• @[email protected]
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    6726 days ago

    Of course we didn’t have iPhones then. We had a pet in a small box and it died if you didn’t press the buttons the right number of times every day.

    • @[email protected]
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      926 days ago

      I’ve recently been feeling nostalgic for Tamagochi. The Minigames were kind of fun, I think. At least I remember them positively, but that might be rose tinted, I was a primary schooler then haha.

          • verity_kindle
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            225 days ago

            So did mine. They wouldn’t buy a digipet thing for me, either. I had a beta named Frank. RIP Frank, you finally beat your reflection.

    • @[email protected]
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      26 days ago

      Ah, that’s a good point. 1898 makes a lot more sense for baking your own sweets.

      The 1990s was a big decade for processed foods

      • verity_kindle
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        225 days ago

        In 1898, you could order giant boxes of cheap candy and chocolates, colored and flavored with all kinds of industrial byproducts. Nothing was off the table. “Artificial” is semantic, they just called it “glucose” instead of “corn syrup”. Source: 1898 Sears, Roebuck & Co. catalog. I also read up on contemporary recipes for commercial candy making.

        • @[email protected]
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          225 days ago

          I feel like when most people think of 1990s food, they’re (accurately) picturing brightly-colored snacks and candy.

          I’m also inclined to think that kids today are VERY aware of the 80s due to the popularity of the aesthetic and it feels weird that someone would assume we went “backwards” with candy like that

          None of this is certain, of course. They could just be reminiscing about a time as a kid when they made candy with their family, too!

      • @[email protected]
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        526 days ago

        You still had a lot of older women making and canning their own stuff, in older 60s or 70s pots like that. It just wasn’t as common and things were trending away from that

  • @[email protected]
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    25 days ago

    Ah yes as we know people in the 19th century didn’t purchase sweets like coca cola (1886) and Turkish delight (conflicting data but could go back to 1777, the Byzantine empire, or sefavid Persia but possibly earlier). Also as we know the concept of markets is a crazy new idea and we have absolutely no extensive written records of ancient civillians having markets where people would barter and trade goods.

    /s

  • @[email protected]
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    2225 days ago

    Born in '86, I remember when classmates were shivving each other for Pokemon cards and Pogs.

  • Lord Wiggle
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    2226 days ago

    Bitch, I spent hours on illegally copying a disc of age of empires I borrowed from a class mate. I didn’t even have a walkman anymore (I do now, ironically)

    • verity_kindle
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      326 days ago

      That’s why the swing set is empty, the kids were busy doing stuff like that. That’s ok.

  • @[email protected]
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    1426 days ago

    😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂 Oh yes I was born in 1990 those good old days where there were no cars, no electricity, no plumbing, no vaccines, people weren’t going to school ah yes the good old days

  • @[email protected]
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    1125 days ago

    I often refer to 2000 as the turn of the century, and it causes confusion among old people. I’m old, too, BTW.

    • @[email protected]
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      225 days ago

      I do the same thing. And I say, “it’s got a 20th century kind of vibe” about movies and music and stuff from the 80s and 90s.

      It’s true, but disorienting. I was born in 85.

    • verity_kindle
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      525 days ago

      In that cheap, thin-bottomed pot, that’s gonna bake so fast. You better be stirring, not posing with a spoonful.

  • @[email protected]
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    1225 days ago

    Back in the day, much of the fiction people saw was set in the past. You saw Marie Antoinette and Cleopatra in cartoons and commercials. Sup0erman met Sitting Bull. Today there are very few shows / movies set in the past, so people don’t have the same perspective.

    • The Picard ManeuverOP
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      1525 days ago

      I’ve noticed this too. It feels like we’re culturally losing touch with even the relatively recent past, and I’m not sure what to think about it.

      I guess it concerns me in the “those who fail to study history are doomed to repeat it” kind of way.

      • @[email protected]
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        1325 days ago

        Like so many things, it goes back to Ronald Reagan.

        Reagan loosened up the rules on children’s TV. That let the networks/advertisers run half hour long commercials with names like “GI Joe” and “Masters Of The Universe.” Back in the day, the folks writing Bugs Bunny could put anyone in a cartoon, but the new guys were being pushed to create characters that could be sold as toys. The same applies to movies. The studios would rather finance a science fiction movie with a dozen tie-in products than a historical picture that has a bunch of public domain characters.

        As always, look for the money trail.

        • @[email protected]
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          325 days ago

          Yeah, the G.I. Joe and Transformer cartoons (and a lot more, I’m sure) were basically created to be commercials for the toys from the get go.

      • @[email protected]
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        225 days ago

        No, it’s that 1998 is so far before they were born that they blurred it with other “recognizably modern but fundamentally outdated” time periods.

        A world where cell phones were not common, only 20% of homes had Internet, social media didn’t exist yet and mass media in general was far more homogeneous is as different from now to a child of today as the 1940s.

