More info: Reddit Image source: AngrilyHonorable, LexScope

#2 My favorite is that the star wrestler, who was a bully, had a one night stand with the star cheerleader years later. It resulted in a pregnancy and she now complains on Facebook that he is a deadbeat dad.

Image source: ThisQuietLife, Serg Alesenko

Image source: Anom8675309, Andrea Piacquadio

#4 Lot of em dead, some highly successful, some still have their varsity football pic as their Facebook profile picture. In my 30s

Image source: Nesurfr, Mike Bird

#5

Image source: Vitaminpartydrums, Nathan Ayoola One of my best friends was from the wrong side of the tracks, poor, had a mullet and wore Metallica shirts way before they broke into mainstream. He was extremely popular because he was crazy smart, very talented and driven. Everyone wanted to be his friend and he was very open about being nice to everyone. Many many parents were like “don’t hang out with that John Smith boy, he’s on [substances] and a bad influence” (He absolutely was not, it was the Satanic scare of the late 80s and 90s and he liked Metal Music) He worked his as off all his life and is now pretty damn wealthy with a house, wife and kids in California. When we chat it up on the phone he is the exact same person I grew up with. Crazy funny and extremely kind.

#6

Image source: sowhat4, fauxels He graduated in 1961 as an all-star athlete with letters in two sports over four years. Class and school president, homecoming king – the whole package in a very small town. He was handsome, too. Went to college on a sports scholarship and flunked out the first semester. Came home, knocked up his HS girl friend, married had two kids, and got divorced. Worked for my dad as a farmer and remarried maybe 10 years later. Dad decided to bankroll this ‘*star’ with an underwritten line of credit so the wunderkind could start grass seed farming on his own. This credit line swelled up to over $850K – in the late 70s, or nearly $4 million in today’s money. Come to find out he was buying expensive equipment and also chartering jets to Las Vegas for golf and gambling trips for his friends. He’d often be seen in bars lighting cigars with $100 bills because… why not? (Dad then cut him off and seized all his property, sold it, and managed to pay the bank most of the money from that) Fast forward to today: He’s 80, living on his (remarried) wife’s pension as a teacher and taking care of her as she developed early Alzheimer’s. His mom gave him a house and place to live forty years ago, so he has that. I looked him up on FB recently. He has as his ‘profile photo’ a fuzzy snapshot of his HS ‘Most Valuable Player’ trophy. (*he’s a cousin)

#7

Image source: BeKindAndWorkHard, Ruthson Zimmerman Small town. There are always exceptions, but most kids who were ‘popular’ were friendly, outgoing, well dressed, and emotionally stable. That happened because they came from families with more money and better educated parents. Those parents often provided better mentoring, ensured they went to college, and as a result the kids ended up professionals who did reasonably well for themselves.

Image source: GoldenFrog14, Jonathan Chng

Image source: ptbus0, Emily Ranquist

#10 They’re making askreddit posts

Image source: coolkarmabro, Brett Jordan

#11

Image source: token_bastard, Alan Levine Most popular kid in our school was a guy named Josh. Insanely outgoing and friendly, he could befriend anyone he talked to within five seconds, and always did. Active athlete, was on the football team. Straight A student. Very devout church-goer. I didn’t meet him until later in high school, where he was part of a Dungeons and Dragons game I joined. Always put on a great time role playing. While we didn’t get close, we had a couple extraordinarily memorable times during our senior year of high school, very fun and meaningful times that stood out strongly to me then during a s****y part of my life and are still remembered fondly by me twenty years later. Josh was going places, and he’d make a difference somewhere. We lost touch after high school. Three years later he fell asleep behind the wheel of his truck and hit a tree. Died on impact. Found out through another friend who’d kept up with him, and we went to his funeral. I’d never seen a church so packed full of people for something like this, hundreds and hundreds of people. From our school, from his church, from all over life, the church was legitimately full. To this day, one of my few true lifelong regrets is letting my anxiety get the better of me when Josh’s pastor asked people to come up to the mic and say something about Josh. I should’ve told everyone of our ludicrous all-nighter digging his truck out of the mud in a forest he’d gone mudding in after an evening school performance where we were all still in khakis and polos, finishing at three AM and somehow ending our bedraggled aes at IHOP after getting it out. I should’ve told everyone how we found out our DnD GM was moving away on short notice, and we high-tailed it to his place after school and literally ran out of gas in that fg truck getting there, then flooded the engine refilling it from a Jerry can, stuck with our GM who didn’t want anyone coming to say goodbye and ending up late in the evening laying in that truck bed talking about science and philosophy and religion, three teenage dudes waiting for that goddamn f**g truck to get to a drivable condition so we could say goodbye to our friend properly before he disappeared from our lives. I’m nearing forty, and I still regret not saying how great of a guy he was to a short, scrawny, long-haired metalhead weirdo like I was in high school. Because he was. He was going to make a difference. I suppose, given all the people at his funeral, he still did.

#12

Image source: BlaqSam, Pixabay Don’t know, Don’t care. Graduated in 1998, left for the Navy and never went back Don’t know what happened to any of them

Image source: OPMom21

#14

Image source: HOBTT27, Ryoji Iwata I was once on a train from NYC back to my hometown for Thanksgiving. By chance I ended up sitting next to a guy from my high school; I didn’t know him that well, as we were part of a semi-large graduating class, but we were familiar enough to chat with each other, to pass the time. He was good friends with two of the most popular dudes from our high school, and he said they were both kinda flailing in early adulthood: -One of them got broken up with by his equally popular girlfriend, right before college had started, and he just could not handle it. He would show up to her school, unannounced, and just see what she was up to & bark at any dude who talked to her. She had to threaten getting a restraining order to get him to back off. Apparently he chilled out a little bit in the ensuing years, but just really struggled to make things happen for himself outside of the high school environment. -The other did mostly fine during our college years, but really started to struggle once we all graduated & he lost the comforting structures of school. He was a handsome dude in our town, as a teen, but now, living in NYC, he was in an ocean of handsome dudes and apparently struggled a little bit not getting preferential treatment as often & not having girls interested in him after spitting a minimal amount of game. I don’t bring this up to wish ill will on either of them. I think they’re both interesting examples of how poorly prepared most people are to jump off the “cliff” of leaving high school: you’ve spent your entire life building a life & network within a very specific life structure, and then suddenly, overnight, it all goes away. I think some kids, especially ones who got popular early (like, going all the way back to 4th or 5th grade) do really struggle with the fact that one day, they’re thrust amid a sea of new people who do not perceive them as popular.

