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From pest control to pet cremation, these 18 industries are surprisingly booming

These jobs aren’t going anywhere anytime soon.

career, work, money, new careers, ask reddit, jobs, best jobs 2025, most secure jobs 2025, growing jobs 2025
Would you work in these industries if you knew they'd provide security?Photo credit: Canva

So many of us are either looking for extra easy ways to make income, or searching for more lucrative and secure career paths to pivot to altogether. But with so much “advancement” being thrown at us, it’s hard to know if a path we are considering will even be around long enough for us to pursue it, and which ones will go the way of the robots.

After all, according to a study from Microsoft, dozens of jobs are highly at risk of being replaced by AI, particularly those involving language, analysis, and communication, such as translators, historians, writers (rest assured…a bot did not write this piece…yet!).

However, when someone on Reddit asked, “What industry is booming way more than people think?” people gave a ton of insight into which jobs might have actual potential. Many prospects are in utilities—things to do with essential services like electricity, natural gas, water, etc.—which makes a lot of sense. But there are also some rather surprising niche sectors in there as well.

Of course, take this all with a grain of salt, but perhaps a quick scroll could provide you with some inspiration about thinking outside the box when it comes to making money moves.

Check out these surprisingly “booming” industries…

1. Wastewater treatment

“S*** doesn’t go away.”

“I work in the Civil Engineering industry. Wastewater treatment is not only a booming industry, but it’s insanely hard to find wastewater engineers! I think they’ve got like a .5% unemployment rate or something insane, maybe even lower.”

“Civil 3D designer here working on water projects. Between raw water pipelines and treatment facilities, I feel pretty damn secure in my career. Water always needs to be moved somewhere.”

“Environmental & Safety Director here. Can confirm. We pay wastewater operators very well in our company and they can be tough to come by!”

@mywowscotland What happens when you flush the ? Claire is a Waste Water Treatment Operator and she shows what a day in her life looks like working for @scottishwater From testing samples to analysing data and, of course, feeding the fish, Claire shows how her job plays an important part in keeping our water safe. #careers #ScottishWater #ditl ♬ cool water – dayaway

2. Electricity storage

“Grid-scale battery storage, used to store excess electricity from wind and solar farms for use during peak demand. This industry is huge and is growing exponentially, especially as the cost of batteries continues to drop and demand increases.”

“I used to develop BESS systems [Battery Energy Storage Systems] for a renewables developer…We are in need of a lot of electrical & civil engineers, accountants, and people to build the damn things.”

“Energy, particularly electricity, due to AI demand. Electricity demand has been pretty slow and steady the past couple of decades due to better efficiency, but now AI has caused a huge spike.”

3. Data centers

“I worked for a utility company near Atlanta and all in just about 3-5 years the data centers became the largest load on electricity by a long shot. Before it was hospitals and shopping centers but the data centers started pulling WAY more load.”

“I work for a major transformer supplier as an engineer, and I design the pad-mounted ones. We are pumping out transformers as fast as we physically can, but our order backlog is so long that it is being measured in YEARS. Imagine ordering a PS5 and the projected shipping date is 2-4 years later.”

“Doing some data center work one day. Ask what the 8 smaller buildings outside are for, cuz they look like generator houses. They were way bigger than the mines, and there were 8 of them. The utility literally cannot supply them with enough power, so they’re just gonna make their own. Blew my mind.”


4. E-Commerce packaging

“Packaging in general with e-commerce. Problem is it’s almost at a commodity level, so it’s a price and cost over design and performance.”

5. Pest Control

“Pest control, quietly, has a 5-11% growth year over year.”


@pestworld Is pest control the right career path for you? There is no experience needed. You can learn everything on the job! #pestcontroljobs #highschoolgraduation #careergoals #helppeople #entryleveljobs ♬ Where We’ve Been (Vocalese Only) – The Young Ebenezers

6. HVAC (Heating, Ventilation, and Air Conditioning) Installation

“More areas where you used to get by just fine with an open window and a box fan are getting unbearably hot in the summers.”

