Vintage Toy Commercial Compilation

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  • Опубликовано: 27 сен 2024
  • About an hour of vintage toy and games TV commercials from the 1950's to 1970's

Комментарии • 963

  • @christianblade2052
    @christianblade2052 8 лет назад +150

    That toy drive-in theater was kinda cool.

    • @PlasmaCoolantLeak
      @PlasmaCoolantLeak 8 лет назад +4

      Yeah, but no concession stand...

    • @2degucitas
      @2degucitas 8 лет назад +10

      +PlasmaCoolantLeak Gotta go to the kitchen or raid a siblings halloween candy

    • @sdmurphy20
      @sdmurphy20 8 лет назад +3

      cue mom's big purse.

    • @PlasmaCoolantLeak
      @PlasmaCoolantLeak 8 лет назад +1

      2degucitas True those, LOL

    • @tasteegold7772
      @tasteegold7772 7 лет назад +7

      hell i miss real drive in theaters..we should petition president Trump to bring them back showing classic movies and psa's

  • @MovieEggman
    @MovieEggman 7 лет назад +58

    It's a terrifying fact that all the adult actors in these ads are All Dead and The Children Actors are All Old now.

    • @dropleckk4404
      @dropleckk4404 Год назад +1

      Do you think that happened on account of the career choices they made?

    • @ClaudiaMitchell-jn7fw
      @ClaudiaMitchell-jn7fw Год назад +2

      What a drag, eh ? 🙄

    • @Fresh-tw7ev
      @Fresh-tw7ev Год назад +2

      Yeah but that dog at 45:45 is still living. Guinness Book of World Records

    • @I-Libertine
      @I-Libertine 9 месяцев назад +1

      Wrong! Here I am!

    • @JoanSmith-t7k
      @JoanSmith-t7k 9 месяцев назад +2

      Billy Mumy is only one year older than me. Should I be dead by now ( I had a stroke in 2012 and still going)?

  • @seanwilkinson3975
    @seanwilkinson3975 7 лет назад +21

    That "real galloping horse" makes me wonder why all rocking horses afterwards didn't have the same ability. It's really cool.

    • @Bruh___Moment
      @Bruh___Moment 9 месяцев назад +1

      I had a similar toy as a kid, but his legs didn't move. He was on springs, so it felt like a real horse.

    • @JoanSmith-t7k
      @JoanSmith-t7k 9 месяцев назад

      That Blaze horse - I saw that in a store for $25.00 !!! Way too expensive then, I stood there looking at it, no, even if we were rich I'm sure I would never like it.

    • @annettemalaski1967
      @annettemalaski1967 6 месяцев назад

      I wish I had been born in the early fifties! Then I would tell my mother "The only dolls I wan't are GI Joes!"

    • @MrWolfSnack
      @MrWolfSnack 3 месяца назад

      I can guarantee you with total certainty that it was too elaborate for its own good and they promptly broke. Too many moving parts and maintenance needed on the toy. The MSRP was also $48.00 in 1961. That is well over $500 in today's money. That's half as much as a TV set of the period. They are very rare today and will set you back at least $250-$400 for a good one. Most survived well and sport little to no rare, as if they were barely played with.

  • @WorgenGrrl
    @WorgenGrrl 7 лет назад +226

    Remember the days when you can play with toy guns and no one would freak out?

    • @tasteegold7772
      @tasteegold7772 7 лет назад +16

      dont worry president Trump aka the god emperor is soon to be inaugurated..we will get back to American freedom as it was meant to be.and yes toy guns are and always will be COOL!

    • @petemclinc
      @petemclinc 7 лет назад +7

      I bet Tamir Rice's mother wishes for those days.

    • @Whtxombi
      @Whtxombi 7 лет назад

      Rather hard...been awhile.

    • @Isabelle3.14
      @Isabelle3.14 7 лет назад

      Alex S Yes! I had two pink plastic guns and I played with them a lot.

    • @jhonsiders6077
      @jhonsiders6077 7 лет назад +2

      At age 6 I had a real .22 !!! I wanted a BB gun but my mother would not have it but allowed me to have the single shot bolt .22 I still have it ! Mom felt I would be more careful with a real rifle She was right my friends got in trouble with there BB guns I never did with the .22 !!

  • @onwego1946
    @onwego1946 7 лет назад +10

    Boy, these bring back memories. Most of the time, though, we didn't have the fancy toys. We had to use our imaginations. Old Christmas trees propped against a picnic table became rocket ships, a clothes pin and playing card strategically placed on a bike frame "motorized" our bikes. A stick became a gun and a colander became a helmet. We had skinned knees and elbows and knew we had to be in the house by the time the street lights came on. Nobody had to protect us. We learned how to protect ourselves. I remember chemistry sets and pogo sticks and any number of "dangerous" toys. Somehow we survived. Thanx for the trip down memory lane.

  • @grepodstfj
    @grepodstfj 7 лет назад +9

    those were the good old days when toys could put your eye out, and we loved it

  • @deviousmrnoahhelmer2769
    @deviousmrnoahhelmer2769 7 лет назад +12

    I want a mini drive in theater now !

    • @JoanSmith-t7k
      @JoanSmith-t7k 9 месяцев назад

      I'm sorry, I never saw a commercial for them in the 1960s, but we went to the Torrance Drive-In quite alot in the 1960s, when anybody could get in for 75 cents if you were 12 or younger ( after 12 it was $1.19). I remember we saw "The Time Machine " when it was new ...

