But the internet has a basement. And the basement has no windows.
We don’t know which version is real. The domain is parked. The history is scrubbed. And that ambiguity is precisely the point. Let’s be honest: for a brief, ugly period in the 2000s, there was a market for this. Remember Bumfights ? The rise of shock video aggregation sites? The phrase "World Star Hip Hop" becoming a verb for watching someone get hurt? Fightingkids.com Website
Let the dead link rest. And let us be better than the curiosity that built it. What old, strange domain names have you stumbled upon that made you pause? Share in the comments. Let’s excavate the digital past together. But the internet has a basement
The internet gave us a place called Fightingkids.com . But the real domain name was always AdultsChoosing.com . The domain is parked
We live in an era of hyper-curated childhoods. Blue light glasses, mindfulness apps, and playdates scheduled three weeks in advance. The phrase "fighting kids" today conjures images of school zero-tolerance policies, parent-teacher conferences about emotional regulation, and worried Google searches about aggression.
But the question remains.
But the internet has a basement. And the basement has no windows.
We don’t know which version is real. The domain is parked. The history is scrubbed. And that ambiguity is precisely the point. Let’s be honest: for a brief, ugly period in the 2000s, there was a market for this. Remember Bumfights ? The rise of shock video aggregation sites? The phrase "World Star Hip Hop" becoming a verb for watching someone get hurt?
Let the dead link rest. And let us be better than the curiosity that built it. What old, strange domain names have you stumbled upon that made you pause? Share in the comments. Let’s excavate the digital past together.
The internet gave us a place called Fightingkids.com . But the real domain name was always AdultsChoosing.com .
We live in an era of hyper-curated childhoods. Blue light glasses, mindfulness apps, and playdates scheduled three weeks in advance. The phrase "fighting kids" today conjures images of school zero-tolerance policies, parent-teacher conferences about emotional regulation, and worried Google searches about aggression.
But the question remains.