Remember the 90's? Bodybuilding was so awesome back then. The personalities were larger than life and I couldn't wait to get the next issue of FLEX and IRONMAN magazines. Muscletech actually had us believing that if we used their products we'd get as big and ripped as the pros.....The bodybuilders would talk big smack about each other and actually trained together......miss uncle Joe and Ben as well 
I have to admit I also miss going down to the supplement store and buying those fake sups we all saw in he mags....such an innocent and simple time back then..... 
Miss the old contests as well....especially the grand prix contests that used to run for a few weeks at the end of the year....
MEMORIES................ ............
I miss the WBF. Back then, it was cool because you didn't have to wait a month to hopefully catch a bodybuilding show at 3 am (i.e. American Muscle on ESPN).
The 1991 show was the first to pay six figures for a professional bodybuilding contest.
For a while, the only magazines I bought were MuscleMag International and WBF Bodybuilding Lifestyles. After the WBF went kaput, I ended up reading Muscular Development (MD). I liked that one too, even when the identity crisis started in the mid 90s: Muscular Development-Fitness-Health, All-Natural Muscular Development, etc. It seems that's happening again with MD some 20 years later.
The magazines all had supplement companies behind them.
Flex & Muscle & Fitness - Weider Nutrition
Muscular Development - Twinlab
MuscleMag International - Muscletech
Muscle Media (2000) - EAS
IronMan - Muscle Link
WBF Bodybuilding Lifestyles - ICOPRO
As for Muscletech, speak for yourself. Maybe it had YOU believing you'd be as big and ripped as the pros (especially since most of the pros were big and ripped before MuscleTech existed. And its initial poster boy weighed 240 as a teen before he even started bodybuilding). I tried Muscletech's original three supplements (Acetabolan, Creatine 6000-ES, and Hydroxycut). Back then, they cost a fortune. But, of course, as newer supplements arrived, the old ones became cheap.
I still have some of the tapes I got with some supplement purchases. The Mass Fuel tape came with the Twinlab Lee Haney's Mass Fuel kit I bought on clearance. It's hard to believe that tape is nearly 30 years old. Then there's "Up Close and Personal with the Mega Mass Champions". Guess how I ended up with that tape.
I got my first gym membership for Christmas in 1991 at Bally Total Fitness (back when it had the blue and white logo and was also known as the Scandinavian club). I kept that membership for 20 years, until Bally went belly up.
Even before then, my high school science project in 1990 was gaining weight. The test subject was MYSELF. I gained 21 lbs in 3 months (142 to 163). Though technically, my interest in bodybuilding officially started in 1989 with the cement weight set I got from my old middle school, the 1990s were my "golden years", of sorts.