Day: November 16, 2025
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- Gen Z is bringing back the polarizing trend of shared tables and communal dining.
- Though often the butt of jokes, the trend experienced surges in popularity in the 1980s and 2000s.
- In the post-pandemic era, shared tables offer an easy way for digital natives to socialize.
Where diners once recoiled from the idea of rubbing elbows with strangers, Gen Z is pulling their chairs a little closer.
According to new data from the online reservation service company Resy, 90% of Gen Z diners say they enjoy communal tables, compared to just 60% of boomers, highlighting a generational revival of one of the restaurant world’s most polarizing trends: seating multiple groups of diners together at large banquet tables.
For a generation raised online but hungry for real-world connection, sharing a table with strangers has become less about awkward proximity and more about the promise of controlled socialization, and the potential for a new friend — or even a date.
“Share plates have become the new standard, especially among Gen Z, and communal tables are the perfect setting for that — they naturally turn dinner into a shared experience,” Pablo Rivero, CEO of Resy and Tock and Senior Vice President of Global Dining at American Express, said. “You never know who you’ll be seated next to; that’s the fun of it!”
Resy’s report found 63% of respondents feel that communal tables are great for meeting new people, with half saying they’ve had interesting conversations with someone they otherwise wouldn’t have spoken to while dining with strangers. One in three said they’d met a new friend this way, and one in seven said they’d landed a date.
Communal dining has long split the room — literally. The format has been a punchline in the FX comedy “You’re the Worst,” and IFC’s “Portlandia,” where characters endured forced intimacy and awkward small talk over shared seating. For some diners, the idea of brushing elbows with strangers feels less like rustic charm and more like a social anxiety experiment, but not everyone sees it that way.
Michael Della Penna, chief strategy officer at the digital advertising research firm InMarket and parent of two Gen Z kids, told Business Insider that, for members of a notably anxious generation, the communal environment offers a social buffer, “because you don’t have to be the focus or the initiator of the conversation.”
“You are benefiting, because it’s a group conversation, and you can add to that conversation in a safer way,” Della Penna said. “It’s especially comforting for some of those folks who may have felt like they don’t have the social skills, or are a bit shyer, or have been kind of digital-only for so long. It’s a safe step back to connecting and being social where you don’t have the heavy weight of carrying the entire conversation.”
Communal dining also offers a few other perks, Della Penna said: shared plates are often a more affordable way to dine, they provide customers with low-risk opportunities to try new flavors, and the in-person experience is seen as a better value than drive-thru or take-out options.
For those who want to share their meal on social media, long communal tables also make a great photo op, he said.
Intimate, in-person, and built for sharing
Communal dining has a history that spans thousands of years, but its popularity has fluctuated, with waves of enthusiasm following periods of intense social disconnection. Donnie Madia, a Chicago-based restaurateur and partner of the 12-time James Beard award-winning restaurant group One Off Hospitality, told Business Insider.
“Back in 2001, after the tragedy in New York, people wanted to be together. They wanted to be intimate, and to be in smaller spaces, and interaction was really important,” Madia, who played himself in an episode of FX’s hit show “The Bear,” said. “The same thing happened in 2008 after the financial crisis — once people started to come back to the restaurants, they wanted that festive feeling of being communal and dining together.”
Madia says the turn toward communal dining is one toward human connection — and is especially important in the post-COVID era, as well as in an age of exponentially accelerating technological advancement.
For Gen Z, which is also turning its back on AI and spearheading a resurgence of flip-phones, communal dining appears to be part of a broader recalibration toward the tangible: shared experiences that can’t be downloaded, duplicated, or filtered.
Gen Z is also responsible for a surge in dinner parties and supper clubs as they trade nights out on the town for more intimate social gatherings that feel personal and affordable, while still delivering the connection and atmosphere they crave.
“Gen Z is driving a shift back toward communal dining because they crave experiences as much as meals,” Ashley Mitchell, vice president of marketing for East Coast Wings + Grill and Sammy’s Sliders, told Business Insider.
Mitchell added, “They grew up online, but they’re intentionally seeking real-world connection, and restaurants have become that gathering space again. For them, sharing a table isn’t just practical seating — it’s part of the social experience.”
Courtesy of Haley Bosselman
- I live alone in a tiny house, which is in a stranger’s backyard.
- The tiny house has minimal amentities and a small kitchen, but it works for me.
- The landlord has become a close friend, and I’m so thankful to have this opportunity.
After seven years of living in Los Angeles with roommates, the wailing babies and screaming kids in my building were too much to bear anymore. I decided it was time to get my own place.
I intended to jump from LA’s Pico-Robertson neighborhood to the San Fernando Valley. Just over the hill, you could find generally more affordable and safer housing. Plus, my boyfriend and another close friend lived on that side of town.
That’s when I stumbled upon a tiny house in a stranger’s backyard — that I now call home.
Courtesy of Goldman Sachs
- Six new Goldman Sachs MDs share how passions outside finance shape their work and leadership.
- From filmmaking to the Marines, their paths reveal unexpected lessons for Wall Street success.
- The 2025 MD class shows how life beyond the desk can enhance their insight at work.
They’ve made films, performed stand-up, run races, and served in the Marines. For some of the members of Goldman Sachs’ newest class of managing directors, these pursuits aren’t just hobbies — they’ve shaped how they lead, think, and confront the stress of the job.
So how did they get here? These new leaders at the Wall Street bank say that experiences away from the desk help them stay grounded under pressure, forge deeper connections with clients, and find fresh perspectives in an industry that rarely pauses.
Business Insider spoke with six members of the 2025 MD class — some of the 638 people the firm elevated to the title, which sits one rung below its partnership — about how their lives outside finance have shaped the way they work.
Wall Street is often seen as a world of uniform resumes, but these unexpected backgrounds show that the people who work in the industry aren’t a monolith from the same schools with the same interests or the same Patagonia vests.
Indeed, Goldman’s new MD class counts among its ranks a filmmaker, a former Marine, an ex-stand-up comic, and a pediatric cancer survivor who’s fighting childhood cancer on behalf of others now. Their experiences outside finance, they say, augment the work they do inside the bank.
Here’s what they told us about how those experiences have shaped them.