Well that gravy train ended when the county went wet and prices got competitive, problem was they apparently never saved money the whole time. Then their regulars saw that the price was much lower at the gas station compared to what they had been paying them, like 30% over SRP. They closed very quickly, all their luxury vehicles got sold but they had the house paid. They moved after a while. I saw her 3 years post graduation and she had doubled her weight and was having pics printed of her fiancé who I found out was a trust fund guy after the fact. (The souped up muscle car in his pics was a hint) He broke it off with her like a month later. Heresay was he figured out she was just there for money. Most of that info I got second hand and I was only present for the pictures part. I don’t use Facebook so I never verified anything. I also do not care to investigate, I’ve stopped letting hs bs live in my head rent free. Image source: DWGJay

#16 A girl friend of mine that I knew since kindergarten was appointed a California State Supreme Court Judge.

Image source: Shellyebellye, EKATERINA BOLOVTSOVA

#17

Image source: Cheetodude625, ThisisEngineering RAEng Lawyer. Doctor. Current NBC Anchor in Lubbock. Track and Field Coach for high school. Physical therapist. Engineer. Prison for involuntary vehicular manslaughter and DUI.

#18 They are still as clicky as they were in high school almost 20 years later. There was a whole drama around the reunion (which I wasn’t going to), the valedictorian planned a reunion, and one of the “popular kids” in planned a separate one. People keep adding me to to the fb page and I keep denying myself entry. Not interested in any of them ??

Image source: Present-Rope3683, Askar Abayev

#19 Turned out just like the rest of us.

Image source: stuntobor, Barbara Galeane Some were successful af, some discovered being a d**k had repercussions, and some took it to the bank. The real shockers are the homecoming queens. Some turned out fantastic and some ended up loony. So yeah. Turned out just like the rest of us.

#20

Image source: NewLibraryGuy, Kairos Panamá Last I heard they were failing to organize a 10 year reunion. I think it technically happened, but the facebook group where they organized it has like 5 people in it. Also, 2 of them are ministers now, and wow would I have stories to tell their congregations.

#21 He was our QB in highschool. Liked by everyone, handsome, did good in school, and was a humble person totally aware of his situation. Got married to a girl we went to school with, got a local job in a big local Industry, had a kid with her. I saw him at the gas station last time I was in town. He seems like he’s doing well.

Image source: FineHospital3, Joe Calomeni

#22 They all became Instagram influencers and started selling detox tea

Image source: AdLongjumping8403, George Milton

Image source: Monotonegent, Keira Burton

#24

M. took a break up badly, took a bad beating from the cops, took to hard [substances], found his body in the river. A. tried to get clever with 4 guys over a pool table, outside beating left him quadriplegic. P. a terrible bully, tormented dozens of kids (all younger than him) throughout all 5 years of senior school, now a social work child counsellor and all round good guy for those who don’t know. C**t. K. Professor of Science and MBE recipient. J. Couldn’t get over the death of his brother through alcoholism, so proceeded to drink himself to death, go figure. Image source: StonerFGAU

#25

Image source: squishymarshmello, Guto Macedo Was a popular ish kid: currently in school Other people in my friend group: – Dropped out of ivy league – Got pregnant in freshman year at ivy league – Dropped out of west coast CS school for a start up. Not going well – on track for med school but not currently doing well on MCAT. Considering quitting medicine – went to europe to model. Not going well Doesn’t look too good for me atm lol

25 Tales Of Where The Popular Kids Ended Up  According To Netizens - 8425 Tales Of Where The Popular Kids Ended Up  According To Netizens - 7925 Tales Of Where The Popular Kids Ended Up  According To Netizens - 8325 Tales Of Where The Popular Kids Ended Up  According To Netizens - 1925 Tales Of Where The Popular Kids Ended Up  According To Netizens - 6425 Tales Of Where The Popular Kids Ended Up  According To Netizens - 2625 Tales Of Where The Popular Kids Ended Up  According To Netizens - 4325 Tales Of Where The Popular Kids Ended Up  According To Netizens - 7125 Tales Of Where The Popular Kids Ended Up  According To Netizens - 4925 Tales Of Where The Popular Kids Ended Up  According To Netizens - 7925 Tales Of Where The Popular Kids Ended Up  According To Netizens - 8625 Tales Of Where The Popular Kids Ended Up  According To Netizens - 3025 Tales Of Where The Popular Kids Ended Up  According To Netizens - 7725 Tales Of Where The Popular Kids Ended Up  According To Netizens - 4625 Tales Of Where The Popular Kids Ended Up  According To Netizens - 4425 Tales Of Where The Popular Kids Ended Up  According To Netizens - 9725 Tales Of Where The Popular Kids Ended Up  According To Netizens - 5025 Tales Of Where The Popular Kids Ended Up  According To Netizens - 4925 Tales Of Where The Popular Kids Ended Up  According To Netizens - 7125 Tales Of Where The Popular Kids Ended Up  According To Netizens - 2625 Tales Of Where The Popular Kids Ended Up  According To Netizens - 4625 Tales Of Where The Popular Kids Ended Up  According To Netizens - 3


title: “25 Tales Of Where The Popular Kids Ended Up According To Netizens” ShowToc: true date: “2024-09-26” author: “Nancy Cheek”

More info: Reddit Image source: AngrilyHonorable, LexScope

#2 My favorite is that the star wrestler, who was a bully, had a one night stand with the star cheerleader years later. It resulted in a pregnancy and she now complains on Facebook that he is a deadbeat dad.

