Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Some cartoons don’t just live in our memories — they live in our vocabulary. For anyone who grew up in the ’80s or ’90s, certain ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. There was a very specific moment in the 1980s when television executives looked at children and thought: “What if we simply gave ...
Kristy Ambrose has been writing professionally since 2010. She dabbles in various genres, but her favorites are fantasy and science fiction. She creates everything from fanfiction to serialized novels ...
For those of us of a certain age, nothing from childhood was better than Saturday mornings. The weekend was here, which meant no school for the next two days. To celebrate, we’d wake up early on ...
Saturday-morning cartoons were legend back in the day. Here are some of the best '80s cartoons that will make you feel like a kid again. RD.Com, Getty Images (2), via streaming services (5) These days ...
The 1980s were a significant time for both cartoons and science fiction tales, with the decade producing some truly incredible animated sci-fi series that hold up today. Though the sci-fi genre has ...
When we first ran a list of a dozen unmemorable ’80s cartoons back in November, we barely scratched the surface of the decade’s crappiest animated shows. Here are 12 more that deserve to be ...
Remember when Saturday mornings meant waking up before your parents, pouring a bowl of sugary cereal, and settling in front of the television for hours of animated glory? Those iconic 1980s cartoon ...
Ah, the 1980s, a time of spandex, synth guitars, and toy advertisements disguised as Saturday morning cartoons meant to entertain a generation of kids all over the world. It's impossible to sum up the ...
Not stories with endings. Not subtle character arcs. Just laser guns, synth music, animal hybrids, toyetic vehicles, and an intro theme that went harder than it had any right to. Some of these ...
There was a very specific moment in the 1980s when television executives looked at children and thought: “What if we simply gave them everything?” Not stories with endings. Not subtle character arcs.