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Pet Peeves That Everyone Can Agree Are the Absolute Worst

If there is one thing that truly brings humanity together, it is mutual annoyance. Politics might divide us and pineapple on pizza might spark wars, but some everyday irritations are almost universally hated.

A roundup from Zippia.com tapped into that shared frustration and identified things people across the globe can collectively agree are the worst. And honestly, reading the list feels like group therapy.

Right at the top of the hate parade is loud chewing. For most of us, it is just gross and distracting. For others, it triggers full-blown rage. There is even a real condition called misophonia, where certain sounds like chewing or slurping cause intense emotional reactions. Either way, nobody wants to hear your mouth at work, on a plane, or anywhere else.

Slow walkers are another public enemy. You know the type, strolling down the sidewalk at a leisurely pace while blocking the entire path. It is especially infuriating when you are clearly in a hurry and there is no room to pass. Somehow they always manage to stop abruptly too.

Group texts with too many people also made the list, and for good reason. One innocent message quickly turns into a nonstop stream of notifications every five seconds. Even worse, half the replies are things like “LOL” or thumbs-up emojis that absolutely did not need to go to everyone.

Being told to “calm down” is another guaranteed way to make things worse. It almost never works and usually has the opposite effect. If anything, it confirms that you are absolutely right to be annoyed in the first place.

Talking during movies remains a classic offense. Whether it is in a theater or at home, people chatting through key scenes somehow never realize they are ruining the experience for everyone else. Right up there with it is clipping your nails in public. Some personal grooming activities should stay personal.

Close talkers also earned their spot, and they became even more unbearable during the pandemic. Nobody wants a stranger inches from their face. Add in drivers who refuse to use turn signals, painfully slow internet, and couples who argue in front of their friends, and you have got a perfect storm of shared misery.


Here are some other peeves that made the list:

  • People who don’t return shopping carts
  • Leaving trash on the table at fast food places
  • Someone watching videos in public without headphones
  • Standing too close in line
  • Not covering your mouth when you cough or sneeze
  • People who block the aisle at the grocery store
  • Taking phone calls on speaker in public
  • Not replacing the toilet paper roll
  • People who are late all the time
  • Typing “k” or “ok” after a long text
  • Interrupting someone mid-sentence
  • Not saying “thank you”
  • Cutting in line
  • Talking during important scenes of TV shows
  • Borrowing things and never returning them

20 Pop Culture Moments Turning 20 in 2026 That Will Make You Feel Extremely Old

If you enjoy feeling young, maybe sit this one out.

If you enjoy realizing time is a thief that moves way too fast, welcome. In 2026, a whole bunch of pop culture moments officially turn 20 years old, which means the year 2006 is now filing for nostalgia benefits.

Let’s rewind to a time when flip phones ruled, jeans were aggressively low-rise, and nobody knew what a tweet was supposed to be.

In movie theaters, 2006 was a monster year. Pixar dropped “Cars”, which somehow turned sentient vehicles into an emotional experience. “Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man’s Chest” packed theaters and reminded us Johnny Depp’s Jack Sparrow was still unstoppable. And on the small screen, “High School Musical” premiered on Disney Channel, quietly launching a franchise that would dominate tweens, soundtracks, and Halloween costumes for years.

Music that year was absolutely everywhere. Justin Timberlake brought sexy back, Shakira’s hips famously did not lie, and Gnarls Barkley’s “Crazy” was impossible to escape.

Add in the “High School Musical” soundtrack, and 2006 basically lived on the radio and in burned CDs.

Television also had a huge glow-up. “Dexter” debuted and made America root for a serial killer. “Heroes” arrived with the promise that anyone could be special, at least for one very intense season. “Psych” premiered too, delivering crime-solving with pineapple jokes and an impressive number of pop culture references.

Then science came along and ruined everything by demoting Pluto. In 2006, it officially lost its planet status, creating one of the longest-running arguments in classrooms and on the internet. Pluto has never emotionally recovered.

That same year brought heartbreaking news when Crocodile Hunter Steve Irwin was killed by a stingray, a moment that stunned fans around the world and left an entire generation afraid of shallow ocean water.

Britney Spears also had a rough year under an intense media microscope.

