Date |
Title |
Artist/Group |
Notes |
1879 |
"O Dem Golden Slippers" (song) |
James A. Bland |
Theme song from the Philadelphia Mummers New Year's Day Parade. |
1963 |
"South Street" (song) |
The Orlons |
|
1964 |
"Dancing in the Street" (song) |
Martha and the Vandellas |
|
1973 |
"TSOP (The Sound of Philadelphia)" (song) |
MFSB |
This tune and its subsequent cover versions have served as the theme song from the dance and music television series Soul Train for most of the period from 1973 to the present. |
1975 |
"Philadelphia Freedom" (song) |
Elton John |
Inspired by Billie Jean King and the Philadelphia Freedoms tennis team. |
1976 |
"Gonna Fly Now" (song) |
Bill Conti |
Theme song from the Rocky film series. The song is closely associated with the city of Philadelphia in general, and with the front steps of the Philadelphia Museum of Art in particular. |
1982 |
"Atlantic City" (song) |
Bruce Springsteen |
The first line, "Well they blew up the chicken man in Philly last night now they blew up his house too," refers to the murder of mobster Philip Testa in 1981. |
1982 |
"Mt. Airy Groove" (song) |
Pieces of a Dream |
Tribute to the Mount Airy section of Northwest Philadelphia. |
1983 |
"Fo-Fi-Fo" (song) |
Pieces of a Dream |
Inspired by the Philadelphia 76ers' NBA championship in the 1982-83 season, with the team winning the three rounds of the playoffs in "four, five, four" games, respectively. |
1985 |
"The Roof is on Fire" (song) |
Rockmaster Scott and the Dynamic Three |
The lyric "The roof, the roof, the roof is on fire. We don't need no water, let the motherfucker burn" is a direct reference to the 1985 bombing of the MOVE house by the Philadelphia Police Department. Onlookers and protesters are reputed to have chanted this lyric in outrage as the local police and fire departments chose to let the house burn to the ground. |
1988 |
"Parents Just Don't Understand" (song) |
DJ Jazzy Jeff & the Fresh Prince |
Contains the line "We headed downtown to the Gallery Mall." |
1991 |
"Motownphilly" (song) |
Boyz II Men |
|
1991 |
"Summertime" (song) |
DJ Jazzy Jeff & the Fresh Prince |
Contains the line "Back in Philly we be out in the park, a place called the Plateau is where everybody goes." (reference to Belmont Grove in Fairmount Park) |
1993 |
"Philadelphia" (song) |
Neil Young |
Written for the film Philadelphia. |
1993 |
"Streets of Philadelphia" (song) |
Bruce Springsteen |
Written for the film Philadelphia. |
1994 |
"All Around the World" (song) |
Boyz II Men |
|
1996 |
All Eyez on Me (album) |
Tupac Shakur |
The song "Got My Mind Made Up" has the line "I rock from here to there, to Philly and back." |
2002 |
"Block Paty" (song) |
Will Smith |
Mentions a plan to buy hundreds of cheesesteaks from Ishkabibble's Eatery, Jim's Steaks, and Pat's King of Steaks for a block party. |
Date |
Title |
Country |
Notes |
IMDB |
1926 |
The Show Off |
USA |
Silent film based on the play by George Kelly. Stars Ford Sterling. |
[1] |
1933 |
42nd Street |
USA |
Busby Berkeley musical, ending takes place in Philadelphia. |
[2] |
1934 |
The Show-Off |
USA |
Based on the play by George Kelly. Stars Spencer Tracy. |
[3] |
1940 |
The Philadelphia Story |
USA |
Stars Jimmy Stewart, Katharine Hepburn and Cary Grant. Takes place on the Main Line, based on a play.[2] |
[4] |
1940 |
Kitty Foyle |
USA |
Based on a 1939 novel.[2] |
[5] |
1941 |
The Big Store |
USA |
Stars the Marx Brothers. |
[6] |
1946 |
The Show-Off |
USA |
Based on the play by George Kelly. Stars Red Skelton. |