Image source: ThisQuietLife, Serg Alesenko

Image source: Anom8675309, Andrea Piacquadio

#4 Lot of em dead, some highly successful, some still have their varsity football pic as their Facebook profile picture. In my 30s

Image source: Nesurfr, Mike Bird

#5

Image source: Vitaminpartydrums, Nathan Ayoola One of my best friends was from the wrong side of the tracks, poor, had a mullet and wore Metallica shirts way before they broke into mainstream. He was extremely popular because he was crazy smart, very talented and driven. Everyone wanted to be his friend and he was very open about being nice to everyone. Many many parents were like “don’t hang out with that John Smith boy, he’s on [substances] and a bad influence” (He absolutely was not, it was the Satanic scare of the late 80s and 90s and he liked Metal Music) He worked his as off all his life and is now pretty damn wealthy with a house, wife and kids in California. When we chat it up on the phone he is the exact same person I grew up with. Crazy funny and extremely kind.

#6

Image source: sowhat4, fauxels He graduated in 1961 as an all-star athlete with letters in two sports over four years. Class and school president, homecoming king – the whole package in a very small town. He was handsome, too. Went to college on a sports scholarship and flunked out the first semester. Came home, knocked up his HS girl friend, married had two kids, and got divorced. Worked for my dad as a farmer and remarried maybe 10 years later. Dad decided to bankroll this ‘*star’ with an underwritten line of credit so the wunderkind could start grass seed farming on his own. This credit line swelled up to over $850K – in the late 70s, or nearly $4 million in today’s money. Come to find out he was buying expensive equipment and also chartering jets to Las Vegas for golf and gambling trips for his friends. He’d often be seen in bars lighting cigars with $100 bills because… why not? (Dad then cut him off and seized all his property, sold it, and managed to pay the bank most of the money from that) Fast forward to today: He’s 80, living on his (remarried) wife’s pension as a teacher and taking care of her as she developed early Alzheimer’s. His mom gave him a house and place to live forty years ago, so he has that. I looked him up on FB recently. He has as his ‘profile photo’ a fuzzy snapshot of his HS ‘Most Valuable Player’ trophy. (*he’s a cousin)

#7

Image source: BeKindAndWorkHard, Ruthson Zimmerman Small town. There are always exceptions, but most kids who were ‘popular’ were friendly, outgoing, well dressed, and emotionally stable. That happened because they came from families with more money and better educated parents. Those parents often provided better mentoring, ensured they went to college, and as a result the kids ended up professionals who did reasonably well for themselves.

Image source: GoldenFrog14, Jonathan Chng

Image source: ptbus0, Emily Ranquist

#10 They’re making askreddit posts

Image source: coolkarmabro, Brett Jordan

#11

Image source: token_bastard, Alan Levine Most popular kid in our school was a guy named Josh. Insanely outgoing and friendly, he could befriend anyone he talked to within five seconds, and always did. Active athlete, was on the football team. Straight A student. Very devout church-goer. I didn’t meet him until later in high school, where he was part of a Dungeons and Dragons game I joined. Always put on a great time role playing. While we didn’t get close, we had a couple extraordinarily memorable times during our senior year of high school, very fun and meaningful times that stood out strongly to me then during a s****y part of my life and are still remembered fondly by me twenty years later. Josh was going places, and he’d make a difference somewhere. We lost touch after high school. Three years later he fell asleep behind the wheel of his truck and hit a tree. Died on impact. Found out through another friend who’d kept up with him, and we went to his funeral. I’d never seen a church so packed full of people for something like this, hundreds and hundreds of people. From our school, from his church, from all over life, the church was legitimately full. To this day, one of my few true lifelong regrets is letting my anxiety get the better of me when Josh’s pastor asked people to come up to the mic and say something about Josh. I should’ve told everyone of our ludicrous all-nighter digging his truck out of the mud in a forest he’d gone mudding in after an evening school performance where we were all still in khakis and polos, finishing at three AM and somehow ending our bedraggled aes at IHOP after getting it out. I should’ve told everyone how we found out our DnD GM was moving away on short notice, and we high-tailed it to his place after school and literally ran out of gas in that fg truck getting there, then flooded the engine refilling it from a Jerry can, stuck with our GM who didn’t want anyone coming to say goodbye and ending up late in the evening laying in that truck bed talking about science and philosophy and religion, three teenage dudes waiting for that goddamn f**g truck to get to a drivable condition so we could say goodbye to our friend properly before he disappeared from our lives. I’m nearing forty, and I still regret not saying how great of a guy he was to a short, scrawny, long-haired metalhead weirdo like I was in high school. Because he was. He was going to make a difference. I suppose, given all the people at his funeral, he still did.

#12

Image source: BlaqSam, Pixabay Don’t know, Don’t care. Graduated in 1998, left for the Navy and never went back Don’t know what happened to any of them

Image source: OPMom21

#14

Image source: HOBTT27, Ryoji Iwata I was once on a train from NYC back to my hometown for Thanksgiving. By chance I ended up sitting next to a guy from my high school; I didn’t know him that well, as we were part of a semi-large graduating class, but we were familiar enough to chat with each other, to pass the time. He was good friends with two of the most popular dudes from our high school, and he said they were both kinda flailing in early adulthood: -One of them got broken up with by his equally popular girlfriend, right before college had started, and he just could not handle it. He would show up to her school, unannounced, and just see what she was up to & bark at any dude who talked to her. She had to threaten getting a restraining order to get him to back off. Apparently he chilled out a little bit in the ensuing years, but just really struggled to make things happen for himself outside of the high school environment. -The other did mostly fine during our college years, but really started to struggle once we all graduated & he lost the comforting structures of school. He was a handsome dude in our town, as a teen, but now, living in NYC, he was in an ocean of handsome dudes and apparently struggled a little bit not getting preferential treatment as often & not having girls interested in him after spitting a minimal amount of game. I don’t bring this up to wish ill will on either of them. I think they’re both interesting examples of how poorly prepared most people are to jump off the “cliff” of leaving high school: you’ve spent your entire life building a life & network within a very specific life structure, and then suddenly, overnight, it all goes away. I think some kids, especially ones who got popular early (like, going all the way back to 4th or 5th grade) do really struggle with the fact that one day, they’re thrust amid a sea of new people who do not perceive them as popular.