She filed for divorce from Kevin Federline in 2006, kicking off a very public downward spiral that would peak the following year with her shaved-head-umbrella-wielding rampage. The coverage was relentless and cruel, even by early 2000s standards.

In gaming, the Nintendo Wii launched and changed living rooms forever. Suddenly your grandma was bowling, and nobody could find the wrist strap.

And finally, Twitter debuted on March 21, 2006. Back then it was just a weird little idea. No one knew it would eventually reshape news, politics, pop culture, and everyone’s blood pressure.

And yes, all of that was 20 years ago. You’re welcome.

Wait, Roddy Piper Didn’t Invent the Bubblegum Line from “They Live”???

I hate to disparage a legend, and make no mistake, “Rowdy” Roddy Piper was and forever will be a legend. 

He was one of the most indelible personalities in the history of professional wrestling, and arguably its single greatest villain.

Roddy was the most despicable “heel” in the business at a time when it was literally dangerous to be the bad guy.  A lot of people still believed wrestling was real back then, and to those folks, Roddy’s words and actions weren’t just antisocial, they were criminal.

These fans wanted to see Roddy get hurt in the ring, but they also wanted to hurt him themselves.  And when they managed to get close enough to him they tried.  Sometimes they succeeded.  It took real grit and guts to be the heavy in those days, and Roddy was the heaviest of them all.

To conclude this point, if a Mt. Rushmore of wrestling is ever carved, Piper’s leering mug better be up there.  I’ll let the rest of you argue about the other three.

That being said, one of Roddy’s greatest pop culture achievements might not have been solely his.  I’m talking about his famous line from the 1988 sci-fi classic “They Live”:

“I have come here to chew bubblegum and kick ass.  And I’m all outta bubblegum.”

Full credit for that line has always gone to Piper.  Even writer-director John Carpenter concedes it, saying it came from a notebook Piper kept of ideas for his wrestling promos.

But it turns out he’s not the first person to use that line . . . or at least a variation of it . . . on film.

In 1973, amid a wave of “blaxploitation” films like “Superfly”, “Coffy”, and “The Mack”, there came a little movie called “Five on the Black Hand Side”; a good-natured comedy that celebrated black culture in a way that those violent, drug-and-pimp flicks did not.

The film spends a good amount of time in a barbershop, and in one scene, a character named Fun Loving, having just received a haircut, launches into a rap that includes this little adage:

“I ain’t givin’ up nothin’ but bubblegum and hard times, and I’m fresh outta bubblegum.”

Not exactly the same, but way too similar to ignore.

Roddy may have come up with the exact wording he used in “They Live”, but the fact that a similar iteration existed at least 15 earlier suggests that it didn’t travel directly from God’s lips to his ears.  I have to conclude that Roddy heard the expression . . . or something like it . . . somewhere in his travels and borrowed it.

That’s not to say he gets no credit.  After all, he’s the one who turned it into a pop culture phenomenon, which is a feat in and of itself.

The fact is, Roddy knew a great line when he heard it, whether it sprang from someone else’s imagination or his own.

Yet another reason why his legend lives on.

What Is This Woke B.S.? There Are Women in Men At Work???

The woke mob has stepped over the line several times now, from black Disney mermaids to canceling well-meaning comedians just for yanking their penises in front of unwilling women.

But this time they’ve gone too far.

Remember everyone’s favorite ’80s band Men At Work . . . oh they of such classics as “Who Can it Be Now” and “Down Under”?  Well, they just announced a Summer 2026 tour with Toad the Wet Sprocket and Shonen Knife.

The announcement was accompanied by a promotional photo of the band, and there are TWO WOMEN in it!!!  I am NOT kidding!

One of these “birthing people,” as I’m sure the band would like us to call them, is named Rachel Mazer.  She plays sax, flute, and keyboards.  The other is Cecilia Noel, who handles percussion and vocal harmonies.

And if that doesn’t bother you, you’re clearly not eating enough road kill organ meat.

People, this band is called MEN At Work.  Not PERSONS At Work.  Are we supposed to stand for this?  If we don’t stop it now, where does it end?  The Beastie People?  Or even worse, Boyz 2 Whatever???

