Perfect Strangers – When Jennifer and Marry Anne Lost It

For seven plus years (1986–93), ABC entertained the American audience with the unique duo of distant cousins Larry Appleton (Mark Linn-Baker) and Balki Bartokomous (Bronson Pinchot) as protagonists of the sitcom Prefect Strangers. Viewers got

80s Cologne

The 10 Most Remembered Colognes of the ’80s

The most iconic colognes of the 80s weren’t expensive. They were loud, legendary, and everywhere. From Brut to Rookie, these scents became the background notes of growing up in a louder, simpler decade.

Superstations: How Local Television Quietly Went National

Superstations reshaped early cable by turning local broadcasters into national channels, expanding viewer choice and introducing regional sports and culture to millions long before dedicated cable networks dominated the television landscape.

Nintendo Nostalgia

TV Moms

The Top Ten Moms in Television History

TV moms have always been the heart of the shows we love, offering comfort, chaos, wisdom, and warmth in every era. This list celebrates the unforgettable women who helped raise us from the living room couch.

1984 VMAs

The Birth of MTV’s Video Music Awards

When MTV launched the Video Music Awards (VMAs) on September 14, 1984, it wasn’t just creating an awards show, it was igniting a cultural revolution, though no one knew it then. Held at Radio City

We Are the World

‘We Are the World’ by USA for Africa

For this issue, we revisit the original “We Are the World” charity single which was penned by Lionel Richie with the late, great Michael Jackson and co-produced by Quincy Jones. The final recording by 46

“Dinner & A Movie” on TBS

“Beans and Cornbread had a fight… Beans knocked Cornbread out of sight!” All Elite Wrestling (AEW), the main competitor to WWE and preferred wrestling brand of yours truly, announced on January 5th, 2022, the company

Up All Night with Rhonda Shear

Staying Up All Night with Rhonda Shear

Rhonda Shear was an iconic staple of late-night television in the ’90s. She was beautiful, funny, and oozed sex appeal. We pay tribute to her greatness and define why she was so magical.

This is Starcade!

When I was a kid game shows were a key part of my TV viewing experience. Whether it was a sick day from school, vacation or summer break, if I was home during the day

Ted Turner

RIP Ted Turner: A Life of Bold Ideas and Big Impact

Ted Turner’s legacy stretches from Braves championships to the birth of 24‑hour news, a life spent reshaping how America watches, cheers, and connects. TRN reflects on his impact and honors a visionary who changed the media world forever.

Batman Logo

Batmania: Revisiting 1989’s Batman

It might be hard today to fully grasp just how big a cultural moment it was when Tim Burton’s Batman opened in theaters thirty years ago this month. You couldn’t go out of the house without

Nick at Nite

A Look Back at Nick at Nite

This coming week will celebrate 35 years of Nick at Nite, the family-friendly programming block during the evening hours on Nickelodeon.  On July 1, 1985, Nick at Nite launched with only a handful of shows

A Day in the Life of a 90s Kid

There were so many great things that made the ’90s memorable and fun to grow up in. But since there were so many memorable things, we took them for granted, and rarely “stopped to smell

Green Acres

The Rural Purge at CBS

In the early 1970s, Fred Silverman undertook a radical plan to remake CBS. What resulted was the programming bloodbath known as the rural purge.

The Wizard Files: Deanna Destito

Managing Editor of Comics Beat and co-host of Comic Book School on YouTube, Deanna Destito joins us to talk about her early days as an intern for Wizard magazine. Hear stories about interviewing Stan Lee,

Pulp Fiction

How Pulp Fiction Changed the Way We Watch Movies

Pulp Fiction hit the nineties like a shockwave, blending sharp dialogue, bold style, and unforgettable characters into a film that didn’t just entertain but completely rewired how audiences thought movies could work.

Pat Sajak Show

When Pat Sajak Took a Swing at Late‑Night TV

Pat Sajak’s late‑night experiment didn’t last long, but for a moment it offered a gentler, friendlier alternative in a crowded era of television giants and became a small, charming footnote in late‑night history.