Things shifted when Nickelodeon and the Disney Channel showed up. Cartoons weren't just a Saturday thing anymore. The ...
You absorbed lessons without realizing you were being taught, and that foundation still shows up in who you are today.
Long before reality TV blurred the lines between celebrity and character, Saturday morning cartoons were already doing it—with ink, paint and a heavy dose of bubblegum pop. Throughout the 1960s and ...
Back in the day, Saturday morning was the best time of the week. You'd get up early, pour yourself a huge bowl of sugar disguised as breakfast, and let your TV assault you with animated adventures ...
The '90s were a golden age for Saturday morning cartoons—an era when anything could be animated, no matter how weird, wild, or completely unhinged. From mutant biker mice and time-traveling teens to ...
Saturday morning cartoons are now officially a thing of the past. According to the Washington Post, CW — the last american broadcast channel still airing cartoons on Saturday mornings — has pulled the ...
Cereal bowl in hand, sunlight streaming through blinds, the television warming up. For Gen X, Saturday mornings meant pure freedom: no school, no responsibilities, just animated adventures and Sugar ...
Courage the Cowardly Dog centers on a scared little dog living on a remote farm with his elderly owners. At first glance, it might seem like this cartoon could never work as a big movie. But think ...
In the 1980s and early 1990s, everyone had a cartoon. Whether you were trying to sell trucks that turned into robots, ninja turtles with zippy attitudes, or a new class of rappers, the Saturday ...