Well that gravy train ended when the county went wet and prices got competitive, problem was they apparently never saved money the whole time. Then their regulars saw that the price was much lower at the gas station compared to what they had been paying them, like 30% over SRP. They closed very quickly, all their luxury vehicles got sold but they had the house paid. They moved after a while. I saw her 3 years post graduation and she had doubled her weight and was having pics printed of her fiancé who I found out was a trust fund guy after the fact. (The souped up muscle car in his pics was a hint) He broke it off with her like a month later. Heresay was he figured out she was just there for money. Most of that info I got second hand and I was only present for the pictures part. I don’t use Facebook so I never verified anything. I also do not care to investigate, I’ve stopped letting hs bs live in my head rent free. Image source: DWGJay

#16 A girl friend of mine that I knew since kindergarten was appointed a California State Supreme Court Judge.

Image source: Shellyebellye, EKATERINA BOLOVTSOVA

#17

Image source: Cheetodude625, ThisisEngineering RAEng Lawyer. Doctor. Current NBC Anchor in Lubbock. Track and Field Coach for high school. Physical therapist. Engineer. Prison for involuntary vehicular manslaughter and DUI.

#18 They are still as clicky as they were in high school almost 20 years later. There was a whole drama around the reunion (which I wasn’t going to), the valedictorian planned a reunion, and one of the “popular kids” in planned a separate one. People keep adding me to to the fb page and I keep denying myself entry. Not interested in any of them ??

Image source: Present-Rope3683, Askar Abayev

#19 Turned out just like the rest of us.

Image source: stuntobor, Barbara Galeane Some were successful af, some discovered being a d**k had repercussions, and some took it to the bank. The real shockers are the homecoming queens. Some turned out fantastic and some ended up loony. So yeah. Turned out just like the rest of us.

#20

Image source: NewLibraryGuy, Kairos Panamá Last I heard they were failing to organize a 10 year reunion. I think it technically happened, but the facebook group where they organized it has like 5 people in it. Also, 2 of them are ministers now, and wow would I have stories to tell their congregations.

#21 He was our QB in highschool. Liked by everyone, handsome, did good in school, and was a humble person totally aware of his situation. Got married to a girl we went to school with, got a local job in a big local Industry, had a kid with her. I saw him at the gas station last time I was in town. He seems like he’s doing well.

Image source: FineHospital3, Joe Calomeni

#22 They all became Instagram influencers and started selling detox tea

Image source: AdLongjumping8403, George Milton

Image source: Monotonegent, Keira Burton

#24

M. took a break up badly, took a bad beating from the cops, took to hard [substances], found his body in the river. A. tried to get clever with 4 guys over a pool table, outside beating left him quadriplegic. P. a terrible bully, tormented dozens of kids (all younger than him) throughout all 5 years of senior school, now a social work child counsellor and all round good guy for those who don’t know. C**t. K. Professor of Science and MBE recipient. J. Couldn’t get over the death of his brother through alcoholism, so proceeded to drink himself to death, go figure. Image source: StonerFGAU

#25

Image source: squishymarshmello, Guto Macedo Was a popular ish kid: currently in school Other people in my friend group: – Dropped out of ivy league – Got pregnant in freshman year at ivy league – Dropped out of west coast CS school for a start up. Not going well – on track for med school but not currently doing well on MCAT. Considering quitting medicine – went to europe to model. Not going well Doesn’t look too good for me atm lol

25 Tales Of Where The Popular Kids Ended Up  According To Netizens - 5625 Tales Of Where The Popular Kids Ended Up  According To Netizens - 9325 Tales Of Where The Popular Kids Ended Up  According To Netizens - 6425 Tales Of Where The Popular Kids Ended Up  According To Netizens - 1725 Tales Of Where The Popular Kids Ended Up  According To Netizens - 5125 Tales Of Where The Popular Kids Ended Up  According To Netizens - 3625 Tales Of Where The Popular Kids Ended Up  According To Netizens - 2125 Tales Of Where The Popular Kids Ended Up  According To Netizens - 3125 Tales Of Where The Popular Kids Ended Up  According To Netizens - 7925 Tales Of Where The Popular Kids Ended Up  According To Netizens - 6825 Tales Of Where The Popular Kids Ended Up  According To Netizens - 6025 Tales Of Where The Popular Kids Ended Up  According To Netizens - 8625 Tales Of Where The Popular Kids Ended Up  According To Netizens - 5925 Tales Of Where The Popular Kids Ended Up  According To Netizens - 8025 Tales Of Where The Popular Kids Ended Up  According To Netizens - 2425 Tales Of Where The Popular Kids Ended Up  According To Netizens - 1025 Tales Of Where The Popular Kids Ended Up  According To Netizens - 9925 Tales Of Where The Popular Kids Ended Up  According To Netizens - 6825 Tales Of Where The Popular Kids Ended Up  According To Netizens - 825 Tales Of Where The Popular Kids Ended Up  According To Netizens - 5825 Tales Of Where The Popular Kids Ended Up  According To Netizens - 2425 Tales Of Where The Popular Kids Ended Up  According To Netizens - 42


title: “25 Tales Of Where The Popular Kids Ended Up According To Netizens” ShowToc: true date: “2024-10-23” author: “Pamela Taylor”

More info: Reddit Image source: AngrilyHonorable, LexScope

#2 My favorite is that the star wrestler, who was a bully, had a one night stand with the star cheerleader years later. It resulted in a pregnancy and she now complains on Facebook that he is a deadbeat dad.

