Young people with Connecticut Lockjaw/Boston Brahmin/Upper East Side accents

With the death of William Buckley, I recalled how the upper-class “Connecticut Lockjaw” accent used to be more common than it is now. Granted, it was still rare, but still encountered in the media on a daily basis. Now, except for caricatures of wealthy Upper East Siders on Sex in the CIty episodes from a half decade back, the accent seems to be fading away.

Are there still pockets of people that speak with the affected onnecticut Lockjaw/Boston Brahmin/Manhattan Upper East Side accent? Are they mostly elderly, or are there actually young uppercrusters that sound like the kiddie versions of William Buckley?

I have no idea what the accent you are describing sounds like. Can you link to examples?

Buckley’s accent wasn’t of this type - indeed, it wasn’t of any type. It came from an interesting combination of an upbringing by a Swiss mother in a household that also spoke Spanish conversationally, plus the interesting fact that, though American, he was educated at English boarding schools.

That accent died with him.

For more information on Buckley’s accent, see this Slate.com article. (At 13, he attended Beaumont College in England and then later Millbrook School in upstate New York. Also, his parents were Southerners, so there’s some influence from that. And the article notes that his siblings don’t talk like him.)

Think Thurston Howell from Gilligan’s Island

When I was in college, there were some twins down the hall with this accent. We called them the “Greenwich Snobs.”

I live in the Boston area and I have never met one. I worked with a lady once who had a roughly Kennedy accent but she is in her late 60’s at least now. The rich Boston suburbs tend to have kids that speak close to American neutral. The poorer suburbs like Revere generate a strong accent but that isn’t related to the one you are referring to.

Didn’t Katharine Hepburn talk like that?

There’s also a (I think recurring) character on Family Guy. He’s in the episode where Brian goes back to college after getting fired from The New Yorker. It appears his name might be Wellsley Sheperdson. I have a feeling he’s in another episode, but I could be wrong about that. Anyway, he’s the first guy I thought of when I read the OP.

Another example isthe guy in Futurama. The rich Guy at the Party where in the $300 tax refund episode. Bender blows smoke from the super cigar in his face.

Is this accent in the 1980’s film Trading Places?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RAXdie_gifI

Buckley v. Vidal: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nYymnxoQnf8

Judge Whitey.

Or, from MAS*H, Major Charles Emerson Winchester III.