We asked some 2016 All-Stars to recall their very worst AIM screen names

This browser does not support the video element.

If you had the pleasure of growing up in the era of Dunkaroos and choker necklaces, you probably remember AIM -- otherwise known as AOL Instant Messenger, the preferred method of online communication for every proper '90s child. And for every proper '90s child using AIM, there was a proper '90s child who had retrospectively embarrassing AIM handles.
As it happens, a group of some of America's finest '90s children congregated in San Diego on Monday: the 2016 MLB All-Stars. And so, compelled by our sense of journalistic duty, we asked some of the best baseball players on the planet to list only the most cringe-inducing screen names of their youth. It did not disappoint: A's catcher Stephen Vogt, for example, once logged on under the moniker "BaseballforLife" -- he was intentionally vague about the spelling, though, so we'll have to assume it was something closer to "Baseball4Lyfe."
Watch the video above for more, including Paul Goldschmidt feeling such a deep sense of shame that he refused to answer the question.