  • @[email protected]
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    225 days ago

    maybe - just maybe - the part on the left could easily be reconstructed by dropping that smartphone, deleting social media and hooking up with friends by simply showing up there.

    at least outside of the US that’s totally doable without being arrested.

  • @[email protected]
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    425 days ago

    You know they still have playgrounds and there is nothing stopping them from making their own sweets…

  • @[email protected]
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    4626 days ago

    Bro 90s sweets?

    Gushers

    String thing

    Dunkaroos

    Choco tacos

    Squeezits

    Fruit by the foot

    Fruit rollups.

    If you know anyone in their late 30s to early 40s, be surprised they have teeth.

    • @[email protected]
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      226 days ago

      Can confirm. Missing a bunch teeth, have 2 crowns, and the rest is basically all fillings.

    • SatansMaggotyCumFart
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      226 days ago

      Man the ‘90’s was when store bought processed food was a sign of wealth and everyone wanted to go to McDonald’s or Pizza Hut for birthdays.

    • @[email protected]
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      326 days ago

      How did you miss the three most popular candies of the late 90s: jolly ranchers, airheads, and warheads?

      • @[email protected]
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        626 days ago

        I mean if I wanted to go for the tooth decay showstopper: jujubees.

        Hey parents! Kid got a loose tooth you want to just get out of their mouth already? Jujubees.

    • Blackout
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      126 days ago

      I was one of 6 people worldwide that loved the original crystal Pepsi flavor

    • @[email protected]
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      726 days ago

      Yeah the kids of 1998 had damn near day-glo insides from all the artificial dyes and weird preservatives we ingested lmao

    • @[email protected]
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      926 days ago

      …does anyone else remember that kit that was kind of the easy-bake-oven but marketed to little boys; it was this mad scientist kinda thing around when Goosebumps was popular, and you’d make your own candies by mixing little packets together, then mold them into spiders and brains and shit like that.

      The brain stuff in particular was this fruity foamy gunk that I swear was the best tasting junk food that has ever or will ever hit the market. I was also probably like 5 y/o, so grain of salt.

        • @[email protected]
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          426 days ago

          Aight so what the fuck, for the first half of that video I could have sworn you nailed it, but I remember it being more than just bugs, so something seemed off. BUT! Related videos had the fucking thing!!

          https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8FxyNP6SLsI

          …never realized just how much marketing went into glamorizing ‘ick’ to little dudes lol.

          • @[email protected]
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            226 days ago

            Woah wait I thought you were talking a out the queasy bake oven where it had a brain on top and baked easy bake oven concoctions with sour flavors. The good one being dog bones and drool which was sugar cookies with like strawberry foam.

            https://youtu.be/NCxbE85h7Gk

            It was all ick factor still running off of garbage pail kids and that doesn’t even include the fart gun I had.

          • @[email protected]
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            225 days ago

            The blue raspberry they had for melting was sooooo good. I never made the formed gummies for that, I just ate em.

        • @[email protected]
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          125 days ago

          Not quite—they’re definitely talking about Doctor Dreadful’s Food Lab. Creepy Crawlers were amazing though—the old ones my parent bought me were just open-air hot plates with zero protections.

      • @[email protected]
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        125 days ago

        DOCTOR DREADFUL’S FOOD LAB!

        I had an EZbake and all of the Doctor Dreadful kits! Monster warts, insect gummies, the brain, the microscope, oh I loved those so much!

    • @[email protected]
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      126 days ago

      Don’t forget how every museum would have the gift shop with the gummies that looked like whatever animal was featured prominently in their displays. The blue/white sharks were the best.

    • [email protected]
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      1826 days ago

      Out of nostalgia, I purchased a choco taco. Turns out they sold the company like 20 years ago, changed the recipe to cheaper, quicker to stale waffle cone, made the ice cream a plainer flavor, removed the cacao from the chocolate, etc. What a truly awful thing to trick someone into eating.

      • @[email protected]
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        726 days ago

        Oh my god, the new ones are so nasty. Legitimately why even bring them back like that? There is no way people purchase those consistently.

        • [email protected]
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          726 days ago

          They didn’t. They’ve been discontinued for years, citing a desire to make their supply lines sturdier for their other products. Translation-people did not want to eat their garbage tacos.

    • @[email protected]
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      226 days ago

      My wife bought some Dunkaroos for a music fest last year, and it was so perfect to sit and eat those at the camp site while high. It made me so happy. They’re still amazing today as an adult; I just wish they were in bigger containers.

      • @[email protected]
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        26 days ago

        You remember flavored wax lips and wax vampire teeth?

        Those were awesome. Not good, certainly, but interesting and uniquely gross!

        • Tar_Alcaran
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          626 days ago

          Candy gem rings so you could combine having sugar at all times of the day with your love of eating lint