The Top Questions Kids Google About Adults

From budgeting to packing hacks, here’s everything you need to know to make travel stress-free and enjoyable.

Google just dropped some more of its eye-opening (and occasionally soul-crushing) data about what people have been searching lately—and this batch focuses specifically on adults. More precisely, what kids are Googling about adults.

It turns out that when kids go online to figure us out, they’re not exactly pulling punches. Google Trends revealed two Top 5 lists of questions starting with “Why are adults so…” and “Why are adults always…”

The results are a blend of confusion, concern, and pure teenage side-eye. 👀

Top 5 Questions Starting with “Why Are Adults So…?”

“Why are adults so mean?”

From a kid’s point of view, “mean” often translates to “won’t let me do what I want.” Whether it’s saying no to junk food, enforcing bedtime, or insisting on homework before screen time, parents and teachers can come off as the villains in a child’s daily drama. But behind every “mean” adult is usually someone trying to teach boundaries—even if it doesn’t always feel that way to the person being told “no.”

“Why are adults so obsessed with Disney?”

This one might not just be kids asking—it’s possible some adults are Googling it about themselves. For younger people, it can be strange to see grown-ups watching cartoons, collecting themed merch, or planning entire vacations around Disney parks. But for many adults, Disney represents a connection to childhood joy, nostalgia, and simpler times. It’s comfort food for the soul, even if it comes with mouse ears and a catchy soundtrack.

“Why are adults so stupid?”

Ouch. But let’s be honest. When you’re a kid and the adults around you don’t understand the latest slang, struggle with basic tech, or offer advice that seems completely out of touch, it’s easy to jump to conclusions. Kids live in a fast-evolving world, and sometimes adults just can’t keep up. “Stupid” might just mean “not fluent in TikTok.”

“Why are adults so tired?”

Kids have energy to burn, so it’s confusing to watch their grown-ups yawn through life. But between work, chores, parenting, financial stress, and the occasional sleepless night (or three), being tired is practically part of the adult uniform. To a kid, it may seem mysterious. To an adult, it’s just Tuesday.

“Why are adults so condescending to kids?”

There’s a reason this one made the list—it reflects a real frustration. Kids don’t like being talked down to, and they’re quick to notice when they’re not being taken seriously. But from the adult side, it’s often more about trying to simplify things than being rude. Unfortunately, it doesn’t always come across that way. When you’re 10 and someone explains something like you’re 4, it’s easy to get annoyed.


Top 5 Questions Starting with “Why Are Adults Always…?”

“Why are adults always so happy?”

They are??? This one might be more perception than reality. To kids, adults who are smiling at work or pretending everything’s fine might seem genuinely joyful all the time. But a lot of it’s performative—adults put on a brave face to keep things moving. Underneath that smile is anxiety, stress, or just a desperate need for coffee.

“Why are adults always late to trends?”

Kids are usually on the front lines of internet culture. By the time a meme hits your mom’s Facebook feed, it’s been dead for weeks. Adults tend to catch up late because their attention is divided—jobs, families, responsibilities. Plus, not everyone is living in the fast lane of social media 24/7. From a kid’s lens, though, it feels like adults are always a few beats behind.

“Why are adults always tired?”

Yes, it showed up on both lists—and that says something. Clearly, kids notice how drained their parents, teachers, and relatives seem. It’s a reflection of modern adult life, which rarely includes enough rest. When you’re juggling multiple roles and rarely putting yourself first, fatigue just becomes part of the package.

“Why are adults always busy?”

To a child, it might feel like adults are always rushing from one thing to the next—too busy to play, too busy to talk, too busy to breathe. And that’s not far off. Between work, errands, emails, and side hustles, many grown-ups are stuck in a never-ending to-do list. It can leave kids feeling overlooked, which might be what’s really behind the question.

“Why are adults always so unreasonable?”

This likely pops up after hearing “no” one too many times. Adults might seem unreasonable when they set limits that don’t make sense from a kid’s perspective—like no phones at dinner or no video games after bedtime. But what feels unfair to a tween is often a decision based on experience, concern, or just plain exhaustion. And yes, adults can also just be stubborn sometimes (or flat-out wrong).

Whether it’s exhaustion, caffeine dependency, or our refusal to let go of animated movies, kids are clearly trying to make sense of adult behavior—and really, we don’t blame them. Honestly, kids… most of us are kinda just winging it.

Five TikTok Creators We Love Right Now

TikTok is overflowing with talent, laughs, and adventure – but sometimes your algorithm fails you, and it’s hard to know where to start scrolling.

We’ve rounded up five of our favorite accounts that deliver everything from jaw-dropping acrobatics to hilarious comedy and even someone from the future?? Here’s who should be on your For You Page right now.


Bransen Gates (@bransennn)

This NYC-based actor and “Oscar-winning lip-syncer” is a great follow. He delivers high-energy, theatrical shorts that’ll have you smiling before you even hit pause. From Broadway vibes to buzzy duets, every clip feels like a mini-show.

