Is Zoe Saldana Embracing Generation Alpha Slang?
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
- Zoe Saldana is focused on understanding Generation Alpha slang.
- The term '6-7' became a viral sensation.
- Zoe's children are part of Generation Alpha, born between 2010 and 2024.
- She expressed a desire for her kids to be unaware of her fame.
- Zoe aims to be more present in her children's lives post-Oscar victory.
Los Angeles, Dec 28 (NationPress) Hollywood actress Zoe Saldana is dedicated to grasping the slang of Generation Alpha. The actress is intensely focused on decoding these new terms.
The 47-year-old actress' favorite cultural moment of 2025 is the term '6-7', which became a viral meme on TikTok and Instagram Reels last October. It originated from the song Doot Doot (6 7) by rapper Skrilla, 26, featuring the repetitive lyric '6-7', though its meaning remains unclear, according to ‘Female First UK’.
Discussing the trend, pronounced 'six seven', which was also named the word of 2025, Zoe told ‘People’ magazine, 'This whole 6-7 thing has been, oh God, an absolute anomaly. I am just so hyper-focused on this Gen Alpha lingo, and I'm gonna get it.'
In addition to the '6-7' meme, frequently associated with NBA player LaMelo Ball, 24, due to his height of 6 feet, 7 inches, the Oscar-winning actress has begun using the term 'aura', which signifies someone's 'cool factor'.
As reported by ‘Female First UK’, Zoe, whose children—10-year-old twins Cy and Bowie, along with 9-year-old Zen—belong to Generation Alpha (born between 2010 and 2024), humorously remarked, 'But, every time I think that I'm preserving my aura, that's when I'm told that I lost it.'
In June, the ‘Avatar: Fire and Ash’ star expressed her desire for her children, whom she shares with 46-year-old filmmaker Marco Perego-Saldana, to remain unaware of her celebrity status.
Zoe shared, 'I wish I had kids that didn't really know what I do or understand what I do, but my kids have grown up with me on-set. My husband and I made the decision not to separate our lives. I feel like my work is their backyard, so they do understand it, and then they don't. They care about it, and then they don't. They think in soccer language. So it's very much like, 'It's kind of like the World Cup, Mom. It's like the World Cup of acting.' It did give me a little bit of cred, but then they're rolling their eyes again.'
Since her groundbreaking Oscar victory in March, Zoe aims to be 'more present' in the lives of Cy, Bowie, and Zen. She made history as the first Dominican descent performer to win the Best Supporting Actress Academy Award for her role as attorney Rita in the musical-comedy film, 'Emilia Perez.'