[7] |
1959 |
The Young Philadelphians |
USA |
Based on Richard P. Powell's novel The Philadelphian. Stars Paul Newman and Robert Vaughn. |
[8] |
1968 |
High School |
USA |
Documentary |
[9] |
1972 |
1776 |
USA |
Adapted from Broadway musical. |
[10] |
1973 |
Trick Baby |
USA |
Stars Kiel Martin and Mel Stewart. |
[11] |
1976 |
Rocky |
USA |
Written by and stars Sylvester Stallone.[5] |
[12] |
1978 |
Dawn of the Dead |
Italy/USA |
Sequel to Night of the Living Dead. Directed by George A. Romero. |
[13] |
1979 |
Rocky II |
USA |
Written by and stars Sylvester Stallone. |
[14] |
1981 |
Blow Out |
USA |
Directed by Brian De Palma.[5] |
[15] |
1981 |
Bustin' Loose |
USA |
Stars Richard Pryor and Cicely Tyson. |
[16] |
1982 |
Rocky III |
USA |
Written by and stars Sylvester Stallone. |
[17] |
1983 |
Trading Places |
USA |
Stars Dan Aykroyd and Eddie Murphy.[5] |
[18] |
1984 |
Birdy |
USA |
Directed by Alan Parker. |
[19] |
1984 |
The Philadelphia Experiment |
USA |
Based on the urban legend of the Philadelphia Experiment. |
[20] |
1985 |
Rocky IV |
USA |
Written by and stars Sylvester Stallone. |
[21] |
1985 |
Witness |
USA |
Stars Harrison Ford.[5] |
[22] |
1986 |
The Bombing of Osage Avenue |
USA |
Documentary on the 1985 bombing of the MOVE house by the Philadelphia Police Department, as told from the perspective of the neighboring residents of Osage Avenue. Written and narrated by Toni Cade Bambara. |
[23] |
1987 |
Mannequin[5] |
USA |
|
[24] |
1990 |
Rocky V |
USA |
Written by and stars Sylvester Stallone. |
[25] |
1993 |
Money for Nothing |
USA |
Stars John Cusack. |
[26] |
1993 |
Philadelphia |
USA |
Stars Tom Hanks and Denzel Washington.[5] |
[27] |
1995 |
Twelve Monkeys |
USA |
Directed by Terry Gilliam.[5] |
[28] |
1995 |
Two Bits |
USA |
Directed by James Foley. |
[29] |
1995 |
Wide Awake |
USA |
Directed by M. Night Shyamalan. |
[30] |
1996 |
Up Close & Personal |
USA |
|
[31] |
1998 |
Fallen |
USA |
Directed by Gregory Hoblit, starring Denzel Washington. |
[32] |
1999 |
The Sixth Sense |
USA |
Directed M. Night Shyamalan, stars Bruce Willis and Haley Joel Osment.[5] |
[33] |
2000 |
Unbreakable |
USA |
Directed by M. Night Shyamalan, stars Bruce Willis and Samuel L. Jackson.[5] |
[34] |
2001 |
Artificial Intelligence: AI |
USA |
Directed by Steven Spielberg and stars Haley Joel Osment. |
[35] |
2002 |
Confessions of a Dangerous Mind |
USA |
Based on the autobiography by Chuck Barris. Directed by George Clooney, stars Sam Rockwell. |
[36] |
2002 |
State Property |
USA |
Stars Beanie Sigel. |
[37] |
2003 |
Death by Association |
USA |
Written and directed by Anthony L. Fletcher. |
[38] |
2003 |
My Architect: A Son's Journey |
USA |
Documentary on architect Louis Kahn. |
[39] |
2004 |
The 24th Day |
USA |
|
[40] |
2004 |
Fat Albert |
USA |
Based on the animated television series by Bill Cosby. |
[41] |
2004 |
National Treasure |
USA |
Produced by Jerry Bruckheimer, stars Nicolas Cage.[5] |
[42] |
2005 |
E-A-G-L-E-S: The Movie |
USA |
Documentary on the Philadelphia Eagles' 2004 season. |
[43] |
2005 |
A History of Violence |
USA |
Directed by David Cronenberg, based on a graphic novel. |
[44] |
2005 |
In Her Shoes |
USA |
Directed by Curtis Hanson, starring Cameron Diaz.[5] |
[45] |
2005 |
Shadowboxer |
USA |
|
[46] |
2005 |
State Property 2 |
USA |
Stars Beanie Sigel. |
[47] |
2005 |
Train Ride |
USA |
|
[48] |
2006 |
10th & Wolf |
USA |
Directed by Robert Moresco.[6] |
[49] |
2006 |
Invincible |
USA |
|
[50] |
2006 |
Lady in the Water |
USA |
