Top 6 Biggest Fads of 1983 That Took Over America

Top 6 Biggest Fads of 1983 That Took Over America
Smells Like Gen X • Fads of the 1980s

Top 6 Biggest Fads of 1983

By 1983, the decade had stopped asking permission and started acting like it owned the room. This was the year of sidewalk dance battles, Mr. T cereal boxes, Valley Girl talk in places nowhere near California, jelly shoes at the mall, Swatches on teenage wrists, and enough Jheri Curl sheen to light up the whole block.

Why 1983 Hit So Hard

1983 felt louder, brighter, and way more performative than the years right before it. The trends were visible, easy to imitate, and perfect for showing everybody exactly who you thought you were. That is a big reason the year still feels so alive in memory.

#6 Jheri Curls #5 Jelly Shoes #4 Swatch Watches #3 Valley Girl Talk #2 Mr. T Mania #1 Breakdancing

Why these were the biggest fads of 1983

Some years have trends. 1983 had full-blown behavior. People did not just notice what was hot. They tried it on, talked like it, bought it, copied it, and worked it into daily life whether it made sense or not. That is the difference between something being popular and something being a fad.

What stands out about 1983 is how much of it lived out in public. This was not a quiet year. You saw the fads in school hallways, in mall parking lots, in TV commercials, on cereal boxes, at birthday parties, and in the way kids and teenagers suddenly started carrying themselves. A watch became a personality. A hairstyle became a maintenance plan. A dance move became a social event.

And if you were there, you remember that a lot of this stuff hit fast. One minute it felt like a thing a few people were into. Then, practically overnight, everybody knew about it. Everybody had an opinion. Everybody wanted in, or pretended they were too cool for it while still paying attention. That is 1983 in a nutshell.

Gen X Note

1983 had a very specific energy: mall-heavy, TV-heavy, music-heavy, and not remotely shy about any of it. The year felt like people were constantly trying on a louder version of themselves. Clothes were trying harder. Hair was trying harder. Slang was trying harder. Even dancing had become competitive.

That is why this list works. These were not just products or passing interests. They were little identity markers. Everybody knew somebody wearing them, quoting them, attempting them, or building an entire personality around them for at least six straight months.

The countdown

  1. #6 Jheri curlsThe glossy, carefully maintained hair craze that became one of the most recognizable looks of the era.
  2. #5 Jelly shoes / jelliesBright plastic mall shoes that felt cheap, fun, and weirdly irresistible.
  3. #4 Swatch watchesColorful, youthful, collectible watches that turned wrists into little fashion statements.
  4. #3 Valley Girl talkSuddenly everybody was saying “like,” “totally,” “for sure,” and “gag me with a spoon” whether they belonged in a mall in Encino or not.
  5. #2 Mr. T maniaCatchphrases, cereal boxes, gold chains, and half the country walking around saying “I pity the fool.”
  6. #1 BreakdancingThe year of the worm, backspins, freezes, cardboard circles, and kids trying to dance like their limbs were made of rubber.
Jheri curls fad in 1983
#6 Biggest Fad

Jheri Curls

Why it hitHair, identity, style, upkeep
1983 anchorOne of the most visible looks of the year
Why it matteredThe hairstyle itself became the statement

You did not end up with a Jheri Curl by accident. That was a choice, a process, and a commitment. By 1983, the look had become one of the most recognizable style signals around — glossy, defined, deliberate, and impossible to miss once somebody walked in the room. It was not subtle hair. It was hair with an entrance.

That is part of why it qualifies as a real fad instead of just background style. A Jheri Curl did not blend in. It announced itself. You saw it in music culture, on television, in neighborhoods, in clubs, in photos, and in the broader visual language of the era. The look had presence, and in a year as image-conscious as 1983, presence counted for a lot.

There was also the maintenance side of it, which anybody who lived through that period remembers. This was not wash-and-go hair. It came with product, upkeep, shine, and all the little hassles that came with trying to keep the look looking right. That extra effort is part of what made it memorable. The style did not just say you cared about how you looked. It said you were willing to work for the effect.

Jelly shoes fad in 1983
#5 Biggest Fad

Jelly Shoes, or Jellies

Why it hitMall fashion, color, novelty, teen appeal
1983 anchorBright plastic shoe craze
Why it matteredFashion got playful and a little ridiculous

Let’s be honest: jelly shoes were kind of absurd, which is exactly why they worked. Bright plastic footwear should not have become a full-blown fashion moment, but 1983 was more than willing to give it a shot. Jellies looked fun, cheap, colorful, and just weird enough to feel current. They had major mall energy, and that alone gave them a fighting chance.

Part of the appeal was that they were easy. You did not need a whole new wardrobe. You just needed one unmistakable little fashion detail that told everybody you were paying attention. That is classic fad territory. One object, instantly recognizable, easy to buy into, and impossible to mistake for anything else.

And if you wore them, you remember that half the charm was how impractical they could be. They were not timeless. They were not elegant. They were not pretending to be either of those things. Jellies felt young, a little silly, and totally of the moment, which made them perfect for a year that was leaning hard into color, novelty, and visible trend-chasing.

Swatch watch fad in 1983
#4 Biggest Fad

Swatch Watches

Why it hitAccessories, color, collecting, youth appeal
1983 anchorBreakout year in style culture
Why it matteredA watch became a fashion move

A watch used to suggest you were punctual. Swatch helped turn it into a personality choice. By 1983, watches were no longer just practical little tools living quietly on somebody’s wrist. They were colorful, playful, visible, and collectible. That changed the whole vibe immediately.

