Skip to comments.
Popular toys of the last 100 years
MSNBC Forbes ^
| Updated: 9:11 p.m. ET Dec. 12, 2005
| Leah Hoffman
Posted on 12/17/2005 4:33:49 PM PST by dickmc
click here to read article
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first 1-20, 21-35 next last
Any one remember View-Master?Link to slideshow of historic popular toys is here.
Slash.dot thread is here.
1
posted on
12/17/2005 4:33:51 PM PST
by
dickmc
To: dickmc
"And there's serious money to be had. Mr. Potato Head, made in 1952 by Hasbro's Playskool unit, was the first toy advertised on television, and it grossed more than $4 million in its first year (that's $30 billion in 2005 dollars)."
Huh!?!
2
posted on
12/17/2005 4:40:21 PM PST
by
ARCADIA
(Abuse of power comes as no surprise)
To: dickmc
"And there's serious money to be had. Mr. Potato Head, made in 1952 by Hasbro's Playskool unit, was the first toy advertised on television, and it grossed more than $4 million in its first year (that's $30 billion in 2005 dollars)."
Huh!?!
3
posted on
12/17/2005 4:40:21 PM PST
by
ARCADIA
(Abuse of power comes as no surprise)
To: ARCADIA
"And there's .... more than $4 million in its first year (that's $30 billion in 2005 dollars)."
Huh!?!
Sounds like someone had percent and forgot to divide by 100!
4
posted on
12/17/2005 4:45:24 PM PST
by
dickmc
To: dickmc
"And there's serious money to be had. Mr. Potato Head, made in 1952 by Hasbro's Playskool unit, was the first toy advertised on television, and it grossed more than $4 million in its first year (that's $30 billion in 2005 dollars)."
We've had 800000+ % inflation since then? Wow.
To: dickmc
To: MikeinIraq
Amazing. No BB guns, cap pistols, or even water guns mentioned.
7
posted on
12/17/2005 5:49:04 PM PST
by
Budge
(<>< Sit Nomen Domini benedictum. <><)
To: dickmc
What I wanna know is, when I was a kid, my folks got me for Christmas this cool thing that was basically a wax mold setup. You'd plug it in, put the wax in the top, pop the plastic mold together, slide it in the bottom, then push on the plunger. The molds made little soldiers and tanks and airplanes, etc.
Try as I might, got the last 40 years, I can't remember the name! But I gotta lot of fun out of that little toy.
Mom and Dad, Merry Christmas!
8
posted on
12/17/2005 6:42:47 PM PST
by
djf
(Bush wants to make Iraq like America. Solution: Send all illegal immigrants to Iraq!)
To: MikeinIraq
It would require an inflation rate of about 18% every year. Still too much obviously but not unheard of in some countries.
9
posted on
12/17/2005 7:17:17 PM PST
by
Nateman
(In the spirit of friendship reach out to a RAT, then slap the scumbag.)
To: djf
I remember that, just not the name.
To: djf
"What I wanna know is, when I was a kid, my folks got me for Christmas this cool thing that was basically a wax mold setup. You'd plug it in, put the wax in the top, pop the plastic mold together, slide it in the bottom, then push on the plunger. The molds made little soldiers and tanks and airplanes, etc." It may have been Formex 7 Casting here.
The site is Sam's Toy Box which is a neat, well done site worth looking at. Has all kinds of games and things I remember from the 50's with lots of photos and links.
11
posted on
12/17/2005 9:55:24 PM PST
by
dickmc
To: dickmc
Close... but not quite!
The one I had was pressure driven. The molds had channels in them so it would make like 10 soldiers at once, whatever. And the figures were smaller.
Whatever, it was cool!
Some of that stuff is worth a chunk a change these days!
12
posted on
12/17/2005 10:07:29 PM PST
by
djf
(Bush wants to make Iraq like America. Solution: Send all illegal immigrants to Iraq!)
To: djf
13
posted on
12/17/2005 10:20:33 PM PST
by
Khurkris
("Hell, I was there"...Elmer Keith.)
To: djf; kstewskis; Victoria Delsoul
I remember seeing a toy four engine prop airplane, years ago. The neighbor boy of my aunt's could start each engine individually, get the running lights going, turn on the cabin lights and the cockpit lights. He could also make it go forwards, right and left.
The coolest toy plane I have ever seen.
Never seen another one like it.
To: dickmc
No Big Wheel? Those were the best! My brother and I rode around the concrete basement for hours one winter on those things. They are hard to find now. Everything is motorized or too fancy.
15
posted on
12/18/2005 7:34:43 AM PST
by
samiam1972
(Live simply so that others may simply live!)
To: samiam1972
"Everything is motorized or too fancy"
How true!! I remember having to make our own "VROMM" and "eeeeek" sounds when dring our cars and bigwheels!!
16
posted on
12/18/2005 1:30:55 PM PST
by
ccwoman
To: Northern Yankee; kstewskis
I loved board games ...Pirate Snakes & Ladders, Ludo, etc.
I never had a raggedy Ann, but I had cabbage patch kids and other creatures, lol. I loved dolls as well and all the cooking set.
To: dickmc
18
posted on
12/18/2005 2:17:15 PM PST
by
caver
(Yes, I did crawl out of a hole in the ground.)
To: dickmc
Somebody asked me at work the other day if I had played with Tinker Toys as a child (not sure if I was supposed to be offended...but I wasn't).
I never owned Tinker Toys although I played with them many times.
I was seriously into All American Plastic Bricks for a few years. They were for an older cohort than TTs. I pretended to be nursing a budding interest in architecture although, truly, I was only building forts to be populated with little plastic soldiers and then assaulted with various "missles" that I would launch their way!
19
posted on
12/18/2005 2:22:17 PM PST
by
LK44-40
To: Budge
Hey kid, you'd shoot your eye out!!
20
posted on
12/18/2005 2:24:02 PM PST
by
Bernard
(Do it fast. Do it cheap. Do it right. Choose two.)
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first 1-20, 21-35 next last
Disclaimer:
Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual
posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its
management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the
exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson