In 2008,
Entertainment Weekly named the show #20 on its list of top 100 TV shows in the past 25 years. The magazine also named the theme music #15 on its list of top 25 TV themes in the past 25 years, and the "90210 Sideburns" #50 on its list of Pop Culture Moments that Rocked Fashion. The show was named one of the Best School Shows of All Time by
AOL TV. The first-season episode "Spring Dance" caused outrage from many parents after the character of Brenda loses her
virginity to Dylan. Parents were offended by the fact that Brenda suffers no consequences and shows no remorse for having had sex, something unusual for network television in 1991. After a slew of angry phone calls to the network, Fox decided to placate upset viewers by featuring a pregnancy scare for Brenda and Dylan in the second season, as a means of "punishing" the teenagers for their decision. Executive Producer
Charles Rosin criticized this decision, saying "Someday I will write a long article about the censorship that occurred after Brenda lost her virginity at the Spring Dance to her boyfriend (who had been AIDS tested) because she was happy and not full of remorse." In February 1992, at the height of the show's popularity, the three main stars
Jason Priestley,
Shannen Doherty and
Luke Perry were featured on the cover of
Rolling Stone.
Parodies The rap duo
Insane Clown Posse released an EP titled
Beverly Kills 50187 which featured a song titled "Beverly Kills" describing member
Violent J killing the series' characters for being rich and prejudiced toward the "lower class". The short-lived
The Ben Stiller Show did a parody of this show,
The Heights and
Melrose Place called
Melrose Heights 90210-2420 that portrayed the cast as superficial, self-absorbed, and self-pitying, as well as introducing each of the stereotypical cast along with "Akeem,
the black guy". A typical episode's "issue" was a character getting a headache, which affected all the other characters. Each episode would end with the same upbeat song (resembling
The Heights hit single "How Do You Talk to an Angel") performed by the whole cast with new lyrics for each episode. When Jason Priestley guest-hosted
Saturday Night Live in 1992, one of that episode's sketches, which parodied
Beverly Hills 90210, involved that town's zip code being changed to 90218 due to the 1990 Census redistricting. Several of the characters take offense to the fact that Beverly Hills will be absorbed into poorer communities and convene at the Peach Pit, where a Hispanic busboy expresses pride that his native community of Reseda now shares the same zip code as the
90210 cast. The gang lashes out in different ways, with Dylan getting drunk and Donna and Kelly going impulse shopping. Priestley, in his role of Brandon, confiscates all their keys and puts them in a lockbox and gives them a tag to reclaim them when they regain self-control. The sketch ends with the zip code "Beverly Hills, 90210" retained as their rich and powerful parents lobbied the U.S. government not to redistrict. The Fox sketch show
The Edge did a parody of
90210 that mocked Tori Spelling. During the sketch, the character of Tori constantly says, "I can do whatever I want because this is my Daddy's show." Aaron Spelling took offense to this, and asked for an apology from the producers of the show.
Saturday Night Live also did a Tori Spelling parody as well, where
Melanie Hutsell spoofed Spelling, which was met with less protest.
The Mickey Mouse Club did a parody sketch called
Beverly Hillbillies 90210, combining the characters of both
90210 and
The Beverly Hillbillies. In 1999,
Christina Aguilera from the Mickey Mouse Club made a cameo performance on
Beverly Hills 90210 as herself performing at the PPAD for David Silver's surprise birthday party, season 10 episode 2: "Let's Eat Cake". Music from former MMC members
Justin Timberlake and
JC Chasez of
'N Sync also was originally used during several opening title sequences during the mid-to-late seasons of
90210.
MADtv made its own parodies of the show as
Beverly Hills, 90210 B.C. set in
prehistoric Beverly Hills. When Luke Perry made his high-profile return to the series, MADtv did a second parody titled
Beverly Hills 9021-H20 which had the characters being stalked and killed off by Luke Perry (
Pat Kilbane), who had rejoined the cast as a masked killer who was a parody of
Michael Myers of the
Halloween film series. The Czech
TV Nova parody show
Tele Tele made a parody of the show known as
Heverly Debils. Three mini-episodes (about 10 minutes each) were filmed.
GZA of the Wu-Tang Clan released a song called "
Killah Hills 10304", a reference to the show's title in a song about crime and a rough neighborhood. A
VH1 promo for
I Love the 90s featured
Hal Sparks and
Michael Ian Black sitting in the Peach Pit, with
Beverly Hills, 90210 theme music playing. Joe E. Tata also appears in the promo as Nat. In 2009,
The Simpsons aired an episode called "
Waverly Hills, 9-0-2-1-D'oh", which features Lisa wanting to go to a better school and finding it in the very posh town of Waverly Hills.
In pop culture In 2021,
Beverly Hills, 90210 was one of the shows featured on season 1, episode 3 of
Vice Media's ''
Dark Side of the 90's'' entitled "TV for Teens." ==Soundtracks releases==