If you were ever a fan of "Beverly Hills, 90210," September 2, 2010 is the perfect day to let it out.
Once a century, the stars align to pair the calendar date with that Beverly Hills zip-code made famous by cheesy '90s television, so break out your denim jackets and hit the beach if you have one, because you won't get another chance like this for 100 years.
If you think this is a joke, you're sorely mistaken. Rumor has it Larry King will be hosting a party to honor the calendar event, and screening of the series will be held all over the Beverly Hills area.
One pop culture writer for ESPN, Bill Simmons, is even planning a podcast dedicated to the show where he'll bestow a
series of awards on certain characters and episodes. Simmons announced on his previous podcast, "We're diving so deep into this, it's almost like we're performing surgery on the show."
He then vowed not to make any more references to the show in future podcasts, which he apparently did often.
Love it or hate it, 20 years after the show premiered you can't help but look back on it as an idyllic time for
American television, when the cinematic complexity of shows like "Lost" and "24" were nowhere in site and the only thing that mattered was how good Kelly's hair looked.
Ah, the '90s. They were great while they lasted.
Are You Going to Celebrate This '90210 Day'?
And you have time to party over a LAME ASS TV show???????
Forget something there, you anorexic queen?
How many episodes of 90210 are there anyways?
20 years....
Raw 171/2 years and 900 episodes
*Facepalm*
Little Margie Day (Gale Storm) . . . And possibly an Eve Arden’s Our Miss Brooks. What a lot of people don’t realize is that Eve Arden grossed a cool $1,000,000 yearly salary (1953) for her performance as a man-crazy secretary at some Los Angeles High School. Obviously, there were no young attractive High School female teachers molesting 15-year old boys back in those days. Most female teachers back then rarely ever were younger than 70. My Little Margie used to always end her shows with a Duh-duh-duh-duh-duh on a black & white round picture tube that would leave a bright dot shining in the middle of the screen for several hours when turned off at 9:30 PM every night so that people could go to bed. I know what you are saying; “Where did we go wrong?” . . . I doubt that Larry King knows.