  • @kurtbjorn
    @kurtbjorn 8 лет назад +56

    I did some work with an online inflation calculator. Some toys that were $12.98 in about 1965 would be a HUNDRED BUCKS today. Barbie's outfits "from 80 cents to a dollar twenty five" in 1966 would be $7 to $10 each today. This shit was not cheap. Now I know why my parents wouldn't buy us all this crap.

    • @ConstantCompanion
      @ConstantCompanion 8 лет назад +5

      KurtB they weren't cheap then. I remember probably in 69 or 70 saving up for this Spirograph? At that time it was about $3. It took me 2 months to save up that money.

    • @kurtbjorn
      @kurtbjorn 8 лет назад +6

      ConstantCompanion
      Spirograph was a great toy! We had one. But it always hurt when you were 98% done, then slipped with the pen! Frustrating. I wish I still had my spirograph today, as well as my large-sized GI Joe with a foot locker that my Mom threw away.

    • @ConstantCompanion
      @ConstantCompanion 8 лет назад +2

      KurtB Do you have a Cost Plus where you live? They sell the exact same Spirograph (more than 3.00 though) every year at Christmas.

    • @justme_66
      @justme_66 8 лет назад +3

      KurtB Seems kind of pricy for the 50s and 60s, remember toys were a luxury back then. A loaf of Bread might have been 25 cents, but a toy was special.

    • @kurtbjorn
      @kurtbjorn 8 лет назад

      ConstantCompanion
      I'll need to look one up... thanks!

  • @PlasmaCoolantLeak
    @PlasmaCoolantLeak 8 лет назад +125

    "Mystery Date" still exists, it's now called "Online dating sites."

  • @ilovefinn924
    @ilovefinn924 6 лет назад +18

    I have to say, toys back in the day look absolutely fun to play with. The toys definitely makes up the no social media and no internet. Also, there were a lot of toy gun commercials.

    • @StephenLyons-tl8ie
      @StephenLyons-tl8ie Год назад +2

      Kids were not wimps and snowflakes back then.

    • @Bob-zs3ro
      @Bob-zs3ro 3 месяца назад

      I brought my child a toy gun back in 2010, parents flipped out on me ,I couldn't get over it, When I was a kid we all had cap guns spud guns bbs and air rifles, bow and arrows, The Helicopter Parents have a lot to Answer for.

  • @johnskogman5623
    @johnskogman5623 8 лет назад +100

    Wow, the toys the rich kids got.

  • @gameraddy9926
    @gameraddy9926 7 лет назад +8

    I'm a 17 year old,and I'm amazed by these toys!Man in the 2000s toys weren't these interesting!

  • @hardtfelt
    @hardtfelt 7 лет назад +5

    I didn't remember Patty Duke and Kurt Russell and Billy Mumy making commercials back then, but on the other hand, I didn't know who any of them were then, we were all just kids!

  • @vids4thewin4
    @vids4thewin4 6 лет назад +12

    Man, sometimes i wish i was born in a different time period

  • @loneshewolf74
    @loneshewolf74 8 лет назад +103

    I love these slogans:
    She's a wonderful doll... she's *IDEAL*!
    You can tell it's Mattel, it's *swell!*
    Every boy wants a *REMCO* Toy! ...andsodogirls.

  • @nyrwilliams5253kgb
    @nyrwilliams5253kgb 6 лет назад +4

    I worked in an Ideal toy factory in Queens NY back in the 70's. I know I'm dating myself. It was fun. From racing car sets to dolls, I made them all.

  • @sdmurphy20
    @sdmurphy20 8 лет назад +13

    I'm still waiting for my Darkwing duck magnifying glass to come in the mail from the early 90's.

  • @mark-xx1lt
    @mark-xx1lt 9 месяцев назад +2

    Great memories. I had many of these toys. By age 1 yr., I had my first pair of six shooters and every type of gun made during the sixties. Most of our toys were very interactive and fun. Good times.

  • @nataliegray8019
    @nataliegray8019 5 лет назад +5

    Fun fact: that Zero M air cannon thing was recalled because firing it close to your head like that caused severe inner ear damage. Many kids were sent to the hospital with ruptured eardrums. In fact, I see several toys in this video that were recalled for health and safety reasons.

    • @stevecausey545
      @stevecausey545 2 месяца назад

      You somehow managed to live through it

  • @fredc4502
    @fredc4502 8 лет назад +156

    ...Gaylord comes with a bone of his own! - I nearly feel off the couch laughing when I heard that.

    • @steverotters3218
      @steverotters3218 8 лет назад +5

      Gaylord Focker

    • @rickkartisable
      @rickkartisable 7 лет назад +4

      Fred Clarke ....Yeah! In fact, it was a cheeze plastic "bone" with a simple magnet. GAYLORD had a magnet on/in his mouth. He'd saunter up to the bone and...Presto! His mouth really picked it up! wow.

    • @rick_terscale1111
      @rick_terscale1111 7 лет назад +6

      ..nah, Gaylord is always looking for other bones. lol

    • @DarthFrodo
      @DarthFrodo 7 лет назад +4

      Fred Clarke I don't think Gaylord had the same meaning then as it does now. But is still hilarious.

    • @newjerseybt
      @newjerseybt 7 лет назад +10

      There was a game many years ago called "ball buster". According to the announcer, the object of the game was to bust your opponent's balls! You'll see the commercial if you do a YT search. I laughed so hard my sides were aching.

  • @NoCat33
    @NoCat33 8 лет назад +21

    I love watching these. it feels right.

  • @MiMiJoys-xz8mv
    @MiMiJoys-xz8mv 7 лет назад +19

    I loved these toys! I had a Chrissy Doll that her hair that grew and shortened. My cousin had the Dr. Kit and we had the guns all over my block and we had fun from sun up until the street lights came on. Such a shame kids today don't have that much fun! Thanks for the memories!

