#Nickelodeon

49 items

Video thumbnail — "Aaahh!!! Real Monsters" Theme Song (HQ) | Episode Opening Credits | Nick Animation
TV 1994–1997

Aaahh!!! Real Monsters

A Nickelodeon animated series about three monster students learning to scare humans in a monster academy beneath a city dump. Created by Klasky Csupo, the studio behind Rugrats, Aaahh!!! Real Monsters delivered gross-out humor and distinctively ugly-cute character design that defined 90s kids' animation.

Video thumbnail — Les Aventures de Tintin - Ouverture (1991 Original Opening)
TV 1991–1992

The Adventures of Tintin

The boy reporter and his dog Snowy stepped off the comic-book page and into a faithfully animated series that arrived on HBO in 1991. For many American kids, this was their first Tintin — and it stuck.

Video thumbnail — 90s Nickelodeon All That Intro (seasons 1-6)
TV 1994–2000

All That

A live-action sketch-comedy show on Nickelodeon that functioned as "Saturday Night Live for kids." Premiering in April 1994, All That launched stars including Kenan Thompson, Kel Mitchell, and Amanda Bynes while anchoring Nickelodeon's beloved "SNICK" Saturday-night block with its irreverent humor and memorable recurring sketches.

Video thumbnail — Are you Afraid of the Dark Intro
TV 1990–2000

Are You Afraid of the Dark?

A horror-anthology series that began on Canadian TV in 1990 and found its true audience on Nickelodeon's SNICK block. Hosted by the Midnight Society — teens gathered around a campfire — each episode delivered a self-contained spooky tale introduced with the ritual phrase and midnight dust. Genuinely creepy for a kids' show.

Video thumbnail — "Avatar: The Last Airbender" Theme Song (HQ) | Episode Opening Credits | Nick Animation
TV 2005–2008

Avatar: The Last Airbender

Nickelodeon's animated epic about the last Airbender and a world where people bend the four elements. The show's serialized storytelling, humor, and character arcs (especially Zuko's redemption) proved surprisingly mature and acclaimed for kids' television. It ran three seasons from 2005 to 2008 and spawned an enduring fandom.

Video thumbnail — Clarissa Explains It All Official Theme Song | NickRewind
TV 1991–1994

Clarissa Explains It All

Clarissa Darling talked directly to you from her chaotic 90s bedroom, narrating the endless dramas of school, crushes, and sibling war. Melissa Joan Hart made the fourth-wall break feel like having a best friend's voice in your head — while Sam climbed through the window to a guitar chord and little brother Ferguson schemed downstairs. It proved girls' stories could hook any audience.

Video thumbnail — "Danny Phantom" Official Theme Song (HD) | Nicktoons
TV 2004–2007

Danny Phantom

A 14-year-old turns half-ghost in an accident with his parents' ghost portal, gets an alter ego, and starts protecting his town — all while his own ghost-hunting parents think he's the enemy. The theme song is one millennials still recite word for word.

Video thumbnail — Double Dare OFFICIAL Classic Full Episode | Nick
TV 1986–2000

Double Dare

Nickelodeon's messiest game show: take the money or take the physical challenge — and the physical challenge always meant getting slimed. Marc Summers, the giant obstacle course, and the human nose you dug through.

Video thumbnail — "Doug" Theme Song (HQ) | Episode Opening Credits | Nickelodeon Animation
TV 1991–1999

Doug

The banana-yellow-sweater-vest kid, his journal narration, his crush on Patti Mayonnaise, and his daydream alter-ego Quailman. One of the original three Nicktoons — it actually aired first.

Video thumbnail — Drake & Josh – Season 1 and 2 Opening
TV 2004–2007

Drake & Josh

The odd-couple sitcom that dominated Nickelodeon screens in the early 2000s. Drake Bell and Josh Peck as mismatched step-brothers—one cool and laid-back, one neurotic and anxious—got into schemes that escalated from household mishaps to ridiculous chaos, and it was impossible not to laugh along.

Video thumbnail — Eureeka's Castle Intro 1989-1991
TV 1989–1996

Eureeka's Castle

A puppet show on Nick Jr. where a sorceress-in-training and her band of bumbling friends lived inside a giant's wind-up music-box castle. Dragons tripped over their own tails, a bat crash-landed insisting he meant to do that, and every episode wrapped adventure in giggles. For most 90s kids the real memory is the reruns — a Nick Jr. staple that kept the castle alive well past its original run.

Video thumbnail — Fairly OddParents | Theme Song | Nick
TV 2001–2017

The Fairly OddParents

Timmy Turner's fairy godparents Cosmo and Wanda granted every wish—and every wish went catastrophically wrong. Nickelodeon's absurdist comedy about a miserable kid with unlimited magical wishes became a juggernaut that somehow survived 16 years, backseat-driven by evil babysitter Vicky and Mr. Crocker's obsessive screams.

