The Sleepover Retro Countdown Show

Episode 103 – Top Ten Cartoon Theme Songs

This week on The Sleepover Retro Countdown Show, Rob and Guido crack open the cereal boxes and dive into a neon-soaked battle of animated earworms. From the synth-sweet heroic blasts of the mid-80s to the chaotic sing-along charm of the 90s, the guys sort through ten iconic cartoon themes pulled straight from the analog vaults. These are the songs that got you out of bed on Saturday mornings, blasted from living-room floor consoles, and rewired a generation of kid brains for maximum hype. Grab your Walkman, pop in a fresh tape, and relive the era when a theme song could sell an entire universe.

Guido arrives armed with Gummi Bears, Jayce, Jem, He-Man, and She-Ra; Rob counters with Muppet Babies, Space Ghost, Animaniacs, G.I. Joe (the movie version), and the indestructible TMNT anthem. Round by round, they negotiate, duke it out, and slowly carve the perfect ten-track playlist of cartoon greatness.

Final Top Ten – Cartoon Theme Songs
  1. Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (1987) – Chuck Lorre & Dennis C. Brown
  2. She-Ra (1985) – Shuki Levy, Haim Saban, Erika Scheimer & Noam Kaniel
  3. G.I. Joe: The Movie (1987) – Rob Walsh & Jon Douglas
  4. He-Man (1983) – Shuki Levy & Haim Saban
  5. Jem and the Holograms (1985) – Ford Kinder & Anne Bryant
  6. Animaniacs (1993) – Richard Stone
  7. Jayce and the Wheeled Warriors (1985) – Shuki Levy & Haim Saban
  8. Space Ghost (1966) – Ted Nichols
  9. Muppet Babies (1985) – Hank Saroyan & Rob Walsh
  10. Disney’s Adventures of the Gummi Bears (1985) – Michael & Patty Silversher

A Saturday morning mixtape for the ages — crunchy cereal not included.

Keywords: cartoon theme songs, retro cartoons, VHS nostalgia, Saturday morning TV, 80s animation, 90s animation, TMNT theme, She-Ra theme, He-Man theme, GI Joe movie theme, Jem intro, Animaniacs theme, Space Ghost opening, Gummi Bears Disney, Sleepover Trading Co, Video Visions, retro podcast, analog culture

#CartoonThemeSongs #RetroCartoons #80sCartoons #90sCartoons #VHSNostalgia #SaturdayMorning #TMNT #HeMan #SheRa #GummiBears #Animaniacs #SleepoverRetroCountdown #SleepoverTrading

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What is The Sleepover Retro Countdown Show?

“Where nostalgia competes for the top spot.” 🏆
From the VHS aisles to the Saturday-morning toy shelves, The Sleepover Retro Countdown Show rewinds the analog past one list at a time. Hosts Rob and Guido—the retro archivists behind Sleepover Trading Co.—dig through decades of movies, music, toys, comics, commercials, and more to build definitive Top 10 countdowns celebrating the weird, wonderful, and occasionally warped corners of pop culture. Each week, they each bring five picks, debate their merits, and rank the results into one final “Sleepover Top Ten," and every episode is a time-traveling mixtape for VHS kids, mall rats, and midnight movie fans alike.
📼 Presented by Sleepover Trading Co. — be kind, rewind your childhood.
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Welcome to the Sleepover Retro Countdown

show, where nostalgia competes for the top spot.

Brought to you by

Sleepover Trading Company.

Be kind, Rewind your childhood.

Each episode your hosts Rob and Guido

each bring 5 pics from deep in the analog

archives, Movies, comics, toys, songs,

commercials, whatever,

and battle it out to build the ultimate top 10.

Grab your Walkman and those little wire

headphones with a little fuzzy things on

them, rewind that tape and join us for

another round of the Sleepover Retro

Countdown show.

On this episode, top 10 cartoon theme songs.

That's broad.

It is.

And also every time

at first it's so funny because at first

I was saying to you how this is going to be

so hard.

I can't even remember the theme songs.

I came up with my list of five.

And then there was like,

oh, I didn't put this one on.

Oh, I could put this one on.

So like we have to like go back to this

topic at some point because.

Do another top 10.

List

this is not really like necessarily my

favorite of all time top five because

and then I thought, oh, I'm not going to

put that on my list because Geeta will put

that on you on his list and then I looked

at your list and you didn't have some of

the big ones that.

