'90s

  • ChicoSuave@lemmy.world
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    10 hours ago

    The smell. Folks don’t remember but indoor smoking was recently phased out in America and all the restaurants and malls and theaters all smelled like stale tobacco smoke. Clothes and cars had marinated in the smell for years. Only school was clean smelling. It was a nightmare.

  • klemptor@startrek.website
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    11 hours ago

    Just off the top of my head:

    Matthew Shepard
    Rwanda
    Ruby Ridge, Waco, Unaboms, and Oklahoma City
    Abortion clinic bombings
    Bosnia
    Rodney King / LA Riots
    Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell and DOMA
    Seattle WTO protest violence
    Columbine
    OJ

  • protist@mander.xyz
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    14 hours ago

    LGBTQ rights in the US were awful. Sodomy was still illegal across much of the country, as was marriage between two people of the same gender. Blatant homophobia was rampant and dominated the culture. Coming out as gay could ruin someone’s career, and coming out as trans was much less common than today, because most people spent their entire lives hiding who they were.

  • Geometrinen_Gepardi
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    15 hours ago

    If you didn’t know something, you probably had to find a book that contains the information you need. Most of the time you just had to accept that you don’t know.

    Indoor smoking.

    War and massacres in the Balkans and in Africa.

    • solsangraal@lemmy.zip
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      14 hours ago

      probably had to find a book that contains the information you need

      that was the case for all of pre-internet history, not just the 90s…

      the 90s was mostly just a continuation and worsening of things that were already there–rampant consumerism, economic inequality, social injustice, environmental destruction-- the “bad things” really can’t compare with the 00s and the 10s, or, especially now, the 20s

  • neidu3@sh.itjust.works
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    13 hours ago

    I remember watching something really interesting on TV, and they had finally arrived on the topic I was waiting for. And just when they were about to show the answer to something I’d been wondering about for ages, my grandma walked in front of the TV.

    I vividly remember that sad sinking feeling as I silently concluded “I guess I’ll live the rest of my life without knowing, then…”

    • Rai@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      10 hours ago

      I learned how to program the VCR when i was really young. Then Pokémon came out. I missed the first episode, but i was so happy that I could watch the series, I didn’t care that much. Then, I learned that the series was repeating, and they were showing the first episode!

      I set up my VCR to record it, as I was at school when it played. I got home and dashed to the family TV, and started watching. I was sooooo happy to finally see the episode that started it all!

      During the Spearow horde, Pikachu jumps on Ash’s shoulder. Then the cable cut out. Silence. Until it comes back, and Ask and Pikachu are laying on the floor, coming to grips with what just happened.

      I fell the the floor and WAILED, pounding both fists on the floor. I is maybe the most devastated I’ve ever been in my life.

  • massive_bereavement@fedia.io
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    12 hours ago

    Los Angeles Riots were the culmination of continuous LAPD and LASD harassment and criminal behavior towards citizenry. The whole affair was terrible, before, during, and after.

    I would say that eventually the city healed but I don’t think anybody I know has an ounce of trust in either department.

  • Waldelfe@feddit.org
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    14 hours ago

    You had to choose between a small set of approved groups you could belong to. It was especially bad in my small village in western Germany: you could be either a fashion victim (all with the same hair, clothing style, one year they ALL dyed their hair red), a computer nerd, a sporty person, a hip-hop or a techno fan. If you didn’t belong to any of the approved groups, you were an outsider and bullied.

    Obviously I’m writing this because my best friend and I were among the outcast. We bought our stuff at thrift shops and didn’t care much for fashion, neither what was ‘in style’ nor the geek/techno/hip-hop fashion. One year I cut my hair really short and got so much shit for it, because apparently you could only do that if you 100% subscribed to a matching Goth aesthetic. (Still have short hair, so take that stupid mean girls!)

    It was probably partially a small-town-thing, but if you look at the media from the 90s you’ll rarely see characters that don’t neatly fit a certain type.

  • nahostdeutschland@feddit.org
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    14 hours ago

    It really depends on where you were living - if you were living in former Jugoslavia with the war going on, the 90s were pretty bad. And 2025 in China is better than 1990. Despite everything currently happening, the world is in many parts better than 30 years ago.

      • moody@lemmings.world
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        8 hours ago

        I think they used to put bone meal as a supplement in dog food back then, which is what caused the poop to turn white when it dried.

  • graycube@lemmy.world
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    14 hours ago

    Having to rewind a cassette tape with a pencil eraser because it got stuck in your Walkman. Broadcast TV was vapid and overrun with ads. People who used email were geeks and social outcasts.

  • rumschlumpel@feddit.org
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    14 hours ago

    Baseballschlägerjahre (baseball bat years) in east Germany. If you speak German or want to try your luck with automatic translation, here’s a source. Neonazi violence didn’t disappear after the 90s, though, and it wasn’t only in the former GDR areas.

    I think the former GDR areas had a rough time in general - sure they didn’t live in a dictatorship anymore, but there was mass unemployment and many who had somewhat better jobs lost their status (e.g. public officials, history teachers, workers in now uncompetitive companies or engineers who were working with suddenly obsolete technologies). The contrast to the rich west Germans made it worse, and many of them bought out east German real estate.

    Also, tobacco smoke everywhere all the time.