Tin Pan Alley | Alley Theatre | Thunder Alley | Back Alley Oproar | Rewi Alley | Smock Alley Theatre | Lindsey Alley | The Alley Cats | Sally in Our Alley | Damnation Alley | tornado alley | Thunder Alley (film) | The Alley Cats (Los Angeles punk band) | Steampipe Alley | Sniper Alley | Silicon Alley Reporter | Silicon Alley | Richard F Outcault's last ''Hogan's Alley'' cartoon for ''Truth'' magazine, ''Fourth Ward Brownies'', was published on 9 February 1895 and reprinted in the ''New York World'' newspaper on 17 February 1895, beginning one of the first comic strips in an American newspaper. The character later known as the Yellow Kid had minor supporting roles in the strip's early panels. This one refers to ''The Brownies | Richard Alley | Printer's Alley | Hogan's Alley (comic strip) | Hogan's Alley | Damnation Alley (film) | Creeque Alley | Carroll Alley | Blues Alley | Blood Alley | Alphonse Alley |
Hollywood up and coming artists, producers, supermodels and celebrities, including Sylvester Stallone, Tom Cruise, Brad Pitt, Jamie Lee Curtis, Kirstie Alley, Spanish superstar Julio Iglesias and Canadian singer Norman Iceberg were all interviewed and/or guests on America Now TV.
The success of the first two films also inspired an ABC sitcom called Baby Talk, which aired from 1991–92 and featured Tony Danza as the voice of "Baby Mickey." John Travolta, Kirstie Alley, and Olympia Dukakis are the only actors to appear in all three films in the series.
Former spokespeople for the company, seen largely in broadcast commercials, include Cheers alumna Kirstie Alley and Thom Filicia of Queer Eye for the Straight Guy.