“I’ve installed 3 for myself and a bunch for other, have the vacuum pump and the electrical needed is super easy too, but with a certification I can charge a lot more. I even use real wood trim to cover the line sets instead of that crap plastic.”

“Hand over fist money to be had in NYC doing that.”

7. Creating mobile games

“$92.5 billion made in 2024, half of the entire video game industry.”

“The bored SAHM in her 40s that’s spending money on Candy Crush when she wants a break from watching Bravo isn’t going to take up console/PC gaming looking for something more complex and engaging, the simple phone screen game is plenty. Or the 8 year old that can get his hands on mom’s credit card through her phone game but can’t get his hands on a gaming PC.”

“94% of kids today prefer mobile for gaming compared to any console or PC.”

8. Loneliness Remedies

“Any industry that fills the void left by having a partner and friends. People are lonelier than ever. So pets, porn, entertainment/distractions, dumb*** consumables (looking at you, labubu).”

9. Debt Collection

“I’m in the legal services industry related to debt collection. Bankruptcy filings are up double-digits each month, year over year. And they have been for approx. 12 out of the last 18 months. If you’re a new attorney, it’s a great field to get into because it’s only getting busier and it’s cyclical; Once this wave passes it’ll be another 6 or 8 years and there’s going to be another wave. Ride those waves to retirement!”

10. Pet cremation

“I never thought I’d do this because when my pets have died I’ve always just taken them to the veterinarian with my parents and idk what he does with them, but we lost our almost 15yo dog who belonged to my late mom so I thought it made sense to cremate him and spread his ashes in the same place we spread our mom’s.”

“Just had to do this for the first time. It’s awful, but I’m thankful to have something to hold instead of burying her”

11. Any and all pet care, actually

“If you know how to source it you’ll make bank selling in western markets.”

“It’s catching on in the East, too. I went to a restaurant in downtown Tokyo and there were dogs in strollers and dresses all over. In fact, my baby’s stroller company makes doggy strollers. For over ¥80,000! ($550 USD). “

“People have so much information and most pet owners want their pet to live a long happy life and will spend on them. People didn’t used to care less, but the information and supplies just weren’t there. Despite the world going to shit in so many ways we’re in a golden age of pet ownership, and if anything the stress of life is making people more fixated on their animal companions as therapy and comfort creatures.”

12. Sports betting

“As a big sports fan, I can’t believe how out of control it’s become. 10 years ago, it felt like it was a niche thing that your weird uncle did; now, you cannot go anywhere that has sports and not have it be a massive point of discussion. A large group of people, mostly men, are completely incapable of watching a sport now without having money on something or yammering about their parlay.”

13. Making board games

“Plastic minis and war games. Seriously, Games Workshop [board game company] generates more revenue for the British economy than the entire fishing industry. It’s actually mad how much people will pay for that stuff when it’s so very cheap to make.”

14. Digital therapy

“Mental health and wellness technology, e.g., digital therapy apps, telepsychiatry, and wellness platforms.”

“Good one. I work for a behavioral health company that is fully telehealth…We book out several weeks with 40 full time providers.”

15. Selling secondhand clothes

“The second-hand clothing resale industry. Everyone talks about fast fashion, but Vinted and thrift stores are quietly driving a huge economy.”

16. …or secondhand cars…

“The used car market. I work on the back end in the commercial lending side for car dealerships. The tariffs (or threat of) on new cars have pushed used car prices towards ridiculous numbers. I occasionally show up at auctions to gauge market trends, and a 2017 VW Jetta with 133k miles hammered at $11k. Plus auction fees and transport, it’ll be $12k, and that’s before the dealer has done any repairs or made a dollar of profit. Pre-COVID, an 8-year-old Jetta would be $2k tops. But people keep paying it. My market share has risen about 40% since January.”

17. Storage Rentals

“We’re basically paying rent for our junk to live a better life than we do.”

“At my old company shortly after we’d all gone remote in 2020, a group of a few employees all quit at the same time to form a partnership and buy this little chain of storage units from an old guy who wanted to retire. Most of us thought they were insane for giving up great stable corporate careers to own some storage units. They’re laughing at us now, in five years they’ve grown it several times over into one of the largest storage businesses in the metro area of millions of people.”

