Tag Archives: Vintage Halloween

Halloween in the 90s: The Last Great Decade That Got it Right

Every year around this time, I think about how Halloween was when I was a kid and how so much has changed over the last 20 years. I think many of us can collectively agree that the ’90s were probably the last great decade that gave the Halloween holiday its proper due. As a young kid in the 80s in October, I can vouch that era, in particular, is yet to be unmatched except for perhaps the 70s (but I was only a twinkle in my dad’s eye in that decade, so I can’t speak on that); but as an older kid, and teen in the 90s, Halloween fucking rocked then. And I refute the accusation that I’m looking at the times through rose-colored nostalgic glasses.

Growing into a young adult, a mom, and into now just a grumpy 40-year-old witch, I’ve watched the holiday slowly lose its lackluster and excitement. Modern-day paranoia along with today’s technological advances and a lazy attitude brought on by corporate America all have a filthy hand in this. It’s quite rare these days to see a kid wearing a homemade Halloween costume, and what’s worse, is that the Halloween whore costumes have become so goddamn ridiculous that when you come across a Sexy Ronald McDonald costume, you gotta know that the Halloween holiday has taken a turn for the worse.

Yep. This dumb shit really exists. I would, however, like to know who actually thinks this is sexy because I’d like to get a restraining order on you, thanks in advance.

Halloween Costumes

Anyway, Halloween in the 90s looked a lot different from decades prior. It was a lot more colorful, loud, and in your face. Much like, well, the 90s as a whole. And damn it was fun. The costumes became much bolder for us kids, while still suffocating under cheap plastic masks, and more creative than ever before. The homemade Halloween costume was still in effect, however, you’d see more than your fair share of Batmans’, Ninja Turtles, and Power Rangers throughout the day/night. As for the girls, a sea of Disney Princesses and later in the decade, Spice Girls were the popular choice. Of course, the slasher would always reign supreme among both boys and girls who knew their Halloween shit, especially with the addition of Ghostface in the mix.

I still think to this day, those Beavis and Butthead masks were more terrifying than anything on the market.

Halloween TV/Snacks

Halloween TV went hard. Every other commercial was dedicated to Halloween, and every brand got on the spooky bandwagon. The Pepsi and Doritos collab in the early ’90s, is one that many from that generation remember the most.

Speaking of Universal Monsters, they had one hell of a revival during the decade, and I think the PEPSI CO giant may have had a hand in that with these commercials- making them “cool” for the new generation. As if they ever weren’t... The Universal Monsters massive VHS set came in around this time as well, and Frankie and Drac just exploded into pop culture all over again like it was a brand-new thing. Now, I had been watching these movies since I was in diapers, but it was definitely nice to see Bride of Frankenstein cookies in my lunchbox.

The commercials went hard, but the Halloween specials went even HARDER. We still had old faithful airing every year like It’s the Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown, and Garfield’s Halloween Adventure, but the 90s brought in into syndicated programming that was already encased in the blocks. Series TV like Roseanne, The Simpsons, and Home Improvement had Halloween specials every year that every single damn one of us tuned in for. The early 90s in particular, brought prime cable channels to more homes than ever before and with newer kids channels like Nickelodeon and Disney having their own network stations, new programming came along with that. Shows like Are You Afraid of the Dark, Rugrats Halloween specials, Pete and Pete and AAAH! Real Monsters were just a few that were a mainstay in October.

But, that being said, Nick or Treat/ Snick or Treat was where it was AT, because we all wanted to win those prizes so badly.

The contests were usually sponsored by McDonald’s and the one I remember the most in particular is the one where you would pick up an entry form at McD’s and if Nickelodeon called you, you would winsome cool prizes. The anticipation of the phone ringing and answering every phone with “Nick Or Treat!” was, by far, both anxiety inducing and exciting. I never won, but damn, I tried, and it was pretty hilarious when salespeople would phone the house and I would answer like that.

Also, Disney religiously played Disney’s Halloween Treat all through October, whereas it’s not even on their oh-so-mighty streaming service. LAME!