    • @francolombardo9290
      @francolombardo9290 2 года назад

      the beautiful Chrissy doll makes me sad my mom had 1 when she was a kid she passed away when I was only 19 ii miss her so much please pray for me

    • @Rollout421
      @Rollout421 6 месяцев назад

      How old are you exactly? 🤨

  • @peterpherfinion6671
    @peterpherfinion6671 7 лет назад +8

    Cop says, "Is it real?" as he looks down the barrel! I'm hoping police academy training has improved since the 60's!

  • @markcosta9665
    @markcosta9665 9 месяцев назад +2

    I had so many of the Remco Toys. My oldest sisters boyfriend and later husband worked for Remco in NJ and would get me almost every toy they had! Reb Cannon, Frogman, helicopter , battleship, you name it ! Early mid 60’s great time to be a kid especially a boy! Boys toys were great!!

  • @lydialilli4351
    @lydialilli4351 8 лет назад +19

    I had so many of these awesome toys including BLAZE, Beautiful Crissy, Creepy Crawlers, Mr. Potato Head and GI JOE. Yes - I was a girl but my parents allowed me to play with boys toys too (and frankly, I liked boys toys better anyway :) This is a time when kids had imagination and knew how to interact with other kids.

    • @petemclinc
      @petemclinc 7 лет назад +1

      I can still recall the distinct smell of Creepy Crawlers when they baked.

    • @lydialilli4351
      @lydialilli4351 7 лет назад +1

      Oh yeah. I loved the smell.

    • @ajuma55
      @ajuma55 7 лет назад +1

      My parents were pretty forward-thinking as well. We had Chatty Cathy as well as Girder and Panel, Bridge and Turnpike. For my sister and I, there weren't "boys" toys or "girls" toys, just "our" toys.

    • @TheRedsofine
      @TheRedsofine 7 лет назад +2

      The boys’ toys were always way cooler

    • @tyroneepps4854
      @tyroneepps4854 6 лет назад

      I are right sister

  • @sarahshine6026
    @sarahshine6026 7 лет назад +4

    These toys are honestly so cool and i want them all

    • @francolombardo9290
      @francolombardo9290 2 года назад

      I think beautiful Chrissy is a pretty doll no matter how long u make her hair

  • @c3cubed
    @c3cubed 7 лет назад +9

    Lionel and Gilbert (American Flyer) train sets were (and still are) the best thing to keep a young boy occupied for hours.

    • @arielfilmsinc1926
      @arielfilmsinc1926 6 лет назад

      Girls too my niece LOVED to watch the trains move and build the Plasticville kits then she found modern electronics

    • @deathstrike
      @deathstrike 6 лет назад

      I just wish this modern generation would appreciate hobbies like slot cars, trains, and model planes and cars. They teach so much more than the button pushing of this era.

  • @MisterLumpkin
    @MisterLumpkin 8 лет назад +52

    Some of those toys were not cheap! That last one was $19.95 in 1965. That's $152 in 2016 dollars! No wonder I never had any of these unless my mom found them at a garage sale.

    • @ConstantCompanion
      @ConstantCompanion 8 лет назад +4

      MisterLumpkin I would have given anything for that Barbie doll dream house. Only the really well off kids had stuff like that.

    • @ConstantCompanion
      @ConstantCompanion 8 лет назад +2

      mine came from thrift stores. I made their clothes. Mostly out of old socks. We weren't poor! It's just that the toys were very expensive.

    • @dawne5139
      @dawne5139 8 лет назад +2

      ConstantCompanion I learned how to sew making Barbie cloths from leftover scrapes. My mother thought it would be a good way to get use to the machine.

    • @axlewavey4144
      @axlewavey4144 7 лет назад

      Stevo Reno awe

    • @macorey54
      @macorey54 6 лет назад

      I grew up in my grandparent's home, we had few toys, played outside. One of my cousins had all of these Barbie toys and accessories. I remember playing at her house with them. My sister got a Barbie bride doll one Christmas and I got Midge. I never got over that lol. I wanted the Barbie bride doll lol. I had an uncle that had a collection of toys and games his boys had played with (they were quite well off) and he stored them at our house for a few months. We had a blast playing with them. He eventually came and got them and donated them to an organization for disadvantaged youth. I thought that was what we were. I grew up and bought my kids too many expensive toys in the 80's and 90's though.

  • @frankkolton1780
    @frankkolton1780 8 лет назад +248

    By all accounts, those of us born before the 1960s should be either blind, dead, or permanently scarred, maimed, and disfigured. From the time we were 5 or 6 years old, we played outside with our siblings and friends in the neighborhood unsupervised, there were no such things as bike helmets, or elbow and knee pads for when we roller skated or skate boarded (remember metal wheels?). Many toys shot hard projectiles, heated up red hot, had sharp edges, were painted with lead paint or required the use of real scissors or cutting tools like a knife. The best toys didn't need batteries but required imagination, thought, or reasoning. Despite all the unsupervised outdoor play, often with these "killer toys", we not only survived into adulthood, but we learned responsibility, teamwork, creativity, reasoning, and self sufficiency, the constant physical play and activity kept us physically fit and heathy, with obese children being a rarity. Some things the era did not prepare us for was how to play video games, how to have a belief and attitude of self entitlement, and how to be ignorantly rude on social media.

    • @Marr83
      @Marr83 8 лет назад +12

      We still don`t use the bike helmets, elbow and knee pads :-) Greetz from Holland

    • @stendec-dd3he
      @stendec-dd3he 8 лет назад +13

      Thanks for saying what many of us still think,....at least those of us still around.

