15 90s TV Catchphrases That Live Rent-Free in Our Heads
Viewers didn’t just watch 90s TV—they waited for it. Specifically, they waited for that one line. The catchphrase. The moment a character said the thing, everyone at school would repeat the next day (poorly, but enthusiastically).
Some of these became cultural staples. Others made absolutely no sense outside the show. All of them are permanently lodged in our brains.

15. “Oh My God! They Killed Kenny!” – South Park
If Kenny had a loyalty card, he’d have earned a free resurrection by episode three. This line became a running gag and somehow never got old, despite being about a child meeting cartoonishly violent ends on a regular basis.

14. “Did I Do That?” – Family Matters
Steve Urkel absolutely did that. Every time. The question wasn’t if he caused chaos—it was how much damage he managed before asking this with zero self-awareness.

13. “Is That Your Final Answer?” – Who Wants to Be a Millionaire
Few sentences have ever caused more sweating in America. Regis Philbin turned this into a full psychological event, stretching a yes-or-no question into pure televised suspense.

12. “Are You Hungry, Dear?” – Everybody Loves Raymond
Marie wasn’t asking. She was judging. This line was less about food and more about reminding everyone that no one, in her opinion, could cook as well as she could.

11. “You Dumb Babies!” – Rugrats
Angelica walked so every reality TV villain could run. This insult was delivered with the kind of confidence only a spoiled toddler antagonist can muster.

10. “Cool.” – Beavis and Butt-Head
A masterclass in doing the absolute least. This one-word catchphrase somehow carried entire conversations, which feels very on-brand for two guys who also thought music videos were high art.

9. “It Stinks!” – The Critic
Jay Sherman said what everyone was thinking—just louder and with more commitment. A brutally honest review summed up in two words. Yelp could never.

8. “How Rude!” – Full House
Stephanie Tanner’s go-to reaction to basically anything mildly inconvenient. Dramatic? Yes. Relatable? Also yes.

7. “Time Out!” / “Time In.” – Saved by the Bell
Zack Morris invented breaking the fourth wall and hitting pause on reality like it was a remote control. Honestly, we’re still waiting for this feature to be added to real life.

6. “Hi-De-Ho There, Neighbor!” – Home Improvement
Wilson delivered wisdom and neighborly greetings while somehow never fully revealing his face. The real mystery of the 90s wasn’t aliens—it was what Wilson actually looked like.

5. “You Know What I’m Sayin’?” – The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air
Will Smith could sell any idea with this line, even the questionable ones. Spoiler: Most of them were questionable.

4. “Feeny! Fe-he-he-heeny!” – Boy Meets World
Eric Matthews turned yelling your teacher’s name into an art form. Equal parts annoying and iconic—which, to be fair, describes Eric perfectly.

3. “Engage!” / “Make It So.” – Star Trek: The Next Generation
Captain Picard made leadership sound effortless. Calm, confident, and somehow making space travel feel like a well-run meeting.

2. “Eat My Shorts!” – The Simpsons
Bart Simpson’s rebellion in four words. Crude, simple, and exactly what you’d expect from a kid who made detention a personality trait.

1. “How You Doin’?” – Friends
Joey Tribbiani turned three words into a full personality. It shouldn’t work. It absolutely does. Delivery: everything.
Some of these catchphrases were clever. Some were ridiculous. A few made no logical sense whatsoever. But all of them did exactly what they were supposed to do—stick.
And if you just read through this list without hearing at least five of them in your head… You might need to rewatch a little 90s TV.
Read More:
- 30 Throwback Moments Only ’80s Kids Will Understand
- If You Grew Up in the ’70s, These 30 Things Will Hit Home
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This article originally appeared on Resourcebuzz and was syndicated by MediaFeed.co.
