Cheapism is editorially independent. We may earn a commission if you buy through links on our site.

AI-generated image of people laughing at Crocs
Cheapism / DALL-E 3

If you were to go back 20 years ago and tell someone that online dating or home security surveillance was mainstream, they’d call you crazy. The same goes for video calling and ride-sharing. 

According to this recent Reddit thread, that’s just the tip of the iceberg. We took a look at some of the most notable products and services that people had no problem dismissing 20 years ago, but are now a normal part of everyday life for most people. Talk about perspective.

1. Online Dating

Bumble
Google Play
In 1995, the world was introduced to its first dating website in the form of Match.com. The public received such a novel idea with a mixture of excitement and general apprehension. To meet someone online? To carry out conversations and make plans for dates over the internet? No. It just couldn’t be. It’d never catch on. 

Not only did Match.com take off and allow interested singles the ability to make meaningful connections that gave way to lasting marriages, but when smartphones took over the world, dating apps became ubiquitous. To travel back in time a couple decades and show someone an app like Tinder in action would be a hilarious spectacle. I mean, the mere act of “swiping” on people is already absurd enough.

2. YouTube

YouTube App
Anatoliy Sizov/istockphoto

It’s actually pretty wild to think that YouTube only came out in 2005. Founders Chad Hurley, Steve Chen, and Jawed Karim wanted YouTube to serve as a dynamic online video-sharing platform. It would be an intuitive way for individual creators to publish and share their videos on a global scale. 

Not even they could’ve imagined what YouTube has become. The armies of creators that we have nowadays. The vloggers that have secured bags of cash big enough to sink ships from filming themselves literally walking around their apartments talking in silly voices. Wild times.

3. Razors With 5 Blades

3. Razors With 5 Blades
Depositphotos.com

There’s literally an article from The Onion that openly mocks prior razor models for even having four blades. Then the markets were flooded with five-bladed razors. Today, if you walk into most any store with a toiletries aisle, you’re going to see an overwhelming number of five-bladed razors.

4. Ride-Sharing Services

Uber/Lyft Car
Wikimedia Commons

Picture a caring parent 20 years ago. They’re adamantly telling their kids that they should never talk to strangers on the internet, and to never, ever hop into a stranger’s car. 

Fast forward to now. Not only do plenty of kids have their own smartphones, but they’re literally communicating with Uber and Lyft drivers to arrange their rides. Even with the safety measures that ride-sharing services have in place, it’s still pretty crazy to think about.

5. Video Calling

5. Video Calling
ake1150sb/istockphoto

Video calling definitely didn’t catch on for a while. For many people, the idea of using your phone to have a video call with another person seemed laughably ridiculous — or just plain old weird. Today, it’s the go-to for plenty of people that don’t want to overexert themselves by sending text messages.

6. Crocs

6. Crocs
crocs.com

Today, Crocs are proudly sported by leading celebrities like Justin Bieber, Post Malone, Bad Bunny, etc. They’re a trend that’s seemingly here to stay; it almost seems like the weirder the Crocs design, the more popular it becomes. But before they came out in 2002 — and even sporadically throughout the company’s history — plenty of people would’ve ridiculed someone for wearing Crocs based on how absurd they look. I mean, they wouldn’t be wrong. But weird foamy shoes are the new cool now.

7. Video Game Streaming

7. Video Game Streaming
DepositPhotos.com

Many a kid was told growing up that they’d never actually make money from playing video games. Sure, that rings true for plenty of kids; video game streaming as a job is incredibly competitive. 

But there are certain individuals that now make loads of cash from streaming themselves playing video games. For instance, it’s reported that the leading video game streamer, Ninja, takes in a clean $500K a month

Meet the Writer

Matt has spent the last 8 or so odd years as both a writer and editor in Seattle and Brooklyn, where he is now based. He loves escaping the tirelessly fast pace of the “Mad Apple” that is NYC by taking walks and runs through parks where he’s able to catch up on the latest tea about society from the city’s ever chatty, always hungry, occasionally rabid, pigeons. When he’s not taking his urban nature strolls, or dutifully combing the deepest rabbit holes of the internet to find the content that’s worth sinking your mind’s teeth into, he’s likely holed up at a dark-lit dive bar with a book and/or some friends, or just easily he could be on the hunt for the next addition to his steadily growing plant family.