    • @2degucitas
      @2degucitas 8 лет назад +8

      After falling down 30 times learning to skate I took my sisters advice. I tied a pillow around my skinny butt and used a broom for balance. It worked. There were lots of laughs.

    • @justme_66
      @justme_66 8 лет назад +13

      Frank Kolton yup, too much processed food since the 1980s too. before that it was home made, I remember.

    • @rickkartisable
      @rickkartisable 7 лет назад +10

      jackthayer ... Uh oh, Frank Milton, ya picked up a "proud" LibDemProg...just like Proud GAYLORD picked up a bone-r. Ironic, isn't it, JackoffThayer??😃 Some your head. Must be freaking still from Tuesday's TRUMP VICTORY over Hilarious Felonious Clintonious! Garbage Bitch from Arkansas.....😉

  • @footballlvnlady
    @footballlvnlady 2 месяца назад +1

    I got a rocking horse from Santa in 1964. I wanted to get one for my daughter in the early 80’s. Found one. She wasn’t as excited about it as I was. I had a Barbie doll in the mid 60’s with a carry case. I spoiled my daughter and got her the annual Barbie holiday dolls. She had lots of clothes and an elderly lady made knitted and sewed clothes for her Barbie. I saved all the clothes and packed them in special tissue in a computer box. I got a divorce from my ex and I forgot I had the boxes stored in the attic. When the house was sold my ex threw all the boxes out without my knowledge. I remember many of these toys but not the drive in toy.

  • @deviousredneck5109
    @deviousredneck5109 6 лет назад +9

    That guy said “ it’s so safe, you just can’t tip him over!” I guarantee more than one kid got broken bones from tipping that horse over..🤦‍♂️

    • @Bruh___Moment
      @Bruh___Moment 9 месяцев назад

      Possibly not. I had something similar as a kid and it never fell over, even though I was kinda rough on it.

  • @courtneyspence1008
    @courtneyspence1008 7 лет назад +12

    Those Remco toys actually seemed kind of cool. The shrunken head one was fucked up, but in a "cool" way. But a lot of these toys seemed to be very expensive for those days. Particularly the Remco toys. And I couldn't help but laugh at there slogan. "Every boy wants a Remco toy...and so do girls". Lol they were way ahead of there time with that slogan whether they knew it or not. The toy that I found most hilarious was that Mystery Date one. It seems kind of like a game for like, drunk adults at a party or something.

  • @rebeccamunn8673
    @rebeccamunn8673 8 лет назад +7

    Patty Duke is also in the commercial that begins at the 13:23 mark. Both commercials were for remco toys. She played Helen Keller in the Miracle Worker probably just a couple of years later. And, who could forget the Patty Duke show, a few years after that? I enjoyed these old toy commercials, it sure brings back memories. Thanks.

    • @jeffreyslott3883
      @jeffreyslott3883 8 лет назад +3

      +Rebecca Munn "Only $12.98 at your favorite toy store !" Only $12.98?
      That would equal $105.86 today.

    • @ToyKingWonder
      @ToyKingWonder 8 лет назад

      +Jeffrey Slott Yes, prices were strange. My guess is that was the list price, and you could get it WAY less in a store, as a manufacturer could not dictate prices. I remember in 1972, which is more than a decade later, the GI Joe Mobile Support Vehicle was $17.95, and that was considered a big present at Christmastime. I doubt very much that actually sold for $12.98. Cost was probably $5 and sold for $7.5 for a 33% margin. Those "beautiful cars" look like they were pressed tin, the whole thing was cardboard with a plastic movie screen. That said, I am a major Remco fan!!!!!

    • @justme_66
      @justme_66 8 лет назад

      Jeffrey Slott Middle-class of the 50s-70s could afford that too.

    • @kkuenzel56
      @kkuenzel56 Год назад

      Didn't see her but did see Billy Mumy and Kurt Russell

    • @oliviajohnjohnolivia8142
      @oliviajohnjohnolivia8142 Год назад

      Is there a Trany Barbie.

  • @tonytafoya6217
    @tonytafoya6217 7 лет назад +5

    Look! It's Patty Duke as a child! Cool.
    She turned out to be a staple on TV.
    Really good actress.
    She's an old familiar face.....almost like one of the family.

  • @theamansour
    @theamansour 7 лет назад +3

    This was somewhat comforting. I found myself smiling throughout the whole video.

  • @dan-gy4vu
    @dan-gy4vu 7 лет назад +5

    i need that lie detector game asap.

    • @dan-gy4vu
      @dan-gy4vu 7 лет назад +2

      mattel should really remake it.

    • @JoanSmith-t7k
      @JoanSmith-t7k 9 месяцев назад +1

      Yes, we still have it today, somewhere in the attic, and at least 2 edition Concentration games ...

  • @robmcmuffin8453
    @robmcmuffin8453 8 лет назад +17

    dude! I want the shrunken head kit!

    • @keithwilson6060
      @keithwilson6060 7 лет назад

      Rob Mcmuffin
      Who wouldn't? :)

    • @tasteegold7772
      @tasteegold7772 7 лет назад +1

      yeah that was badass. rob zombie would most likely market it but the remaining libtards would probably flip out over it cause none of them had afros lol

    • @robmcmuffin8453
      @robmcmuffin8453 7 лет назад +1

      tasteegold7772 im surprised there aren't any triggered libtard comments about "Gaylord the walking dog toy" lol

    • @JamiHeart
      @JamiHeart 7 лет назад +1

      Here is a comment for you.....only a deplorable would want a shrunken head or laugh at the name "Gaylord".