I was, that's why I was like, I don't know

what you're thinking because I've got it

clear and solidified and I knew you weren't

going to pick mine. So

let's get on with it because today's rules

are quite simple.

Our only rule for today? Rule one.

It has to be a theme song from an animated

television series.

That is it.

Keep it simple.

Nice and broad.

Who's starting tonight?

You struggled, so I think you should start.

OK, I'll kick things off

with my number five choice.

So this is our will be our number 10 and 9,

but my number 5 is Muppet Baby.

From 1985.

I can hear, I can hear.

And who sings it? Well,

we'll start with who wrote it.

OK, it's written by Hank Saroyan and Rob Walsh.

That second name is going to reoccur later

on as well.

I have some.

Recurring ones too.

Look at that.

Well, yeah, I mean.

I guess it was a small world of of anime

cartoon composer play.

I think as soon as you said the title

though.

Anyone any of our ages your age? My age a

little older, me a little younger than you

probably could hear that

that like, yeah, I don't know, Doo wop sort.

Of well, that's that's the thing and that's

what that's why I chose it cuz I'm a big

fan of music from this era that do up that

early rock'n'roll.

It's almost like a Shah Nah Nah kind of

sound, that kind.

Of thing, that's the right comparison.

And I really like that sound in general.

And it hadn't

until I was doing research and trying to

pull songs.

And then it was like,

how, yeah, that really does sound like that

era, which it's fun because it's not really

the Muppet TV show.

They were kind of more old timey.

They were more

musical theater vaudeville.

They weren't really.

They weren't really Doo wop, right?

Well, no.

And in the 1980s, they certainly weren't

either. So.

No, but

there was that kind of revival, I think

then, right? Wasn't there a lot of like

that American graffiti kind of coming back?

And that's the 70s.

And 70s.

That's the Muppet Show era, though.

The Muppet Show doesn't draw upon any of

those references, so it's almost like The

Muppets are like a decade off in the

generational recycle that happens normally.

So

yeah,

I think this is

a great

pick to start us off.

What's your favorite aspect of this song?

Oh, it just just

the the as soon as you read like what you

said, as soon as you read the title, the

song you.

Hear it in that voice, that.

You hear it in that voice and that's

whatever.

What is that called? Not a falsetto.

Like a falsetto.

Yeah, it is kind of like that, yeah. And

I think that's so powerful.

It's like, because even you're, you're just

scrolling through your streamer or whatever

and you see Muppet Babies and it's like,

it's like, oh, maybe I want to watch it now.

All right, well,

I'm coming at you with a very similar pic,

honestly, and this is

Disney's Adventures of the Gummy Bears

dashing.

And

daring,

courageous and faithful

and

friendly

with

stories to share.

From 1985,

written by Michael and Patty Silvershore,

credited as silver sure.

And silver sure.

And this is

this is.

I had friends who live down the block and

we used to play this song on repeat.

I remember once we were trying to like

tease other people in their backyard by

playing this song on loop, like thinking it

was funny that we are.

I don't know what we were doing honestly,

but this song Gummy bears

Hi Adventure, let's be on compare.

People have to listen to me saying I never

thought that I'd be publicly saying

you shame me.

At all.

Plus people, people don't know this about you.

You know that like

you have no concept of what any instrument

is like you would you'll hear a clarinet

noise and you'll go like is that a trumpet?

Like is that you have? No, I know.

What a cello,

Because I like a cello, that's all I know.

But I don't think there's any cellos in the

Adventures of the Gummy.

Bear, I don't.

Think I think it's all synthesizers, but

it's a really, really fun, catchy,

memorable song, a little on par with Muppet

Babies.

I'm going to say these are

not too dissimilar from each other.

So do you, Did you watch this show?

I did, but I don't remember it very well.

I don't think it was super high.

In my rotation with the with the one guy he

had like a Cape and a big hat.

Yeah, yeah, yeah.

They took place in my beautiful times.

And so he was doing kind of that era.

And

but.

It did cycle out.

Remember how the Disney afternoon like they

used to move a show up in the time slot and

then they cycle it out.

OK, so this one I remember pretty early got

to like the 330 slot, then the 3:00 slot

and then it got pushed out of the Disney.

Plus this is 85, so it's actually before I

was born so I wasn't

watching it

dead, but it must have come.

All of my pics are from before you were born.

That's true, actually.

Yeah, so.

I am willing to say that Gummy Bears can

round out our number 10 and Muppet Babies

can be our number 9 slot.

