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

From Killer Snowmen to Grumpy Cat, These Are the Worst Holiday Movies Ranked

If you need a little schadenfreude to go with your holiday cheer, buckle up.

Paste magazine has officially crowned the worst Christmas movies ever made, and it is a spectacular parade of cinematic coal. If you love bad movies, cult classics, or anything involving killer snowmen, this is basically your Super Bowl.

This rundown has everything from campy horror to sequels literally no one asked for. At the top of the list is the beautifully awful “Silent Night, Deadly Night Part 2”, the 1987 gem best known for the line “Garbage day!” If you’ve somehow never witnessed that scene, treat yourself.

What makes this ranking especially fun is the mix of styles. You get low-budget slashers, strange sequels, and those “How did this get made?” titles that only resurface during the holidays.

Here’s the Bottom 20:

  1. “Silent Night, Deadly Night Part 2” (1987)
  2. “Elves” (1989)
  3. “Santa Claus” (1959)
  4. “Last Ounce of Courage” (2012)
  5. “A Karate Christmas Miracle” (2019)
  6. “Jingle All the Way 2” (2014)
  7. “Santa with Muscles” (1996)
  8. “Santa Claws” (1996)
  9. “A Christmas Story 2” (2012)
  10. “Jack Frost 2: Revenge of the Mutant Killer Snowman” (2000)
  11. “Santa Claus Conquers the Martians” (1964)
  12. “Deck the Halls” (2006)
  13. “Surviving Christmas” (2004)
  14. “Saving Christmas” (2014)
  15. “Christmas Evil” (1980)
  16. “The Nutcracker in 3D” (2009)
  17. “I’ll Be Home for Christmas” (1998)
  18. “Santa’s Slay” (2005)
  19. “Grumpy Cat’s Worst Christmas Ever” (2014)
  20. “Rudolph and Frosty’s Christmas in July” (1979)

If you use the holidays as an excuse to binge both classics and catastrophes, this list is your new watch guide. Just maybe pace yourself, or risk having “Jack Frost 2” haunt your dreams.

’70s Songs We Love to Hate (And Secretly Still Sing Along To)

The 1970s gave us iconic artists and legendary albums—but not every track has stood the test of time. A lifestyle site called FamilyMinded.com curated a list of the “worst” songs of the decade, with some big names on the chopping block.  These tracks weren’t necessarily flops when they debuted—in fact, many were hits—but they’ve since developed a reputation as cheesy, annoying, or downright baffling.

Here are the 15 songs that made the list:

  1. “Let ‘Em In” – Paul McCartney and Wings (1976)
  2. “Feelings” – Morris Albert (1975)
  3. “Billy Don’t Be a Hero” – Bo Donaldson and the Heywoods (1974)
  4. “Muskrat Love” – Captain and Tennille (1976)
  5. “(You’re) Having My Baby” – Paul Anka (1974)
  6. “Convoy” – C.W. McCall (1975)
  7. “The Morning After” – Maureen McGovern (1973)
  8. “The Streak” – Ray Stevens (1974)
  9. “Seasons in the Sun” – Terry Jacks (1974)
  10. “Sing” – The Carpenters (1973)
  11. “Afternoon Delight” – Starland Vocal Band (1976)
  12. “Lovin’ You” – Minnie Riperton (1974)
  13. “Escape (The Piña Colada Song)” – Rupert Holmes (1979)
  14. “Disco Duck” – Rick Dees and His Cast of Idiots (1976)
  15. “Ben” – Michael Jackson (1972)

For music fans, the list is a mix of guilty pleasures, novelty tracks, and polarizing ballads.  “Muskrat Love” and “Disco Duck” are frequent targets of ridicule, thanks to their odd subject matter and production quirks.  Meanwhile, “Afternoon Delight” and “The Piña Colada Song” have been re-evaluated as kitschy or camp, despite their success at the time.

And it’s not just novelty songs or syrupy ballads that get called out—big-name artists like Paul McCartney and Michael Jackson are also featured, proving that even legends have their misses.

Of course, calling something the “worst” is subjective.  One person’s cringe is another’s nostalgia.  But if you’re building a playlist of infamous ’70s tunes to revisit (or avoid), this list offers a solid place to start.

So whether you’re laughing, groaning, or secretly adding these to your queue, these songs remain part of pop culture—whether we like it or not.

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