    • @tasteegold7772
      @tasteegold7772 7 лет назад +1

      jami1545
      why are you loser libtards still here in potus Trumps new America?..didnt you smelly worthless hippies say you were gonna move out?

  • @1mrstutt
    @1mrstutt 7 лет назад +3

    That Dick Tracy 2-way wrist radio is pretty cool, wouldn't today's kids like it?

  • @Skarfp
    @Skarfp 7 лет назад +4

    Did any of you notice Patty Duke in some of the Remco commercials?

  • @mistertentpole
    @mistertentpole 7 лет назад +16

    These toys sure looked better on TV. Am I right?

    • @garyhuffford6085
      @garyhuffford6085 7 лет назад +1

      u r right ..i had Jimmy Jet...just gotit for Christmas , played with it a couple of times ,,that day ,then it broke...dad said hed fix it but he for got AND I never played with it again . even then that thing was cheep junk!

    • @deathstrike
      @deathstrike 6 лет назад +1

      Could you imagine the cost of a lot of these toys if they built them to the level of reliability of today's electronics? The price would have been unbelievable!

    • @francolombardo9290
      @francolombardo9290 2 года назад

      yes I luv watching these videos I think ist cool u can see what my uncle played with when he was a kid

  • @sutrasofdelight
    @sutrasofdelight Год назад +1

    All the sweet people who's entire day was consumed by designing and developing toys to delight children. Their noble efforts humble me.

  • @virginagobetz4756
    @virginagobetz4756 7 лет назад +6

    Looking at all the army war toys boys played with-I couldn't help but think in ten years those same boys would be fighting a real war in Vietnam.How innocent we were!

  • @623professormartino
    @623professormartino 8 лет назад +24

    A toy horse that any dead beat dad can put together.

    • @VeNuS2910
      @VeNuS2910 7 лет назад

      true.

    • @robertromero8692
      @robertromero8692 6 лет назад

      Why the insistence on calling fathers "dead beat dads"?

    • @avaa2983
      @avaa2983 3 года назад

      @@robertromero8692they weren't saying that all dad are that

    • @robertromero8692
      @robertromero8692 3 года назад

      @@avaa2983 But why use the phrase at all? Why refer to fathers that way?

    • @avaa2983
      @avaa2983 3 года назад

      @@robertromero8692 he probably meant the dads that drink

  • @yanimartinez8103
    @yanimartinez8103 7 лет назад +6

    I grew up in the 80's and I believe that it was the last of the glory years of American Toy Makers. When they still had toy factories here home made in the U.S.A. It is so sad to see on all toys today Made in China. But hand's down I believe the coolest toy's were made from 50's-80's.

    • @hairdryermanson6955
      @hairdryermanson6955 4 года назад

      @Trust nobody Trustsnuthin ah yes. TVs and computers and videogames were better in the 50s to 80s

  • @emilyroberts3832
    @emilyroberts3832 3 года назад +2

    So what I learned is that as a kid in the 50s you could either play with guns and rocket ships, or dolls, and that was your lot. Cool.

  • @ConstantCompanion
    @ConstantCompanion 8 лет назад +21

    I got a Patty play pal doll when I was somewhere between two and three years old. She was exactly my size. I thought she was fun until she fell on me and nailed me to the floor. I didn't like her very much after that.

    • @madeleinebaier3896
      @madeleinebaier3896 7 лет назад +7

      ConstantCompanion "My name is Talky Tina, and I'm going to kill you".......

    • @ConstantCompanion
      @ConstantCompanion 7 лет назад +2

      Madeleine Baier different doll. we weren't allowed to watch Twilight Zone back then exactly for reasons like this. My parents are very smart.

    • @bonniecat5346
      @bonniecat5346 7 лет назад +4

      ConstantCompanion Patty play doll is the stuff of nightmares 😱

    • @ConstantCompanion
      @ConstantCompanion 7 лет назад +2

      Bonnie Cat lol..yes! I still don't like that doll!

    • @tyroneepps4854
      @tyroneepps4854 6 лет назад

      +Bonnie Cat really?

  • @allenjones3130
    @allenjones3130 Год назад +2

    Kellogg's was a sponsor of the "Superman' TV series in the 50s.

  • @zacharybedair4280
    @zacharybedair4280 5 лет назад +1

    Being a kid in the 1950 seems really fun... Except for all the polio and stuff

    • @yeoldeseawitch
      @yeoldeseawitch 7 месяцев назад

      and it was probably best if you were white. any other color and you were heckled, beaten and mobbed.

  • @kathycandelaria2115
    @kathycandelaria2115 7 лет назад +4

    I wish the kid's 2day could just experience the fun we had back then.everybody got along the whole block play baseball.hide and seek.man those we're the day's.sure miss those day's at times.😌.

    • @Jeromeromeshelton
      @Jeromeromeshelton 5 лет назад

      Kathy Candelaria they can’t technology took them over

  • @reedryals4116
    @reedryals4116 7 лет назад +2

    got some of those when i was a kid. at Christmas time we could pick out $50 worth we wanted. on birth days we would get $10 worth of toys. wish i had them all today

  • @ferociousgumby
    @ferociousgumby 8 лет назад +17

    6:49 hahahahaha "not a flying toy"

    • @kurtbjorn
      @kurtbjorn 8 лет назад +9

      Exactly like the label on Buzz Lightyear's box in "Toy Story"!

  • @amberlawson7867
    @amberlawson7867 8 лет назад +50

    this makes me have a fallout feeling xD

    • @robmcmuffin8453
      @robmcmuffin8453 8 лет назад +1

      lol...i was waiting for a "Giddy up Buttercup" commercial

    • @mrspooks5287
      @mrspooks5287 7 лет назад +4

      +Rob Mcmuffin "Gaylord the pup"
      I died laughing

    • @VeNuS2910
      @VeNuS2910 7 лет назад

      me too.