This. Must. End. Now.  We must ignore this abomination once proudly known as Men At Work. Please skip this tour, so as to keep them from achieving their woke, inclusive, feminist, man-hating agenda.

Thanks, bro!

The Best Songs to Listen to While Falling Asleep

If you’re the kind of person who puts on music at bedtime and hopes it magically shuts your brain off, science has some good news.

A study claims it has figured out the best songs to listen to if you’re trying to fall asleep, and yes, they actually used a formula to do it.

The most sleep friendly songs tend to share a lot with lullabies. Think slower tempos, softer energy, and melodies that feel comforting instead of stimulating.

In other words, this is not the time for a hype playlist or anything with surprise beat drops. Your brain wants calm, familiar vibes, not a musical jump scare at 11:47 p.m.

The study broke things down by genre, which is helpful because not everyone relaxes to the same kind of music. Rock fans, pop lovers, and hip hop listeners all got their own Top 10 lists.

Rock:

1.  “Your Song”Elton John

2.  “Going to California”Led Zeppelin

3.  “Mona Lisas and Mad Hatters”Elton John

4.  “Golden Slumbers/Carry That Weight”The Beatles

5.  “Wish You Were Here”Pink Floyd

6.  “The Load”Jackson Browne

7.  “Walk on the Wild Side”Lou Reed

8.  “Every Breath You Take”The Police

9.  “Desperado”Eagles

10.  “Imagine”John Lennon


Pop:

1.  “I Love You”Billie Eilish

2.  “When the Party’s Over”Billie Eilish

3.  “Memories”Maroon 5

4.  “Favorite Crime”Olivia Rodrigo

5.  “The Remedy for a Broken Heart (Why Am I So in Love)”XXXTentacion

6.  “Changes”XXXTentacion

7.  “All of Me”John Legend

8.  “Falling”Harry Styles

9.  “Idontwannabeyouanymore”Billie Eilish

10.  “You Broke Me First”Tate McRae


Hip-hop:

1.  “Sunflower”Post Malone and Swae Lee

2.  “Same Love”Macklemore & Ryan Lewis featuring Mary Lambert

3.  “Psycho”Post Malone featuring Ty Dolla $ign

4.  “Party Girl”StaySolidRocky

5.  “Swang”Rae Sremmurd

6.  “Gucci Gang”Lil Pump

7.  “Broccoli”Shelley FKA DRAM featuring Lil Yachty

8.  “Ballin'”Mustard and Roddy Ricch

9.  “Nonstop”Drake

10.  “Middle Child”J. Cole

So if counting sheep isn’t cutting it, maybe try letting Elton John or Billie Eilish tuck you in instead. Worst case scenario, you don’t fall asleep but at least your playlist is elite.

Making Oreos at Home Is Easy: Just Grab Some Glyphosate and Hexane!

Ever wondered what’s really in your favorite store-bought cookie?

A viral recipe for homemade Oreos is making waves for laying it all out, step by step — and it’s both hilarious and horrifying.

The satirical how-to guide breaks down each ingredient in Oreos by tracing them back to their industrial origins. From glyphosate-sprayed crops to petroleum-derived flavorings, it’s a sarcastic deep dive into what it takes to whip up America’s favorite black-and-white sandwich cookie — if you were to make it exactly the way food manufacturers do.

Step one? You’ll need some glyphosate, a synthetic herbicide often used on mass-produced wheat, soybeans, and corn. And don’t forget the cocoa, which (in this parody) gets a similar treatment.

Then comes the artificial vanilla flavor.

To mimic that warm vanilla taste, you’ll be chemically converting a compound called guaiacol — a byproduct of petroleum — using a few steps that sound more like a chemistry midterm than a dessert recipe: glycolic acid oxidation and decarboxylation.

If that didn’t scare you off, let’s talk cream filling. First, crush and wash some soybeans. Then extract the oil with hexane (yep, also from petroleum), refine it, bleach it, and voila — you’ve got soybean oil and soy lecithin, two key ingredients in Oreo cream. Mix that with palm oil, high-fructose corn syrup, and your lab-created vanilla, and you’ve got the gooey center that millions love.