Since Halloween snacks and TV sort of go hand in hand, the cereals released during Halloween in the 90s were on par for some of the best. Of course, we had our Monster cereals, but we would also get Halloween themed versions of Rice Krispies, Fruity Pebbles, and hell, even Waffle Crisp if you remember that one! Actually, before someone shoots me, Halloween Waffle Crisp was introduced in 2000, but the OG was a 90s cereal so I’m letting that one-year difference slide. Sure, we still have that today. But we don’t have Halloween Waffle Crisp. And that, my friends, is a Halloween catastrophe.

Also, we had Addams Family cereal. Can’t beat walking around your house at 2 AM with your Cousin ITT flashlight, rummaging through the cabinets for snacky-snacks.

Halloween Books

If you were a bookworm like I was in the 90s, series like Goosebumps and Scary Stories To Tell in the Dark were must reads all year-round of course, but essential during spooky season. It was even better when they were featured outright in the Fall Scholastic Book Fair.

While I’m here, special shoutout to the Scary Stories For Sleepovers series that always got overlooked because those were damn, good books.

Halloween Decorations

The 90s were also the last year of true die-cut and paper decorations, along with lawn leaf jack-o-lanterns. I want to say I’m wrong, but after the new millennium hit, you just didn’t see these as often as you would, if at all. Gel clings have taken over the Halloween window market these days, and well.. let’s just say the art of the matter doesn’t compare here.

Hefty. Be smart here. You’re sitting on a nostalgic gold mine. Bring these back. Thanks.

Trick-or Treating

Trick-or-treating was nowhere near as cool as in the 90s. It seems that more and more people forego that old-fashioned, door-to-door trick-or-treating in lieu of trunk-or-treating. Instead of enjoyable neighborhood candy-soliciting, the kiddos can go to a parking lot to collect their wears while the pumpkin spice latte-fueled parents’ pretty much ignore their kids.

Trunk-or-treat sounds more like a threat than a good time to me.

Kids in the ’90s celebrated all day with school parades and activities, and we immediately went out after an hour intermission between school and home, to obtain a shitload of candy. We were out all night for hours at a time, staking rich houses for those full-size candy bars for hours. My parents usually had to buy three bags of candy to keep up. These days, you’re lucky to get a handful of kids. Last year, I got ONE trick-or-treater. It felt like the end times for me. Now, I know this isn’t in every neighborhood, and maybe I’m exaggerating a little based on my own bitterness about present practices, but I’m not far off here.

Seriously, the last time I saw anyone give out homemade treats was in the 90s. Popcorn Balls are underrated, and a lost art, folks.

The ‘90s were arguably the best and, for what I feel, the last time for a kid to have a real Halloween experience the way it should be. Unfortunately, in these weird and wild times, I don’t know if things will get better or worse. But at least we have memories and those of us that still have that nostalgic Halloween spirit, can continue doing things our own way. That is, at least until dementia kicks in for me.

Halloween In The 80s’ Ruled- And Why It Remains Unmatched To Today’s Standards

Chances are you’re opening up this article and saying, ” Yeah, yeah… nostalgia and shit, blah, blah, blah…” And while yes nostalgia does have some weight to this, I’m here to make my case as to why this is more than sweet, childhood memories. Halloween in the 80s’ were a magical time that doesn’t seem to hit home by today’s standards. The simplicity of it has been lost by flashy, cheap décor, over-the-top while underwhelming haunted houses, and what little treats given on Halloween night that are simply pathetic in comparison to yesteryear. Maybe it’s the town I live in that leaves me longing for Halloweens’ of the past, but I have an inkling I’m not alone on this sentiment.

The Costumes

Yep. That is indeed a six-year-old Patti Paultertgeist in a plastic Minnie Mouse costume that was all the rage in 1988. Going to our local Sav-On drugstore for the very latest, and greatest in noisy plastic wear was part of the Halloween tradition right along with grabbing a fun horror flick next door from Action Video, (my Mom and Pop rental store growing up). Of course the Ben Cooper costumes were the heavyweight when it came to Halloween; but even the knockoff brands were just as good- well, I mean if they held up until the end of the night, you were in good shape- and most of the time they did. However, while they may look ridiculous, they are FAR more menacing than any kiddie costume you’ll see at the big chain stores today during the October sales season. There is a reason why film and TV use vintage masks for scary-story telling, (look at Trick R Treat as a great example). Would you be more terrified of this Minnie Mouse mask coming at you in a dimly lit street, or something like this…

Credit: Party City

Sure, the quality is better. It most likely won’t rip by you merely looking at it. But what’s the fun in that!?

