The B‑side was the hidden half of a single, a place where artists tucked experiments, deep cuts, and surprises that often revealed more than the hit ever could.
Sci-fi cinema almost habitually broke the bounds of human comfort and convention by engaging with alternative scenarios of life. Many of these alternative worlds have crept into the real world around us over the years.
USA’s Cartoon Express brought classic animation to cable kids everywhere, creating a cozy daily ritual filled with familiar characters, simple charm, and the earliest taste of all‑day cartoon programming.
McDonald’s Pizza was the chain’s bold attempt to reinvent family dinner, a fast food experiment that sparked curiosity, slowed drive thrus, and became one of the most enduring legends in menu history.
Episode 39 drops NOW! We stay in the world of television again, but this time, Ken and Chad are remembering the classic, memorable earworms that we call TV THEME SONGS! Featuring classic tv shows from
Tonka’s Steel Monsters brought post apocalyptic style to the toy aisle, combining heavy metal construction with rugged designs that turned ordinary playtime into gritty, end‑of‑the‑world adventure.
Red quarters were standard coins marked with dye for tracking and sorting purposes, a simple banking and vending practice that created confusion and curiosity among anyone who found them in circulation.
ALF crashed into 80s television with chaotic charm, turning a suburban family and one wisecracking alien into one of the decade’s most unforgettable sitcom combinations.
The 1990s had a special talent for turning television into an event. Before streaming queues, algorithmic feeds and endless on-demand choice, certain broadcasts arrived with a sense of occasion that felt impossible to ignore. A
WrestleMania is this weekend and in the over thirty years for this event, this will be the most unusual. Two nights, taped, and in front of zero fans. Many of us are tuning in for
One of the staple toy lines of the ’80s was Coleco’s Cabbage Patch Kids line. Every girl I knew as a kid had at least one Cabbage Patch Kid. I had a few, including an
Lucky Charms cereal has been a favorite of kids everywhere since it first hit store shelves in 1964. But even though the brand is almost sixty years old, most people don’t know much about it
RollerJam brought pro‑wrestling theatrics to the banked track, reviving roller derby in the late ’90s with hard hits, big personalities, and storylines that made every episode feel like a collision of sports, spectacle, and pure adrenaline.
When you bring up Cars in the ’80s, some might first think of the band of that name or possibly the song by Gary Numan. We’re not talking about Ric Ocasek and those Cars or any
WrestleMania III marked the peak of the 80s wrestling boom. A packed Silverdome, Savage and Steamboat’s classic, and Hogan facing André in the biggest main event ever turned the night into wrestling’s most iconic spectacle.
Hulk Hogan’s Rock n Wrestling turned Saturday mornings into a wild mix of cartoons, wrestlers, and pure eighties energy, creating a world where heroes flexed, villains plotted, and kids couldn’t look away.
WWF Ice Cream Bars turned summer afternoons into wrestling memories. With superstar cookies, sweet vanilla, and that perfect chocolate snap, they became a childhood ritual and one of the most beloved treats of the 80s wrestling boom.
LJN’s Wrestling Superstars turned 80s wrestling into playtime legend. Big, rubber, and full of personality, the figures let kids bring the WWF home, creating a toy‑aisle universe that shaped an entire generation of fans.
Few rivalries in American sports have sustained the level of intensity, star power, and shared excellence that UNC and Duke basketball produced throughout the 1990s. From packed arenas in Chapel Hill and Durham to the
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
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
ColecoVision was the Cadillac of home video games back in 1982; a system so powerful, you’d make friends with the biggest jerk on the block just to be near it. Everyone had an Atari—that quaint little
Twenty five years ago, Independence Day was released in theaters and a new modern classic was born. Even though most everyone who visits The Retro Network has likely seen the film, there may be some
Pretty Woman earned $178 million at the box office in 1990 and sold over 42 million domestic tickets, making it the highest-grossing romantic comedy of its era. A Broadway adaptation followed in 2018. Thirty-six years
We say farewell to our friend and co-host, William Bruce West on this episode, then explore the rest of issue 125 of Wizard magazine. You can contribute to helping Will’s family pay the medical bills
WrestleMania 2 turned one night into a coast‑to‑coast experiment. Three cities, three crowds, and a steel‑cage finale proved the WWF was determined to grow bigger, louder, and bolder, pushing wrestling further into the national spotlight.
Learning the Ropes blended family‑sitcom heart with the wild world of 80s wrestling, following a gentle teacher moonlighting as a masked grappler. It became a quirky, endearing snapshot of an era when wrestling seemed to spill into everything.
Grunt! captured the wild spirit of 80s wrestling with a mockumentary that blended mystery, chaos, and cult‑movie charm. It celebrated the era’s larger‑than‑life characters and preserved the unpredictable world that made wrestling unforgettable.