18. Mortuary Services

“Dead people. There are more dead people than ever.”

“A family member is a Mortician by education, and though he has since retired out, he made great money doing it.”

  • Millennials sound off of the 10 ‘cringe but correct’ hills they’re willing to die on
    We have finally gotten to this age.Photo credit: Canva
    ,

    Millennials sound off of the 10 ‘cringe but correct’ hills they’re willing to die on

    You can pry the side part and earnestness from our cold, dead hands.

    Kids today don’t use words like “lame” to let you know when something’s uncool. No, no, no. Instead, they’ll say, “That’s so cringe.” Or more likely, they’ll type it as a comment on TikTok, because let’s face it, that’s where most conversations happen nowadays.

    But you know what? One of the most incredible things about getting older is that you care less and less about what younger folks consider cringey.

    Just take it from millennials, who have notoriously been on the receiving end of condemnation from every generation—be it the Gen Xers and baby boomers calling them entitled weaklings, or Gen Zers making fun of their side parts. Now Gen Y is all grown up, baby, and that means we don’t really care what anyone thinks! It also means that in our old age, certain beliefs are bound to just stick, even if they do become the next wave of “get off my lawn!”

    Recently, millennials on Reddit were encouraged to “unite globally on these petty issues” by listing the silliest “cringe but correct” practices of their generation that were worth maintaining, no matter how often they’re ridiculed:

    LOLS. They’re here to stay

    millennials, gen z, gen x, boomers, ask reddit, humor, generational humor, ask reddit
    LOLs are harmless! media1.giphy.com

    “I will forever maintain that using ‘LOL’ for anything that is not actually funny is an essential form of emotional regulation. The LOL isn’t a laugh; it’s a silent scream. It means, ‘I acknowledge this, I’m slightly annoyed, but I am responding with a pleasant, non-threatening digital sigh.’ It is the most valuable punctuation mark we have, perfectly capturing nuanced, passive-aggressive resignation.”

    Other millennials were inclined to agree…

    “lol is the most dynamic word/acronym that we have added to humanity. Way underrated lol”

    “Millennials use ‘lol’ the way they used to use ‘stop’ in telegrams lol”

    So is the “Millennial Pause.”

    “The Millennial Pause is functionally useful, since it allows the viewer to orient to the video before you start talking. Seriously, how many videos have you had pop up that start talking before your brain says ‘oh, this guy is saying something,’ and you miss the first sentence?”

    Millennials are going to wholeheartedly like things, and you can’t stop them.

    millennials, gen z, gen x, boomers, ask reddit, humor, generational humor, ask reddit
    Without enthusiasm, what are we even doing? media4.giphy.com

    This might not be a millennial-specific thing, but rather a phenomenon that occurs as you get older and realize that the world is a vast and complex place, where you can almost always find a tribe of similarly impassioned people. Still, we’re claiming it.

    “Unabashedly enjoying things and not being paralyzed by fear of being cringe.”

    “My Z nieces try to bully me for enjoying things/being earnest, and it doesn’t work. I enjoy doing things I enjoy, and also say/emote what I am thinking/feeling without worrying about if I’m being cool or detached or ironic enough. I survived millennial middle school. You can pry my hard-won, unabashed sense of self from my cold, dead hands.”

    “IT’S NICE TO LIKE THINGS! Seriously, surround yourself with people who won’t judge you for authentically liking the things you like. Anyone else doesn’t matter. They’ll at some point. We all did.”

    Not succumbing to fashion trends

    millennials, gen z, gen x, boomers, ask reddit, humor, generational humor, ask reddit
    Side parts are synonymous with timelessness. media3.giphy.com

    Keep your coquette looks and insert literally any word-core. We don’t need or want it.

    “My side part stays.”

    (Apparently, side parts are cool again anyway. Further reason to just stick to what feels right—it will become in vogue again eventually.)

    “I’ve spent a lifetime cultivating a wardrobe of flannels, jeans, and boots, I ain’t changing now.”

