancelled, she reflects that the reason public transport in Yuppville is rubbish because all yuppies drive everywhere, so it exists purely for discarded girlfriends and boyfriends.
60* The [[OurGeniesAreDifferent genie]] in ''Literature/{{Sourcery}}'' fits many yuppie stereotypes, including having a fantasy version of a Filofax (the Fullomyth) and something that appears to be a mobile phone (in the eighties ''and'' in a fantasy universe), using phrases like "Let's do lunch" and "Have your people call my people" (although he admits he doesn't actually have any people), and there's even a nod to gentrification when he explains that he's invested in "a set of derelict lamps in the docks area of Ankh-Morpork that had great potential, once the smart crowd got there, to become the occult equivalent of a suite of offices and a wine bar".
61[[/folder]]
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63[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
64* The characters on ''Series/{{thirtysomething}}'' were textbook examples of Baby Boomers who were part of the counterculture during the '60s and yuppies during the '80s.
65* ''Series/{{Cheers}}'': The occasional yuppie shows up. When the diner above Cheers, Melville's, gets a new owner, Cheers becomes flooded with yuppie run-offs, including a yuppie version of Norm. Frasier and Lilith socialize within yuppie circles, though Lilith herself takes exception to being referred to as such (Frasier dryly suggesting she can rip out his tongue and serve it on a fajita if he does it again).
66* Alex P. Keaton on ''Series/FamilyTies'' is a yuppie who's still in high school and has dreams of working on Wall Street when he grows up (which he ultimately does). As an outspoken conservative free-marketeer, he frequently butts heads with his more liberal parents, both of them [[FormerTeenRebel former '60s activists]].
67* The Meachums from ''Series/IronFist2017'' all have the look and feel of the typical '80's yuppie. They are a rich family that run [[Characters/MCUCompanies Rand Enterprises]] with the Rand Family gone (until Danny shows up, alive and well). Both Harold and his son Ward wear three-piece suits and combed-over hair that fits the look and are different flavors of CorruptCorporateExecutive.
68* ''Series/{{Newhart}}'': TV producer Michael Harris is often described as a yuppie, but as his portrayer Creator/PeterScolari often pointed out, he isn't all that successful; he lives in rural Vermont, he doesn't drive a cool car, and he has a far-from-perfect relationship with his frivolous and demanding [[RichesToRags aristocrat-turned-hotel maid]] wife.
69* Del Boy from ''Series/OnlyFoolsAndHorses'' wanted to project the image of a yuppie, because he thought that since yuppies were successful businessmen, [[CargoCult if he became one, he would also become a successful businessman]]. He failed to take into account that yuppies' work involves six-figure sums, while his [[HonestJohnsDealership street-trading business]] had trouble reaching five figures.
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71
72[[folder:Music]]
73* The song [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nK16za-S7is "Yuppie Drone"]] by The Pheromones is a satiric review of all the annoying characteristics and cliches that made yuppies so hated during the 80s and 90s.
74* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I8HL97DtQQY "Yuppie Rap"]] is a rap song satirizing the yuppie lifestyle and its more materialistic adherents.
75* [[Music/RemainInLight "Once in a Lifetime"]] by Music/TalkingHeads is a very obtusely about this, as it is a about a yuppie who is so work-obsessed they didn't even realise they became opulent and materialistic.
76* [[Music/LondonCalling "Koka Kola"]] by Music/TheClash was recorded in 1979, a few years before the archetype solidified, but deals with cocaine-fueled white collar types, showing that the subculture was already starting emerge at that point.
77-->I get good advice from the advertising world\
78"Treat me nice" says the party girl\
79Coke adds life where there isn't any\
80So freeze
81[[/folder]]
82
83[[folder:Newspapers]]
84* Creator/DaveBarry made a lot of jokes at the expense of the yuppies during the 80s and 90s:
85->''If you've been reading the trend sections of your weekly newsmagazines, you know that "yuppies" are a new breed of serious, clean-cut, ambitious, career-oriented young person that probably resulted from all that atomic testing. They wear dark, natural-fiber, businesslike clothing even when nobody they know has died.''
86 -->--"Yup the Establishment", ''Dave Barry's Greatest Hits''
87[[/folder]]
88
89[[folder:Professional Wrestling]]
90* [[Wrestling/PaulHeyman Paul E. Dangerously]] was nicknamed "the Psycho Yuppie" for a reason. He was basically what would happen if Gordon Gekko were a pro wrestling manager, right down to having a brick-sized '80s cell phone on him at all times.
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93[[folder:Theatre]]
94* Benny from ''Theatre/{{RENT}}''. He is literally referred to as "yuppie scum" by his former friends and sports a preppy sweater.
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96
97[[folder:Western Animation]]
98* ''{{WesternAnimation/Futurama}}'' parodied this trope mercilessly in "[[Recap/FuturamaS3E21FutureStock Futurestock]]" with Steve Castle, a typical '80s corporate raider who had been [[HumanPopsicle cryogenically frozen]] when he was in his 30s, in a bid to survive a then-untreatable disease. He dresses in an expensive suit with suspenders, has a cell phone seemingly attached to his hand, is obsessed with the latest trends and gadgets, works in finance, and thinks greed is a virtue. He quickly takes over Planet Express and grooms Fry in the yuppie lifestyle, [[DiscoDan acting like the eighties hadn't ended]] a thousand and ten years before, [[spoiler:only to end up abruptly dying of the very disease he was frozen for, because he had been too busy "being an eighties guy" to get himself cured.]]
99* ''WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons'' has recurring character Lindsay Naegle, a businesswoman [[NewJobAsThePlotDemands who always finds herself in whatever corporate position the plot needs for her]] (her justification being that she's a sexual predator) who's always decked out in a suit and PowerHair while demonstrating the soulless materialism typical of Yuppies.
100[[/folder]]

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