Since I don't even really remember the

gummy bears,

Yeah,

I have to say you're correct.

Sounds good to me,

all right.

Well, next Next up, I have

a

weird pick, a pick that you were not even

familiar with

existing until very recently.

And when I went back and listened to the song,

I was like,

not only do I love the show and this song

from nostalgia,

but whoa, this could have been a Top 40 hit.

This song could have been a Top 40 hit.

This is Jace and the Wheeled Warriors.

From 1985.

This song is by my, I guess, favorite

composers in the world based on this work,

Dookie, Levy and Haines the Bond.

And so this song is just an all around like 1985.

I don't know, Journey, sort of up

tempo,

just

banger.

It really could have been on the radio,

should have been on the radio.

It could be on the radio now.

It's so good.

So

I don't know what else to say about it

other than

it's so good.

Yeah, this, this one I I feel like again

I'll have to go back and

revisit again, But what is it about that 85

sound? Is it that you're you're so because

a lot of your choices are from As.

You said, well, you could talk about that

at the end.

I all of my choices, there's one exception

are 1985 and and

three of them are Suki Levia name's the

button.

So I clearly have got a zone.

I don't know why.

And Jason the wheeled warriors is a great

example.

If you're not familiar, go listen to it and

you'll be like wow, why isn't this

streaming online as a

hit single right now?

Because

it's

great.

It has like a voice over

intro at the start but then it's so many of this.

Had those voice over intros including

including I think some other ones on hard

lists today.

But this one then the wheeled warriors like

you could hear it in some.

That is a very.

Movie or I don't know a very.

Journey.

Very foreigner.

All those kind of vans, yeah.

So they were doing a great job at that

point pumping them out. That

song gets me pumped,

makes me ready to race on a car made of

vegetables and plants against some weird

mystical things.

I love the show and don't even understand

it, but that's OK

because it's lots of fun.

So that's what I am

battling up against.

What are you bringing?

OK by #4 by most obscure pick of the night.

So I loved Space Ghost Coast to Coast.

Great

theme song, very 90s theme song.

I could have picked that but I went with

the original.

So this is the theme

song to the original Space Ghost from 1966

Space Ghost.

So you got a song before either?

Of us

that's true that's true

the reason why I like this one so Ted

Nichols I saw he also worked on scooby-doo.

He did the Scooby-doo theme song.

He did Birdman as well, worked on Josie and

the Pussycats.

But the reason why I like this one, and you

know this, you know, I'm a big

fan collector of what they call like space

age pop,

exotica, all that kind of like lounge music

from the 1960s.

And this theme song is exactly that.

It's got that Forbidden Planet kind of

thing where there's some early synthesizers or.

Thurman, something like that.

But also this kind of loungey feel to it

that was very much like we're in outer space.

So it's it's not one that you're gonna walk

away humming at all.

But of all the theme songs

that are on my list, like this is the only

one I think.

Like I would actually put on

in the background while.

I'm doing actual music like.

Having on as actual music and there's no

words to it, it's just all instrumental.

It's also

probably our only instrumental song on the

whole list.

It is,

and it's funny for for both of us

in this slot, we're choosing between the

songs that we would listen to could have

been like hits outside of the context of

the TV shows that they occupy.

So

I don't know, I'm, I'm

I'm torn here.

What do you think?

Well, I think you were very passionate

about Jason the Wheel Warriors.

So I think that.

Has to come.

Out on top.

All right, Space Ghost is our number 8, and

Jace and the Wheeled warriors #7

so tell me what you have here in our middle slot.

OK, so my #3 here's another one that I

think as soon as you see the title

or say it out loud, you

just the song starts coming to you

and that is Animaniacs from 1993 by Richard Stone.

And I love this one because I'm also a big

musical theater fan and there's something

old timey.

It's all just what I was saying about The

Muppets.

Like this song is got like that

fast patter.

Like you wouldn't be out of the.

Word play too.

Word play word.

Play is so clever in this song, like the

rhymes and the.

You're right that it's very musical

theater, but it's like

Sondheim musical theater.

Like it's.

Yes, yeah, so good.

Yeah.

And I don't think I can ever

even,

well, not all the time, but yeah, here like

Bill Clinton's name without thinking

Bill Clinton place of sex,

which is also one of the most 90s

references that you can possibly have on a very

ultimately pretty 90s reference heavy show. But.

Yeah, and this show has such good music

throughout.

