30 Facts From the 90s That Will Overwhelm You With Nostalgia

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1Mike Cameron

Mike Cameron

In 1998, a Georgia high school student named Mike Cameron was suspended from school after wearing a Pepsi t-shirt on Coke Day. Upon hearing the news, a Pepsi spokesperson said, "Without knowing all the details, it sounds like (he's) obviously a trendsetter with impeccable taste in clothes."


2. In 1990, the US Ambassador (Joseph Wilson) to Iraq was threatened with execution if he was harboring Americans. He responded with a press conference; where he wore a noose while declaring “If the choice is to allow American citizens to be taken a hostage or to be executed, I will bring my own f*cking rope.”


3. In 1995, the Church of Scientology imprisoned, dehydrated and starved a mentally ill woman named Lisa McPherson for 17 days until she died.


4. In 1998, a group of hackers -- identified only by their "hacker names", including "Kingpin", "Mudge", and "Space Rogue" -- testified before a U.S. Senate committee. They described how they could take make the internet "unusable for the entire nation" with "just a few packets."


5. In 1994, the CEOs of the seven biggest tobacco firms testified before Congress that "nicotine was not addictive" despite the overwhelming scientific evidence. 


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6Chris Farley

Chris Farley

In 1995, American actor Chris Farley crashed a House Republican Meeting and did his impersonation of American politician Newt Gingrich.


7. In 1992, a team of game developers used a white puffball as a placeholder graphic while they designed their game’s protagonist. They grew fond of the puffball, and decided to keep him rather than replace him with a real character. He became the iconic character Kirby.


8. In 1991, a man found the first print of the Declaration of Independence inside the frame of a $4 painting he bought at a flea market. It was sold at an auction for $2.4 million.


9. In 1995, St. Jude's Hospital received an anonymous letter with a $1 million winning McDonald's Monopoly game piece. Although it was against the rules to transfer prizes, McDonald's honored it even after learning that the piece was sent by an individual involved in an embezzlement scheme.


10. In 1996, a small town named Spanish Fork in Utah mistakenly booked Rage Against the Machine at a venue for tractor and monster truck shows. The locals panicked and businesses boarded up thinking the band's followers would riot and vandalize everything.


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11Mike Diana

Mike Diana

In 1994, a cartoonist named Mike Diana received a criminal conviction for obscenity for artwork in USA. He wasn't allowed to draw comics even for personal use or just for his house.


12. In 1992, an Israeli cargo plane crashed in Amsterdam killing 43 people. Israel claimed it was carrying flowers and perfume. It took 6 years and a Dutch parliamentary inquiry before they admitted it was carrying DMMP, a key component for sarin nerve gas.


13. In 1995, an inmate named Robert Lee Brock tried to sue himself for $5 million because he violated his own civil rights by getting arrested. He then asked the state to pay because he had no income in jail.


14. In 1994, a 74-year-old man named Alvin Straight unable to get a driver's license drove 240 miles on a 1966 John Deere lawnmower to visit his brother who recently had a stroke. At a top speed of 5 mph, the journey took him 6 weeks.


15. In 1992, dance/pop duo The KLF were invited to play at the BRIT awards. They unexpectedly performed with a grindcore metal band, fired machine gun blanks into the audience, announced they were leaving the music industry, dumped a dead sheep at the afterparty, and deleted their entire back catalog.


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16Julia Hill

Julia Hill

On December 10, 1997, Julia "Butterfly" Hill ascended 180 feet (55 m) up the redwood tree Luna to stave off Pacific Lumber Company loggers who were clear-cutting. Hill lived on two 6-by-6-foot (1.8 by 1.8 m) platforms for 738 days until a resolution was reached with the logging company.


17. In 1992, a banner appeared in the lobby of MIT at the end of the year that read "GAME OVER INSERT 94260 QUARTERS TO CONTINUE" as the tuition at the time was $23,565.


18. In 1995, New Mexico state senator Duncan Scott introduced an amendment that psychologists were required to wear a wizard's hat when they testify in court.


19. In 1997, in Japan, a Pokemon scene with flashing lights induced mass seizures in children across the country. Reporting on the incident, the nightly news replayed the offending scene, prompting yet more seizures.


20. In 1998, Serena and Venus Williams said they could beat any man ranked 200th or worse in a game of tennis. Karsten Braasch, ranked 203rd, accepted their challenge and easily beat them, 6-1, 6-2.


21Bruniquel Cave

Bruniquel Cave

In 1992, a youth group descended into a French cave named Bruniquel Cave with steel brushes to remove graffiti and ended up partially removing 15,000-year-old bison cave paintings.


22. In 1995, there was television documentary film produced called “The Dying Rooms”, which was made about Chinese state orphanages. The film documented rooms where babies and children (mostly disabled/female) were left to die of thirst or starvation as it was illegal to kill a child directly but not through neglect.


23. In 1996, the Irish Republican Army planted a bomb in Manchester City center and told the authorities they had an hour to evacuate the area. The police successfully managed to evacuate 75,000 people in what has been called the most 'extraordinary policing operations' in United Kingdom history. There wasn't a single fatality.


24. In 1994, a man named Tony Cicoria was struck by lightning while standing next to a public telephone, and resuscitated by a nurse who was waiting to use the phone. Not long after recovery, he said his head became flooded with music. He bought a piano and is now a successful composer and performer.


25. In 1991, two artists named Christo and Jeanne Claude paid $26 million to install thousands of umbrellas along the California highway. One of the umbrellas was toppled by high winds, killing one woman and injuring several others. The exhibit was ordered closed and another person died during the removal of the umbrellas.

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