School Parties and Community Carnivals

Syracuse.com

Kids waited 364 days for their annual Halloween class party and parade and goddamn it was the coolest part of the year. The entire day was dedicated to educational in some form, Halloween activities with brief intermissions with a game of Heads-Up, Seven-Up. And let’s not forget that tiny sliver piece of cardboard tasting pizza that no matter how bad it was, tasted a lot better than a math quiz. Also, parents would chip in bake homemade treats for the party, giving the teacher a bit of a break in the finance department and we would be drowning in rice-crispy treats along with festively decorated sugar cookies until we would sugar crash an hour later. Now a days, kids are lucky to even get that tiny sliver of pizza, and home-baked goods? Forget about it. The schools have implemented such a strict diet code now that even bringing in Yoplait yogurt might be questionable.

On top of school parties, Community Halloween carnivals were THEE TITS growing up. They were usually held a few days prior to Halloween and were filled with cake-walks, bake-sales, tons of games with candy and pumpkin prizes, and of course, THE COMMUNITY HAUNTED HOUSE. The pic above of a cheesy-smiled me along with my younger ninja brother marked the occasion of us right before my little bro got scarred for life at one such carnival held at the Mirabelli Community Center.

I’m well aware Community “Fall Festivals” do exist, as this is what they’re normally referred to as now. But I can guarantee they didn’t have a haunted house that had a Mad Scientist tour guide walking you through it only to be murdered at the end of the house by Michael Myers jumping out behind a few boxes with a knife and pummeling him into the ground scaring the ever loving shit out of everyone inside. As we had to walk gently over the tour guide’s limp body now drenched in red corn syrup, my mother was holding my brother going out as he was absolutely terrified at what had occurred. Good ol’ Michael though; he made sure to go right up to my bro and give him a little tickle on the chin- sending my brother into a full-blown panic attack, traumatizing the kid for life. I sound like a dick, but eh, you had to be there to see how funny it all kind of was. Nowadays, if you can get a few hay stacks and throw them into a grassy field, that will suffice as a haunted maze for the kiddies. Less traumatizing? Yes, but way less fun.

Halloween Decorations

The fact that today’s most popular Halloween decorations are throwbacks to vintage decor, says it all. My parents had a nice selection of paper cutouts that seemed to last for somehow a decade, along with blow-mold wall decor and figures. When they were brought in from the garage, the smell of stale garage dust with the colorful witch cut-outs got me high on life. Sure, DIY crafts are fun and making the most beautiful Pinterest worthy centerpiece of pinecones and leaves is nice and all; but sometimes a giant orange garbage bag full of leaves and a .99 cent jointed skeleton is all that’s needed to get the true feel of spooky season going.

The Great Trick Or Treating Olympic Candy Event

Alright, the night has finally arrived. We pulled on those noisy garbage bag costumes, grabbed our pillowcases and plastic Empire buckets and headed out for five straight hours of trick or treating. We left as soon as the first hint of orange hue hit the sky and didn’t come back until our bags and buckets were about to break. From festive candy like Mr. Bones and Wax Lips, to popcorn balls and homemade cookies, the great candy swap event with friends was the Olympic event of the year. Dumping our bags onto the selected friends’ living room floor sorting, and trying to trade those Bit ‘O’ Honeys’ for a mini Snickers was the Halloween was definitely the perfect end to a solid evening.

These days, you’re LUCKY to get half a buckets’ worth no matter how far you travel in the neighborhood. Halloween scrooges are abound more than ever, pissing on the holiday and unwilling to spare a Tootsie Pop to save their life. Not to mention the cheap buckets chain stores try to pawn off on the kids for candy hauls with such a flimsy handle, it’ll break at the mere glance of a full-size candy bar. Trick or Treating hours are usually over by at the very least, 8 PM with an occasional strangler bunch of teens that normally get the bulk of any of the ONE candy bag I buy for the occasion. Not sure what happened along the way that made this holiday less magical and with scarce participation, but it sure wasn’t what it used to be.

I’ve made my case. And I’m sticking by it. So I’ll just leave you with this photo of me sucking on a candy box in my sweet homemade witch costume from 1986.