Image source: ThisQuietLife, Serg Alesenko

Image source: Anom8675309, Andrea Piacquadio

#4 Lot of em dead, some highly successful, some still have their varsity football pic as their Facebook profile picture. In my 30s

Image source: Nesurfr, Mike Bird

#5

Image source: Vitaminpartydrums, Nathan Ayoola One of my best friends was from the wrong side of the tracks, poor, had a mullet and wore Metallica shirts way before they broke into mainstream. He was extremely popular because he was crazy smart, very talented and driven. Everyone wanted to be his friend and he was very open about being nice to everyone. Many many parents were like “don’t hang out with that John Smith boy, he’s on [substances] and a bad influence” (He absolutely was not, it was the Satanic scare of the late 80s and 90s and he liked Metal Music) He worked his as off all his life and is now pretty damn wealthy with a house, wife and kids in California. When we chat it up on the phone he is the exact same person I grew up with. Crazy funny and extremely kind.

#6

Image source: sowhat4, fauxels He graduated in 1961 as an all-star athlete with letters in two sports over four years. Class and school president, homecoming king – the whole package in a very small town. He was handsome, too. Went to college on a sports scholarship and flunked out the first semester. Came home, knocked up his HS girl friend, married had two kids, and got divorced. Worked for my dad as a farmer and remarried maybe 10 years later. Dad decided to bankroll this ‘*star’ with an underwritten line of credit so the wunderkind could start grass seed farming on his own. This credit line swelled up to over $850K – in the late 70s, or nearly $4 million in today’s money. Come to find out he was buying expensive equipment and also chartering jets to Las Vegas for golf and gambling trips for his friends. He’d often be seen in bars lighting cigars with $100 bills because… why not? (Dad then cut him off and seized all his property, sold it, and managed to pay the bank most of the money from that) Fast forward to today: He’s 80, living on his (remarried) wife’s pension as a teacher and taking care of her as she developed early Alzheimer’s. His mom gave him a house and place to live forty years ago, so he has that. I looked him up on FB recently. He has as his ‘profile photo’ a fuzzy snapshot of his HS ‘Most Valuable Player’ trophy. (*he’s a cousin)

#7

Image source: BeKindAndWorkHard, Ruthson Zimmerman Small town. There are always exceptions, but most kids who were ‘popular’ were friendly, outgoing, well dressed, and emotionally stable. That happened because they came from families with more money and better educated parents. Those parents often provided better mentoring, ensured they went to college, and as a result the kids ended up professionals who did reasonably well for themselves.

Image source: GoldenFrog14, Jonathan Chng

Image source: ptbus0, Emily Ranquist

#10 They’re making askreddit posts

Image source: coolkarmabro, Brett Jordan

#11

Image source: token_bastard, Alan Levine Most popular kid in our school was a guy named Josh. Insanely outgoing and friendly, he could befriend anyone he talked to within five seconds, and always did. Active athlete, was on the football team. Straight A student. Very devout church-goer. I didn’t meet him until later in high school, where he was part of a Dungeons and Dragons game I joined. Always put on a great time role playing. While we didn’t get close, we had a couple extraordinarily memorable times during our senior year of high school, very fun and meaningful times that stood out strongly to me then during a s****y part of my life and are still remembered fondly by me twenty years later. Josh was going places, and he’d make a difference somewhere. We lost touch after high school. Three years later he fell asleep behind the wheel of his truck and hit a tree. Died on impact. Found out through another friend who’d kept up with him, and we went to his funeral. I’d never seen a church so packed full of people for something like this, hundreds and hundreds of people. From our school, from his church, from all over life, the church was legitimately full. To this day, one of my few true lifelong regrets is letting my anxiety get the better of me when Josh’s pastor asked people to come up to the mic and say something about Josh. I should’ve told everyone of our ludicrous all-nighter digging his truck out of the mud in a forest he’d gone mudding in after an evening school performance where we were all still in khakis and polos, finishing at three AM and somehow ending our bedraggled aes at IHOP after getting it out. I should’ve told everyone how we found out our DnD GM was moving away on short notice, and we high-tailed it to his place after school and literally ran out of gas in that fg truck getting there, then flooded the engine refilling it from a Jerry can, stuck with our GM who didn’t want anyone coming to say goodbye and ending up late in the evening laying in that truck bed talking about science and philosophy and religion, three teenage dudes waiting for that goddamn f**g truck to get to a drivable condition so we could say goodbye to our friend properly before he disappeared from our lives. I’m nearing forty, and I still regret not saying how great of a guy he was to a short, scrawny, long-haired metalhead weirdo like I was in high school. Because he was. He was going to make a difference. I suppose, given all the people at his funeral, he still did.

#12

Image source: BlaqSam, Pixabay Don’t know, Don’t care. Graduated in 1998, left for the Navy and never went back Don’t know what happened to any of them

Image source: OPMom21

#14

Image source: HOBTT27, Ryoji Iwata I was once on a train from NYC back to my hometown for Thanksgiving. By chance I ended up sitting next to a guy from my high school; I didn’t know him that well, as we were part of a semi-large graduating class, but we were familiar enough to chat with each other, to pass the time. He was good friends with two of the most popular dudes from our high school, and he said they were both kinda flailing in early adulthood: -One of them got broken up with by his equally popular girlfriend, right before college had started, and he just could not handle it. He would show up to her school, unannounced, and just see what she was up to & bark at any dude who talked to her. She had to threaten getting a restraining order to get him to back off. Apparently he chilled out a little bit in the ensuing years, but just really struggled to make things happen for himself outside of the high school environment. -The other did mostly fine during our college years, but really started to struggle once we all graduated & he lost the comforting structures of school. He was a handsome dude in our town, as a teen, but now, living in NYC, he was in an ocean of handsome dudes and apparently struggled a little bit not getting preferential treatment as often & not having girls interested in him after spitting a minimal amount of game. I don’t bring this up to wish ill will on either of them. I think they’re both interesting examples of how poorly prepared most people are to jump off the “cliff” of leaving high school: you’ve spent your entire life building a life & network within a very specific life structure, and then suddenly, overnight, it all goes away. I think some kids, especially ones who got popular early (like, going all the way back to 4th or 5th grade) do really struggle with the fact that one day, they’re thrust amid a sea of new people who do not perceive them as popular.

