Mighty Morphin Power Rangers
Five teenagers morph into color-coded superheroes to fight Rita Repulsa and her rubber monsters in Angel Grove. Haim Saban's audacious adaptation of Japanese suit footage and American cheesiness became an unstoppable juggernaut—kids bought the toys, wore the costumes, and shouted "It's morphin' time!" in playgrounds across America.
Mighty Morphin Power Rangers premiered on television in 1993, created by Haim Saban and produced in conjunction with the Japanese studio Toei, which supplied suit footage from the Super Sentai series Kyoryu Sentai Zyuranger. Saban's genius was grafting American actors and serialized storytelling onto Japanese action footage, creating a hybrid that resonated with 90s children. The original lineup featured five teenagers—Jason (Red), Trini (Yellow), Billy (Blue), Kimberly (Pink), and Zack (Black)—recruited by the giant floating head Zordon and aided by his fussy robot assistant Alpha 5.
The show's three-season original run (1993–1996, 145 episodes) became a merchandising phenomenon, with action figures, costumes, and accessories flying off shelves. Power Rangers toys outsold nearly all competitors and remain collectible today. The show's success spawned multiple spin-offs and films throughout the 1990s and beyond, though the original series' after-school energy and earnest approach to teenage teamwork remain its defining characteristic. The cultural impact was enormous; Power Rangers reached children globally and became synonymous with 1990s kids' television.
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