Late 90s facts
While investigating facts about Late 90s, I found out little known, but curios details like:
American Geochemist Clair Patterson helped reduce lead levels within the blood of Americans by approximately 80% by the late 90s, after spending decades of fighting the industrial use of lead.
A teletubby toy was recalled in the late 90s for calling kids "faggot" and telling them to "bite my butt"
In my opinion, it is useful to put together a list of the most interesting details from trusted sources that I've come across. Here are 50 of the best facts about Late 90s I managed to collect.
-
Donnie Yen in his late 90s was at a nightclub with his then girlfriend who was getting harassed by a gang of thugs. Yen warned them to leave her alone but to no avail and as they left, the gang followed and attacked Yen. According to reports Yen hospitalized upto 8 members of the gang.
-
Until the late 90s people used to refer to first person shooters as "Doom clones"
-
A "band-aid" for "people of color" was marketed in the late 90s and early 00s, but failed to gain traction, partly due to retailers insistence on only featuring the item in the "ethnic sections" rather than in-line with its "white" counterparts.
-
For all the hysteria, peak membership in the Flat Earth Society was 3500 people in the late 90s
-
ABBA was offered a BILLION dollars to reunite in the late 90s, and rumours of a THREE BILLION dollar offer a few years ago.
-
At least 30 women in the late '90s became pregnant with embryos created with the DNA of three people. The whereabouts of these "three-parent" children are not known to the public.
-
In the mid to late 90s it was a common "fast cash" investment to buy out the insurance policies of those infected with HIV/AIDS for say 20-40% the final payout.
-
Déjà Vu Services, Inc. operates about 132 strip clubs in 41 U.S. states, as well as multiple clubs in the United Kingdom, Australia, France, Canada, and Mexico. It was founded and is controlled by Harry Mohney, the largest distributor of pornography from the late '60s to the early '90s
-
Originally film credits rarely lasted two minutes. In the 60s and 70s, the list of credits grew longer and were moved to the end of the film. The average duration for credits was 3-4 minutes until the late-90s when credits averaged 6-7 minutes—some nearly 10 minutes.
-
Actor Bruce Willis release three record albums in the late 80s and 90s including Bruno is Back and The Best of Bruce Willis. His cover of Under the Boardwalk hit the number two spot in the UK.
What is true about late 90s?
You can easily fact check it by examining the linked well-known sources.
During the late 80s and early 90s the concept of superpredators supported laws that put thousands of underaged offenders in life in prison. They're being released as research and experience shows that recidivism is rare and they can be rehabilitated.
The generation after Millenials is called Generation Z. The start of the generation is still debated on but somewhere between late 90s and early 2000s is the cutoff date. - source
High-level US politicians and VIPs were accused of crimes including child abuse, devil worship, cannibalism, drug trafficking in the late 1980s and early 90s in what became known as the Franklin child prostitution ring - source
There's a TV show from the late 90s called ReBoot, and in 2015 that show got a reboot
In the late 90s AIG sold finite insurance policies that allowed companies to fraudulently always meet their expected forecasts for income - source
Fictitious pop group 2gether, who were formed to parody the boy band phenomenon of the late 90s, actually outsold 'NSYNC for several weeks
Kerri Kenney from Reno 911 was in all girl punk band in the late 90s
In the late 90s South Yorkshire Police, unable to find enough black volunteers for a line up, hired white volunteers and put them in 'black face'.
Private car ownership was virtually unknown in China until the 90s and as late as 1985, the country produced a total of only 5,200 cars. A fabricated news story about China's first peasant to own a car was circulated to encourage sales, which were all purchased by work units
A failed dot-com company of the late 90s known as DigiScent tried to transmit smells over the internet.
Munich-based EM.TV purchased the rights to the Muppets in the late 90s for $690 million. Four years later Jim Henson's children bought the rights back for $89 million