This Page Shares Pics And Memes From The ’80s And ’90s, Here Are The 50 Most Nostalgic Ones
InterviewSometimes, often without warning, you will see or hear something that unlocks an entire ocean of memories you didn’t even remember you had. Nostalgia, after all, is a potent emotion. Naturally, there are many pages out there dedicated to dishing it up to everyone who wants some.
The “That 80s and 90s Page” Instagram account shares memes and pictures of things from past decades that might make you pretty darn nostalgic. We got in touch with the page’s administrator to learn more. So get comfortable as you scroll through and upvote your favorites.
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Idk what just happened in my brain. You unlocked something I didn't know was stored there. If you don't hear from me again you know why
Bored Panda got in touch with Tom, the creator and administrator of the group and he was kind enough to answer our questions. Firstly, we wanted to know the story behind why he created the account. “The story behind the page is that I would remember or come across a picture of something from my childhood, toys I grew up with, foods that have been discontinued, stores I used to shop at that were no longer around, and then the content to family and friends.”
“Eventually, I decided to post them on social media so others who grew up in the 80s and 90s could see them too, and then it just kind of grew organically. I had no idea I'd one day have hundreds of thousands of followers on social media,” he shared.
We also wanted to know what he thought attracted people to the page and this sort of content in general. “I think the main appeal is the combination of humor and nostalgia, not everything I post has humor, but I do try to add humor to my content when possible.”
I believe nostalgia-based content is popular online because it's sort of a mental time travel that reconnects us to who we are and our past, it was a simpler time in our lives and brings back a lot of happy memories, like a favorite toy you had when you were a kid, or a movie or TV show that you used to love but totally forgot about. It doesn't matter what walk of life you came from; we were all watching the same commercials, and TV shows, and looking forward to finding the prize at the bottom of a cereal box.”
Undoubtedly, the ‘80s and ‘90s were a very unique time, so we wanted to know why he focused on them in particular. “That's what I knew and was passionate about since I was born in the early 1980s. I have fond memories of growing up in both the 80s and 90s. I had no idea the page was going to do as well as it had done when I first started it. I feel blessed to have had the page to have grown the way it has and I'm very grateful to all the fans who have followed and supported the page over the years,” he shared with Bored Panda.
“In a way, my page and other nostalgia pages like mine are time machines, followers get to see toys they played with when they were kids and have long forgotten about until they see it on the page, they see fashion they grew up wearing, stores that are no longer around, movies and TV shows they used to watch but haven't seen in years. It's like comfort food for the soul because it brings back a lot of happy memories of a simpler, less stressful time in their lives.”
My ADHD brain still does this but nobody understands me :') It also does this with any other obscure niche reference to the past it can think of.
“I think it's natural for the younger generation to find the two or three decades before they were born appealing, I remember watching 'Dazed and Confused' in the nineties and thinking how cool it would have been to grow up in the 1970s, I loved the music and fashion, and I think the same is true for a lot the younger generation today, they like the music and fashion, and have watched shows like 'Stranger Things' and 'The Goldbergs', so they have a romanticized view of the past.”
McDonald’s has become unbearable now. I was lucky enough to go into one recently where they actually had a place to order at the counter instead of the kiosk. The employee then proceeded to come around the counter and have me give him my order while he punched it into the kiosk for me. Almost broke the whole store when I decided to pay with cash.
“And while the 80s and 90s were overwhelmingly positive for me, it definitely had some drawbacks like no internet in the 80s, a very slow internet in the late 90s in comparison to how fast it is today. If you took a trip you had to use a map, whereas now you can enter where you want to go into your phone and it will tell you exactly how to get there every step of the way.”
Happened to me @ bros wedding..thought it was one of his friend's dad..nope..kid I graduated with...
“In the past, if you needed help with your math homework you had better hope one of your parents knew how to solve the problem and could explain it in a way that you understood, and now a kid can use a site like Calculator Soup or go to YouTube and find a video that explains it in a way they can better understand it. I have no doubt that in twenty to thirty years from now, there will be a whole new younger generation wishing they had grown up in the 2020s.”