Like they have that really famous state

capitol song that people will often rehost

or refer to as helping them learn the

capitals. So

it's a

yeah, I got a

lot of clever

musical

lyrics going on in this

show, so

I.

Think, yeah, this this guy,

this guy Richard Stone who wrote it.

He also worked on picking the brain and all

the other like related shows worked on the

Pumpkinhead movie.

I love that

deep cut there and then.

Fortunately he passed away at only 47 years old,

so it back in 2001. So I I

too bad like we didn't get more amazing

ditties out of him.

Well, I'm this is where I'm bringing the

big guns starting from here on out,

because

I am

going up against this with Jem and the

Holograms.

Another song

show known for its music, but

a whole lot more than the Animaniacs,

that's for sure.

And

there are two versions of the gem and the

holograms theme.

There's the early seasons

Gem and the holograms,

and then

the

truly Outrageous, also known as And then

later they turned it into Gem Girls

and me and my.

Father, I don't even think I know that one.

Oh, you I.

Heard it was turned it on, but it's much less

interesting than the gem.

Gem is excitement.

Oh gem.

So I think this is by Ford Kinder and Anne

Bryant, also from 1985.

So this is clearly the year that everything

settled into my brain,

all music glocked in place, and I have not

moved on since, which is true if you think

about like Madonna.

And there's a whole lot going on in 1985 that

I just all converged for me.

So

I love this theme.

You were not too familiar with this theme

or this show, so you only heard this

theme probably in the last few years.

And now I make you listen to the soundtrack

incessantly and the 3 releases

so.

Yeah, but they're truly good songs.

And the other good thing about the songs,

and I guess all our theme songs in general,

but this is true of all gem songs,

is they're short.

Like they don't now stay.

They're too short.

Because.

Yeah,

in some cases they

needed like an extended version that would become

the

the

the single release the radio play 1.

You know, I could totally see that.

Well, where this one works too is

often if I just see

like Jeb mentioned or read her name, I'll go Jeb.

She's truly outrageous.

Truly, truly, truly outrageous.

But then you even got the little the little

interlude with the misfits.

We are the misfits.

Oh yes, I forgot that part.

Yeah, yeah.

I mean, so it's there's a lot going on, a

lot of explaining the show, but all

lyrically.

No, no voice over a narration in this show.

It's all thumbs through.

So

I love gem in the holograms and I'm sorry,

Animaniacs

gem has to be.

Yeah,

I, I, I think I will give it to gem in the

holograms as well all.

Right.

Well, you're gonna find yourself.

But two songs, 2 shows,

shows with really solid soundtracks

throughout

are probably our only ones that have like

super heavy

on on.

Yeah, that are known for songs being in the

show Muppet Babies to a certain extent, but

yeah,

I agree. Gem and

the Animaniacs.

So Animaniacs number six.

Gem in the holograms #5 we're moving into

the top half and this is where it's over.

Shuki Levy and Haim Saban

have

owned my childhood,

and here we are with my #2 He Man

and the Masters of the Universe.

And the Masters of the Universe

from 1983

theme by

Shiki Levi, Haim Saban.

So

I don't know what to say about this.

It's an interesting one because like my

number one pick these songs,

they

don't have

singing.

They have like that he man, he man, right?

Like they have a little bit of voice,

but otherwise it's music

mixed with voiceover.

So these ones are voiceover by the main

character.

So of course he man narrating who he is and

who knows his secret and what he fights for.

All of that is a part of the formal theme song,

but

I just think the

supercharged energy and the synthesizers

that this show uses across its whole

soundtrack.

But the theme song,

I mean, obviously they've

they live in my heart and soul. So

I can't I can't let go of them.

I don't even know you were

a new adventures of he man person.

I don't even know that theme song 'cause I

don't even know that show.

Well, but

I don't think I know that theme song

either.

Yeah,

it's so funny that I guess was

were they not trusting of the kids to

remember the plot every time?

Why do you think they?

Did that, yeah, I think

probably that, but also so that you could

enter any episode

like you didn't you didn't.

It's part of why there's very few

2 parters and he man, there's none and

Shiro, there's a handful.

And so that's so that you can, a kid could

sit down and watch it at any point in time,

could play them in any order.

We know of course, order got all that

totally these kinds of shows.

So I think that's probably why makes it

nice and easy.

So

I think you're bringing your big guns,

quite literally to this battle.

Yes, well, mine has a lot of singing in it.