Well that gravy train ended when the county went wet and prices got competitive, problem was they apparently never saved money the whole time. Then their regulars saw that the price was much lower at the gas station compared to what they had been paying them, like 30% over SRP. They closed very quickly, all their luxury vehicles got sold but they had the house paid. They moved after a while. I saw her 3 years post graduation and she had doubled her weight and was having pics printed of her fiancé who I found out was a trust fund guy after the fact. (The souped up muscle car in his pics was a hint) He broke it off with her like a month later. Heresay was he figured out she was just there for money. Most of that info I got second hand and I was only present for the pictures part. I don’t use Facebook so I never verified anything. I also do not care to investigate, I’ve stopped letting hs bs live in my head rent free. Image source: DWGJay

#16 A girl friend of mine that I knew since kindergarten was appointed a California State Supreme Court Judge.

Image source: Shellyebellye, EKATERINA BOLOVTSOVA

#17

Image source: Cheetodude625, ThisisEngineering RAEng Lawyer. Doctor. Current NBC Anchor in Lubbock. Track and Field Coach for high school. Physical therapist. Engineer. Prison for involuntary vehicular manslaughter and DUI.

#18 They are still as clicky as they were in high school almost 20 years later. There was a whole drama around the reunion (which I wasn’t going to), the valedictorian planned a reunion, and one of the “popular kids” in planned a separate one. People keep adding me to to the fb page and I keep denying myself entry. Not interested in any of them ??

Image source: Present-Rope3683, Askar Abayev

#19 Turned out just like the rest of us.

Image source: stuntobor, Barbara Galeane Some were successful af, some discovered being a d**k had repercussions, and some took it to the bank. The real shockers are the homecoming queens. Some turned out fantastic and some ended up loony. So yeah. Turned out just like the rest of us.

#20

Image source: NewLibraryGuy, Kairos Panamá Last I heard they were failing to organize a 10 year reunion. I think it technically happened, but the facebook group where they organized it has like 5 people in it. Also, 2 of them are ministers now, and wow would I have stories to tell their congregations.

#21 He was our QB in highschool. Liked by everyone, handsome, did good in school, and was a humble person totally aware of his situation. Got married to a girl we went to school with, got a local job in a big local Industry, had a kid with her. I saw him at the gas station last time I was in town. He seems like he’s doing well.

Image source: FineHospital3, Joe Calomeni

#22 They all became Instagram influencers and started selling detox tea

Image source: AdLongjumping8403, George Milton

Image source: Monotonegent, Keira Burton

#24

M. took a break up badly, took a bad beating from the cops, took to hard [substances], found his body in the river. A. tried to get clever with 4 guys over a pool table, outside beating left him quadriplegic. P. a terrible bully, tormented dozens of kids (all younger than him) throughout all 5 years of senior school, now a social work child counsellor and all round good guy for those who don’t know. C**t. K. Professor of Science and MBE recipient. J. Couldn’t get over the death of his brother through alcoholism, so proceeded to drink himself to death, go figure. Image source: StonerFGAU

#25

Image source: squishymarshmello, Guto Macedo Was a popular ish kid: currently in school Other people in my friend group: – Dropped out of ivy league – Got pregnant in freshman year at ivy league – Dropped out of west coast CS school for a start up. Not going well – on track for med school but not currently doing well on MCAT. Considering quitting medicine – went to europe to model. Not going well Doesn’t look too good for me atm lol

25 Tales Of Where The Popular Kids Ended Up  According To Netizens - 5425 Tales Of Where The Popular Kids Ended Up  According To Netizens - 5925 Tales Of Where The Popular Kids Ended Up  According To Netizens - 925 Tales Of Where The Popular Kids Ended Up  According To Netizens - 8725 Tales Of Where The Popular Kids Ended Up  According To Netizens - 9325 Tales Of Where The Popular Kids Ended Up  According To Netizens - 4325 Tales Of Where The Popular Kids Ended Up  According To Netizens - 2525 Tales Of Where The Popular Kids Ended Up  According To Netizens - 625 Tales Of Where The Popular Kids Ended Up  According To Netizens - 925 Tales Of Where The Popular Kids Ended Up  According To Netizens - 6325 Tales Of Where The Popular Kids Ended Up  According To Netizens - 2725 Tales Of Where The Popular Kids Ended Up  According To Netizens - 2125 Tales Of Where The Popular Kids Ended Up  According To Netizens - 7025 Tales Of Where The Popular Kids Ended Up  According To Netizens - 2525 Tales Of Where The Popular Kids Ended Up  According To Netizens - 9025 Tales Of Where The Popular Kids Ended Up  According To Netizens - 7225 Tales Of Where The Popular Kids Ended Up  According To Netizens - 625 Tales Of Where The Popular Kids Ended Up  According To Netizens - 8625 Tales Of Where The Popular Kids Ended Up  According To Netizens - 2925 Tales Of Where The Popular Kids Ended Up  According To Netizens - 425 Tales Of Where The Popular Kids Ended Up  According To Netizens - 3125 Tales Of Where The Popular Kids Ended Up  According To Netizens - 8


title: “25 Tales Of Where The Popular Kids Ended Up According To Netizens” ShowToc: true date: “2024-09-13” author: “Esther Baron”

More info: Reddit Image source: AngrilyHonorable, LexScope

#2 My favorite is that the star wrestler, who was a bully, had a one night stand with the star cheerleader years later. It resulted in a pregnancy and she now complains on Facebook that he is a deadbeat dad.