Video thumbnail — Figure it Out: Main Theme
TV 1997–1999

Figure It Out

A kid with a weird secret talent, a panel of Nickelodeon stars guessing it word by word on Billy the Answer Head, and the ever-looming Secret Slime Action ready to douse someone for "looking to the left." Summer Sanders kept order; nobody stayed dry.

Video thumbnail — 1992 Nickelodeon Gak Commercial
Toys 1992–2004

Nickelodeon Gak

Mattel's stretchy, squishy neon compound that made a loud fart noise when you squished it back into its star-shaped container. Named after what the Double Dare crew called the show's on-set slime messes, Gak's genius was the noise—which was the entire point for most kids.

Video thumbnail — "Hey Arnold!" Theme Song (HQ) | Episode Opening Credits | Nick Animation
TV 1996–2004

Hey Arnold!

Football-headed Arnold navigating urban life with his boarding house family. Nickelodeon's unusually melancholy animated series about childhood loneliness, gentrification, and the quiet moments between the gags.

Video thumbnail — Hey Dude Theme & Intro (HQ)
TV 1989–1991

Hey Dude

Nickelodeon's dude-ranch teen sitcom, set at the Bar None Ranch out in the Arizona desert. One of the network's first live-action comedies, it became a rerun staple that a whole generation caught after school.

Video thumbnail — ICarly Theme Song
TV 2007–2012

iCarly

The Nickelodeon sitcom about a teenage girl running a web show from her apartment, perfectly capturing the moment when online video became the new fame. Carly, Sam, and Freddie's shenanigans and random web-show bits defined what a generation thought being internet-famous looked like—before YouTube influencers made it real.

Video thumbnail — Inspector Gadget Opening Credits and Theme Song
TV 1983–2000

Inspector Gadget

The bumbling cyborg inspector with a gadget for every situation, voiced by Get Smart's Don Adams, became a 90s institution through reruns that bracketed the decade. For most kids, Gadget wasn't a show from before their time — it was just always on.

Video thumbnail — Kenan and Kel | Theme Tune with Lyrics | Nickelodeon UK
TV 1996–2001

Kenan & Kel

SNICK's buddy-comedy crown jewel: scheming Kenan and his orange-soda-obsessed best friend Kel, forever tangling themselves in grocery-store plots that collapsed with a shared "Awwww, here it goes!" The show taught a generation to love orange soda and made Kenan Thompson a star.

Video thumbnail — Legends Of The Hidden Temple Intro (1993)
TV 1993–1995

Legends of the Hidden Temple

Six teams of kids competed in arcade-style obstacle courses to retrieve a relic from inside a booby-trapped temple. Hosted by Kirk Fogg and the giant talking stone head Olmec, this Nickelodeon action game show was as chaotic as it was captivating.

Video thumbnail — Nickelodeon 1990 Promo: "Mr. Wizard's World"
TV 1983–2000

Mr. Wizard's World

Don Herbert's calm, deadpan science show where the magic was real: dry ice, eggs pulled into bottles, chemistry that made sense. Each episode, Mr. Wizard sat down with a rotating kid assistant and made the world work. No costume, no cartoon, no nonsense — just a patient man and genuine wonder.

Video thumbnail — Nick Arcade Opening Theme
TV 1992–1997

Nick Arcade

You remember it running for years — it was actually two quick seasons, all in 1992, kept alive by reruns until 1997. Phil Moore sent kids "to the Video Zone!", the green-screen finale where you physically jumped around inside a video game and almost always lost. The dream of every kid with a Genesis and a dream.

Video thumbnail — Nick @ Nite - Classic Ident / Bumper Compilation (1992 - 1998)
TV 1985–present

Nick at Nite

Past your bedtime, the TV glowing in the dark, your parents' childhood sitcoms unreeling while you drifted off. Nick at Nite turned Nickelodeon into a time machine after 8 p.m., swapping cartoons for decades-old classics. Those shows didn't belong to you — they belonged to them — and that made watching feel like stolen time.

Video thumbnail — Nickelodeon - Classic Ident / Bumper Compilation (1984 to Mid-2000s)
TV 1984–2009

Nickelodeon Bumpers

The wacky five-to-thirty-second interstitials wedged between shows — the orange splat that could be anything, the goofy stop-motion and live-action idents, and the sung "Nickelodeon" jingle. There were a million of them, and 90s kids remember them as fondly as the shows.

Video thumbnail — Nickelodeon GUTS - Intro Theme (1992, HQ)
TV 1992–1995

Nickelodeon GUTS

An extreme-sports game show where three kid athletes competed in over-the-top events, many of them strapped into bungee harnesses. Hosted by Mike O'Malley and refereed by Moira Quirk, it crowned winners with a gold GUTS medal and a glowing piece of the legendary Aggro Crag. That final mountain climb — Aggro Crag, Mega Crag, or Super Aggro Crag — was the holy grail of 90s kids' TV.

