
If You Can't Guess What Season These F.R.I.E.N.D.S Events Happened, Did You Even Watch The Show?
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Guess which season these F.R.I.E.N.D.S moments happened

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Buzz Feed
an hour ago
- Buzz Feed
15 Everyday Things From Past Decades That You'd Never Do Today
It's always fascinating to consider what ubiquitous aspects of modern culture weren't always so standard. So recently, we asked the BuzzFeed Community, "What's something that was so 'normal' back in the day but could NEVER happen now?" The responses were insightful and a major nostalgia trip. Here are just 15 things that really stood out: "Letting your kids outside to do and go wherever they please as long as they're home by dinner. The things we did, the trouble we got into, and the places we went without our parents just 25 years ago, like drinking out of the water hose and eating whatever food our friends' parents had. Like, they really trusted that we could just survive on our own, and I mean we did. But parents these days would have a complete meltdown if their kid leaves their eyesight. That isn't to say I don't understand the fear, as the sheer amount of missing kids or major injuries that occurred definitely warrants the fear. But still, those days could never be relived now." —Anonymous, 36; Ohio "Riding in the bed of an open pickup truck with a half-dozen other kids. Sometimes, we would even sit on the sides." "You can't slam a phone to end a phone call in a furious state of dissatisfaction. Now you press a screen button on your phone. 😂" —Anonymous, old man; Oregon coast "'Smoking' and 'non-smoking' areas in fast-food restaurants — with nothing to separate the two sides." "Growing up in Florida, we could fish in the river and ocean from the beach without a fishing license. Freshwater, we had to have a license. Now to fish, you have to have a license except under 16 and over 65." —Anonymous, 68; Florida "🛫 Walking up to the airport gate without a ticket. Back in the day, you could literally: show up with your friend or family, go through security without a boarding pass, wait with them at the gate, even wave them off as they boarded, and be there when they got off the plane." "Buying my parents their cigarettes. We just went to the store and told them they were for them, and we paid and left. Skipping gleefully home because we got penny candy with the change!! 🤣" —Anonymous, 54; Texas "Making a collect call." "Walking into a room filled with the sound of typewriters." —Anonymous, 56; Oxford, England "We were encouraged by the police to engrave our Social Security number on valuables in case they were stolen." "Seat belts and car seats were not mandatory until the 1980s. Before then, kids could sit wherever and pack in the car (although my parents and most of my friends' parents were sticklers for using seat belts and car seats)." —ktomato "Going days without seeing your parents, especially in the summer, with the only communication being notes written on the back of envelopes on things that needed to be done. When the weather was good, we were outside on our bikes or on foot walking through the woods, out fishing, walking the train track looking for pennies, at a friend's house jumping on a trampoline, or anywhere but home. We came home when it was dark, way after our parents had gotten off work. And they would usually leave the house to go to a friend's to play cards, leaving the oldest child in charge. There would be a note on the table of what to eat for supper, sometimes a phone call if the teenage sister wasn't talking to friends all night, and a repeat of this the next day. The summer between my 4th and 5th grade years, I think I saw my mother a total of three times that entire summer." "Smoking on an airplane." —Anonymous, 35; Washington, DC "I am French, and while I wasn't born yet, I know that wine used to be served to children in kindergarten (and older) until 1956 when it was finally banned for the youngest kids. However, students aged 14 and up were still allowed to drink (including in school cafeterias) until 1981!" Finally, "Questionable first aid tactics. Even just simple stuff like it used to be standard to dump peroxide into open wounds, which we now know slows healing. But also, much more casual attitudes about things like concussions." —casualpizza23 Have another example of something that used to be so very common but would be considered odd to do today? Let us know in the comments or through the anonymous form below!


Buzz Feed
2 hours ago
- Buzz Feed
You're Choice In Songs From Musicals Tells Me What Your Spirit Animal Is
This post has not been vetted or endorsed by BuzzFeed's editorial staff. BuzzFeed Community is a place where anyone can create a post or quiz. Try making your own! · I love Beetlejuice the Musical


Buzz Feed
9 hours ago
- Buzz Feed
This Week's Best Internet Content Roundup
What you're about to read is an issue of the Only Good Internet newsletter, which brings you the funniest, weirdest, and most interesting content from around the internet, no doomscrolling required. Subscribe here and you'll get the web's best stuff in your inbox every week! Hello there! As you probably know, there's been a heck of a heat wave going on over the past week. How hot is it? Well, it's so hot that people's weed-eaters are going on strike: To beat the heat, I — much like the goats — have been trying to lie as still as possible with a fan pointed directly at my face at point-blank range. But, I did manage to move my arm just enough to pick up my phone and see this TikTok from @kaileeaaliyah about her experience in the NYC heat wave: Yeah, apparently that's the strap of her bag melting and sticking to her shirt in the heat. If it's too hot for a handbag to hold it together, what hope do I have? Anyway, the comments made me laugh a ton: If anyone needs me, I will be peeling myself off the fabric of my couch, much like the poor, disintegrating strap of that bag. Stay cool, y'all. Today I learned that monarch caterpillars do this, and that I, too, would almost definitely be more stupid than a bird: Like, I would cry? I would feel so bad, and then the caterpillar would be like, "SIKE!" And then I'd be like, "You got me this time, caterpillar!" Somebody call Sarah Connor, we have found our savior in the war against the machines: One thing about me is I love birds and think they're so stinkin' cute. Damn, bro is already 15 minutes in. RIP. I always like to finish every week by leaving you with a little something that doesn't necessarily have a home in a BuzzFeed post or anywhere else, but I feel like I MUST share with you, because I can't get it out of my head. This week, it's all about this person's dream bear: Imagine putting in all the effort to train your mind to lucid dream, and this is what you get out of it. Stressed-Out Bear Divorcé. — Heh. French.— Sure, this one's old, but it still makes me laugh every time.— These people are having a DAY.— How 'bout some wholesome stuff for a change?— "Not only did Vegas not stay in Vegas, it was on national TV." That's all for this week, see you later! And remember, if you want more like this, you can subscribe to the Only Good Internet newsletter (if you want, I mean, don't let me tell you what to do, ya know?).