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Complex Numbers #1034460 added June 30, 2022 at 12:01am Restrictions: None
The 80s Called
Wrapping up June with this one from Cracked...
The title immediately caught my attention (clickbait!) because the 1980s was the decade I started out as a kid and ended up as a kid who was legally allowed to drink. It's hard for me to believe that the food trends of that decade could possibly be worse than the low-fat craze of the 90s, the no-carb fad of the noughties, or the utterly stupid gluten-free bullshit from the 10s. Or, for that matter, the abundance of aspics in the 50s, which, thankfully, I missed on account of not having been born yet.
The ‘80s were a crazy time for everyone, from the most powerful Gordon Gekko clones to those who were just trying to get their groove on but nevertheless had to wear stupid neon pants, and perhaps no one was more confused than food companies.
The only thing "crazy" about the 80s were the people running various world governments, especially our own.
Also, I never have figured out who the hell Gordon Gekko is, and I can't be arsed to look him up now.
Over the course of this decade that was mostly fueled by cocaine and hairspray, they apparently figured that what we actually ate didn’t much matter and took the opportunity to get weird with it.
Well, nothing mattered, because we were about to get nuked by Russia.
As usual, I'm not copying everything here, just hitting the ones that I have something to say about.
15. New Coke
Ah, yes, I remember this one well. I called it the Great Coke Crisis of 1985, and it was truly a dark time. I tried that piss once and spit it right out. It was almost as bad as Pepsi, if you can believe it. I got hooked on Dr. Pepper that summer.
But it's not weird. Unfortunate, sure, but not weird.
14. “Light” Drinks
The success of Diet Coke in 1982 perhaps led the company to fly too close to the sun. It kicked off a whole slew of “light” drinks, like Crystal Light and Bud Light, in response to the burgeoning health craze.
And this is different from today how?
11. Tie-In Foods
The height of commercialism brought with it the height of pop culture or celebrity tie-in products.
These were around before the 80s and stuck around long after.
8. Hubba Bubba Soda
Okay. Okay. I'll grant you this one. I don't think I could have nightmared up a more ridiculous abomination against all that is holy than a soda that tasted like bubble gum. I will say this, though: I lived the 80s, and this is the first I ever heard of HBS.
That, or I gave myself deliberate amnesia about it.
As an aside, I was introduced to the concept of urban legends in the 70s, when there was one going around that Hubba Bubba (whose claim to fame as a bubble gum was that it was soft and chewy, not a brick like the old standby, Dubble Bubble) was made with spider eggs. I mean, come on, even Kid Me couldn't have believed that shit.
6. Tobacco Gum
Okay, look, no, this wasn't tobacco-flavored chewing gum, but shredded gum that was supposed to resemble chewing tobacco (to a moderate extent). I saw it as an alternative to chew, but the Morals Police eventually freaked the fuck out just like they did with candy cigarettes a decade earlier, which I also thought was bullshit. I mean, those things were nasty, regardless of whether they were "training" kids to smoke.
2. The McDLT
You know what? Screw you. Those bastards were delicious.
It was obscenely wasteful, totally unnecessary, and mostly ineffective. It was perfectly ‘80s.
That much, I'll grant.
So anyway, like I said, there's more at the link, but they didn't impact my life in any significant way. Okay, neither did #8 (I swear I had no idea that hippo diarrhea ever existed until I read this article), but that one's notable in that I'd at least heard of all the others.
I'll just end this with the usual reminder: in 40 years, people will be looking back at our food trends today and making them into weird food lists.
They should start with "hard seltzer." Or, they could, if that crap wasn't just rebranded Zima from the 90s. |
© Copyright 2022 Robert Waltz (UN: cathartes02 at Writing.Com). All rights reserved. Robert Waltz has granted InkSpot.Com, its affiliates and its syndicates non-exclusive rights to display this work.
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