Binko wrote:BuddyRoadhouse wrote:First time I heard it was on a Simpson's episode, at least ten years ago.
Same here. At least that's when I remember it becoming popularized. I may have heard it earlier than that. The earliest internet sites for the word I could find are circa 1992, and the Simpsons episode was 1995....
According to Wikipedia, "meh" was first used on The Simpsons in 1992:
"The word gained popularity as a result of its use on The Simpsons. It was first used in passing during the 1992 episode Homer's Triple Bypass, when Lisa describes her generation's nonchalance regarding events such as her father's open heart surgery. It was also used in a 1994 episode, "Sideshow Bob Roberts", when a librarian reacts to Lisa's surprise that voting records are not classified, and also in "Lisa's Wedding" after Marge weaves "Hi Bart" on a loom to try to pique his interest in weaving, to which he responds "meh". In the 2001 episode "Hungry, Hungry Homer", Lisa spells out the word for emphasis ("M - E - H") after Homer tries to interest her (Lisa) and Bart into going to the theme park "Blockoland".
As early as 1992, however, the word appeared in a posting to a Usenet Internet forum in a discussion referring to the TV series Melrose Place. The word's first mainstream print usage occurred in the Canadian newspaper the Edmonton Sun in 2003: "Ryan Opray got voted off Survivor. Meh."
"Life is a combination of magic and pasta." -- Federico Fellini
"You're not going to like it in Chicago. The wind comes howling in from the lake. And there's practically no opera season at all--and the Lord only knows whether they've ever heard of lobster Newburg." --Charles Foster Kane, Citizen Kane.