mistercomedy

mistercomedy
Location
Minneapolis, Minnesota,
Birthday
March 30
Bio
Michael Dane is America's favorite middle-aged, Jewish, bisexual social satirist. Or, at least one of them. As a comedian, he's performed at clubs from Seattle to Key West, and from San Diego to Maine. He's also performed on a frozen lake for the opening of ice-fishing season. And of course, at the Antelope Valley Fair and Alfalfa Festival.

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NOVEMBER 16, 2009 10:39AM

rushing the season or: my childhood, explained

Rate: 35 Flag

Apparently, I was confused. I thought Christmas celebrated the birth of Jesus (which, from what I’ve read, was a one-day event), but my local Walgreens is under the impression that we’re celebrating Mary’s last trimester. That’s right; their Christmas items have been on the shelf for over a week. Oh--and in the spirit of multiculturalism, they put out some boxes of Hanukah candles.


Norelco
 
I’m a big ol’ Jew now, but I was raised in a Christian home, and I still have some fond memories of Christmas traditions. For me, the start of the holiday season was always marked by the ad with Santa riding a Norelco electric razor. Call me sentimental.
 
 
Of course, when I think of childhood, I mostly remember all the toys, beckoning from under the twinkling lights of a tree trimmed with strands of tinsel. And looking back, I can see that most of my toys sucked.
 

bigwheel

I got the short end of the gift stick through no fault of my parents. Even with just my mom’s social security and my stepdad’s veteran’s benefits, there was always something for me to open on Christmas morning.

 The problem was, having been born in 1960, I was too old for toys by the time the cool toys came out. I still remember being envious of kids who had a Big Wheel, because the Big Wheel debuted in 1969, and what with me being nine, I was too old to ride one.


 

globe

Another problem was that I was really smart, so Mom would always buy me smart kid toys, as opposed to toys that involved, say, going outside. Don’t get me wrong—I always asked for brainy toys, but it probably would have been a good idea, social-development-wise, for Mom to get me a ball, or a bat, or a glove, and suggest I leave my room. Instead, one year, she got me a globe.

Great. I'll invite some friends over. We can...point to different countries.

 visible man and woman anatomical

 One year for Christmas, I got what was called ‘The Visible Man,’ I guess the reasoning being, “He’s sure smart for a sixth-grader, which must mean he’ll become a doctor, so he’d better learn where the spleen is.” Of course, I could always invite friends over and point to it. Maybe the reason my generation is so fat and sedentary is that so many of our toys didn’t actually DO ANYTHING. Or, I got a lot of toys that did one thing, and that’s it. So, I’d gleefully open a package, do the one the toy was capable of, and think, “That’s all it does?”

 


Here are some examples of toys which…don’t do a whole lot.

(To my younger readers, none of these toys ‘plug in,’ so they would make perfect gifts for your Amish nephew.)

wheelo-toy

 

Behold, the Wheel-O. Through the magic of gyro-dynamic something-or-other, the wheel goes around the loop thingie, and back. Down. And up. Minutes of fun.

 

ClackersBLUE

These were called Clackers. They bang together. Loud enough to annoy the entire family, but dangerous enough to leave a bruise.

  whizzer

Our last entry in the Parade of Pointless Toys is the Wizzer. Despite what it says, it does not do 'a zillion fantastic tricks.' It spins if you roll the rubber tip on the ground. And then it stops spinning.

   slinky2

I never had a Slinky, but only because our house didn’t have stairs.

 


hot wheels

Though I’m not a car guy (somehow I missed that genetic marker), I had some toy cars. Hot Wheels cars were how I rolled, and the best thing about Hot Wheels was the track that came in pieces you could assemble in infinite combinations. Or, you could just do a straightaway, with a loop in the middle.

Anyway, I would push my car toward the loop, and the car would race to the top, and...plummet to the floor. The imaginary carnage was horrifying.

 

ssp

Then came the ne plus ultra of car toys for 1972, the SSP Racer. First of all, this commercial mentions that it comes with ‘sonic sound,’ and there’s no sound more thrilling to a young boy than sonic sound. So, I would insert the special T-stick, pull it out, put the car on the floor, and…then the car would be lost, or broken. But it really went fast that one time.


 

etch-a-sketch-blank

The two most frustrating toys from my youth were the Etch-A-Sketch and the Spirograph. Etch-A-Sketch was great for drawing steps (and what kid doesn’t enjoy that?), but then there was that special moment when you figured out you could draw a curved line by turning both wheels at the same time. And….then you were done with it.

Side note—if you fight with your cousin over an Etch-A-Sketch and it breaks, aluminum powder is a bitch to get out of the carpet.

 

spirograph[1]spirograph

The problem with Spirograph was that the box would tell you that you can make designs like the one on the right, when in fact, you can’t.

 

 

That, and the fact that if you lost either the pens or push pins that came in the box, no other pen or pin made by humans would fit in the little holes. And, the fact that it was impossible to use the long skinny pieces at all.

 

viewmaster

My childhood was a time when it was considered entertaining to look into plastic binoculars and see 3-D still pictures of the Grand Canyon. Presenting--the Viewmaster! Entire afternoons spent clicking and staring. You could even get discs for it with still pictures from movies and TV shows! Did I mention they were in 3-D?  Now that I think of it, if they still made these, I could catch up on ‘Mad Men’ without having to pay for cable.