Image source: ThisQuietLife, Serg Alesenko

Image source: Anom8675309, Andrea Piacquadio

#4 Lot of em dead, some highly successful, some still have their varsity football pic as their Facebook profile picture. In my 30s

Image source: Nesurfr, Mike Bird

#5

Image source: Vitaminpartydrums, Nathan Ayoola One of my best friends was from the wrong side of the tracks, poor, had a mullet and wore Metallica shirts way before they broke into mainstream. He was extremely popular because he was crazy smart, very talented and driven. Everyone wanted to be his friend and he was very open about being nice to everyone. Many many parents were like “don’t hang out with that John Smith boy, he’s on [substances] and a bad influence” (He absolutely was not, it was the Satanic scare of the late 80s and 90s and he liked Metal Music) He worked his as off all his life and is now pretty damn wealthy with a house, wife and kids in California. When we chat it up on the phone he is the exact same person I grew up with. Crazy funny and extremely kind.

#6

Image source: sowhat4, fauxels He graduated in 1961 as an all-star athlete with letters in two sports over four years. Class and school president, homecoming king – the whole package in a very small town. He was handsome, too. Went to college on a sports scholarship and flunked out the first semester. Came home, knocked up his HS girl friend, married had two kids, and got divorced. Worked for my dad as a farmer and remarried maybe 10 years later. Dad decided to bankroll this ‘*star’ with an underwritten line of credit so the wunderkind could start grass seed farming on his own. This credit line swelled up to over $850K – in the late 70s, or nearly $4 million in today’s money. Come to find out he was buying expensive equipment and also chartering jets to Las Vegas for golf and gambling trips for his friends. He’d often be seen in bars lighting cigars with $100 bills because… why not? (Dad then cut him off and seized all his property, sold it, and managed to pay the bank most of the money from that) Fast forward to today: He’s 80, living on his (remarried) wife’s pension as a teacher and taking care of her as she developed early Alzheimer’s. His mom gave him a house and place to live forty years ago, so he has that. I looked him up on FB recently. He has as his ‘profile photo’ a fuzzy snapshot of his HS ‘Most Valuable Player’ trophy. (*he’s a cousin)

#7

Image source: BeKindAndWorkHard, Ruthson Zimmerman Small town. There are always exceptions, but most kids who were ‘popular’ were friendly, outgoing, well dressed, and emotionally stable. That happened because they came from families with more money and better educated parents. Those parents often provided better mentoring, ensured they went to college, and as a result the kids ended up professionals who did reasonably well for themselves.

Image source: GoldenFrog14, Jonathan Chng

Image source: ptbus0, Emily Ranquist

#10 They’re making askreddit posts

Image source: coolkarmabro, Brett Jordan

#11

Image source: token_bastard, Alan Levine Most popular kid in our school was a guy named Josh. Insanely outgoing and friendly, he could befriend anyone he talked to within five seconds, and always did. Active athlete, was on the football team. Straight A student. Very devout church-goer. I didn’t meet him until later in high school, where he was part of a Dungeons and Dragons game I joined. Always put on a great time role playing. While we didn’t get close, we had a couple extraordinarily memorable times during our senior year of high school, very fun and meaningful times that stood out strongly to me then during a s****y part of my life and are still remembered fondly by me twenty years later. Josh was going places, and he’d make a difference somewhere. We lost touch after high school. Three years later he fell asleep behind the wheel of his truck and hit a tree. Died on impact. Found out through another friend who’d kept up with him, and we went to his funeral. I’d never seen a church so packed full of people for something like this, hundreds and hundreds of people. From our school, from his church, from all over life, the church was legitimately full. To this day, one of my few true lifelong regrets is letting my anxiety get the better of me when Josh’s pastor asked people to come up to the mic and say something about Josh. I should’ve told everyone of our ludicrous all-nighter digging his truck out of the mud in a forest he’d gone mudding in after an evening school performance where we were all still in khakis and polos, finishing at three AM and somehow ending our bedraggled aes at IHOP after getting it out. I should’ve told everyone how we found out our DnD GM was moving away on short notice, and we high-tailed it to his place after school and literally ran out of gas in that fg truck getting there, then flooded the engine refilling it from a Jerry can, stuck with our GM who didn’t want anyone coming to say goodbye and ending up late in the evening laying in that truck bed talking about science and philosophy and religion, three teenage dudes waiting for that goddamn f**g truck to get to a drivable condition so we could say goodbye to our friend properly before he disappeared from our lives. I’m nearing forty, and I still regret not saying how great of a guy he was to a short, scrawny, long-haired metalhead weirdo like I was in high school. Because he was. He was going to make a difference. I suppose, given all the people at his funeral, he still did.

#12

Image source: BlaqSam, Pixabay Don’t know, Don’t care. Graduated in 1998, left for the Navy and never went back Don’t know what happened to any of them

Image source: OPMom21

#14

Image source: HOBTT27, Ryoji Iwata I was once on a train from NYC back to my hometown for Thanksgiving. By chance I ended up sitting next to a guy from my high school; I didn’t know him that well, as we were part of a semi-large graduating class, but we were familiar enough to chat with each other, to pass the time. He was good friends with two of the most popular dudes from our high school, and he said they were both kinda flailing in early adulthood: -One of them got broken up with by his equally popular girlfriend, right before college had started, and he just could not handle it. He would show up to her school, unannounced, and just see what she was up to & bark at any dude who talked to her. She had to threaten getting a restraining order to get him to back off. Apparently he chilled out a little bit in the ensuing years, but just really struggled to make things happen for himself outside of the high school environment. -The other did mostly fine during our college years, but really started to struggle once we all graduated & he lost the comforting structures of school. He was a handsome dude in our town, as a teen, but now, living in NYC, he was in an ocean of handsome dudes and apparently struggled a little bit not getting preferential treatment as often & not having girls interested in him after spitting a minimal amount of game. I don’t bring this up to wish ill will on either of them. I think they’re both interesting examples of how poorly prepared most people are to jump off the “cliff” of leaving high school: you’ve spent your entire life building a life & network within a very specific life structure, and then suddenly, overnight, it all goes away. I think some kids, especially ones who got popular early (like, going all the way back to 4th or 5th grade) do really struggle with the fact that one day, they’re thrust amid a sea of new people who do not perceive them as popular.