I have one of these floating around my parents house..it has pix of the world trade center from a class trip less than 3 months before they went down....
She was 26 and he was 34. Their characters ages were 17 and 25, also an 8 year difference.
Load More Replies...It’s fascinating how takes like this reflect a) a massive lack of self-awareness and b) a massive lack of understanding about what the writers of Dirty Dancing were saying about society. Baby’s father’s character represents conservative parents who do good for others within their own spheres but ultimately think that the poor are bad people. Agreeing with him doesn’t mean you’re smarter than a fictional character; it means you’re the kind of real person the writers were calling out via the narrative of the movie.
That's not what op is saying. It's not so much about different status as the clear age gap, acting irresponsibly - and did you miss the part about anger issues?
Load More Replies...So he got really mad at the guy who got one of his best friend pregnant, then abandoned her to deal with it on her own and went off sleeping with other women. I don't call that anger issues. I call it justified anger. Most of the time he was well restrained, even when put down to his face.
Mostly correct except it was ROBBIE who got Penny in trouble, not Johnny.
Load More Replies...Stop. This was my favorite movie ever growing up! I swear I know all the songs.
There's nothing wrong with the film. The age gap was normal for the 1960s. They didn't know then what we do now about human development. Johnny didn't have anger issues; he got angry when he had reason to be angry. People treated him like sh*t and made constant assumptions about him. He was a good guy who helped his friend/dance partner when needed it and helped a shy wallflower feel like she was part of things (in the scene where Baby brings a watermelon into the party). People need to let go of their pearls.
Load More Replies...Dude did NOT look like he was FORTY. Over exaggerated like most everything on the internet.
In the UK, it would be she is over 16 therefore it would be "legal" but a bit creepy he is 25 as she would have just left school. Chuck in words like safeguarding and predatory into the mix. Also he works in a holiday camp so probably spends his time working through each weeks new arrivals with the "you're so special" routine. Dad is obviously to his shenanigans...
How old are you? I remember the Dirty Dancing poster at my local movie theater!
she was 17, he was 25. She needed to be put in the corner, he needed to be put in a jail cell
It was the 1960s... people got married at those ages then. Look at t through the culture of the time. My grandparents got married at 17 and 25, and had a happy 55 years together before he died in her arms. She'd have been horrified if anyone suggested he'd exploited her. So would he. They were in love. In the eyes of the world she lived in, she was old enough to make those choices. A few of my aunties got married to guys in their 20s as soon as they turned 18. Still married; still happy. Things are different now, because we understand human development better, and I'd blow a gasket if a 25-year-old pursued my 17-year-old niece, but we don't need to be calling every guy who dated and married within normal cultural context of the era he lived in a criminal.
Load More Replies...Lastly, we wanted to know if he had any particular philosophy when picking what to feature. “I try to keep my content family-friendly for the most part, and I stay away from politics. In short, I want my page to be an escape to the simpler and happier times of the past, even if it is for a brief moment.” So if you want more nostalgic content, check out “That 80s and 90s Page” or go to their Facebook page.
I'm still waiting for the flying car that folds up into a briefcase. I'm convinced that it can be done. Gyrocopters are getting close to the flying car and Transformers to the folding car. But I want them together.
It’s important to remember that nostalgia isn’t just some term marketers use to get us to buy things, it's a very real emotion with its own benefits. Some research suggests that it helps us remember better days as a substitute for current sadness. This, interestingly, often allows a person to pull through. So if you are in need of a pick-me-up mentally, feel free to check out our other articles on nostalgic content.
I live in a small coastal town and it is so safe that the local kids still do this
I preferred swings and get them going flat out! I was on some swings recently and the thrill is different when you are 72...
My first apartment had an entire set stolen from Pizza Hut over numerous visits to their Lunch Buffet.
Actress Mae Questel who played the role of Aunt Bethany in National Lampoons Christmas Vacation was the voice behind Betty Boop, Minnie Mouse, Olive Oyl, and Felix the Cat.
I have a picture of 4 year old me me dressed up in one of these when we still lived on the Navy Base in Japan. My Japanese mom did her best, and I don't remember what happened, but I had a skull mask and a Bozo The Clown suit for my constume. LMAO
My mom beat the first Super Mario World game for the gameboy, it was insane because you had to play it in one go and I remember it being very difficult
Not anymore. They just announced they're discontinuing it
Most of these were “technology bad” and “kids are so weak these days” memes, I’m gonna get downvoted to hell, but they’re just annoying at this point
You're not wrong though. I'm so tired of all the people insisting kids don't play outside, or hang out without technology. Are these people even around kids? I've raised three since 2000 and they and all their friends were always outside, running around the neighborhood, playing sports, riding bikes, etc. We have a walking path and park behind our house and I still see teens hanging out back there, just shooting the s**t, ALL the time. But for some reason everyone has convinced themselves kids don't do those things anymore.
Load More Replies...Respectfully, if they are getting tiresome, in your opinion, don't look at them. There are those of us who really enjoy them. You can tell that by the comments. Thank you
Load More Replies...These posts always make me think of the Drew Gooden video where he breaks down how ridiculous these posts are: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G_FUmf0T8YI
Some of these are nostalgic for all kids aswell. Also why are some of these just slandering 2000s and 2010s kids childhoods. Most I fypu are the older generation that caused this and are for some reason blaming the kids that you lot raised. Smh
I agree. I’m amongst the oldest millennials and definitely in the target group for this kind of nostalgia but it gave me kind of a weird feeling. Some of the entries were a little amusing, but many of them seem to connote a misplaced sense of cultural superiority and judgey nostalgia that would cause lots of millennials to roll their eyes if boomers were doing it.
Load More Replies...I feel like only old people like the posts that feel the need to make it a contest about which generation was best: Newsflash, none of them, you're just biased and will obviously prefer your timeline from when you were young. People that were kids and young adults in the 80s prefer the 80s, people from the 70s, people from the early 2000s and so on. Y'all really became your parents 😂 not so young anymore, now you're the old farts wishing you were a kid again and dogging on young people today.
Most of these were “technology bad” and “kids are so weak these days” memes, I’m gonna get downvoted to hell, but they’re just annoying at this point
You're not wrong though. I'm so tired of all the people insisting kids don't play outside, or hang out without technology. Are these people even around kids? I've raised three since 2000 and they and all their friends were always outside, running around the neighborhood, playing sports, riding bikes, etc. We have a walking path and park behind our house and I still see teens hanging out back there, just shooting the s**t, ALL the time. But for some reason everyone has convinced themselves kids don't do those things anymore.
Load More Replies...Respectfully, if they are getting tiresome, in your opinion, don't look at them. There are those of us who really enjoy them. You can tell that by the comments. Thank you
Load More Replies...These posts always make me think of the Drew Gooden video where he breaks down how ridiculous these posts are: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G_FUmf0T8YI
Some of these are nostalgic for all kids aswell. Also why are some of these just slandering 2000s and 2010s kids childhoods. Most I fypu are the older generation that caused this and are for some reason blaming the kids that you lot raised. Smh
I agree. I’m amongst the oldest millennials and definitely in the target group for this kind of nostalgia but it gave me kind of a weird feeling. Some of the entries were a little amusing, but many of them seem to connote a misplaced sense of cultural superiority and judgey nostalgia that would cause lots of millennials to roll their eyes if boomers were doing it.
Load More Replies...I feel like only old people like the posts that feel the need to make it a contest about which generation was best: Newsflash, none of them, you're just biased and will obviously prefer your timeline from when you were young. People that were kids and young adults in the 80s prefer the 80s, people from the 70s, people from the early 2000s and so on. Y'all really became your parents 😂 not so young anymore, now you're the old farts wishing you were a kid again and dogging on young people today.