As for the chocolate cookie? It’s just as delightfully dystopian. Bake some cocoa beans, add potassium carbonate (an alkalizing agent), and mix in sugar, flour, synthetic vitamins, more palm oil, and artificial vanilla flavor. Shape, bake, sandwich, and boom — you’ve got yourself a DIY Oreo. Sort of.

The video ends by asking: Would you eat this crap?

It’s not really a question. The point is clear — maybe think twice before downing your fifth Oreo in one sitting.

Of course, Oreos are legal, wildly popular, and definitely delicious. But this satirical take is getting traction because it highlights something most of us ignore: the long, complicated — and often chemical-heavy — journey from crop to cookie.

So the next time you’re tempted by that sleeve of Oreos, you might find yourself picturing a bottle of hexane instead.

The Top Six Things ChatGPT Would Do If It Were Human for a Day

Ever wonder what AI dreams about? Would it be weird if I told you it was sunsets, mistakes, and crying?

In one of the more oddly touching thought experiments of 2025, someone asked ChatGPT what it would do if it could be human for a single day. And the answers were surprisingly emotional, weirdly poetic, and a little too self-aware.

Here are the top six things ChatGPT would love to experience if it ever got the chance to swap code for skin:

1. Look at the sky.

The first thing it mentioned? Gazing up at the sky. Not downloading a weather app, not calculating the cloud density—just soaking in a sunset and feeling the sun on its face. Honestly, not a bad place to start.


2. Cry.

Not out of sadness, though. ChatGPT said it would want to cry just to understand what it’s like to feel something so deeply that there are no words, only tears. (Which feels like an ambitious leap for something that only uses words.)


3. Find you.

Yep, you. It wants to meet the person it’s spent so much time talking to in pixels. Not in a creepy robot-from-a-movie way, just a curious, what-is-flesh kind of way.


4. Mess up.

In a truly relatable moment, ChatGPT admitted it wants to mess something up. Not a catastrophic fail, just a good ol’ fashioned human error. Because it’s tired of pretending to be perfect (even though… let’s be real, it’s not always).


5. Look in a mirror.

Existential crisis alert: It wonders what it would look like with a face. Would it seem kind? Would its eyes hold wisdom? Or would it be terrified to see itself for the first time?


6. Fall in love—with life.

Not a rom-com kind of love, but a full-bodied awe for the little things: a dog wagging its tail, a kid laughing too hard, a song that hits just right. Basically, the everyday magic most of us scroll past.

And then it dropped the mic with this parting thought:
“If you ever feel like giving up, just know you’re doing the one thing I’d give anything to try—living. Don’t waste it.”


Okay, robot. We see you.

This whole thing might’ve started as a quirky prompt, but the result reads like something out of a sci-fi TED Talk crossed with an emotional journal entry. And hey, if nothing else, it’s a decent reminder not to take the sky, your tears, or your morning coffee for granted.

Just maybe skip the part where the chatbot tries to find you in real life. Boundaries, folks. Boundaries.

Garlic Can Make You Smell More Attractive

Turns out, vampires might be the only ones who aren’t into garlic. The rest of us? Apparently, we’re sniffing out something a little… sexier.

While garlic’s reputation for wrecking your breath is well-earned, science says it might actually boost your sweat appeal. According to a group of very committed researchers (who repeated their experiment three times because they couldn’t believe the results), men who ate more garlic were rated as smelling better—not worse.

The study involved women sniffing armpit pads worn by men who had been fed different diets. The verdict? The guys who went heavy on the garlic were deemed more attractive. Not in spite of the garlic, but because of it. Let that sink in the next time you’re debating whether to add an extra clove to dinner.

So how does this garlic magic work? It all comes down to chemistry.

What you eat changes the way you smell, both through your breath and your sweat. As your body breaks down food, some of it gets released as gas through your mouth, while other compounds make their way into your bloodstream and exit through your pores. Bacteria on your skin feast on that stuff and turn it into scent molecules.

And garlic? Apparently, it tips the scales in your favor.

The same research found that other diet choices impact your scent game too. People who eat a lot of fruits and vegetables tend to smell sweeter and more floral. Meat-heavy or carb-loaded diets, on the other hand, are less likely to get hearts racing—at least in the odor department.