Video thumbnail — Nickelodeon Magazine Commercial- 1993
Books 1993–2009

Nickelodeon Magazine

The kids' magazine that brought Nickelodeon into mailboxes nationwide, packed with comics, pranks, gross-out humor, and celebrity features. Published from 1993 to 2009, it was the must-read subscription for 1990s and 2000s kids.

The brightly painted green, orange and yellow exterior of the Nickelodeon Studios building at Universal Studios Florida, with orange paint-splattered columns
Trends 1990–2005

Nickelodeon Studios

The working Nickelodeon studio tucked inside Universal Studios Florida — the one with the giant Slime Geyser erupting green out front. Kids toured the soundstages, watched real game shows get taped, and dreamed of being the one pulled from the crowd to get slimed. For a 90s Nick fan, it was a pilgrimage.

Video thumbnail — 90'S NICKELODEON WITH TOYS R US - SUPER TOY RUN SWEEPSTAKES COMMERCIAL
Trends 1984–2000 peak

Nickelodeon Super Toy Run

The ultimate Nickelodeon dream: win a timed sprint through a toy store and keep everything you can throw in the cart. A few frantic minutes of grabbing toys off shelves — the single most desirable sweepstakes a '90s kid could imagine.

Video thumbnail — Nickelodeon Ultimate Room Sweepstakes Ad (1994)
Trends 1994–1996

Nickelodeon Ultimate Room Sweepstakes

The Nickelodeon sweepstakes that redid a lucky kid's bedroom into a toy-stuffed dream space. Every kid watching the ad did the math on their own boring room and desperately mailed in to win the makeover.

Video thumbnail — The Adventures of Pete and Pete Intro (Full Theme song) HQ
TV 1989–1996

The Adventures of Pete & Pete

Nickelodeon's cult-favorite series about two red-haired brothers, both named Pete, navigating a suburbia that was equal parts mundane and magical. Between the deadpan narration, the indie-rock soundtrack, and Artie, the Strongest Man in the World, it was a kids' show smart enough for adults.

Video thumbnail — Ren and Stimpy Show-Opening Theme
TV 1991–1996

The Ren & Stimpy Show

The unhinged Nicktoon about a psychotic chihuahua and a dim-witted cat — gross-out close-ups, surreal violence, and adult humor that sailed clean over kids' heads (and past a lot of censors). One of the original three Nicktoons, and the one that pushed hardest at the edges.

Video thumbnail — "Rocket Power" Theme Song (HQ) | Episode Opening Credits | Nick Animation
TV 1999–2004

Rocket Power

Four friends in a Southern California beach town who lived for surfing, skateboarding, and street hockey. Rocket Power bottled the turn-of-the-millennium extreme-sports craze — all attitude, boardshorts, and "friends before competition."

Video thumbnail — "Rocko's Modern Life" Theme Song (HQ) | Episode Opening Credits | Nick Animation
TV 1993–1996

Rocko's Modern Life

Rocko the wallaby and friends stumbled through suburban absurdism in a show that smuggled adult satire past Nickelodeon's censors. Crude, weird, and weirdly brilliant — the launching pad for future SpongeBob creators.

Video thumbnail — OLD VHS FOUND! | SNICK | Nickelodeon Roundhouse (1992) Theme Song | 2024 Restoration and Remaster
TV 1992–1995

Roundhouse

Nickelodeon's wildest Saturday-night experiment: sketch comedy fused with full dance numbers and musical performances, taped before a live audience. Built around the "Anyfamily" and their everyday problems, each episode ended with the cast singing the theme a cappella over the credits. It debuted on SNICK's opening night in 1992.

Video thumbnail — "Rugrats" Theme Song (HQ) | Episode Opening Credits | Nick Animation
TV 1991–2004

Rugrats

Nickelodeon's 1991 animated series gave the world the Pickles household — a group of talking babies narrating their daily adventures and misadventures with brilliant, absurdist humor. Rugrats proved that cartoons for kids didn't need to be dumbed down; the show's clever writing and wild imagination made it appointment TV for 90s kids and their parents.

Video thumbnail — Salute Your Shorts Intro
TV 1991–1992

Salute Your Shorts

Nickelodeon's summer-camp sitcom set at Camp Anawanna, where the campers ran circles around counselor Ug and bully Bobby Budnick ruled the bunk. The theme song — "Camp Anawanna, we hold you in our hearts" — is permanently lodged in every '90s kid's memory.

Video thumbnail — The Secret World of Alex Mack - Opening
TV 1994–1998

The Secret World of Alex Mack

An ordinary kid gets doused by an experimental chemical on the walk home from school and comes away with powers — telekinesis, finger-tip electricity, and the ability to melt into a puddle of silver goo. Then she has to keep it secret from everyone.

