thanks to stewart for reminding me about soap shoes.
this one’s a double header: remember REAL TV?
i get this song in my head at least a few times every year
First post in ages. I have no commitment to the world wide web.
This guy does some neat work.
What young lad didn’t have a crush on Lisa Loeb?
The crazy thing is, a couple years back she had a tv show where she went on dates with guys to try and find a boyfriend. If only I was a few years older.
1992 brought us crystal pepsi. I can’t believe it didn’t stick.
Do you recall speaker’s corner? Here’s a troupe of amazing singers. Feel free to put this video on repeat and take a bath.
This is for all you women readers who used to keep your lips chap-free with these tasty cylinders of flavour. Anyone up for a game of spin the bottle?

A tribute to the undercut. When will this style resurface? It’s bound to happen.
Didn’t we love sugary snacks in our lunchpails? Gushers, fruit rollups, Soda-Licious. What a treat those were.
Electric Circus. Canada’s finest dancing show in the nineteen nineties. Have you ever heard of another dance show like it? I mean, what other show on television would let you sit around and watch people dance live all night long to bad music?
Why were these things such a popular snack? Between 1993-1996, thousands of kids purchased these noodles from their local convenience store and ate them, uncooked, on a daily basis. Did Mr. Noodle market these to kids? I doubt it. It likely had a lot to do with the pricetag: at less then 30 cents per pack, they’re quite affordable. I get the feeling they had the same type of appeal to kids in the nineties as Pabst Blue Ribbon had a few years ago with twentysomethings.
High-tops had unbeatable ankle support. I’d love to have a set of pumps.