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Which toy(s) would sum up your childhood? I'd choose the the inexpensive plastic toy knights, soldiers, and farm animals that were beginning to edge out lead soldiers.

'...the episode on the He-Man action figure, for example. Visually, it is a wonderland of memories, full of lingering shots of colours and textures that you had forgotten were once your whole life. But the meat is the interviews with the people who created He-Man.

To these people, He-Man was just a day job. They lumbered into an office, surrounded by all the annoyances and petty rivalries of every office, and through a combination of ingenuity, luck and carelessness created the quintessential toy of my childhood. We learn that the He-Man cartoon was invented on the fly in a moment of blind desperation by a Mattel employee who could sense that a sales meeting was heading south. Battle Cat was created because Mattel had a bunch of oversized tiger toys lying around, so they made some saddles and marketed them as He-Man’s must-have companion. Again and again, we hear stories of how a mythology that defined a generation was put together pragmatically out of leftovers by a gang of middle-aged men who did not like each other very much.

It is repeated time and time again. One episode shows how Hasbro essentially tipped a pile of Japanese toys on to a writer’s desk and ordered him to create the entire Transformers mythology in a weekend. Another wallows in Gene Roddenberry’s dismal taste for under-the-table licensing deals that ended up with a range of Star Trek tanks, Star Trek army soldiers and an official Star Trek “space fun helmet”, effectively a bucket with a lamp on it and the word “SPOCK” written across the front in massive letters. The breakout star of the Star Wars episode is a lawyer by the name of Jim Kipling, who sits and simmers at George Lucas’s avarice under a huge sign that reads: “It’s FUN!”'

[theguardian.com]

moNOtheist 7 June 7
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16 comments

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0

Handmade wooden tops, handmade rope jump ropes, slinkies, hula hoops, tinker toys, board games, jacks, hopscotch chalk, baseballs, volleyballs, wooden baseball bats

1

Tinkertoys were #1 followed by Erector Sets, and Lincoln Logs

1

Star Wars, Lego, Transformers, He-man

1

1960s & 70s Breyer horses and I still love them so much. That & I loved weird shit like rubber snakes. ... super elastic bubble plastic... gumby & pokey.
I wasn't a doll person. The only dolls I ever cared about were the Sunshine family and my Alice in Wonderland Madame Alexander. I freaking HATED barbies. Hate hate hated them. (wasn't until they began making unusual ones when my girl was little that I ever appreciated them...blue fairytopia lol)

2

A pencil, a pencil sharpener and a notebook. I will write stories, make up rock bands, draw them on stage, made cover albums with my own creation of titles of songs, Draw everything from cowboys on horses to baseball players alignment on a play. Draw airplanes, tanks, spaceships, racecars, etc, etc, etc... best toy ever! I invented basketball and baseball games with throwing dices. Created teams, players, leagues. So of course later as adult I played some of those baseball, basketvall, football table games like Avalon Hill. My imagination and creativity was larger than all those little army soldiers and cowboys and indians I used to love so much.

Wish I'd known YOU! We could have had great fun!

2

I once scolded my mom for buying me dolls as a kid, but she said I preferred to dolls to the boy toys that my brothers played with (Tonka trucks, racetracks, balls of every size, blocks and logs...) The one thing that all everyone played with was a deck of cards - Cribbage, Euchre, Sheepshead, Poker, Blackjack, a dozen forms of Solitaire, I Doubt It (aka Bullshit), Crazy Eights, War, Go Fish, Concentration. We learned card tricks and how to cheat. An inexpensive way to keep a lot of kids busy for hours.

1

Star Wars, classic TMNT, and Mighty Max.

1

Elastic that you put around two friend's ankles and jumped over in various permutations of moves to a chant...

1

Interestingly, I grew up in the salt marshes of Virginia (on Chincoteague Island) and my toys were tadpoles, frogs and comic books. I've no idea what kids today would do in my situation...but it was a wonderful way to develop love for nature and imagination.

2

Evel Knievel's Stunt Bike! That and everything Star Wars.

1

I was born in 74, so I had things like Tinker Toys, Lincoln Logs, LEGOs, etc, but also Barbie dolls, Cabbage Patch dolls, and about a hundred Star Wars toys. I had a wee Fisher Price record player and also the cassette player. When I look back on it, it's interesting the kind of technological advances I saw in my childhood.

My favorite toy, though, was an electronics kit. Just a 'breadboard', a tonne of wires and diodes/transistors/etc, light bulbs, switches, dials, and instructions. I will say this about my parents, they weren't at all sexist when it came to kids' toys.

1

I had just about every gun that Mattel made in the 50's and into the 60's. I never owned a real gun and I am for gun control. Guess I got the 'Phallic' symbol quest out of my mind when I was young. LOL

4

Barbie. I used to dress my doll with tin foil and pretend she was an astronaut 🙂

LOL!!!!!

3

John Deere toy tractors, Beatle cards, and bicycle.

3

Tinker Toys and Lincoln Logs - and those little red bricks, i forget what they're called.

gater Level 7 June 7, 2018

Oh I LOVED Tinker toys & lincoln logs!!!! ❤

3

Give me sticks and stones and clay ?

Why so you can break your bones, LOL

@buzz13
I would have made my own toys and playthings or is that to hard to understand ?

@VAL3941 Sticks and stones may break my bones but then I'd have to go to the ER.

@buzz13
You not making sense, but OK ! I understand !

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