Video thumbnail — Nickelodeon Snick Bumper 1 (1992)
TV 1992–2004

SNICK

Saturday Night Nickelodeon — the legendary two-hour Saturday-evening programming block that launched in 1992. SNICK was must-watch weekend TV for 90s kids, featuring shows like Clarissa Explains It All, Are You Afraid of the Dark?, All That, and Kenan & Kel, with the iconic orange-couch bumper.

Video thumbnail — "SpongeBob SquarePants" Theme Song (NEW HD) | Episode Opening Credits | Nick Animation
TV 1999–present

SpongeBob SquarePants

The absurdist sponge working the fry cook line at Bikini Bottom, living under the sea with his starfish best friend, and radiating genuine optimism. SpongeBob SquarePants premiered on Nickelodeon in May 1999 and became the network's biggest hit — a cultural juggernaut that turned early episodes into an endless meme quarry.

Video thumbnail — The Rugrats Movie (1998) Trailer #1 | Movieclips Classic Trailers

The Rugrats Movie

The babies hit the big screen: newborn brother Dil arrives, the Reptar wagon careens into the woods, and the Pickles crew has to find its way home. Nickelodeon's first feature-length animated film, released November 1998, became the first non-Disney animated feature to cross $100 million at the US box office.

Video thumbnail — The Tomorrow People (1992) | The Origin Story Ep. 1 | 4K A.I. Remaster
TV 1992–1995

The Tomorrow People (90s revival)

Teenagers "break out" with telepathy, telekinesis, and teleportation, and find themselves drawn to a sentient psychic spaceship on a South Pacific island. The British revival of a 70s cult classic aired on Nickelodeon from 1992 to 1995 — and lives on for US viewers as a fever-dream memory many later doubted was real. It was real, and it was genuinely on Nick.

Video thumbnail — "The Wild Thornberrys" Theme Song (HQ) | Episode Opening Credits | Nick Animation
TV 1998–2004

The Wild Thornberrys

A globe-trotting family of wildlife documentarians, and their 12-year-old daughter Eliza, who has a secret: she can talk to animals. Plus her chimp sidekick Darwin, a feral little brother, and a booming, big-nosed naturalist dad.

Video thumbnail — 2003 Video Now Player TV Commercial
Toys 2003–2007

VideoNow

The pre-YouTube dream of TV in your pocket — one purchased episode at a time. VideoNow played 30 minutes of Nickelodeon cartoons on a chunky handheld screen, and the black-and-white original felt both cutting-edge and primitive.

Video thumbnail — Welcome Freshmen (Nickelodeon) - Theme Song 1992
TV 1991–1994

Welcome Freshmen

Nickelodeon's high-school comedy lived a double life: it kicked off as a sketch show before pivoting into a genuine sitcom halfway through its run. Set at Hawthorne High with a chaotic crew of teens and a perpetually flustered vice principal, it's the kind of show you caught between Salute Your Shorts reruns and forgot you ever loved.

Video thumbnail — What Would You Do? Opening Theme Song
TV 1991–1993

What Would You Do?

Marc Summers hosting a half hour of pure audience mayhem that was, at its core, an elaborate excuse to pie people. The Pie Pod, the Pie Coaster, the Pie Wash — Nickelodeon built an entire arsenal of whipped-cream machinery and pointed it at anyone standing still.

Video thumbnail — Wild & Crazy Kids - Intro [HQ]
TV 1990–1992

Wild & Crazy Kids

Dozens of kids per team, physical challenges in California parks, pies and slime flying everywhere, teen hosts in matching neon shirts barking encouragement — and absolutely no prizes at the end. Pure chaos for its own sake: the Nickelodeon philosophy, distilled.

Video thumbnail — Zoey 101 Intro Song |High Quality|Follow Me| Jamie Lynn Spears
TV 2005–2008

Zoey 101

A boarding-school show where the main draw was the tech. Zoey 101 ran four seasons on Nickelodeon and delivered the fantasy we all wanted: a beach-adjacent boarding school with PDA devices and its own sushi joint.

Video thumbnail — Nickelodeon - Zoom by Istvan Banyai (1996)
TV c. 1996

Zoom by Istvan Banyai

The fever-dream Nickelodeon interstitial that pulled back and back forever — each image revealed to be a tiny detail inside a bigger one, pulling back until the whole world shrinks away. A strange, hypnotic minute wedged between the goofier bumpers.

Video thumbnail — 1995 Nickelodeon Stick Stickly Nick In The Afternoon
TV 1995–1998

Stick Stickly

Nickelodeon's summer host was a popsicle stick with googly eyes and a jelly-bean nose. He wanted you to write to him, and he sang you the address to prove it — which is why a generation can still recite a PO box in Manhattan.