    • @brokenrobot2004
      @brokenrobot2004 7 лет назад +1

      70 toy commercials, Ah, a one of a kind experience to enjoy such happiness and creativity! But wait, What about the children born in 2007? They consider this a pathetic video game, and nothing else. and a drop of the "XD" Emote aswell.

    • @kaelandin
      @kaelandin 7 лет назад

      Blaze the horse was close enough to it tho

  • @CountWannabe
    @CountWannabe 8 лет назад +7

    My cousin had Barbie Dolls the clothes were made really well and were very pretty, when I bought one for my little niece I noticed the clothes were not as well made and looked pretty shitty by comparison.

  • @gordonfreeman3480
    @gordonfreeman3480 7 лет назад +2

    1:25 Jimmy's been into dad's medicine cabinet again

  • @EdsterIII
    @EdsterIII Год назад +1

    I am an avid collector of Die-Cast cars and trucks. I've also gotten really into some diorama pieces. I have an older Tomica Limited Vintage Car dealership that has a small office and, a garage, as well as maybe 10+ parking spots. I'd love to find a⛽Gas⛽⛽Station⛽as well, but a Drive-in theater would be absolutely perfect for a scenario! I have the Super 6-lane Raceway that Mattel made. I have created a ¼-mile dragstrip and it's a sweet set-up! Imagine as your Hot Wheels flies down the hill, flying across the straight track towards the finish line! Past the ⛽Gas⛽⛽Station⛽, the Car Dealership, then the Drive-in a t the end? Wow! Especially if your "filming" at night. Epic is an understatement!

  • @theartoftimelapsemore424
    @theartoftimelapsemore424 Год назад +1

    32:27
    "Alright now, how does a train go?"
    (whistle blowing)
    "Now an ocean liner?"
    (horn blowing, short toot)
    "Now then, how does your tricycle sound?"
    (metallic squeaking)
    "I see. But how would you like your tricycle to sound?"
    (engine roaring)

  • @PhaQ2
    @PhaQ2 8 лет назад +4

    Flying superman was the prelude to lawn darts.

  • @flakethefox9005
    @flakethefox9005 6 лет назад +2

    Sometimes the toys made back then are bettwr than the ones made now!

  • @dakotanorth1640
    @dakotanorth1640 7 лет назад +4

    "My name is Chatty Cathy and I'm going to kill you." LOL I always heard June Foray did both Chatty Cathy and Talky Tina but this is the first time I actually heard it.

  • @PlasmaCoolantLeak
    @PlasmaCoolantLeak 8 лет назад +1

    I had one of those Man In Space sets, great fun.

  • @williamstevenson9057
    @williamstevenson9057 Год назад

    I had some of these toys when i was a kid, i remember having Major Matt Mason and a couple of others

  • @markforrest5599
    @markforrest5599 7 лет назад +7

    I'd like to get one of those Remco "build-it-yourself" transistor radios, although I'd probably put it together wrong and end up receiving alien transmissions or something...

  • @VeNuS2910
    @VeNuS2910 7 лет назад +1

    i make my own dolls with cardboard and the doll house with shoe box. i learned how to make cardboard furniture too. my cardboard dolls have lots of clothes. i just drew/color/cut them. they were made of paper. and my brother and i carves a highway at the garden and play with our own "match box" cars, made from real match boxes. i often do an F1 race with all of our shoes and slippers, and discovered uncharted lands riding my sleeping mat as my sea ship. imagination is fun! XD

  • @norsemyn6865
    @norsemyn6865 7 лет назад +39

    Today's Libs would freak with the rocking horse commercial. Playing with a gun! Aaahhh!

    • @tasteegold7772
      @tasteegold7772 7 лет назад +8

      lol yeah fuck the demtards they're yesterdays used toilet paper

    • @jhonsiders6077
      @jhonsiders6077 7 лет назад +7

      What about the Johnny Reb Cannon and a confederate flag !!!! BLM and the rest of them would have a FIT !!!

    • @Loincourt
      @Loincourt 7 лет назад +3

      +Jhon Siders: I had a Johnny Reb Cannon as a kid (I'm sixty now, btw). I can't quite remember what became of it, but I recently found another one on Ebay. It was in sad shape, but I managed to get it working again. Yee-haw!!!

    • @foabmoab
      @foabmoab 7 лет назад +1

      Perhaps if you weren't so fucking nuts with your guns, people wouldn't feel paranoid about whether it was real or not.

  • @jackkircher1755
    @jackkircher1755 8 лет назад +1

    52:48- My cousin had one and I envied him for it. I never gave him a hard time about it, we just had fun and enjoyed it together. This is the one commercial that stands out foremost in my mind. To this day, I am still mesmerized by airplanes.

  • @abilenevespa
    @abilenevespa 8 лет назад +8

    I had the creepy crawler maker, open hot plate, loved it. My sister had a Chatty Cathy, boring.

    • @2degucitas
      @2degucitas 8 лет назад +1

      Did you have a vacuuform??

    • @abilenevespa
      @abilenevespa 8 лет назад

      No, rats.

    • @rickkartisable
      @rickkartisable 7 лет назад +3

      2degucitas Yes. Vacu-form, creepy-crawlies, others. Was my thing....that plastic smell!!!😃

  • @DoubleMrE
    @DoubleMrE 2 года назад

    I like the ad for shrunken heads…..”Now, shrunken heads for all occasions!” 😆

  • @deadliestchic8768
    @deadliestchic8768 7 лет назад +3

    I would LOVE to own one of the retro Barbie dolls

    • @ddivincenzo1
      @ddivincenzo1 7 лет назад

      You and I both. I have my aunt's Barbie and Midge from '62. They have seen better days, LOL!!

