Before Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce, there was Luke and Laura.

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Luke and Laura’s wedding on General Hospital was not just a soap opera wedding. It was a television event. In 1981, about 30 million people watched a fictional couple get married in the middle of the afternoon, and for that moment, daytime TV felt bigger than prime time.

Today, Taylor and Travis are having the modern version of that same pop culture moment. Instead of everyone gathering around the TV at the same time, people are following it through news alerts, fan videos, social media posts, street closures, and crowds outside Madison Square Garden.

Luke and Laura were the wedding America watched.

Taylor and Travis are the wedding America is following.

Different era. Different screen. Same kind of fascination.

Before Bond, Roger Moore Was The Saint

I was about 10 years old when this intro ran, and it was my favorite. The moment that halo appeared and the theme music kicked in, it had me. It was simple, but it worked. The little stick figure with the halo was genius, and the music was cool, haunting, and instantly recognizable. In a way, The Saint taught a whole lesson in how much you could do with very little. A line drawing, a halo, and the right piece of music could stay in your head for decades.

The show itself had already been successful overseas before American network viewers got it. Roger Moore played Simon Templar from 1962 to 1969, long before he became James Bond. The character was not exactly a detective, not exactly a spy, and not exactly a crook. He was more of a charming modern-day Robin Hood type who often worked outside the rules to help people who could not get justice the usual way.

In the United States, The Saint first found an audience through syndication before NBC picked up the color episodes for network television. NBC did not air every episode, but the American exposure helped make Roger Moore a familiar face here. The show had style, mystery, travel, danger, and a lead character who always seemed one step ahead of everyone else.

The intro may be what many people remember first. That halo over Simon Templar’s head, the stick-figure Saint logo, and Edwin Astley’s theme created one of those openings that did not need a lot of explanation. It was classy, clever, and just a little mysterious.

Looking back, The Saint feels like one of those shows that bridged the gap between old-fashioned adventure stories and the cool spy craze of the 1960s. It had the suits, the cars, the international flavor, the beautiful locations, and that smooth Roger Moore confidence. And for a kid watching at home, sometimes all it took was that halo and that music to know something cool was about to happen.

Before the Lawyers Got Involved

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As a kid, I always wondered why adults were leaving blasting caps around often enough that they had to hire Willie Mays to make a commercial about it.

This old PSA is such a strange piece of TV history. One minute you were watching cartoons or cereal commercials, and the next minute one of the greatest baseball players of all time was looking into the camera warning you not to touch explosives.

It feels like it came from that era before everything had ten warning labels, sealed packaging, and a legal department reviewing every word. The message was simple: if you find a blasting cap, do not pick it up. Tell a policeman, a fireman, or an adult.

Looking back, it is funny how many safety lessons were delivered to kids through television. Fire safety, seat belts, strangers, drugs, littering, and apparently, random blasting caps.

Only back then could Willie Mays interrupt your Saturday morning to warn you about explosives.

Do you remember this PSA?

Magilla Gorilla

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Magilla Gorilla was one of those classic Hanna-Barbera characters who was impossible not to like. Sitting in Mr. Peebles’ pet shop with his little hat, bow tie, suspenders, and endless supply of bananas, Magilla was always waiting for someone to take him home.

Of course, every time someone did, it usually went wrong — and poor Mr. Peebles would end up with Magilla right back in the window.

Do you remember watching Magilla Gorilla?

Munster Father’s Day

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Eddie Munster had no doubt his dad could do anything — even if Herman’s help usually caused more trouble than he meant to. This Cheerios commercial is a fun little Father’s Day-style reminder that to a kid, Dad is still the biggest hero in the house.

Happy Father’s Day to all the dads, granddads, stepdads, and father figures who may not be perfect, but are loved just the same.

Lotsa Luck

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One of my family’s favorite shows starring Dom DeLuise only lasted one season, but we never forgot it.

Lotsa Luck starred Dom as Stanley Belmont, a good-hearted working guy stuck supporting his mother, sister, and unemployed brother-in-law. It was loud, silly, and very much built around Dom DeLuise’s lovable, frustrated comedy style.

It may not have lasted long, but if your family watched it, chances are you still remember it.

Did you watch Lotsa Luck?

ABC Saturday Morning Cartoons 1971

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This is what Saturday mornings looked like when the cereal bowl was full, the TV was warm, and the whole morning belonged to cartoons. ABC’s 1971 lineup brought together a wild mix of animated favorites, spooky fun, music, adventure, and live-action weirdness that only the early ’70s could deliver.

Did you watch ABC on Saturday mornings, or were you switching between channels?

Nanny and the Professor-Were You A Fan?

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Nanny and the Professor premiered on ABC on Wednesday, January 21, 1970, and ran until December 27, 1971. It starred Juliet Mills as the mysterious Phoebe Figalilly, better known as Nanny, and Richard Long as widowed Professor Harold Everett.

The show had a gentle Mary Poppins feel, with Nanny always seeming to know a little more than everyone else. Was she magical, psychic, or just very clever? That was part of the fun.

For many kids, it fit perfectly into ABC’s family lineup, especially when it aired on Friday nights near The Brady Bunch and The Partridge Family. It was sweet, quiet, and very much of its time.

Did you watch Nanny and the Professor? Did you think Nanny was magical?

Ba-Ba-Ba-Barbarino!

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Before Saturday Night Fever, before Grease, and before John Travolta became one of the biggest movie stars of the 1970s, he was Vinnie Barbarino on Welcome Back, Kotter.

One of his great early TV moments came in the episode “The Telethon,” which aired on February 12, 1976. In the episode, the Sweathogs try to raise money for much-needed school supplies, and Travolta gets to show off the charm that was already making him the breakout star of the show.

His bit was a goofy little number sung to the tune of “Barbara Ann,” turning it into “Ba-Ba-Ba-Barbarino.” It was silly, self-centered, and completely Vinnie — exactly the kind of moment that made kids repeat his lines at school the next day.

Welcome Back, Kotter had only premiered in September 1975, but Travolta was already becoming the one everyone was watching. Vinnie Barbarino gave him his first big break on television, and by 1976 the fan mail and attention were building fast. Within just a couple of years, he would jump from Sweathog heartthrob to full-blown superstar with Saturday Night Fever and Grease.

Looking back, this clip is fun because you can already see it: the grin, the timing, the swagger, and that Travolta confidence before the rest of the world completely caught up.

Ba-ba-ba… Barbarino!

When Elvis Rocked the USS Hancock

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On April 3, 1956, Elvis Presley made one of his early national TV appearances on The Milton Berle Show, but this one had a setting you don’t forget — the flight deck of the aircraft carrier USS Hancock.

The ship was docked at Naval Air Station North Island in San Diego, giving the live NBC broadcast a built-in military audience. There was Milton Berle, sailors packed around the deck, and a 21-year-old Elvis just as “Heartbreak Hotel” was making him a household name.

Elvis performed with his regular band — Scotty Moore, Bill Black, and D.J. Fontana — and sang songs including “Heartbreak Hotel” and “Blue Suede Shoes.” This was still early Elvis: before the full “Elvis the Pelvis” backlash, before the famous June 1956 “Hound Dog” appearance, and about two years before he was drafted into the U.S. Army in 1958.

Looking back, it’s such a perfect 1950s moment: Milton Berle, live television, a Navy aircraft carrier, and Elvis Presley bringing rock and roll to the flight deck.

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