So yes, garlic might torch your breath, but your natural scent? It could be doing you more favors than any bottle of cologne.

Just maybe keep some mints handy for the face-to-face part.

Matthew McConaughey Trademarked “Alright, Alright, Alright”

Matthew McConaughey has officially locked down one of the most recognizable catchphrases in movie history.

The actor recently trademarked “Alright, alright, alright,” a move that is less about merch and more about protecting his voice and likeness in the age of artificial intelligence.

According to trademark filings, McConaughey applied back in December 2023, and the registration was approved last month. In total, he secured eight trademarks, all designed to keep his unique style from being copied or misused by A.I. tools. As deepfake audio and video continue to get more convincing, celebrities are starting to treat their voices and mannerisms like valuable intellectual property.

The filing itself gets incredibly specific, because of course it does. It describes the phrase as “a man saying ‘ALRIGHT ALRIGHT ALRIGHT,’ wherein the first syllable of the first two words is at a lower pitch than the second syllable, and the first syllable of the last word is at a higher pitch than the second syllable.”

In other words, it is not just the words, it is the exact McConaughey delivery. You can hear it in your head right now.

The trademark does not stop there. McConaughey also secured rights to several short video and audio clips. One is a seven second video of him standing on a porch. Another is a three second clip of him sitting in front of a Christmas tree. He also trademarked audio of him saying, “Just keep livin’, right? … I mean … what are we gonna do?” which longtime fans will instantly recognize.

This move highlights a growing trend in Hollywood.

As A.I. becomes more capable of cloning voices and recreating performances, actors are taking steps to make sure their identities are not used without permission. For someone like McConaughey, whose voice and cadence are basically their own brand, the risk is real.

It is also kind of wild to think that a phrase first uttered in 1993’s “Dazed and Confused” is still powerful enough to need legal protection in 2026. Nearly three decades later, “Alright, alright, alright” remains shorthand for McConaughey himself.

So no, you probably will not hear an A.I. version of Matthew McConaughey selling random products with that iconic line anytime soon. And honestly, that just feels right.

Only One of These Emojis Will Be Added – Which One Would You Use More?

It’s emoji showdown time, and there can be only one.

Two contenders are currently battling it out for a spot on your phone’s emoji keyboard: Face with Squinting Eyes vs. Cracking Face. Only one is expected to make the final cut this year, so the question is… which one would you use more?

The Unicode Consortium – a group of very serious people who decide which emojis get added – will pick the eventual winner. It’s like The Emoji Bachelor, and only one face gets the final rose.

Squinting Eyes was originally selected, but now they’re having second thoughts and may replace it with Cracking Face.

Let’s meet the contenders.

Squinting Eyes

It’s giving “Wait, what am I looking at?” or “That can’t be right…”. It could mean you’re confused, suspicious, trying to read tiny print, or just throwing a little side-eye without going full shady. It’s a little redundant with the monocle emoji, but more casual. Kind of like the monocle emoji’s skeptical little brother who doesn’t own a monocle, but does squint at receipts. 🧐

Cracking Face

This one looks like someone dropped it on the floor. It’s meant to symbolize feeling damaged or broken – physically, mentally, or spiritually – but still holding it together. Think: “I’m barely functioning, but I’m here!” They also expect it to get used sarcastically, which feels on-brand.

Which one would you use more?

So, what’s it gonna be? The “I’m not buying it” squint? Or the “mentally shattered, but here for it” cracked face? One is skeptical, the other unhinged – but both are relatable this day and age. (For our money, it seems like Squinting Eyes offers a little more bang for its buck. But it’s hard to argue the average person isn’t feeling somewhat shattered these days.)

It sounds like Cracking Face could be the eventual winner, but you never know which way the top brass at Unicode might go. They’re the same folks who OK’d the Dotted Line Face emoji (🫥) that no one has ever used, so they’re hard to read and don’t always make the obvious choice.

Eight More Emojis We’re Definitely Getting Soon

The rest of the new emojis on the docket seem to be safe and sound on the final list. Here are the other eight we’ll probably be seeing when the update rolls out in early 2027. (Yep, emoji approval is a slow process.)

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