  • @krisshaw9916
    @krisshaw9916 6 лет назад +1

    Those old barbie commericals haunt my nightmares

  • @kelstar1967
    @kelstar1967 7 лет назад +4

    OMG!!! that Patty Playpal doll is just creepy as hell!!! Those are the kind of dolls they make horror movies out of!

  • @jordanh.2912
    @jordanh.2912 5 лет назад +1

    These are better and more creative than the toys now.

  • @debstor6599
    @debstor6599 9 лет назад +7

    superman looks like a plane

  • @kikyozoldyck7872
    @kikyozoldyck7872 4 года назад +1

    im still thinking about how the kids are all grandparents right now

  • @mjp29
    @mjp29 Год назад +1

    I didn't know Mr Potato head actually used a real potato at one time !

  • @jmn1209
    @jmn1209 4 дня назад

    I had and loved my creepy crawlers, along with my Barbie Dream House, chatty Cathy, too!

  • @noodlesnoodles1
    @noodlesnoodles1 7 лет назад +6

    Billy Mumy at 28:14 pre- Lost in space....Twilight Zone

  • @yanki161
    @yanki161 7 лет назад +2

    OMG! That's Patty Duke in the ticket taker hat.

    • @yanki161
      @yanki161 7 лет назад +1

      And again at 13:40 with the Coney Island penny machine.

  • @kimberleyh9509
    @kimberleyh9509 8 лет назад +36

    Poor Gaylord. 😂

  • @truckupgf
    @truckupgf 7 лет назад +4

    Holy cow...a kid with a toy gun...call out the SWAT team

    • @gracieallen8285
      @gracieallen8285 6 лет назад

      The Average Joe, I still have my cap gun from 1955, don’t know what to do with it too dangerous in this era, afraid the police would shoot my young grandson if he played with it outside.

  • @1950Grendel
    @1950Grendel 5 лет назад +1

    Remco, Ideal, Marx, Hasbro, American Flyer - all gone. Now parents buy "toys" that they want their kids to learn from so they can be miniature adults. Last month I gave my granddaughter a few old socks knotted together and she hasn't put it down. Kids know what they want; too many parents don't know how to give it to them.

  • @joansmith6092
    @joansmith6092 7 лет назад +4

    No,NO! I never wanted Creepy Crawlers. I wanted Incredible Edibles-what happened to them?

  • @ThePerson1959
    @ThePerson1959 7 лет назад +1

    These toys are much better than the crap they turn out today. I see all these plastic toys at the Tip Shop on a regular basis. They are always cracked and faded with parts missing. They obviously do not last. What I have seen in the shops do not look realistic or very much fun. Ugly dolls and Lego that you have to set up as required in the sets. I am glad I grew up in the sixties with decent toys. I bet I had much more fun.

  • @evansmith4330
    @evansmith4330 8 лет назад +3

    That $14.98 turbojet would cost over $125.00 in 2016 dollar value. Only rich kids could afford it then.

  • @heatherbilly4223
    @heatherbilly4223 7 лет назад +2

    "Looks just like super man himself!" 😂 ok. Kinda looked more like the batman logo. You just have to listen to these commercials to know they're old. (Not just the sound quality) but how they talk. Same as sitcoms from the 50s/60s. I like how they have the prices in the commercial. Me/mrs potato head is my favorite where you use an actual potato. 🥔. 👍🏻😆

  • @1984potionlover
    @1984potionlover 7 лет назад +4

    Wow...that M-16, and the Western rifle from Marx are pretty cool! I love how they advertise that they look like real, and sound like real. Those would have been top selling point... flash forward to Christmas 2016...you won't see this kind of marketing at all. With the way some (not all) police react, you'd be liable to find your child dead... Sorry to go all grim there for a moment. I'm no lover of guns, at least the way that some fanciers love to flail them around, but I've never really seen a problem with kids being kids. I might be wrong, but back when children went outside to play, used their imaginations, and the toys that were props to their imaginary worlds, there wasn't any where near the sort of catastrophic shooting sprees and casual disregard for violence that you see now.
    Oddly, I wonder if kids playing cops and robbers, soldiers etc.,and got the chance to pretend and get exercise and all that might have been less likely to act out in more anti social ways? They/ we got rid of lots of energy and pretended the most harrowing things, knowing full well that at the end of the day, except for scratches and a bruise or two it was good fun, and that tomorrow imagination would again provide transport to outer space, or the old west, or a jungle, or anywhere that could be thought of. I was a tomboy growing up, and I would have been right in there like a dirty shirt wanting one of these toys too, because they were exciting.(I won't go into the whole "girls toys sucked, and boys had the best toys" rant)...not to mention all the space toys yadda yadda yadda :)
    I really do feel sorry for a lot of children today. Sure the video games re awesome, and the internet is the world's largest multi media library, social media and all the rest, but sadly for too many children, teens, and adults, it takes the place of real social interaction face to face, and getting off one's duff to go and actually do something physical.
    There are loads of things in the past I would not want to reoccur, but the freedom to be kids( and not have an adult holding their hands or looking over their shoulder constantly), and run around and pretend to do a million different things and not have some well meaning but totally stuffshirted derp sjw who wouldn't know a joke or fun if they fell over it, or it squirted a water pistol at 'em, or has no idea what makes kids "tick"

  • @dongeraci8599
    @dongeraci8599 5 лет назад +1

    11:30 The smartwatch has existed since the 50s...

