The Best and Worst Canadian Entertainers from the 80s and 90s
In this episode of "The 80s and 90s Uncensored," the guys explore the best and worst Canadian entertainers that graced our screens and airwaves during the iconic decades of the 80s and 90s.
So, whether you grew up during this golden age of entertainment or are a curious newcomer eager to learn about the Canadian stars who left their mark, this episode of "The 80s and 90s Uncensored" is for you.
Here are the top 10 news events that 80s kids remember watching on TV, the ones that shaped our understanding of the world before we even realized it.
In the 80s and 90s, a number of tv themes crossed over into the mainstream charts. Here’s a journey through the era when TV theme songs weren’t just memorable. They were hits.
Jude Cole’s “Back to School,” the jaunty pop-rock number from Rodney Dangerfield’s 1986 comedy, is one of those perfectly-timed little pieces of 80s sonic wallpaper.
If you bought music in the late 80s or early 90s, there’s a good chance you remember an odd piece of packaging that has mostly vanished from memory: the CD longbox.
Pour yourself a bowl of sugar disguised as breakfast, and plant yourself in front of the TV for hours of cartoons that sold the cereal that funded them.
The Cold War was an invisible war that loomed large over the 1980s. Hollywood transformed that tension into a parade of films that ranged from heart-pounding thrillers to satirical comedies.
Let’s talk Pump Up the Volume – the 1990 cult classic starring Christian Slater and a whole lot of teenage angst. This gem is a time capsule of rebellion.
These two icons weren’t just video game characters. They were cultural ambassadors, console-selling forces, and breakfast cereal box mascots.
In the greatest subgenre nobody asked for but everyone remembers, TV gave us intergalactic visitors who moved in with human families, disrupted suburban routines.
From the water cooler to the group chat, we are sprinkling lines from the 80s and 90s into everyday conversation with zero awareness. It's like muscle memory, but for your mouth.

Independent web publisher, blogger, podcaster… creator of digital worlds. Analyst, designer, storyteller… proud polymath and doer of things. Founder and producer of “the80sand90s.com” and gag-man co-host of the “The 80s and 90s Uncensored” podcast.
The Y2K bug was a cultural phenomenon. It was a late-90s cocktail of millennial anxiety, corporate profiteering, and 24-hour news hysteria.