This week, we take a haunted stroll through the cobwebbed halls of pop culture history to uncover the true roots of The Addams Family. Before the catchy theme song, finger snaps, and Wednesday’s deadpan glare, there was Charles Addams — the cartoonist who dreamed up America’s spookiest, strangest household in The New Yorker. We explore: How Charles Addams’ single-panel gags in the 1930s evolved into the family we know today.The leap from cartoons to the 1960s TV sitcom (and why Mo...
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This week, we take a haunted stroll through the cobwebbed halls of pop culture history to uncover the true roots of The Addams Family. Before the catchy theme song, finger snaps, and Wednesday’s deadpan glare, there was Charles Addams — the cartoonist who dreamed up America’s spookiest, strangest household in The New Yorker. We explore: How Charles Addams’ single-panel gags in the 1930s evolved into the family we know today.The leap from cartoons to the 1960s TV sitcom (and why Mo...
015 From Nouns to Newton: The Magic of Schoolhouse Rock
My Sister Made Me Watch This
33 minutes
1 week ago
015 From Nouns to Newton: The Magic of Schoolhouse Rock
Get ready to hum along, because once these songs start… they never leave your head! This week, we take a nostalgia-packed trip back to Schoolhouse Rock, the beloved Saturday morning shorts that taught us multiplication, grammar, science, and American history—all with the help of some ridiculously catchy tunes. From Three Is a Magic Number to I’m Just a Bill, we revisit the songs that shaped our childhoods, share the funny ways they stuck with us (yes, we all sang the Preamble in class), and t...
My Sister Made Me Watch This
This week, we take a haunted stroll through the cobwebbed halls of pop culture history to uncover the true roots of The Addams Family. Before the catchy theme song, finger snaps, and Wednesday’s deadpan glare, there was Charles Addams — the cartoonist who dreamed up America’s spookiest, strangest household in The New Yorker. We explore: How Charles Addams’ single-panel gags in the 1930s evolved into the family we know today.The leap from cartoons to the 1960s TV sitcom (and why Mo...