    “You can pry my ankle and no-show socks off my cold, dead feet; there’s no way in hell I’m going to go rocking a crew-sock farmer’s tan just because you dumbass kids insist on dressing like my grandpa going golfing.”

    “Once Gen Z guys start discovering their leg hair awkwardly disappears at the exact height they pull their tube socks up to they’ll have realized their mistake.”

    “Flared leggings aren’t a thing. If they have a flare they aren’t leggings. Yoga pants they are yoga pants and will always be yoga pants.”

    “I will never give up comfort camisoles. If I ever have only one layer on, I have been replaced by a pod person.”

    Not everything has to be high tech…

    millennials, gen z, gen x, boomers, ask reddit, humor, generational humor, ask reddit
    Unless we can get teleportation, we can maybe slow things down a bit. media3.giphy.com

    “Stating your number when leaving a voicemail. Double points if you do it at the beginning and again at the end.”

    “Big decisions and purchases are on big screens. Not my phone. How else am I going to open 50 different tabs for reviews and price comparisons?”

    “Until one streaming service has every movie or show made and is readily available at all times, I will continue to collect and keep DVDs/Blu Rays of movies and shows I want to watch.”

    “Not everything needs to be smart. I don’t need a smart windshield, smart glasses, a smart watch…I have a phone and a tv. That covers my needs.”

    “The most useful tools ever created do not require an internet connection or a battery.”

    “Paper menus are the correct way to order food when dining in. I am not scanning a QR code.”

    …including cars

    millennials, gen z, gen x, boomers, ask reddit, humor, generational humor, ask reddit
    Cars don't need to be computers. They can just be cars. media4.giphy.com

    “Screens in cars are ugly give me knobs and buttons.”

    “They also seem more dangerous! Like, I should be able to feel around. If I have to look then My eyes aren’t on the road!”

    “Better yet, give me the same exact layout across all makes/models for things like headlights and wipers. Nothing gets me frazzled like not knowing how to turn on basic safety functions because I had to use our fleet vehicle at work, or borrow someone’s car.”

    “Cars peaked in the mid 90s to mid 00s. Now they’re all ginormous, look the same, everything is an SUV with too many screens and sensors and computers to cost a fortune when they break. Power windows were the most technology needed. We used to have fun colors, makers experimented with new and weird body styles. I miss seeing station wagons everywhere.”

    On that note, IRL purchases > online

    millennials, gen z, gen x, boomers, ask reddit, humor, generational humor, ask reddit
    Cher got it right. media1.giphy.com

    “I refuse to buy everything online. Sometimes, you need the in-person store experience, so you can see how stuff actually looks and feels. I don’t want a nice looking but scratchy af blanket or the painting that looked a different color online. I definitely don’t want to wait weeks while I return it and get a refund to order another elsewhere and potentially have the same thing happen again. I just want to go to the store, buy it, and be done with it already.”

    “Video rental stores are cool and good. Sure Netflix, Hulu, whatever HBO’s service has been renamed to this week are more convenient but the simple joy of convincing my parents I needed to rent Richie Rich again is peak childhood.”

    We WILL be using what we learned in grammar school. Unironically. Thanks so much.

    millennials, gen z, gen x, boomers, ask reddit, humor, generational humor, ask reddit
    Oxfordu00a0commas areu00a0accurate, true, and correct. media2.giphy.com

    “I will murder anyone who comes for my Oxford comma.”

    “Idc what the cool kids are doing these days I am using capital letters.”

    We still believe in dancing like nobody’s watching

    millennials, gen z, gen x, boomers, ask reddit, humor, generational humor, ask reddit
    If you don't wave your hands in the air, how will they know you don't care? media4.giphy.com

    “I’m not doing that corny, lackadaisical, give them nothing dance that Gen Z does on TikTok to make themselves look like they are cool because they don’t care enough, I’m shaking my ass despite me never really learning how to. I don’t know why Gen Z is so scared of humiliation, but I’m glad that was never us.”

    “I’m gonna put my hands in the air when I dance. Especially at a concert. Going to concerts where people’s hands are only in the air when they are holding their phones is crazy to me!!”

