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- What made ‘90s kids' shows so special was their ability to combine humor, heart, and valuable life lessons seamlessly. These shows weren’t just mindless entertainment; they encouraged creativity, fostered friendships, tackled real-life issues, and sometimes even inspired careers.
www.ranker.com/list/best-90s-kid-shows-ranked/molly-gander
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Konnie Huq: why the 1990s were an iconic era for Kids TV. The former Blue Peter presenter explains why the pre-internet decade produced the best children's shows on the box. Radio Times Staff.
The Ultimate 100+ Nostalgia List for every 90's kid (TV shows) by E-I-R-E-N-E • Created 13 years ago • Modified 10 years ago. Reminisce the good ol' days. The television shows of the 1990s-early 2000s. Comment below if any of your favourite shows aren't listed.
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- TV-Y7-FV
Oct 15, 2024 · What made ‘90s kids' shows so special was their ability to combine humor, heart, and valuable life lessons seamlessly. These shows weren’t just mindless entertainment; they encouraged creativity, fostered friendships, tackled real-life issues, and sometimes even inspired careers.
- Mona Bassil
- Journalist
- Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (1987-1996) Produced by Fred Wolf Films and adapted from the comic book characters created by Kevin Eastman and Peter Laird, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles was a worldwide phenomenon at the time, and it capitalized on all its merchandise, especially action figures, breakfast cereals, and plush toys.
- Full House (1987-1995) ABC’s eight-season family sitcom Full House centers on widowed father Danny Tanner (Bob Saget), who raises his three daughters, D.J.
- Boy Meets World (1993-2000) ABC’s coming-of-age sitcom Boy Meets World follows Cory Matthews (Ben Savage) and his misadventures at school, at home, and with his friends.
- The Powerpuff Girls (1998-2005) Cartoon Network’s critically acclaimed The Powerpuff Girls revolves around three crime-fighting girls living with their creator and parent, Professor Utonium.
- Are You Afraid of The Dark?
- Boy Meets World
- Rugrats
- Goosebumps
- Recess
- Spider-Man
- Hey Arnold!
- Dexter's Laboratory
- Bill Nye The Science Guy
- Batman: The Animated Series
To finally answer the rhetorical question that this Canadian horror anthology asked us back in 1990; yes, we are afraid of the dark, and mostly because of Are You Afraid of the Dark? Like the best shows we remember from when we were kids (and like most things from the 90s), Are You Afraid of the Dark was a beautifully campy show that embraced its f...
TGIF – the block of programming that ABC showed on Friday nights – wasn’t just a marketing gimmick; it was a way of life. Fridays were special to us because after a tough week of school and homework and tests the weekend was coming, sure, but Cory Matthews and Boy Meets World was coming sooner; and that was something for us all to get excited about...
See an image or play a soundbite from Rugrats and a blanket of childhood calm will wrap around you and make you smile. The brightly colored cartoon told from the perspective of Tommy Pickles and his friends incorporated everything great about Nickelodeon cartoons from the 90s, and if you were to watch it now you’d still be blown away by how enterta...
If Are You Afraid of the Dark was the genuinely frightening show that treated us like adults, then Goosebumps was its cheesier and more fun cousin, always there for us when we wanted something to make us feel like a kid. With classic episodes like "Night of the Living Dummy," "A Night in Terror Tower," and "Stay Out of the Basement," Goosebumpstook...
Saturday mornings were a magical time filled with endless potential, endless sugary cereal, and an endless block of cartoons called One Saturday Morning. It was everything a kid could ask for after a tough week of coloring and playing outside, and the best part of it was without a doubt Disney’s Recess. Following the adventures of fourth graders TJ...
Before superheroes hit it big on the silver screen with blockbuster tentpoles, they spent the bulk of their time in animated shows on television in the 90s. Every Saturday morning superheroes zoomed in and out of our lives with anime-inspired animation, surprisingly deep storylines, and a level of maturity that had not been seen in cartoons prior t...
We’re still not entirely sure if Hey Arnold! was a kid’s cartoon or a nightmare factory that churned out stories of street youths in a concrete wasteland with little-to-no adult supervision. Packed with filthy and misshapen characters that constantly bullied or stalked one another, Hey Arnold! exists in that realm of horror/fantasy/comedy/random-co...
What was it about cartoons in the 90s that featured unsupervised children doing dangerous things that made us all so envious? Maybe it was the sense of freedom that these characters had. Maybe it was their endless schemes and everlasting playtime that we were jealous of. Or maybe we all just wanted an amazingly cool secret hideout like the best of ...
Bill! Bill! Bill! Bill! Another 90s show, another 90s theme song that will be caught in our heads until the day we die. But this time, rather than insane animation or heart-warming live action families that came after the opening credits, Bill Nye The Science Guy was our very own science class; and damnit if he didn’t make learning fun! Between Bil...
Consistently ranked as not only the best adaptation of Batman outside of the comics, but as one of the best animated series of all time, Batman: The Animated Series took Batman and gave him a whole new identity for a new generation of fans. Incorporating film noir elements into a thematically complex story that spanned multiple seasons, Batman was ...
- Jake Horowitz
Jan 22, 2022 · At the risk of sounding like our parents, when it comes to kids’ TV shows, they just don’t make them like they used to, do they? The likes of Art Attack, Live & Kicking and Fun...
Apr 11, 2023 · Adults outside of anime fandoms were discovering that animation wasn't easily dismissible as "for kids" anymore. Even the truly goofy, nonsensical shows made up for their lack of dramatic depth...