@bransennn

Posting the full compilation (including the one that was removed from this app) — and there’s plenty more where that came from 😘 [Please watch until the end so I can finally make some coin]

♬ original sound – Bransen Gates

Jacob Acrobat (@jacob_acrobat)

This creator blends circus-level moves with jaw-dropping visuals. Each video is a gravity-defying spectacle—parkour, flips, and “how’d he do that?” He’s also funny.


Garron Noone (@garron_music)

Meet Garron: Irish musician, comedian, and superstar. He’s one of the most hilarious people on the internet. And with the best tagline… “Follow me, I’m delicious.”


Nova Machina (@novamachinatransmissions)

The TikTok account that raises more questions than answers, transmitting “music and messages from a future on the edge of collapse.” Apparently, the future is as dystopian as our current pace suggests – and they love hard rock there. “This isn’t just music. It’s resistance.”


Natasha Travels (@theworldpursuit)

Natasha is the travel-inspo queen, especially for solo female adventurers. Her feed balances stunning locales with real, practical tips. From snowboarding the Rockies to solo trips in Antarctica, Natasha’s energy feels like a best friend inviting you along.

How Fast Could You Eat an Entire Head of Lettuce?

The University of Minnesota’s “Lettuce Club” meets each year to see who can eat a one-pound head of iceberg lettuce the fastest.

The 2025 winner took one down in 3 minutes and 30 seconds. Could you beat it?

Rick Springfield Once Killed a Guy in ‘Nam

The Jessie in “Jessie’s Girl” is frankly lucky to be alive.  Because, as we all know, Rick Springfield wanted his girl.  And Rick isn’t above smokin’ a mofo.  By the time that song came out, Rick had already taken a life. Seriously.

Back in the late ’60s, Rick was a 17-year-old kid living in Australia when his band was chosen to go entertain the troops.

Now, if you watch a lot of war movies, you know that things could get pretty lawless over in ‘Nam, and the musicians got to buddy up with the soldiers… to the point they ended up helping out during a battle.

According to Rick, in a 2012 interview:  “They said, here, you throw the mortars down.  So I threw the mortars down the tube.  And the next morning, the soldiers came running into our villa and said, ‘You got one!'”

“They said, here, you throw the mortars down.  So I threw the mortars down the tube.  And the next morning, the soldiers came running into our villa and said, ‘You got one!'”

Rick Springfield

Rick wasn’t exactly thrilled that he’d killed a guy. At the time of the 2012 interview, he still wasn’t over it. He said, “It was an enemy, it was wartime, they were sneaking up on us trying to get us. But I wasn’t in the army. I wasn’t meant to be there. It’s something that I still haven’t fully processed.”

Tom Cruise’s Secret to High-Flying Stunts? Eggs. Lots of Eggs.

When you’re hanging onto the wing of a vintage biplane flying over 120 miles an hour, you need more than nerves of steel—you need breakfast.

In “Mission: Impossible – The Final Reckoning,” Tom Cruise once again proves he’s in a league of his own when it comes to performing death-defying stunts. One standout moment shows him wing-walking on a 1940s era biplane at altitude, a feat that requires extreme physical and mental preparation—and, apparently, an enormous plate of bacon and eggs.

Cruise opened up about what goes into getting his body ready for these intense scenes. “The amount of energy it takes, I train so hard for that wing-walking,” he told People. “I’ll eat, like, sausage and almost a dozen eggs and bacon and toast and coffee and fluids. Oh, I’m eating!”

His point? Fuel is essential.

“It’s cold up there. We’re at high altitude. My body is burning a lot,” Cruise added. It’s not the kind of prep most actors go through—but then again, most actors aren’t strapping themselves to airborne machinery.

Even at 62, Cruise continues to add new skills to his stunt toolkit. From piloting helicopters to playing the piano, he approaches his craft with the mindset of a lifelong student. “The wonderful thing is you’re never there. It can always be better,” he said of his constant drive to improve.

“The wonderful thing is you’re never there. It can always be better.”

TOM CRUISE

Interestingly, that drive doesn’t just apply to high-octane pursuits. Cruise has also taken an interest in dance—not as a gimmick, but as another serious discipline. “I’m interested in that art form,” he explained. “The teachers understand how to move a body, what the shape does, and the emotion it can create in others.”

While it might seem like an unusual addition to his action-hero resume, Cruise’s embrace of dance fits neatly into his broader philosophy: mastering the body as a tool for storytelling, whether that means leaping from buildings or hitting the perfect pirouette.

Cruise’s extreme stunt work has long been a hallmark of the Mission: Impossible franchise, and his hands-on approach is a major reason fans keep coming back. With each film, he seems more determined to push boundaries—not just cinematic, but physical as well.

And yes, that includes breakfast. Would you ever fuel up for a flight like that?

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