11 Celebrities Who Guest-Starred on Their Spouses’ TV Shows
Many celebrity couples have crossed paths at work.
Many celebrity couples have crossed paths at work.
Over the course of roughly 500 episodes of the 1986-93 original series and its many spin-offs, the crew got to do pretty much everything else involving replica mucus.
Before the show was a hit, audience members were made out of plywood.
In 1995, 'Sesame Street' needed a miracle to survive—or a fuzzy, giggly red monster.
The popular home shopping station could have had some A-list salespeople. Marlon Brando wanted a job there.
The titular character’s name literally means Red-Bean Bread Man.
Fourteen hundred of the super stylish items used or worn by Don, Joan, Peggy and the rest of the Mad Men cast are up for sale at auction.
In 1968, a correspondence with a schoolteacher led to Charles Schulz creating the Peanuts’s first African-American character.
Archie, Jughead, Betty, and Veronica are versatile enough to go anywhere: from the gritty world of a vigilante to an alternate universe.
Vaughn Meader skyrocketed to stardom with his impersonation of John F. Kennedy in the early 1960s, even winning a Grammy. But it all came crashing down the day the President was assassinated.
The story of how television personality and painter Bob Ross ended up with a lifelong perm.
The longest running original series in Adult Swim history is coming to a close.
In the '80s, everyone owned a pair of leg warmers. This is why.
Oscars and NBA championship rings can fetch high prices at auction.
Lots of stuff is more dangerous than we realized. But some things people once considered dangerous aren't harmful at all.
How many of these references and inside jokes have you caught?
The show about nothing is full of cultural references that may be unfamiliar to younger viewers today.
National Geographic offers a snout-to-tail dissection of the most famous predator to ever walk the Earth.
Nearly 35 years after its debut, Vicki the Robot and 'Small Wonder' are simultaneously remembered with fondness and outright scorn.
There was a lot to like about the early 1990s sitcom that transformed Mayim Bialik into a fashion icon and turned "Whoa!" into a (still-popular) catchphrase.
Insomniacs with credit cards have inspired some of the most improbable, and impractical, products ever hawked on late-night television.