The beauty of Swatch was that it made something ordinary feel current again. You were not just checking the time. You were showing off a little piece of taste. Something bright. Something youthful. Something that looked like you chose it because it matched your mood, not because you needed to be somewhere at 3:15.

That is why the fad had real legs. Swatch fit perfectly into the decade’s appetite for color, image, and little status-coded accessories. You could collect them, compare them, coordinate them, and use them as one more little signal that you were plugged into what was hot. For a small object, they did a lot of social work.

Valley Girl talk fad in 1983
#3 Biggest Fad

Valley Girl Talk

Why it hitSlang, attitude, parody, teen voice
1983 anchorValley Girl movie year
Why it matteredA regional voice became a national performance

By 1983, Valley Girl talk had fully escaped California and was running loose across the country. All of a sudden people who had never been west of Phoenix were tossing “like” into every sentence, saying “totally” and “for sure” like they had been born in a mall parking lot, and cracking out “gag me with a spoon” the minute anything annoyed them. It was everywhere, and it was not quiet about it.

That is what made it such a good fad. It did not require money. It did not require talent. You did not need to buy a product or learn a skill. You just needed a voice and the willingness to lean into the performance. That made it incredibly easy to spread through schools, movies, malls, and every other place where people were already trying on versions of themselves.

The funny part is that even the people mocking it were helping it spread. You would hear somebody do the voice as a joke, stretch out a “like, oh my God,” roll their eyes, say “grody,” then turn around and accidentally start talking that way for real. Once that happens, the fad is already in the bloodstream. In 1983, Valley Girl talk did not just live in dialogue. It lived in imitation.

Mr. T mania in 1983
#2 Biggest Fad

Mr. T Mania

Why it hitTV, catchphrases, merch, attitude
1983 anchorPeak larger-than-life pop-culture presence
Why it matteredHe became a whole personality template

There were stars, and then there was Mr. T. By 1983, he was not just famous. He was a full-blown force of nature. The haircut, the gold chains, the voice, the scowl, the catchphrases — everything about him was oversized in exactly the way pop culture wanted at that moment. He did not enter a scene. He dominated it.

And the phrase was everywhere. You could not go five feet without hearing somebody say, “I pity the fool,” usually in a terrible imitation voice and usually from somebody who had no business trying it. Kids said it. Adults said it. People who did not even know where it came from were saying it. That is when you know a person has turned into a fad all by himself.

What pushed this into true mania was the spillover. Mr. T was in cereal aisles, in impressions, in jokes, in advertising, in playground conversations, in kids trying to copy the look with whatever plastic chains or costume junk they could scrape together. He felt bigger than the show, bigger than the role, bigger than the catchphrase. In 1983, Mr. T was not just a celebrity. He was an entire mood.

Breakdancing craze in 1983
#1 Biggest Fad

Breakdancing

Why it hitDance, music, performance, imitation
1983 anchorMainstream breakout year
Why it wonIt turned public space into a stage

You knew breakdancing had gone fully mainstream the minute people started trying it in places that were clearly not designed for it. Sidewalks. Schoolyards. Parking lots. Basement floors. Somebody always had cardboard. Somebody always had a boombox. And somebody was always about to attempt the worm, a backspin, a freeze, or some half-invented move they were absolutely certain would impress the crowd.

That is why it lands at number one. Breakdancing was visual, competitive, public, and contagious. You did not just watch it. You gathered around it. You reacted to it. You tried it yourself even if you had no business doing that on concrete in cheap sneakers. Most kids were not exactly pulling off perfect windmills or headspins, but that did not slow the fad down for a second. Half the point was the attempt.

More than anything else on this list, breakdancing captures the physical energy of 1983. It turned ordinary space into stage space. It made kids feel like performers. It made spectators feel like they ought to become performers. And once a fad starts recruiting people that aggressively, it stops being something you merely notice. It becomes something you live around.

Rewind Verdict

1983 felt like the year the early ’80s stopped warming up and started showing off. Breakdancing turned sidewalks into stages. Mr. T became a one-man pop-culture event. Valley Girl talk changed the sound of everyday conversation. Swatch made watches fun again. Jellies proved plastic shoes could somehow be a trend. And Jheri curls made hair itself part of the performance.

That is why this lineup feels right. These were not just things people liked in 1983. They were things people wore, copied, quoted, attempted, and folded into how they moved through the world while the year was actually happening.

1983 Fads FAQ

Why is breakdancing ranked above Mr. T mania?
Because breakdancing had the strongest imitation factor. It spread into actual behavior, public space, and everyday life in a way that makes it feel like the purest fad on the list.
Why rank Mr. T above Valley Girl talk?
Because Mr. T had broader mainstream saturation. He crossed TV, merch, advertising, impressions, and general pop-culture presence in a way that reached just about everybody.
Are jelly shoes really bigger than Jheri curls?
They are more broadly readable as a fad item for the year. Jheri curls were hugely visible, but they function more like a style wave. Jellies behave more like a classic buy-it-now mall fad.
Could Swatch watches be ranked higher?
Absolutely, depending on whether you want to emphasize fashion and accessories more heavily. They were a major 1983 fad. I keep them at four because the top three had even stronger cultural spillover.

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