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What was daily life like in the 90s?
The 1990s was a decade of extremes and contradictions. Americans built bigger and more elaborate homes and drove more expensive automobiles, then worked longer hours to pay for them. Americans spent more, borrowed more, and went more deeply into debt.
What was significant about the 1990s?
The 1990s is often remembered as a decade of relative peace and prosperity: The Soviet Union fell, ending the decades-long Cold War, and the rise of the Internet ushered in a radical new era of communication, business and entertainment.
What was it like in the 90s?
Writer Douglas Coupland as the 90s drew to a close. (Credit: Jack Mitchell/Getty Images) The 1990s were a darned good decade, and everybody’s now coming to realize this, but people also need to know that when the 1990s began, it felt like anything but a decade with a unique tone and texture and attitude. It felt like nothing.
What happened in the 1990s in the United States?
For most of the 1990s, Bill Clinton was president, the first baby boomer to live in the White House as the commander-in-chief. The Berlin Wall, the prime symbol of the Cold War, fell in November 1989, and Germany was reunited in 1990 after 45 years of separation.
What defines the 1990s for young professionals?
With that said, here are 90 – yes, 90 – things that defined the 1990s for young professionals: 1. Reebok Pumps…and the fact that we thought the pump actually made a difference. 2. You didn’t get the jokes at the time, but Seinfeld was a favourite to watch with the parents. 3. Bleached hair; better yet, frosted tips.
What was breakfast like in the ’90s?
In the ’90s, Pop Tarts Crunch — Pop Tarts as cereal — was considered a legit breakfast for growing humans, which sums up perfectly why the ’90s was both awesome and ridiculous. (Also, I appreciate that this commercial argues that the priorities of young girls should be (a) Boys and (b) Cereal. Way to teach us early, Kellogg’s.)