Well that gravy train ended when the county went wet and prices got competitive, problem was they apparently never saved money the whole time. Then their regulars saw that the price was much lower at the gas station compared to what they had been paying them, like 30% over SRP. They closed very quickly, all their luxury vehicles got sold but they had the house paid. They moved after a while. I saw her 3 years post graduation and she had doubled her weight and was having pics printed of her fiancé who I found out was a trust fund guy after the fact. (The souped up muscle car in his pics was a hint) He broke it off with her like a month later. Heresay was he figured out she was just there for money. Most of that info I got second hand and I was only present for the pictures part. I don’t use Facebook so I never verified anything. I also do not care to investigate, I’ve stopped letting hs bs live in my head rent free. Image source: DWGJay

#16 A girl friend of mine that I knew since kindergarten was appointed a California State Supreme Court Judge.

Image source: Shellyebellye, EKATERINA BOLOVTSOVA

#17

Image source: Cheetodude625, ThisisEngineering RAEng Lawyer. Doctor. Current NBC Anchor in Lubbock. Track and Field Coach for high school. Physical therapist. Engineer. Prison for involuntary vehicular manslaughter and DUI.

#18 They are still as clicky as they were in high school almost 20 years later. There was a whole drama around the reunion (which I wasn’t going to), the valedictorian planned a reunion, and one of the “popular kids” in planned a separate one. People keep adding me to to the fb page and I keep denying myself entry. Not interested in any of them ??

Image source: Present-Rope3683, Askar Abayev

#19 Turned out just like the rest of us.

Image source: stuntobor, Barbara Galeane Some were successful af, some discovered being a d**k had repercussions, and some took it to the bank. The real shockers are the homecoming queens. Some turned out fantastic and some ended up loony. So yeah. Turned out just like the rest of us.

#20

Image source: NewLibraryGuy, Kairos Panamá Last I heard they were failing to organize a 10 year reunion. I think it technically happened, but the facebook group where they organized it has like 5 people in it. Also, 2 of them are ministers now, and wow would I have stories to tell their congregations.

#21 He was our QB in highschool. Liked by everyone, handsome, did good in school, and was a humble person totally aware of his situation. Got married to a girl we went to school with, got a local job in a big local Industry, had a kid with her. I saw him at the gas station last time I was in town. He seems like he’s doing well.

Image source: FineHospital3, Joe Calomeni

#22 They all became Instagram influencers and started selling detox tea

Image source: AdLongjumping8403, George Milton

Image source: Monotonegent, Keira Burton

#24

M. took a break up badly, took a bad beating from the cops, took to hard [substances], found his body in the river. A. tried to get clever with 4 guys over a pool table, outside beating left him quadriplegic. P. a terrible bully, tormented dozens of kids (all younger than him) throughout all 5 years of senior school, now a social work child counsellor and all round good guy for those who don’t know. C**t. K. Professor of Science and MBE recipient. J. Couldn’t get over the death of his brother through alcoholism, so proceeded to drink himself to death, go figure. Image source: StonerFGAU

#25

Image source: squishymarshmello, Guto Macedo Was a popular ish kid: currently in school Other people in my friend group: – Dropped out of ivy league – Got pregnant in freshman year at ivy league – Dropped out of west coast CS school for a start up. Not going well – on track for med school but not currently doing well on MCAT. Considering quitting medicine – went to europe to model. Not going well Doesn’t look too good for me atm lol

25 Tales Of Where The Popular Kids Ended Up  According To Netizens - 4825 Tales Of Where The Popular Kids Ended Up  According To Netizens - 8325 Tales Of Where The Popular Kids Ended Up  According To Netizens - 7325 Tales Of Where The Popular Kids Ended Up  According To Netizens - 5825 Tales Of Where The Popular Kids Ended Up  According To Netizens - 625 Tales Of Where The Popular Kids Ended Up  According To Netizens - 5825 Tales Of Where The Popular Kids Ended Up  According To Netizens - 1625 Tales Of Where The Popular Kids Ended Up  According To Netizens - 1325 Tales Of Where The Popular Kids Ended Up  According To Netizens - 9625 Tales Of Where The Popular Kids Ended Up  According To Netizens - 2325 Tales Of Where The Popular Kids Ended Up  According To Netizens - 825 Tales Of Where The Popular Kids Ended Up  According To Netizens - 3025 Tales Of Where The Popular Kids Ended Up  According To Netizens - 6325 Tales Of Where The Popular Kids Ended Up  According To Netizens - 5025 Tales Of Where The Popular Kids Ended Up  According To Netizens - 7925 Tales Of Where The Popular Kids Ended Up  According To Netizens - 9825 Tales Of Where The Popular Kids Ended Up  According To Netizens - 2825 Tales Of Where The Popular Kids Ended Up  According To Netizens - 2225 Tales Of Where The Popular Kids Ended Up  According To Netizens - 4125 Tales Of Where The Popular Kids Ended Up  According To Netizens - 4825 Tales Of Where The Popular Kids Ended Up  According To Netizens - 6325 Tales Of Where The Popular Kids Ended Up  According To Netizens - 10