Scooby‑Doo, Where Are You! turned spooky mysteries and gentle humor into a Saturday morning ritual, creating characters and catchphrases that shaped childhood for generations.
Michael Cannetti and Adam explore a Last Man Standing battle between Batman and Snake Eyes from G.I. Joe, take peek at Kirsten Dunst’s diary from the set of Spider-Man, try to uncover the mystery of
Duff’s Smorgasbord turned a simple rotating buffet into a beloved dining ritual, serving comfort food, value, and a little bit of spectacle to families across America.
Beanie Babies rose from simple plush toys to a national obsession, then collapsed just as quickly, leaving behind one of the most unforgettable boom and bust stories of the 1990s.
Valiant and Image were the hottest publishers of the 1990s, and Deathmate was supposed to be their defining moment. Instead, it became a lesson in hype, deadlines, and the limits of ambition.
From uncut movies to blockbuster boxing nights, HBO became the channel that defined cable television and set the standard every other premium network tried to follow.
America had never seen anything like the 1992 Dream Team. They were icons, champions, and cultural giants, turning the Barcelona Olympics into a showcase of pure basketball brilliance.
SeaWorld felt like stepping into another world, a place where dolphins danced, orcas soared, and childhood summers smelled like saltwater and sunscreen as the ocean came alive right in front of you.
ThunderCats felt like a world waiting for you to leap into it, a bold, electric mix of heroes, monsters, and imagination that turned ordinary afternoons into adventures on the wild, mysterious plains of Third Earth.
Kool Aid was more than a drink. It was summer in a pitcher, a burst of color and flavor that grew wilder in the 90s when Sharkleberry Fin and Great Bluedini turned childhood into neon magic.
Batman, the Caped Crusader is one of my favorite superheroes of all time. He fluctuates between the number one and number two spot with Wolverine depending on my mood. If you told me I could
The earliest ancestor of the modern music video was the soundie, a black-and-white 16mm film recording of a musician performing before a live audience. The first soundies appeared in 1940, and all the big singing
In November 1978, just a year and a half after Star Wars had taken the world by storm, fans were hungry for more. George Lucas’s space opera had become a cultural phenomenon, and the idea
Vintage Masters of the Universe figures weren’t just toys. They were bold, colorful heroes that turned bedroom floors into battlefields and gave an entire generation its first taste of epic, imagination‑powered adventure.
The Shopping Mall was once an essential destination especially for those of us who grew up from the late-70s through the ’90s. The shopping aspect has been more-or-less replaced by online retailers, but the social
Episode 43 sees the guys doing Part 3 of the ongoing “Weird Al” Yankovic Greatest Parody Song Bracket Tournament. Once again, Pitfall Gary is here to break any stalemates in the head to head matchups.
The Game Boy was a little gray brick that changed everything, turning car rides, quiet afternoons, and late nights under the covers into adventures you could hold in your hands.
Morgana the Kissing Bandit turned ballparks into stages and superstars into unsuspecting co stars, creating the kind of joyful chaos that reminded everyone watching that sports were meant to be fun.
The Incredible Hulk was more than a TV hero. He was a lonely green giant who made weeknights feel bigger, quieter, and strangely human in a way only that era of television could capture.
A new live action adaptation of Jem and the Holograms is officially in development, according to an exclusive report from Deadline. The project is being developed as a television series with Amazon MGM Studios, the
Rollergames was peak 1989 chaos, a roller derby spectacle supercharged with rock music, wild characters, and over the top action that turned the figure eight track into one of the loudest and most unforgettable shows on television.
Most of us who grew up during the ’70s and ’80s very likely have had the experience of wearing a Ben Cooper Halloween costume. You might not necessarily know them by the brand name, but
The brief Coy and Vance era on The Dukes of Hazzard became one of TV’s strangest detours, a replacement experiment that baffled fans, shook the show’s momentum, and left behind a uniquely memorable chapter in Hazzard history.
The original Groundhog Day script was darker, stranger, and far more complicated than the film we know. This breakdown highlights the biggest differences and how the rewrites transformed a clever idea into a comedy classic.
Clueless is one of my favorite “comfort food” movies. When I have a tough day at work or I just get tired of watching the news, I either put in my DVD or pull it
More fun from Wizard 128 with returning guest, Phillip Sevy discussing Wizard’s picks for the Top 10 Most Influential Comic Book Artists of All Time, exploring the many comic book references on The Simpsons, a
WrestleRock 86 was the AWA swinging for the fences and hitting something far stranger, a supershow remembered less for its matches and more for the glorious chaos that turned it into wrestling’s favorite punchline.
For many Generation X kids and early millennials, a trip to McDonald’s came with one unforgettable treat. The fried apple pie. It had a shatter crisp crust, a bubbling cinnamon apple filling, and a reputation
Holiday Inn Holidomes turned ordinary hotel stays into indoor adventures, where warm air, glowing string lights, and the sound of splashing pools made every family trip feel like a mini vacation.
Batman: The Animated Series arrived like a shadow across Saturday mornings, proving a cartoon could feel cinematic, moody, and impossibly cool. It made Gotham come alive in a way kids had never seen before.