Hey reader! As you may already be aware, I’ve recently been trying to find a new way to procrastinate and discovered the hallmark internet location for wasting time — Buzzfeed quizzes.

I’m not dishing out my opinion on Buzzfeed as a company, but I must admit that their quizzes are delightfully useless.

There are different categories of quizzes, with topics ranging from “Love” to “Would You Rather?” to “Disney.” They try to guess things like how you’re going to spend your Valentine’s Day or what your biggest pet peeve is. And there are plenty of other quizzes on the internet that are similar to Buzzfeed’s. There are quizzes that can help you discern your personal aesthetic, tell you about your intelligence or temperament, or even recommend where you should travel.

We’re in the age of constantly putting ourselves out in the media, but we often doubt who we are. It’s just a byproduct of growing up. When you’re in your teens, so much of your time is spent figuring out who exactly you are: what you like, what you dislike, how you want the world to see you, and how you want to impact the world. In the digital age, all of that processing and formation happens while using the internet. Sometimes this means that people figure out who they are on social media, or they take these quizzes or delve into sites to create themselves.

These quizzes are a quick and fun way to explore that.

Hopefully people don’t take these quizzes to determine what they’re like — I have a sense that they often confirm suspicions we have about ourselves. For example, I took quizzes on what my design aesthetic was. I already knew that I absolutely loved old-time libraries and would live in one if I could, and when I got the results that my style is most like vintage eclectic, it confirmed what I already knew.

The Buzzfeed quizzes are silly and entertaining. Mr. Kate’s “What’s My Aesthetic” quiz is a good one for finding out your design preferences. And Sporcle has many fun quizzes that actually engage your mind, like ones about naming all 50 states or words that start with the letter “L.”

Have a great time exploring these, reader — I’ll see you next week!



Not Vanilla: Quizzes that tell you things about yourself

Through a live demonstration and tasting, Chef Dede prepared fried chicken, baked macaroni and cheese, and collard greens – dishes rooted in Black Southern history. Students leaned in as she explained the methods and care that go into each plate. Read More

Not Vanilla: Quizzes that tell you things about yourself

The first realization of my own age hit me in the months before I started college. I was helping my dad clean the small office he’d occupied in Rush Rhees longer than I’d been alive. The walls of which boasted childhood drawings that my sister and I had crayoned. Even though I was looking at my distant past, I realized I would soon be starting a new page of my future. Read More

Not Vanilla: Quizzes that tell you things about yourself

While looking for something to do on a Friday evening, five of us at the Campus Times made our way down to ESL Ballpark April 17 to catch a Rochester Red Wings game. Our group boasted a Mets fan, a Yankees fan, a Padres fan, a Twins fan, and one person more familiar with cricket than with baseball. Read More