And this is GI Joe, real American hero.

But I'm specifically going for you were

just saying like an extended cut version.

So I'm going actually for the

extended.

There's a whole nother like 2 verses of it

from the movie GI Joe the movie from 1987.

And this is by John Douglas and Rob Walsh.

Rob Walsh who also Co wrote the Muppet

Babies theme as well.

So this is the same theme as the animated

show, but a longer version.

That's the deal.

Yes, yeah. So

I think the best part of the entire GI Joe

movie, because

I love the GI Joe movie as a kid.

I think, you know, it's hit or miss

now,

but one of the best parts of the entire

movie, it might not ever get better than

this, is the opening credits, which are

Cobra attacking the Statue of Liberty and

GI Joe protecting them.

And

you then get into the traditional song at

the end.

It's a new vocalist.

It's not like he doesn't have as deep a

voice as he does on the TV show,

but there's a whole Cobra

verse as well, and it's just really good.

And this is another whole.

Song is a different voice or those verses

are different.

No, the whole song is a different.

So it was re recorded.

Interesting, yes, a bit more of like a high

higher pitched singer, a little bit more

rock because you know, the original 1 is

like Gee,

Joe Lemare Rican.

He's got like this very bass

voice and this one is a bit more in the

journey foreigner

level of of singing.

Interesting. And

was it released as a single, do you know?

Oh, I don't know if it was released as a

single.

That's a good question because it is about

like 3 1/2 minutes long all together with

this, this extended version.

So it could have very easily been

released as a single, but I don't, I don't know.

That's a good question.

One day I don't think you've seen.

When was the last time you saw the GI Joe

movie? Never.

If I saw it, it was when I was

6-7 years old, so

I think.

You'd love

like

Pythona, the

female villain they introduced.

We saw her action figure in New York Comic Con.

It looked pretty cool, so yeah.

She does.

She's very cool.

And then her introduction is like the

second best part of the movie.

Unfortunately all of that was is within

like the 1st 15 minutes and then it

takes a little bit of a drop down

so.

I'm hard pressed to let anything lose to E man so.

Oh, I don't know.

I think knowing what your top one is, I

don't know.

Oil, I don't know.

I bought a big one for my top one too so.

I'm not sure.

I'm going to say GI Joe should take the

cake because there's more lyric, there's an.

Extended song, yeah, I think I'll give it

to you, not because it's better, but

because it's an extended song, whereas he

Man, as we just discussed, doesn't have a

whole lot of lyrics, so

that makes sense.

All right, we're up to our top slots.

Tell me,

what

are you thinking is fighting for #1.

OK,

I mean a lot of these

songs that we brought today are ear worms.

I'm going to wager that on my entire list,

this is the number one earworm where

we've recently been re watching this show. And

before we go to bed and then I'm laying in

bed and going

that damn song. He's

stuck

in my head.

This is Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles from 1987.

You can hear that I can't even make the noise.

Obviously it's a synthesizer, but that

noise at the start.

Yeah.

Yeah.

Written by Dennis C Brown and in one of the

great weird pieces of trivia of all time,

Chuck Lorre, who went on to create 2 1/2

Men and The Big Bang Theory and All Those.

You wrote a lot of things for

animated shows, including songs.

And also, I saw that then

Dennis Brown did the music for a lot of

those shows.

So Dennis also

worked out really well that Dennis stayed

friends with Chuck

all those years later.

Yeah, this is a really great song.

I agree with you.

I would have put it in my top five if I

didn't have these other five that I needed

to put in my top five.

But

it

it it

it gets the feel of the show really well

because it doesn't tell the story,

but it just gives you the, you know,

cowabunga.

You get the you get the catch phrases.

You get that like, fun funkiness and then,

yeah, the synthesizer.

Electronic music is

peak 1987.

I'm going to say

maybe you'll you'll take umbrage with this, but

I think it does what the he man theme by

explaining who the characters are, But it

does it not with spoken word, but actually

in the song, because if you let's do the song,

you know

that

Donatello does machines, for example.

So it's there to remind you every single

episode who these basic characters are, but

it's a little bit more seamlessly done.

And I think the other thing that

kids probably really like is there's lots of

levels to it as well.

Like it's not just like one person just

singing at the same tone, but it's like

key turtle power.

Like there's like those weird little things

that are

in the song as well.

It's not just it's like the main vocals.

Yeah,

yeah, All right.