    Finally, certain nostalgic bits of pop culture will have a forever home in our hearts

    millennials, gen z, gen x, boomers, ask reddit, humor, generational humor, ask reddit
    Sailor Moon was THE icon of our generation. Period. media4.giphy.com

    “The OG Sailor Moon intro had no business being that catchy. It hits different.”

    “‘Appointment’ television was more fun. Getting a good cliffhanger and having a week to talk about it with your friends before the next episode and you didn’t have to deal with some jackass who has no life and binged the whole thing on 2x speed the second it was released. Waiting until September, when all the new shows and seasons would premiere. Fewer weird multi-year delays between seasons.”

    There you have it. Go forth, millennials, and be your cringiest, most unabashed selves. Because no matter what generation you hail from, you only live once. Or YOLO, as we like to say.

  • People born before 1980 share childhood experiences they wish young people today could have
    Kids used to wander and play unsupervised outside for hours.Photo credit: Photo by Muhammed Aktürk/Pexels

    Childhood is such a special, amazing time. Those of us who grew up in the age before the internet have memories that today’s young people will likely never have. Boomer and Gen X childhoods were simpler in many ways, not having access to endless entertainment or the pitfalls of the online world to contend with on a daily basis.

    The internet has arguably made human life better in many ways, but it has also fundamentally changed what growing up looks like. Where the older generations had a handful of TV shows at set times on limited channels, younger folks can binge watch streaming shows and YouTube channels 24/7. Boomers used manual typewriters while millennials had laptops. Gen X carried Walkmans while Gen Z carries smartphones.

    And that’s just technology. The world has changed in other ways, too, including greater safety awareness that’s changed the way people parent and kids having less access to untouched nature. Change isn’t inherently good or bad, but there are definitely some nostalgic elements of boomer and Gen X upbringings that those older generations wish today’s young people could enjoy.

    Here are some top answers to the question, “What is something you grew up with that you wish younger generations to experience?” from people born before 1980 on Reddit.

    Being unreachable

    80s kids, 80s nostalgia, gen x, gen x kids, nostalgia, boomers, boomers vs gen x, generational differences
    Two young boys leaving home Photo credit: Canva

    “The freedom to be unreachable and unaware of what everyone on earth is doing at any given time, meaning … life pre-iphone and pre-social media.”

    “Pre CELL phone. Pre pager. (I mean, I know early cell phones were around but virtually no one had them pre-1993 and certainly no one expected or even considered them except high paid business folk).”

    “Yes, I came here to say anonymity but being unreachable was so nice.”

    “I remember leaving my phone home and not thinking anything of it. Now it’s not even ‘optional’. Phone is firmly a part of the ‘keys, wallet’ checklist before leaving the house.”

    “Yes, having people be able to reach out to you 24/7 is not a good thing.”

    Unrestricted, unsupervised outside exploration

    80s kids, 80s nostalgia, gen x, gen x kids, nostalgia, boomers, boomers vs gen x, generational differences
    Kids exploring in the woods Photo credit: Canva

    “Running wild outside in the country for entire day without even considering anything that could go wrong.”

    “We used to just run around the woods by my friends house, and had tree forts and rode bikes around to the neighborhood kids houses. No concept of time outside of sunset. I think that might get lost in the shuffle more today.”

    “This would be mine as well. Hop on your bike with a friend or two and head out. Maybe to the creek or the woods or the dime store downtown. Just an amazing aimless wandering with no fear of being accosted by anyone. A quick ten cent phone call home to let mom know where you were. Just be home for dinner. Our era had the best childhood ever.”

    “This is true. I would wander for miles. But the thing is, looking back I can now see more than a handful of incidents that I was very lucky to escape by the skin of my teeth. I’m talking about hitchhiking or telling my parents I was sleeping over someone’s house, them telling their parents they were sleeping at mine and then staying out all night. Stuff like that. It was fun- good times but when I think of MY kid or grandkids doing the same thing I want to throw up.”

