Think the '90s were 10 years ago? You're in for a big surprise. Clinton was elected 20 years ago, Kurt Cobain was found dead 18 years ago and Justin Bieber wasn't even born until 1994. Yes, that's right, you're old.
Dave Coulier, who is most remembered for playing Uncle Joey on the classic sitcom 'Full House,' took part in an interview on a Canadian show. For a skit titled 'Coulier on Coolio' - Coolio being the famous rapper from the 1990s - the actor was asked to talk about the rapper with the similar sounding name. But halfway through the interview, it all goes quite wrong.
Sure, a Garbage Pail Kids tattoo can be cool, but a massive full-back design based on characters from the '80s trading card series? Er, we might just have to draw the line there.
If you read the news yesterday, you'll know that disco diva Donna Summer sadly passed away at the age of 63 after a battle of cancer. And, like many folks these days, you probably tweeted your condolences. However, as is often the case these days, many Twitter users were a bit confused over which celebrity is actually in the news.
Before there were iPhones and iPads, people had to use things like playing cards and board games to keep themselves entertained. Yes, kids, it was rough.
Nevertheless, those of us of a certain age hold a certain nostalgia for the Rubik's Cubes and Connect Fours of our youth. Which was why we were so happy to see them, in all their stop-motion glory, in this video for the Delta Heavy tune 'Get By.'
'Perfect Strangers' was about more than just mismatched cousins who often found themselves in ridiculous circumstances and occasionally danced the "Dance of Joy." The sitcom, which ran from 1986 to 1993, was about following one's dreams.
In the case of Balki Bartokomous (Bronson Pinchot), his dream was to escape his family sheep farm in the Greek-like island of Mypos and start anew in Am
Doesn't it seem like only yesterday that those 'Little Rascals' Alfalfa and his best pal Spanky were hiding out in a ballet studio dressed as ballerinas to escape the tyranny of those two bullies? Even after all these years, we will always see Bug Hall and Travis Tedford as those same young boys always getting into trouble, and the same goes for the rest of the cast of the 1994 update of the class
In an interview with Piers Morgan last month, former 'Growing Pains' star and teen idol Kirk Cameron called homosexuality "unnatural" and "ultimately destructive to so many of the foundations of civilization." That didn't go over well with a lot of people, including his castmates on "Growing Pains".
Boy bands are back. With One Direction's much buzzed-about performance on 'Saturday Night Live' last weekend and the new hotness of The Wanted, the boy band is definitely a thing again. But before we get too excited, let us not forget where they came from. Is the return of the boy band a good thing?
If you grew up on '90s Nickelodeon cartoons, the gang over at Dr.Coolsex Comedy is going to blow your mind. They have taken your animated memories, made them live-action and twisted them so far around, your innocence will be lost. And this time the target is the wacky gang from 'Hey Arnold!'
The hit NBC sitcom 'Frasier' ended its original run almost eight years ago. But the Web is buzzing about the Kelsey Grammer vehicle again due to a surprising revelation about the callers who phoned Dr. Frasier Crane's self-help radio show.
It turns out the faceless voices often belonged to celebrities. And some pretty big celebs at that.
Ever wonder what 'Angry Birds' would look like if it was created way back in the '80s? The folks at Squirrel-Monkey.com have reimagined the massively successfully mobile game as an 8-bit creation complete with blocky sprites and cheesy MIDI music. Maybe it's just us, but this makes us miss our old Commodore 64 terribly.
Ever wonder what Facebook would've looked like back in the early days of the internet? Well, wonder no more. The fine folks at SquirrelMonkey.com have unearthed this (fake) VHS tape from the 20th century TV show 'Wonders of the World Wide Web,' which discusses a new destination called "The Facebook."