It's a good pick,

but

I have to bring Shira, Shira, Shira.

I am

Adora, he

man's twin

sister so.

Now I was torn.

Here there are two songs I want to bring,

but I'll choose one.

There is of course the theme from The

Secret of the Sword, which is the Eye of

the Power song

for He Man and Shira

and I love

that song.

It's a duet. It's

again peak 80s electronic music.

I love duets.

I used to sing this all the time.

I had the soundtrack.

This one came on a soundtrack.

I love that song

but

I'll stick with the original

and just say the Shira Princess of Power

1985 Goodyear theme

by Shuki Levy and Haim Saban

sung by Erica Shimer who is Lou Shimer's

daughter who did a lot of the voices on the show.

And so like the he man song it doesn't have any

vocals outside of Shira Shira

and then it has her narration.

However,

the reason it

eeks out over he man

is that Doo Doo.

Doo Doo Doo

Doo Doo Doo.

Whatever that,

I don't know, percussion synthesizer is

that feels very,

I don't know, print.

Yeah, yes, it's like a drum kit like

synthesizer.

It has such good momentum and then they

reuse it all the time in the episodes.

There is a constant like

every time the action is getting started.

It's just the.

Doo Doo Doo Doo Doo Doo Doo Doo

Doo Doo Doo Doo.

And I love that and it's so fun and

propels you forward and is

a great song that I could listen to

forever.

I think,

well, obviously you agree because you put

in your number one.

I'm going to say I think it's vastly

superior to the Masters of the Universe

theme song.

It's like Masters of the Universe walked so

that the Shira

theme song could run because.

That's true and some similarly that's true

and even like the quality of the T show the

the the

everything.

Yes, it is very true that she's.

I don't.

Yeah, not second.

Yeah, I don't find the man

he man 1 getting stuck in my head.

But again, going back to what we've been

saying for a lot of these other ones, if I

read the she

just Shira's name in my head, I'm going

Shira, Shira, and

I don't find I do that with he man the same way.

Maybe because he man is not nearly as easy

of a like phrase to say like Shira, just

roll off the tongue.

He man is a little,

you know, your mouth has to move a lot more

to get those words out.

All right. Well,

as much as I love he Man and Shira, I think

the Turtles has to win,

I do think.

It's.

Hard to think because you're right, it's

all together.

It's all there.

It's all one package.

It does it all.

So.

And I'll also say

I think

even though we've talked about specific

times, there's something

almost a little bit more timeless a little

bit about the Shira one like, but when you

hear the turtles one, there's something

that is it's is 1987, it is like 1990.

It just brings you

exactly

to that era, which is kind of actually what

I want in some ways.

I want to be like transported right there.

And it has a bit of an adventure and a

story and it, yeah, I agree.

What a lineup, this great top ten that

we've got.

Give us a recap.

OK,

this is

number 10 Gummy bears, or actually Disney's

Adventures of the Gummy Bears.

Official title

#9 Muppet babies #8 Space Goes.

The original

#7 Jase and the Wheeled Warriors.

Number six

animaniacs #5

Jim and the holograms

#4 He, Man and the Masters of the universe

#3 GI Joe, Real American Hero, the movie

version

#2 she run the Princess of Power

and #1 Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles.

That is the perfect Saturday morning

mixtape.

Yes, it is.

All right.

And there was a few, I mean, the one I have

to say, like, I didn't put X-Men down

because it was like, well, Guido's gotta

put the X-Men theme down,

I guess.

I was thinking 80s, so we're gonna need a

90s edition.

Are any of your picks from the 90s? I guess

Animaniacs is.

Yeah. I'm

gonna say we can have a follow up.

At 80s

that's.

True.

Well, I think.

We just have the follow.

Another top ten

because there are plenty.

Batman the Animated Series, I mean, there

were so many,

I just have to put that.

Well, that wraps another round of the

Sleepover Retro Countdown show brought to

you by Sleepover Trading Company.

We now have a physical shop open inside the

historic community Theater in Catskill, NY

Follow us online at Sleepover Trading and

Sleepover trading.com.

Yeah, come visit the shop, flip through the

Video Visions rental shelves and relive the

days when

you were getting up on Saturday morning and

putting on your favorite cartoon with a big

bowl of cereal.

That is true.

That is true when you looked forward to

going to sleep on Friday nights that you

could wake up on Saturday morning.

Yes,

Friday nights were for Saturday morning,

so

be.

Kind

rewind your childhood.