    The joy of wonder without answers

    80s kids, 80s nostalgia, gen x, gen x kids, nostalgia, boomers, boomers vs gen x, generational differences
    A child wondering Photo credit: Canva

    “Wonder. Sometimes we would just wonder about something. Watching a movie with friends. Someone says ‘I wonder if William Holden is still alive?’ Everybody would shrug and say ‘I don’t know’ and you go on with your lives.”

    “Something humbling and wonderful about not knowing. Now with so much knowledge literally in our hands, we have this anxious ‘need to know’ everything. And everyone has become a Tik Tok expert.”

    “Or allowing mysterious, wondrous stuff exist without explanations that are instantly available to remove the sense of awe about how odd, crazy, wonderful, talented, insane, or whatever our world can be.”

    “The world was more of a mystery back then. That has both its upsides and downsides, but I can’t help but feel that some of the wonder has dissipated.”

    The gift of boredom

    80s kids, 80s nostalgia, gen x, gen x kids, nostalgia, boomers, boomers vs gen x, generational differences
    A bored little boy Photo credit: Canva

    “Boredom. Boredom breeds creativity. Boredom has been removed from their lives.”

    “The skills you gain from the experience of being bored, every now and then. Principally, how you can develop that inner voice, which has been my friend on many occasions and saved my bacon many more. If you always rely on external sources for information or support
    you’ll surely get stuck when things go wrong or you have to make a decision quickly.”

    “Boredom leads to reading plus learning to play instruments.”

    “While I’m happy my kids made friends online the desperation of boredom and creating your own things was really important for me.”

    “Boredom. The number of times I whined to my parents I was bored and their answer was just ‘then go find something to do’ led to all kinds of fun.”

    The freedom to make mistakes

    80s kids, 80s nostalgia, gen x, gen x kids, nostalgia, boomers, boomers vs gen x, generational differences
    A young girl embarrassed Photo credit: Canva

    “Being able to make a mistake without it going viral online.”

    “Experiencing awkward coming of age scenarios without being documented in a server farm somewhere with world wide access.”

    “I’m sorry kids don’t have the chance to make mistakes and correct them without it being memorialized online to follow them forever.”

    “Being able to break things and make mistakes… the cost is way too high now.”

    Tactile pleasures

    80s kids, 80s nostalgia, gen x, gen x kids, nostalgia, boomers, boomers vs gen x, generational differences
    A littleu00a0girl reading Photo credit: Canva

    “The satisfaction that comes with slamming down a landline phone receiver.”

    “Encyclopedias.”

    “Paper maps. I’d love to see someone in this day and age successfully use (and fold back to its original form) a paper map.”

    “Reading a book instead of playing video games (most useless invention possible). I’m actually old enough to remember no TV in the house and no radio either (my parents read newspapers and magazines instead for their news but it’s a much slower feed and more local).”

    “The thrill of buying a vinyl album. I know you can still do that, but it just doesn’t seem the same. Back in the ’60s and ’70s they were absolute TREASURES.”

    “Sleeping on sheets that had been dried out on a clothesline in spring. The scent on those sheets was intoxicating.”

    Travel feeling more adventurous

    80s kids, 80s nostalgia, gen x, gen x kids, nostalgia, boomers, boomers vs gen x, generational differences
    Friends going on a road trip Photo credit: Canva

    “Going on a road trip with your friends to somewhere you’ve never been, navigating your way there with a road atlas, and then exploring it without consulting any online reviews or suggestions from Google Maps.”

    “Experience world travel the way it used to be. There was a time when traveling to another country was a big deal and it was adventurous.

    Now, we can buy a last minute ticket on a flash sale, read about the destination on the way to the airport, watch Hollywood movies on the plane, rent a car from a familiar brand, stay at a known hotel chain, eat familiar food and use your GPS to guide you around while you chat in real time with your friends.

    Travel is still fun but the magic and romance are mostly gone. That feeling of being far away and completely submerged in a strange culture almost doesn’t exist anymore. It’s too easy and homogenized now.”

