Pat Morita’s Ohara offered a rare kind of quiet in late‑80s television, a cop drama that traded noise for intuition and proved a gentle voice could still carry authority.
For a brief moment in the seventies, the 8 track felt like freedom itself, a plastic passport that let music spill into every mile of the open road before cassettes quietly pushed it aside.
When “U Can’t Touch This” dropped in 1990, it wasn’t just a hit. It was a cultural shockwave that turned parachute pants, bold swagger and Hammer Time itself into the unstoppable heartbeat of a new pop era.
Saturday Supercade turned early‑80s arcade fever into Saturday‑morning magic, bringing Donkey Kong, Q*bert, Frogger and more to life in a wild, colorful cartoon block that felt like an entire arcade bursting out of the TV.
Pop culture rarely moves in a straight line. Instead, it circles back on itself, pulling ideas, styles, and stories from earlier decades and giving them new life. From reboots of classic television shows to fashion
With the rise of online gaming, arcade gaming seems like a distant memory, especially for Canadians who didn’t grow up with it. However, Canada’s modern digital entertainment landscape, stretching from mobile games to online casinos,
Freshen‑Up wasn’t just gum. It was a tiny, juicy shock that turned an ordinary chew into a playground moment, surprising kids, delighting friends and earning a permanent place in 70s snack‑time nostalgia.
Born from a lab accident and raised in a plastic egg, Silly Putty became the stretchy, bouncy little miracle that soothed fidgety hands, lifted comic strips and earned a permanent place in America’s toy‑box history.
Adam is joined by Dalibor, The Indie Hype Man to discuss 5 Independent Comic Book creators spotlighted by Wizard in issue 123, examine The Incredible Hulk revamp by Bruce Jones and John Romita Jr., plus
Before monster trucks filled stadiums with pyrotechnics, Bigfoot and USA‑1 battled on dirt tracks, turning raw horsepower and hometown pride into one of the most iconic rivalries the sport has ever known.
I’ll admit that 21 is not a very special number when it comes to anniversaries and I’m a year late (and a dollar short) for the big 20th one. Maybe I’m just a tad early
When MTV launched on August 1, 1981, it didn’t just revolutionize music television—it introduced the world to a new kind of celebrity: the Video Jockey, or VJ. Five charismatic personalities became the faces of the
Forty years later and still arguably the best theme song in the history of PBS. From a strange era in between glam rock and disco. In between men wearing short shorts and women wearing short
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 kiss between Kirk and Uhura lasted only a moment, yet it reshaped television history by showing a future where connection rose above division and where inclusion felt as natural as the stars themselves.
A 1950s soda fountain corner brings color, charm, and a sense of fun into any home. The style feels upbeat and social, with bright tones, polished surfaces, and classic drink service that invites people to
For many collectors, Pokémon cards are more than printed cardboard. They are memories of schoolyard trades, weekend booster pack openings, and the thrill of pulling a holographic Charizard. As the hobby continues to grow, so
The Game Genie cracked open NES cartridges like a secret doorway, letting players bend the rules, explore hidden corners, and turn once‑impossible games into thrilling new adventures.
G.I. Joe’s journey spans generations, from towering sixties action heroes to the explosive eighties revival of comics, cartoons, and toys that shaped childhood, leaving behind a legacy fans still treasure today.
The Taco Bell food you enjoy today is probably not the same stuff you enjoyed in your younger years. That’s not a huge surprise as menus change through the years. Fast food restaurants are constantly
Knightfall was the storyline that shattered Batman to his core, a brutal early‑’90s epic that broke the Dark Knight’s body, tested his legacy, and forced Gotham to confront what happens when its greatest hero finally falls.
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
The Goonies was a 1985 film by Richard Donner about a group of adventurous kids who discover an old pirate map and follow it into an underground cavern in search of treasure to save their
Recently on The Retro Network I participated in an awesome TRN Talk: VHS Collecting podcast discussing the art of VHS collecting with Jason (@RD80s) and the always enthusiastic Chad Young from the Horror Movie BBQ
Gargoyles shattered the bright, sugary mold of 90s cartoons, pulling kids into a world of shadows, myth and midnight heroics that made Saturday mornings feel darker, deeper and far more thrilling than ever before.
Long before Mario defined Nintendo’s future, Wild Gunman revealed its experimental past, turning living rooms into frontier shootouts and showcasing the NES Zapper as one of the system’s earliest bursts of imagination.
Before McDonald’s became the face of fast food, Burger Chef helped shape the industry with flame‑broiled burgers, bold innovations, and the very first kids’ meal, leaving behind a legacy far bigger than its vanished storefronts.
Episode 35 is here! For the guys’ ReCurrent Events segment, Ken gives us some “Tales from the Crypt” and Regal Theater’s 2026 plans for Friday the 13th this year, and Chad discusses the rumored upcoming
The Pet Rock became one of the seventies’ most unforgettable fads, a simple stone that turned into a national inside joke and proved that sometimes the smallest ideas spark the biggest smiles.