T?here's no trip like a nostalgia trip.
From celebrity moments that shocked us to red carpet outfits we'll never forget and the one-hit wonder songs we'll always sing along to?, even if we can't remember who released them, let's take a walk down pop culture memory lane.
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Everybody needs good neighbours!?
Margot Robbie joined Aussie soap Neighbours in 2008 when she was 17 after moving to Melbourne to pursue her acting dream.
She played schoolgirl Donna Freedman for three years, and her character was one of the first bisexual representations on Australian television.?
Robbie has spoken out several times about the importance of her characters representation at the time. ?
"She's actually bisexual. In one of the blocks she is talking to Bridget about their 'first time' and Donna asks Bridget if it was with a guy or girl," Robbie explained in an interview at the time.
"I liked the way the writers conveyed that, it was just really subtle and they didn't make a big coming out scene of it.
"I think it's a good message to send out because it's not such a big deal to lots of people. Not all of them have such drama surrounding it."
Robbie has since gone on to become one of the most famous actors in Hollywood, but she'll never forget her roots. ?
In an interview with Deadline, Robbie discussed the mechanisms of filming Neighbours.
"I wanted to know what everyone was doing, and how they were doing it. It was absolutely fascinating. I loved it. I loved it so much," she said.
"And I was on it for three years, so I walked off that set with an education, and I knew that it would by far be the hardest set I ever worked on.
"I knew everything would be easier after that, because nothing else on earth shoots at that kind of pace."
Robbie and her husband Tom Ackerley went on to co-found a production company with two of their friends called ?LuckyChap Entertainment. They produced Saltburn, Barbie and Promising Young Woman.
"Producing is 24/7, but on the acting side, this is the longest I haven't acted on a set, because we finished Barbie in October of 2022," she explained in the January 2024 interview when asked if it was time for a break.
"So, it's already been more than a year since I was on set as an actor, and other than Covid, that's the first time that's ever happened.
"I also think everyone's probably sick of the sight of me for now."?
After all the Barbie mayhem calmed down, she made headlines once again when she revealed she and Ackerley expecting their first child.
JoJo's Get Out was the breakup anthem for tweens everywhere when it was released in 2004
In addition to the deep themes of the song, it was powerful vocals of the then-13-year-old making?music history, with the singer still holding the title of youngest solo artist to top the U.S. Billboard Mainstream Top 40 chart
But when the teen singer first heard the song would be her debut, she "cried".
Speaking to Glamour magazine in 2021, JoJo shared that she was firmly against the song being her debut single.
She recalls that the song had been brought to her through an executive producer and while she enjoyed recording the pop songs and being able to shout on the track, she only thought of it as "fun".
"When they said it was going to be the first single, I cried. I was like, 'Oh my God, people are going to think I'm this little pop girl that I'm not'. That was a real concern of mine.?
"I didn't think it would be a huge hit.
"It felt way more pop than the rest of my first album, and I did not consider myself a pop singer or a pop star. So that was kind of disorienting."
But as the banger began to climb the charts, listeners drew comparisons to RnB, which put the then-13-year-old at ease.?
"Success can definitely sway you. So I think the hesitation or the fear I felt around that song definitely dissipated over the months as it grew and went on to have the success it had," she said.
"I'm forever grateful to it because if it were up to me, it would never have happened. So I'm grateful it wasn't up to me, to be honest with you. I was 12! I didn't know, I had no idea what would work or what wouldn't."
The singer also found it funny that a 12-year-old (her age when recording the song) was the voice for the relatable anthem when she had yet to be in any relationship, let alone one that would cause such emotions as those she portrayed in her singing.
"I was so young. I had certainly never told anybody to get out of my life like that in a relationship. I'd never been in a relationship. I'd never been kissed, anything like that. So it's funny I was the vessel for that song."
After the success of her debut, JoJo went on to release a follow-up single Baby It's You. Her second album The High Road (2006) contained her first top-five Hot 100 hit Too Little Too Late.
Record label disputes delayed her next album by four years and she finally decided to release music independently with mixtapes Can't Take That Away from Me (2010) and Ag¨¢p¨¥ (2012).
The now 33-year-old's most recent release is her sixth studio album Trying Not to Think About It in 2021.
In addition to singing, JoJo has become a prolific actor, appearing in the likes of Hawaii Five-0 (2011) and Lethal Weapon (2017), and even made her broadway debut in 2023 playing Satine in Moulin Rouge! The Musical.
The singer was previously engaged to Saved by the Bell actor Dexter Darden in 2021, though they broke it off a year later.?
Most recently she has released her latest single Porcelain one week ago and has written a memoir titled Over the Influence.
"OH. MY. GOD!"?
You can imagine actress Maggie Wheeler's iconic nasal voice as Janice immediately without even laying eyes on her.?
Unfortunately, so could the live studio audience of Friends, which posed a challenge for the crew.
Wheeler became a beloved member of the Friends cast as she played Chandler Bing's on-again-off-again girlfriend.?