    “So true. Even back in the early 2000s I remember being on a bus in South America with an American 19 year old who was really captivated by the idea that I travelled in the 1970s “before email.” You had to wait two weeks to receive any kind of letter at the General Delivery post office of whatever country you were in. There was so much freedom in that, and a real submersion into the local culture, an ability to let go of your cultural touchstones and become someone new.”

    “The old way of traveling meant there was a lot of serendipity happening. You’d head to some town you knew nothing about and get chatting with someone on the bus who would then invite you to stay at their house. They would feed you and show you around, help you navigate whatever you needed to head on your way. A lovely way to meet people and learn about nearby treasures to see that you knew nothing about. Now , everything can be researched and plotted out beforehand. I still travel in an unplanned way, with no agenda, no lodgings figured out, but when I mention it, other people shudder and say their anxiety wouldn’t allow it. Did we not have anxiety in the old days? Yes, we did, but it was all part of taking risks in life.”

    There’s a lot that’s better, easier, faster and more convenient about life in the 21st century, but there really was something special about growing up in the pre-internet days, wasn’t there?

    This article originally appeared last year.

  • Adults who lived through the ’70s share 10 surprising details about what life was really like
    Please let us never go back to '70s cigarette culture.Photo credit: Canva

    Movies and other bits of pop culture can feel like little time machines that whiz us right back to periods we never actually lived in. Of course, these worlds, however well-constructed, offer only a glimpse into what life was like for the people who really lived through them. Even films or songs made in the actual decade only offer a limited snapshot of the time. Certain details are bound to get missed.

    It’s probably one of the reasons why past decades are so easily categorized into instantly identifiable aesthetics. Take the 1970s, for instance. We instantly think of disco, bellbottoms, hippies, the “free love” movement in full force, etc. But if you ask people who were actually around in the ‘70s, you’d probably find a lot more than just that.

    But never fear, we did that research for you! Thanks to a few educational videos, as well as good old-fashioned Reddit mining, here are some interesting quotes from Redditors and historical tidbits from the “Me Decade” (named for the uptick in individualism and self-help books…see, we’re learning already!)

    Things were dirtier

    “More litter, more air and water pollution. There were commercials and such to discourage littering, and the EPA got involved with corporate polluters.”

    “The cars were stinkier, the ports were in shambles.”

    “Ashtrays, ashtrays everywhere.”

    “There was a big environmental push to clean up the country. ‘Acid Rain’ was not a drug but a serious environmental problem.”

    As much as the ’70s are known for disco, there are other music genres that had a huge impact on culture

    “Glam rock, blues rock, funk, disco, new wave and punk rock were all new and competing for our attention.”

    “There was Led Zeppelin, Rolling Stones, and so on. All the classic rock you hear now came from the late 60’s and the 70’s.”

    This perhaps especially goes for punk rock. Which, contrary to popular opinion, did not start in the U.K.

    It’s easy to forget it was a time of great political turbulence

    “I was 18 in 1974 and living in England. I remember it as a time of strikes, demonstrations, and shortages. The rise of Thatcherism saw the steel industry in my hometown decimated and violent demonstrations with miners clashing with police happened just down the road from me. The music was great and punk really caught the feeling of the times.”

    “It kind of sucked to be a teenager then. It was post-Vietnam and Watergate, and we were very cynical as a result. The energy crisis loomed large, stagflation gripped a sliding economy, and crime and cities were turning to sh**. The Cold War was a pervasive threat and popular music was at its nadir; post-60’s and pre-1977 and punk.”

    “College had anti-war demonstrations. People were getting drafted and sent to Vietnam to die for no reason. I watched them pull my draft lottery number and fortunately, got one in the 300’s.”

    “I recall the feeling of ‘everything sucks, especially us.’ The USA was starting to come to grips with its history not as a patriotic parade, but the horror show it was. In the 1977 inaugural of Carter, Paul Simon sang a beautiful song containing the lyric ‘Still, when I think of the road we’re traveling on, I wonder what’s gone wrong – I can’t help it, I wonder . . . what’s gone wrong.’ AT AN INAUGURATION.”

    “Hostages in the Iranian embassy.”