Directed by M. Night Shyamalan. |
[51] |
2006 |
Rocky Balboa |
USA |
Written by and stars Sylvester Stallone. |
[52] |
2007 |
Pride |
USA |
Directed by Sunu Gonera, starring Terrence Howard.[7] |
[53] |
2007 |
Shooter |
USA |
Directed by Antoine Fuqua, starring Mark Wahlberg.[8] |
[54] |
2007 |
Then She Found Me |
USA |
Upcoming film based on the novel by Elinor Lipman. |
[55] |
2007? |
Cover |
USA |
Upcoming film starring Mýa. |
[56] |
Date |
Series |
Notes |
IMDB |
1941 - present |
Philadelphia Mummers New Year's Day Parade |
Held annually on January 1 on Broad Street since 1901. First televised in 1941. Broadcast rights are currently held by WPHL-TV (Philadelphia). |
|
1952 - 1964 |
American Bandstand |
Dance and music show hosted by Dick Clark, first locally on WFIL-TV (Philadelphia) as Bandstand, then nationally on ABC as American Bandstand. The show moved to Los Angeles in 1964. |
[57] |
1965 - 1978 |
The Mike Douglas Show |
Syndicated talk show hosted by Mike Douglas. Moved to Los Angeles in 1978. |
[58] |
1968 - present |
One Life to Live |
ABC daytime drama (same-day rebroadcasts on SOAPnet since 2000). Setting is the fictional town of Llanview, Pennsylvania, which is modeled after the Chestnut Hill section of Philadelphia. |
[59] |
1969 |
Hey, Hey, Hey: It's Fat Albert |
NBC live action/animated special. Precursor to the Fat Albert and the Cosby Kids animated series. |
[60] |
1970 - present |
All My Children |
ABC daytime drama (same-day rebroadcasts on SOAPnet since 2000). Setting is the fictional town of Pine Valley, Pennsylvania, which is described as a Philadelphia suburb on the Main Line. |
[61] |
1972 - 1984 |
Fat Albert and the Cosby Kids |
CBS children's animated series. Philadelphia setting not specified, but the show was based on Bill Cosby's coming of age in Philadelphia. |
[62] |
1973 - 1986 |
Schoolhouse Rock! - America Rock |
ABC series of educational animated short films, designed to teach children about American history through song. "Fireworks" deals with the signing of the Declaration of Independence, while "Preamble" covers the drafting of the Constitution. The chorus to "Preamble" is a verbatim recitation (less four words) of the actual Preamble to the Constitution. Aired between Saturday morning cartoons on a rotating basis along with other Schoolhouse Rock! short films. |
[63] |
1976 - 1978 |
The Tony Randall Show |
ABC sitcom. |
[64] |
1979 |
Blacks in America: With All Deliberate Speed? |
CBS News two-part documentary. In Part 2, Ed Bradley travels to his hometown of Philadelphia, to assess how African-Americans have fared in the 25 years following the U.S. Supreme Court's decision in Brown v. Board of Education, which outlawed public school segregation. Aired July 25, 1979. |
[65] |
1979 - 1980 |
Angie |
ABC sitcom. |
[66] |
1981 - 1987 |
Dancin' on Air |
Dance and music show, aired locally weekdays on WPHL-TV (Philadelphia). |
[67] |
1983 |
Grace Kelly |
ABC made-for-television movie. Biopic chronicling the life of actress Grace Kelly, from her childhood in Philadelphia until her wedding to Prince Rainier of Monaco. |
[68] |
1984 - 1989 |
Brothers |
Showtime comedy series. |
[69] |
1985 |
Live Aid |
Multi-venue benefit rock concert held on July 13, 1985 to aid famine relief in Ethiopia. One of the major venues was JFK Stadium in Philadelphia. Concert was broadcast live to 1.5 billion viewers in over 100 countries. |
[70] |
1986 - 1991 |
Amen |
NBC sitcom. |
[71] |
1986 - 1993 |
Double Dare |