Her distinct nasal voice, piercing laugh and thick New York accent left a mark on audiences who knew they were in for a good time whenever Janice was on screen.
It led showrunners to go to extreme lengths to maximise the audience's surprise when she finally did appear in front of them.
Wheeler told DigitalSpy, "They would keep me hidden¨CI could barely come down to get a doughnut. I had to stay in my dressing room until the last moment and then they'd secretly move me from behind the set to the right spot and they'd keep a black screen so the audience couldn't see me until I made my first entrance.
"That's very unique to the character and the way that they introduced her in all those episodes
"It was sort of a rock star moment because there will never be another show where my every entrance is a secret and a surprise," Wheeler reflected.?
Janice appeared in many episodes across all ten seasons of the show, and even got a fitting ending where Chandler deluded her into thinking he still had feelings for her.?
After Friends, Wheeler went on to star in Californication, Curb Your Enthusiasm, Maron, Archer, and more. Her most recent role was in Mark, Mary and some Other People, and the Friends reunion.?
But she admits that playing Janice was a "one of a kind experience"
"I love her," she declared, "I think we're part of each other and it's a character that's brought a lot of joy and laughter to people."
A young, doe-eyed blonde named Lesley Lawson catapulted to international stardom and become one of the world's first supermodels, thanks to one iconic Vogue cover.
Lawson is known around the world by an eponymous nickname: Twiggy.
It was in the 1960s that a teenaged Twiggy changed the modelling landscape forever. She first earned that iconic nickname in 1965 while working as an assistant at a London hair salon.
The future supermodel met hairdresser Nigel Davies, who would later be known as Justin de Villenueve, who nicknamed her 'Twigs' due to her slender flame.
This affectionate nickname would define British-born Lawson for the rest of her career.
She was discovered by accident while modelling for a hairdresser at the age of 16 and Twiggy would later be known as the "face of 66".
Twiggy's boyish, androgynous look was exceptionally unique in the 1960s ¨C her pixie haircut, large eyes and long lashes made her into something of an icon very early on.
She landed her first Vogue cover in 1967 while still a teenager. It showed her with a slicked back, cropped hairstyle, statement eyeliner and lashes and a much-too-big turtle neck.
Her statement lashes were a personal creation the model would call "twiggies". The photo was so deliciously '60s it has gone on to define an entire era of fashion.
When the photo was taken, Twiggy was a virtual unknown supermodel. When the Vogue issue hit the stands, her life changed forever.
In a 2016 article with The Guardian, Twiggy admitted her own self-confidence didn't match the fame she earned.
"I was this funny, skinny little thing with eyelashes and long legs, who had grown up hating how I looked," she has revealed. "I thought the world had gone mad."
In just a few years, Twiggy had modelled internationally in France, Japan and the US and had landed multiple magazine covers with Vogue and The Tatler. She was even photographed by the greats including Annie Leibovitz and Norman Parkionson.?
Between 1967 and 1970 was an utter Twiggy phenomenon. So much so, The New Yorker devoted an 100-page spread to her unprecedented rise to stardom.
Her fame ballooned so much that her talents didn't stay within the confines of modelling.
In 1971, Twiggy's role in The Boy Friend earned her two Golden Globe Awards and she made her Broadway debut in 1983 in My One and Only, for which she earned a Tony nomination.?
Much of the next few decades were devoted to her career in theatre, film and television. She even released an album in 2003 titled Midnight Blue.
And in 2019, she was appointed a Dame Commander of the Order of the British Empire for her services to fashion, arts and charity.
All in all, Twiggy only modelled full-time for a short, four-year stint. It's remarkable to think, given the impact she has on culture even today.
Cher has made headlines for her eclectic and daring ensembles many times before, but nothing attracted quite as much attention as her 1986 Oscars gown.
Designed by her longtime friend and designer, Bob Mackie, Cher stepped out in a black jewel-encrusted bralette with a matching skirt, billowing headpiece and a dramatic cape.
Despite looking drop-dead gorgeous, the general public weren't big fans of what would be dubbed as her "revenge dress."
Reflecting on the moment in a recent interview with Vogue, the singer revealed that it was one of her top looks.
"This was one of my favourite outfits," the icon explained.
"I came to Bob with an idea. I said I want to have a mohawk, [but] that is not actually Indian. I want it to be so over-the-top that it's next week. The beautiful shawl was cashmere. I loved the whole thing."
"I had the idea mostly because the Academy didn't really like me," Cher added.?
"They hated the way I dressed and I had young boyfriends so they thought I wasn't serious. So I came out and said, 'As you can see, I got my handbook on how to dress like a serious actress.'"
The showgirl-inspired outfit conceived out of vengeance solidified Cher's long-standing reputation as a fashion icon.?
Speaking with the New Yorker, Mackie confirmed they had conspired to intentionally cause a stir.?
"She was pissed off because she didn't get nominated for Mask," Mackie said.?
"There were a lot of people who said, 'That's not fashion!' And I said, 'Of course it's not fashion. It's a crazy getup for attention.' And it did get attention¡ªpeople talk about it still."?