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15 fads that completely took over the early 2000s

15 Fads That Completely Took Over the Early 2000s

The early 2000s had a very specific kind of chaos. It sat between the offline world and the always-online one, so trends spread fast, burned bright, and often looked questionable almost immediately after.

These 15 fads captured that stretch perfectly. Some came from pop culture, some came from early internet habits, and a few still show up in old photos that deserve a brief moment of silence.

Lance Bass signed Nsync Lunch Box
Openverse

15. Frosted tips and chunky highlights

Early-2000s hair did not aim for subtlety. Frosted tips, thick streaks, and heavily highlighted layers showed up everywhere, helped along by pop stars and reality-TV fashion. The goal was contrast, not softness.

Myspace tshirt
Openverse

14. MySpace profiles

Before Instagram feeds and TikTok edits, there was MySpace. Users learned basic HTML just to add profile songs, glitter graphics, and backgrounds that often made the page harder to read than a tax form. Personal branding definitely started early.

trucker cap
Pexels

13. Von Dutch hats and trucker caps

Von Dutch trucker hats became one of the decade’s most visible fashion fads. A few celebrity sightings helped, but the real appeal was simple—giant logos, casual styling, and a look that felt both expensive and effortless. It was rarely either.

aim away messages
Openverse

12. AIM away messages

AIM turned the away message into a social event. People packed them with song lyrics, vague complaints, inside jokes, and just enough mystery to make someone wonder whether the message was about them. Sometimes it clearly was.

pile of jeans
Pexels

11. Low-rise jeans

Low-rise jeans became one of the defining fashion choices of the era. They showed up everywhere, from red carpets to mall stores, and somehow convinced a generation that constant wardrobe adjustment was a fair trade for being on trend.

motorola flip phone
Openverse

10. Motorola Razr flip phones

The Motorola Razr became one of the signature gadgets of the mid-2000s after its 2004 launch. It looked sleek, felt futuristic for the time, and made ending a call by snapping the phone shut feel far more dramatic than it needed to.

juicy coutoure tracksuits
Openverse

9. Juicy Couture tracksuits

Juicy Couture tracksuits turned velour into a full lifestyle. Matching sets, oversized sunglasses, and a logo that never exactly whispered made the look impossible to miss. Comfort was part of the pitch. So was being noticed.

live strong bracelet
Openverse

8. Livestrong bracelets

The yellow Livestrong bracelet started as a cancer-awareness fundraiser tied to Lance Armstrong’s foundation and Nike. It then became a full trend, and soon silicone wristbands were stacked halfway up people’s arms for every cause, team, and message imaginable.

flip phones
Openverse

7. Custom flip-phone ringtones

Before streaming and smartphones took over, your ringtone said a lot about you. People paid to download short clips of popular songs, then waited for their phones to ring in public, as if it were a carefully planned personality reveal.

duck face selfies
Pexels

6. Duck-face selfies

The duck-face selfie became one of the era’s most recognizable poses, especially in mirror shots taken on digital cameras and early phones. It was treated like a legitimate photo strategy for a while, and that is probably enough said.

A captivating black and white portrait of a woman swimming in the ocean.
Photo by Pelageia Zelenina

5. Chokers and puka shell necklaces

Accessories in the early 2000s usually split into two camps. You either went with puka shells and a beachy look or leaned toward chokers and a darker pop-rock style. Either way, understatement was not doing much.

blogging
Pexels

4. Blogging on Xanga or LiveJournal

Before influencers built brands, people built online diaries. Xanga and LiveJournal gave users space for long posts, coded crush references, song lyrics, and usernames that sounded much more dramatic than everyday life usually was.

pop punk
Openverse

3. Pop-punk style everywhere

Pop-punk shaped more than playlists in the early 2000s. It shaped mall fashion, too, with band tees, studded belts, Converse, wristbands, and heavy eyeliner becoming a full uniform for anyone who wanted to look at least mildly rebellious.

watching commercials
Pexels

2. “Whassup?!” everywhere

Budweiser’s “Whassup?!” campaign started in 1999, but the catchphrase rolled straight into the early 2000s and stayed there. People repeated it in school hallways, on landlines, and across living rooms long after the joke should have retired.

disco ball
Openverse

1. Blinged-out everything

The early 2000s loved sparkle with no real upper limit. Phones, jeans, belts, handbags, nails, and accessories all picked up rhinestones, metallic finishes, or extra shine, making this a fitting final entry because it captures the whole era in one move.

If something could be flashier, people usually made it happen. In that sense, this trend works as a neat summary of the whole period—bold, excessive, and completely unafraid of being a lot.

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This article originally appeared on Resourcebuzz and was syndicated by MediaFeed.co.

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