  • @laurasohn8332
    @laurasohn8332 7 лет назад +1

    can you imagine just how much half of these would go for now? if you had any of these toys you could sell them for a really high price

  • @leekenney9214
    @leekenney9214 8 лет назад +7

    47.28 young Kurt Russell with Bazooka toy..!!

    • @PlasmaCoolantLeak
      @PlasmaCoolantLeak 8 лет назад +7

      A young Snake Plisken. I had one of those Sonic Blasters, great fun. Along with my Johnny Seven One Man Army gun, I was the most heavily armed second grader on the block.

    • @edwarddavis3655
      @edwarddavis3655 8 лет назад +1

      PlasmaCoolantLeak

    • @rdoc
      @rdoc 7 лет назад +1

      Yeah, I had one too. That Sonic Blaster truly was a blast to play with. I would pump mine way up and shoot Nerf balls at my sister. Let me tell you, that thing truly had a loud bark!

  • @josephpolanin182
    @josephpolanin182 Год назад

    My dear old dad bought me every cap gun ever made in the early 50s. I did not become a serial killer or was ever indicted! The only thing that survived my childhood was my Lionel train set. Still runs of course.

    • @Bruh___Moment
      @Bruh___Moment 9 месяцев назад

      My grandfather had a large collection of toy trains when he was a child, even having a motorized set. He kept them his whole life, and my younger brother got them after grandpa died. Most of those trains are still in good condition and the motorized set still works, 70-ish years later. My brother plays with them now.

    • @MrWolfSnack
      @MrWolfSnack 3 месяца назад

      @@Bruh___Moment Lionel postwar and prewar trains are pretty bulletproof. I've got some really rusty ones, and just a wire brush and some de-rust and oil, and they are good to go again. And cleaning the track in an ultrasonic bath gets a lot of the rust off the tin rails too, then just polish clean with steel wool. Back then they told you to wipe the tracks down with light oil after each play so they do not rust.

  • @firestick_update6130
    @firestick_update6130 7 лет назад

    Was born in Chicago,IL 1964. I remember that nurse kit, the Chrissy doll with the hair that grows, my cousins had Mattel's Major Matt Mason, neighbor kid had the thingmaker. My toys were Mattel's Sizzlers, Hasbro's Air Devils and HO trains. Then came Star Wars.

  • @jamesmcgrath1952
    @jamesmcgrath1952 7 лет назад +1

    Jeez, I remember all of these..I feel so old, Lol.

  • @Barbarra63297
    @Barbarra63297 2 года назад

    Wow, that first segment, the drive in, that was a very young Patty Duke!

    • @MrWolfSnack
      @MrWolfSnack 3 месяца назад +1

      Damn, it is! I thought that girl looked familiar.

  • @beckielassetter8865
    @beckielassetter8865 7 лет назад +11

    we had no helmets for bikes or skates , a lot of our toys didn't have batteries we had to use our imagination . we got up in the morning went outside a day stayed all day drank from a hose ,sat in the shade when it got hot or if we were lucky we got to run through the sprinkler . we didn't stay inside like these sissy pants mama's whiney babies of today

  • @CountWannabe
    @CountWannabe 8 лет назад +1

    I used to have Creepy Crawlers when I was a kid, the cooking plate got hot enough to cause some serious burns. I got a blister on my finger from touching a hot mould and so did my brother. You could also get candy goop to make candy. Hard candy like lollypops or chewy candy like gummies

  • @LibraGamesUnlimited
    @LibraGamesUnlimited 7 лет назад +3

    Mr and Miss Potato Head were real potatoes back then? That's pretty cheap.

    • @dianehoward6608
      @dianehoward6608 7 лет назад

      That was the point. Anybody could get a potato, red pepper, blob of bread, a lump of clay, or something else and stick the features on. Anywhere. Not just where the holes in the plastic potato were.

    • @LibraGamesUnlimited
      @LibraGamesUnlimited 7 лет назад

      I also just realized, that's probably where "South Park" got the idea for the mock ad for the Create Your Own Mr. Hanky product. :)

  • @myrnanarvaza7314
    @myrnanarvaza7314 7 лет назад +1

    i want some of these toys ugh..i remember we had one of those crissy doll but we couldnt play with it..my aunt just put em in the display closet but we sometimes take it out and play with it and put the plastic and everything back in the box..and in my grandma's house they had toys but you cant play with em they just stay in a display cabinet..

  • @ariefindriawan
    @ariefindriawan 8 лет назад +6

    09:25 was like my nightmare

  • @virginagobetz4756
    @virginagobetz4756 7 лет назад +1

    That's Patty Duke in the Rondo Drive In Theater toy!

    • @kokujin1014
      @kokujin1014 6 лет назад

      You'll see her twice in this retro.

  • @ahmadrashid970
    @ahmadrashid970 7 лет назад +1

    This is Aida: Wow ! Patty Duke ! Is there a time in her life when she wasn't acting? Actor Mason Adams(Lou Grant, Smucker's) narrator in "Gaylord the Pup" commerical. Boy I loved Mattel's Thing makers and Chatty Cathy was incredible...a talking doll ! I had Mystery Date. I'm African-American. Back in the days of the 60s we didn't expect dolls, games and toys to be presented by black people in commericals. I didn't cross my mind that a black man wasn't there as a date. By the time I got a Mr. Potato Head as a gift, the "potato" head was plastic. You didn't have to use real vegetables/fruits. Billy Mumy ("Lost in Space") was such a popular kid actor.

  • @jordanh.2912
    @jordanh.2912 5 лет назад +1

    Oh, the good old days.