"Somehow, this McDonald's floor was always sticky and slippery at the same time."
"McDonald's abandoned since the 90s in Alaska"
"90's movie theater carpet"
"Remember when you didn’t have to enter your personal info online to win a soda?"
"Who remembers this [ice cream] from school?"
"Did anyone else have a stage in the cafeteria of their school?"
"90s kids are probably the last to know what these were for."
"This plastic sword, which would legit hurt someone if you struck them with it"
"90's TV cabinet. I remember needing to push on the glass doors to open them"
"Come on admit it, this Tupperware combo is still lurking somewhere in your house... Waiting..."
"Who remembers ... the GRADE BOOK ?"
"The old school library book pocket card."
"The crinkly feeling of opening these VHS cases"
"The 1998 “Unofficial” Beanie Baby Handbook is also a cookbook! It has a very important place on my kitchen shelf."
"Rear door ashtrays; playing with these as a kid on car rides"
"Built in battery testers that were impossible to push"
"Built in battery testers that were impossible to push"
Many consider people who were born in the 80s and 90s to automatically be millennials. It is a really poor understanding of how generations are divided. Rather, generations are categorized by the world events that shaped their lives. Largely this is influenced by when you were born, notwithstanding, when your parents were born. There are some that do sub-generational categories for those born in the 80s who have parents born in the late 40s early 50s.
Also homemade cherry bomb equivalent...