Nickelodeon game show for children. Originated from the studios of PBS member station WHYY-TV (Philadelphia). |
[72] |
1987 |
Frontline |
PBS documentary series. Episode entitled "The Bombing of West Philly" examines the 1985 bombing of the MOVE house by the Philadelphia Police Department. Aired May 5, 1987. |
[73] |
1987 - 1988 |
Bustin' Loose |
Syndicated sitcom. Based on the Richard Pryor film. |
[74] |
1987 - 1991 |
thirtysomething |
ABC drama. |
[75] |
1989 - 1991 |
Shannon's Deal |
NBC drama. |
[76] |
1990 - 1996 |
The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air |
NBC sitcom. Frequent references to the titular character's hometown of Philadelphia, including the West Philadelphia section (which is mentioned in the theme song). |
[77] |
1992 |
You Bet Your Life |
Syndicated game show hosted by Bill Cosby (remake of the original, hosted by Groucho Marx). |
[78] |
1993 - 2000 |
Boy Meets World |
ABC sitcom. |
[79] |
1994 |
The Oprah Winfrey Show |
Syndicated talk show. Episode highlighting the city of Philadelphia aired May 23, 1994. |
[80] |
1995 - 1997 |
Brotherly Love |
NBC/WB sitcom. |
[81] |
1996 |
Mumia Abu-Jamal: A Case for Reasonable Doubt? |
HBO documentary. Examines the conviction and death sentence of journalist/activist Mumia Abu-Jamal for the 1981 murder of Philadelphia police officer Daniel Faulkner. |
[82] |
1998 |
Africans in America: America's Journey Through Slavery |
PBS miniseries/documentary. Part 3, entitled "Brotherly Love", examines colonial Philadelphia and its community of free African-Americans. |
[83] |
1998 |
The Garbage Picking Field Goal Kicking Philadelphia Phenomenon |
ABC made-for-television movie. |
[84] |
1999 |
The Hunt for the Unicorn Killer |
NBC miniseries. Dramatizes the 1977 murder of Holly Maddux and the decades-long pursuit of her accused killer, environmental activist Ira Einhorn. |
[85] |
2000 - 2006 |
Strong Medicine |
Lifetime Television medical drama. |
[86] |
2001 - 2002 |
Philly |
ABC drama. |
[87] |
2002 - 2005 |
American Dreams |
NBC drama. American Bandstand's presence in Philadelphia in the 1960s is central to the major premise of the series. |
[88] |
2002 - 2004 |
Hack |
CBS drama. |
[89] |
2003 - present |
Cold Case |
CBS drama. |
[90] |
2004 |
The Big House |
ABC sitcom. |
[91] |
2004 - present |
Living It Up with Patti LaBelle |
TV One lifestyle show. Moderate number of the episodes highlight persons and places from the host's hometown of Philadelphia. |
[92] |
2004 - 2005 |
The Real World: Philadelphia |
MTV reality series. |
[93] |
2005 |
Live 8 |
Multi-venue benefit pop music concert held on July 2, 2005 as a means of pressuring the G8 nations to: increase aid to Africa, negotiate fairer trade rules, and cancel the debt of the world's poorest nations. One of the major venues was the Philadelphia Museum of Art. Concert was broadcast intermittently in the United States on MTV and VH1. |
[94] |
2005 |
The Amazing Race: Family Edition |
CBS reality series. The first leg of the race ended in Philadelphia. |
[95] |
2005 - present |
It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia |
FX sitcom. |
[96] |
2006 - present |
The Class |
CBS sitcom. |
[97] |
2006 - present |
'Til Death |
Fox sitcom. The characters have telephone numbers with area code 215, indicating that the setting is the Philadelphia metropolitan area. |
[98] |
2007 |
Halls of Fame |
Drama on The N network. Upcoming series inspired by the Philadelphia High School for the Creative and Performing Arts. Chris "Ludacris" Bridges will serve as executive producer. |
[99] |