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Apache;2309297; said:I wanted a Schwinn 27 inch bicycle and a Rawlings Dave Concepcion fielders glove and a Johnny Bench catchers mitt.
Earned them all with my paper route.
Jake;2309756; said:Ha! My first purchase with my paper route money was a new bike.
Obviously, we're from an older generation.
Taosman;2309516; said:A Christmas Story - YouTube
And I nearly did! :tongue2:
Dryden;2309773; said:1) Kenner Girder & Panel building sets. A cousin of mine had the "World Famous Buildings" set from the 1975 Sears catalog. I wanted to spend every weekend sleeping over at his house to play with it. He'd ask if I wanted to play LEGO or watch Dukes of Hazzard or something, and I'd be all like, "[censored] that! I can do that [Mark May] at my house, I want to build skyscrapers in your bedroom."
2) The GI Joe USS Flagg. Needs no explanation.
NFBuck;2309776; said:Agree with Dryden. The U.S.S. Flagg was the thing I always wanted. My friend had it, [censored]ing thing was HUGE. No wonder my parents would never get it for me.
http://www.ebay.com/itm/GI-Joe-1985...8644?pt=US_Action_Figures&hash=item4d09d3d234
Hmmmmm, maybe I should buy it now. My wife would be thrilled.
Dryden;2309773; said:1) Kenner Girder & Panel building sets. A cousin of mine had the "World Famous Buildings" set from the 1975 Sears catalog. I wanted to spend every weekend sleeping over at his house to play with it. He'd ask if I wanted to play LEGO or watch Dukes of Hazzard or something, and I'd be all like, "Fuck that! I can do that shit at my house, I want to build skyscrapers in your bedroom."
I was a couple of years too old when GI Joe really started to take off but I do remember thinking the carrier was pretty cool. When I was younger I had a carrier that was smaller (half the size or so?) that had working (rubber band powered) catapults that could launch foam aircraft. Another one of those toys that I've never seen or heard of since (and another one of mom's thrift store/garage sale finds).2) The GI Joe USS Flagg. Needs no explanation.
knapplc;2309838; said:I wanted the Droid Factory.
We were pretty damned poor when I was a kid in the 1970s. I had one Star Wars action figure, a Stormtrooper, until I was ten when I got a few more. My other toys were green army men, a few matchbox cars and a Ford F-100 model truck I didn't know how to put together.
That Droid Factory was my holy grail, and I never got one. They stopped making them before we ever had enough money to buy me one.
The Guns of Navarone set is one of my 3 favorite X-Mas memories. Came downstairs Christmas morning to find it all laid out in front of the tree...awesome job dad (err Santa)! Loved that thing. It's also the only present that I remember coming directly from circling things in the JC Penny catalog.The neighbor kids had the "real" Death Star play set, plus a Force 10 from Navarone play setand I wanted that as well, but not nearly as bad as I wanted the Death Star.
You are going to be an excellent grandfather.Being poor and not having any idea how hard this would be, I went to the wood pile, pulled out a pretty large chunk of tree trunk, and proceeded to try to carve a Death Star out of the wood. I think I worked on that thing for a couple of weeks before realizing I would never accomplish anything with what little ability I had as a kid. I doubt I could pull that off today without half a year's work with my Dremel.
Dryden;2309773; said:1) Kenner Girder & Panel building sets. A cousin of mine had the "World Famous Buildings" set from the 1975 Sears catalog. I wanted to spend every weekend sleeping over at his house to play with it. He'd ask if I wanted to play LEGO or watch Dukes of Hazzard or something, and I'd be all like, "Fuck that! I can do that shit at my house, I want to build skyscrapers in your bedroom."
2) The GI Joe USS Flagg. Needs no explanation.