- Leonard Cohen – The Future (1992)
As Montreal singer/songwriter Leonard Cohen went from being a cult favorite to entering the mainstream at the beginning of the 1990's, he released his 1992 album "The Future," gaining new fans and sealing his place as part of the modern music industry. Meanwhile, a moody seventeen year old Sam Tweedle sees the video for "Closing Time" broadcast on Much Music, giving him a cultural hero and sending him on a futile quest to achieve Bohemian cool. A look at Leonard Cohen's reemergence into prominance during the grunge era and the continuing influence of "The Future."
- Bobby Sherman – Bobby Sherman (1969)
With his huge smile, bright eyes, perfect hair and dimpled chin, Bobby Sherman achieved success at the dawn of the 1970's as one of the most iconic teen idols of all time. The story of how a young love sick teenager found a Bobby Sherman record and became a life long fan, and why Bobby Sherman reigns as the King of Bubblegum. Extra: Shindig!, Here Comes the Brides, Getting Together and Bobby's second career as an LAPD paramedic! Peace, Love and Bobby Sherman forever!
- Bob Dylan – Blonde on Blonde (1966)
In the summer of 1965 socialite and fashion icon Edie Sedgwick took New York City by storm via her association with Andy Warhol and for being a sensation wherever she went. One of the era's most famous muses, it has been highly theorized that she was thw woman behind a number of Bob Dylan's compositions, most signficantly "Just Like a Woman" and "Leopard-Skin Pill-Box Hat." But what was the deal with Bob Dylan and Edie Sedgwick? Whatever it was, Bob Dylan won't talk about it. A look at the rise and fall of Edie Sedgwick and the songs that she inspired. Extra: Bob Dylan's rivalry with Andy Warhol.
- Edd Byrnes – Kookie (1959)
In 1959 television heart throb Edd Byrnes, better known as Kookie, the hip talking car hop on the hit TV series "77 Sunset Strip" teamed up with Connie Stevens to record the memorable novelty song "Kookie Kookie (Lend Me Your Comb)," producing a surprise Billboard hit and an entire album dedicated to Kookie. But how many Kookie songs did the world actually need? A look at the career of Edd Byrnes, and how his character Kookie continues to shape our modern culture. Extra: Edd Byrnes' musical collaborators including Joanie Sommers, Bob Denver, Pat Boone, Sha Na Na and....Anthrax? It's the ginchiest!
- The Buoys – Timothy (1971)
In 1971 Pennsylvania based group The Buoys shocked audiences with one of the most garish and strangest songs ever to hit the Billboard Charts - "Timothy." The mouth watering tale about three men who get trapped in a mine only to have two come out thrilled record buyers with a hunger for the macabre, and became a delicious surprise hit despite being banned from radio stations across North America. But even more suprising was that the song was penned by future "yacht rock" icon Rupert Holmes long before "Pina Coladas" were on the menu. Grab a plate as we serve up the story of "Timothy." We hope you brought your appetite.
- Sweet Daddy Siki – Sweet Daddy Siki Squares Off with Country Music (1972)
Flamboyant and fiercely unconventional, Toronto based icon Sweet Daddy Siki defied all conventions. Called "the woman's pet and the men's regret," and "Mr. Irresistible" by his fans, Siki was one of the first black heels in the world of wrestling. But when he wasn't strutting and brawling in the ring, he could be found in Canadian juke joints playing his brand of country music. A look at the eventful life and strange career of the late Sweet Daddy Siki.