3 Strange Fads

Fads come and go. But it’s hard to believe these fads ever existed!

Bathroom Reader 🚽
The Bathroom Reader
1 min readFeb 11, 2017

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1. Goldfish Swallowing

On March 3, 1939, Harvard University student Lothrop Withington Jr. swallowed a live goldfish to win a $10 bet. Days later, not to be outdone, a college student in Pennsylvania downed three goldfish seasoned with salt and pepper. When a fellow classmate upped the ante to six goldfish, the gauntlet had been thrown down, and the goldfish swallowing craze spread like wildfire on campuses across the United States. By the time the fad faded a few months later, thousands of goldfish had met gruesome ends.

2. Tooth-dyeing

In 16th-century Europe, tooth dyeing was popular among upper-class women. In Italy, red and green were the most popular colors, while Russian women favored black.

3. Crotchless Tunics

In medieval England, wealthy gentlemen often wore clothing that left their “assets” exposed — by way of short-fitting tunics with no pants. (If the genitals didn’t hang low enough, padded, flesh-coated prosthetics called briquettes would be used.)

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