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Another pretty good one (or at least one I remember fondly; that may not be the same thing). As a VW owner/driver for pretty much all my adult life, I always liked that Connie Sellecca's character drove a Beetle convertible.
Though late in the first season they felt compelled to change William Katt's character name from "Ralph Hinkley" to "Ralph Hanley" for several episodes, owing to John Hinkley Jr.'s attempted assassination of Ronald Reagan. By season 2 the returned him to going by "Ralph Hinkley".
An opening sequence that Adam Reed and his crew brilliantly parodied as the teaser trailer for Season 7 of Archer:
(Some fans consider season 7 the last good season of Archer (though I think many would vote for season 6, thinking that with the shift from spy comedy to a parody of the private eye genre was where Archer jumped the shark), though we'll have to see if the upcoming Archer: Danger Island can reverse that trend).
Cats - opened on Broadway in 1982 and was one of the most popular (perhaps the most popular) Broadway shows of the 80s.
Not to drop names, but Ken Page, who first did the role of "Old Deuteronomy" in the original Broadway run of Cats, and I went to high school together. He was a senior when I was a freshman, but I managed to make friends with a number of juniors and seniors (I was always a bit mature for my age) who happened to run in the same circles as he did. We weren't great buddies or anything like that, but he knew me by sight and was always friendly to me.
Since it's actually on topic for this thread, I'll mention that Ken had a supporting role (Joe "Cheesecake" Tyson) in a very short-lived series (7 episodes between Nov. 7, 1987 and Jan. 2, 1988) titled Sable, which purported to be an adaptation of Mike Grell's comic book Jon Sable: Freelance. A very loose adaptation, apparently. One of my high school buddies (a year behind Ken Page and who ran in that circle--he was very possibly the guy who introduced me to Ken) was a great fan of Jon Sable: Freelance, but he hated the Sable series, complaining that it was almost nothing like the comic. He still watched every episode, though; such is the power of loyalty to our old alma mater and our classmates.