    Living frugally was a necessity

    “Everyone in my middle-class neighborhood lived frugally. My parents had one car and my mom worked nights so they could both commute. I had five pairs of shoes – dress, running, casual, work in the yard and boots. Most kids wore hand me downs – not because it was cool but because there was no money in the budget. We never went out to eat even for special days. Summer was playing in the various back yards and once in a while you got a popsicle from the neighbor. Vacations were camping or trips to relatives. When people scream about inflation today I think you haven’t seen anything. But we were happier…life was simpler and everyone seemed to pull together.”

    “Got my driver’s license about the time gas shortages started. Imagine pulling into the station and asking for a dollar’s worth of regular today.”

    Things weren’t all low-tech


    Sure, there were no iPad kids or Waymos, but the ‘70s saw a ton of technological advancements, including the personal computer. It’s wild to think that Apple technically came out of this time period.

    You also had the rise of video game consoles, arcades, VCRs, and VHS tapes.

    We know cigarettes were mainstream, but it’s crazy to think about how it affected younger people

    “Your mom gave you 2 bucks and a note and sent you to the store for cigarettes.”

    “Smoking was allowed on high school campus in smoking areas. Smoking areas were the teachers lounge in the school for teachers only. Also, just outside of two exits for the students. Hold your breath!”

    “Most adults and many teens smoked. I was allowed to smoke at home at 15. I was sooooo lucky! A small pack cost 50 cents.”

    And just imagine witnessing the cultural juggernaut of Star Wars for the first time

    “Younger people have no idea what an impact it had. We had grown up on Star Trek reruns and lots of old, bad science fiction. But Star Wars inspired us like nothing else. It had special effects that had never been seen, and a story that was hopeful and uplifting in a time when everything seemed to be getting worse.”

    The bicentennial—you either loved it or hated it. There was no in-between.

    For context, the United States Bicentennial was a series of celebrations and observances during the mid-1970s that paid tribute to historical events leading up to the creation of the U.S. as an independent republic. Some events included reenactments of the Boston Tea Party and Paul Revere’s ride, as well the red, white, and blue American Freedom Train, which carried historical artifacts and stopped at 48 contiguous states.

    “The bicentennial was the bomb.”

    “My siblings and I didn’t love the bicentennial! We were so sick of the ‘bicentennial mattress sale’ etc ads blaring on the tv. My sister and I wrote a song called ‘We Hate the Bicentennial’ that we still sing occasionally.”

    “The bicentennial years seemed party-less as far as GOP or DEM – we all were just Americans. Everything was red, white, and blue. There were continuous celebrations, picnics, parties over a two year period. I think it would have made our fore father’s proud, when you think back to that two year period two hundred years prior.”

    The sexual revolution was fun…for men and women alike

    Imagine it: Birth control and premarital sex are finally normal. Roe v. Wade offered protection for a woman’s right to choose whether or not to become a mother. Even the queer community, while obviously still facing discrimination, began to develop safe havens in places like San Francisco.

    “It was still during the sexual revolution where women were not ashamed of openly exploring their sexuality.”

    “This was pre-AIDS. The idea of ‘catching herpes’, and this being a serious problem came in around 1980. So there was a short period, more or less from 1950 – 1980, when people thought you could just get rid of STDs with a shot.”

    But not everyone was on board

    There were plenty of cautionary tales (particularly for women) about the dark side of the sexual revolution. Take, for instance, Looking for Mr. Goodbar, a book and subsequent movie based on the real-life murder of a woman named Roseann Quinn, who was murdered by a man she had a one-night stand with. The killer’s violence was partially stirred by his feelings about his own sexual identity.

    Similarly, Cruising is a ‘70s novel that follows an undercover cop looking for a homosexual serial killer in New York City.

    You also had conservative activists like Phyllis Schlafly, who vehemently rallied against feminism, abortion, queer rights, and most notably, the ratification of the Equal Rights Amendment (ERA).

    History is a fascinating thing. The more we learn about it, the more we realize that every era is full of contradictions. Because while life continues to march forward, there will always be a tug-of-war between the past and future.

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