 


Every year, I gave my mom a Christmas list, and from the time I was seven or eight, I wanted an ant farm. It went on the list, and every year, no ant farm. Oh, I always got the new edition of the World Almanac and Book of Facts, but never the ant farm. Until, one Christmas, I couldn’t believe my eyes. I tore off the wrapping paper and there it was—UNCLE MILTON’S GIANT ANT FARM!

The thing is, I was seventeen when I finally got it. Really, Mom? I know the box says 'ages seven and up,' but, really? Only thing I can figure is that Mom kept all the old Christmas lists and, since I never told her I had stopped wanting an ant farm, she finally decided, “He’s ready for this now.” Oh well, it's the thought that counts.

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comedy, christmas, toys

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Comments

Type your comment below:
"Minutes of fun."

Sorry that I laughed, and laughed some more, at your crappy gifts.
;-)
Hehehe... point to things!

Oooo, clackers! Those things hurt like a sonofabitch! And a Slinky becomes a Kinky in about five minutes. But it does "walk down stairs alone or in pairs, and makes a slinkety sound," unless it's one of those lame plastic ones.

At least your mom didn't give you a wood burning kit... unless you asked for it, that is.

LEGO! You just needed some lego...
"my local Walgreen’s is under the impression that we’re celebrating Mary’s last trimester." - You had me going right there at the beginning.
Oh and on the slinky - It's fun even without stairs....unless you are Egon from Ghost Busters, who straightened his. I'll never forgot that act of insanity and horror. I think that's where I started to rebel against Science as a matter of fact.
Never mind, Great post, lot's of fun!

Rated
Is it sad that I had a friend save up his own pocket money to buy an Etch-A-Sketch? Great blog. I'm a little younger than you are but I remember all of these. And slinkies don't work on carpeted stairs either.
I loved this - had them all! (you left out Lite Brite). I still think Viewmasters are pretty neat. The slinky went plastic for awhile, but then they reintroduced the metal ones. They're cool if you can accept that the real fun is in repetitively starting it on a journey down the staircase that would always prematurely abort, then there would be a tangle and you'd have to throw it away.
Your childhood sounds about as fun as mine. While your friends came over to point at countries, mine came over to play "read a book". This was very funny. Rated for high nostalgia factor.
What would you have had to write about today if not for those Clackers? Great post. You certainly stirred memories for me. Santa on the Norelco sleight. Yup. Every year!
R
Awesome job with the pictures. Of course, now I'm mad at you because I was successfully ignoring "the holidays" until now.
All is forgiven because of your wit and style.
Ah, yes, I remember them well.
spotted: fine, laugh at my pain--wait till you see what i get you...
C.K.:yeah, kids, and burning wood--ideal combination (and i'm scared you remember the slinky song)
Andy:we can all learn a little from 'ghostbusters'...
GJI: yeah, a little...
sandra: why does what you said seem like a metaphor for life...
O'Really: wow, if we'd known each other as kids we would have had some crazy fun...
Donna: without clackers, i wouldn't be who i am today...
aim: "it's the most wonderful time of the--" too soon?
I resemble these remarks!! I had about 90% of these toys myself! And btw, love the pictures! LOL
Great piece. I got one of those Visible Man things too, Now I'm a neurosurgeon. Also, mine had advanced liver disease.
R
This brought back a lot of memories I thought were repressed! I might need to bo find some Hot Wheels for myself right NOW!

And "minutes of fun" is a killer funny line.

The only thing I didn't see was my "Doctors Kit" for those special games with Nancy the girl who lived down the street. . . .

Great piece!
While we were born 9 years apart, it's nice to know that there is no statute of limitation on the above listed crappy gifts, for I got them all as well.

I also kind of dig a razor-riding Santa.
My favorite nerdy Christmas present was the chemistry set that included a plastic rocket suitable for blasting off via the chemical reaction between baking soda and vinegar.

Rated for the Visible Man who should have gotten together with my Visible Woman. Consider the possibilities . . .
Rated for painful nostalgia. (Good work with the pictures!)
hell's bells: weird how memories of minutiae stick with you...
MAWB: thanks!--the formatting limitations in os were driving me batty--wish you could see what it looked like in word...
blumenthal: that's what happens when you also have a'visible bartender'...
Sheldon: yeah, lame never goes out of style...
Chicago Guy: just so ya know, i was nancy's first...
Coyote: sadly, my visible guy seems to be less than anatomically accurate, so your visible gal would have been disappointed...
Jeanette: 'painful nostalgia'--i think that's my favorite new phrase (or possible band name)
I'm older than you, so I have a different perspective. I didn't get a globe because the earth was flat then... I had to make do with a map. I didn't have Hot Wheels cars, but the Wells Fargo stagecoach was fun.

Growing up was tough back then, wasn't it?

-R-
Let's face it, "The Holiday Season" starts the day you buy candy for Halloween, and ends the day the last assorted chocolate is eaten, or the last petal falls from the bouquet of roses that you gave to your girlfriend or wife for Valentine's Day (and let's face it, most men don't give a rat's ass about Valentine's Day)
Wow! I LOVED my Wheel-O. I had totally forgotten about that. Fun post and Rated.
You're great. That's all. You're great.
I'm putting the ViewMaster and a Big Wheel in my Christmas list this year.
Cool memories. But try having to celebrate your mother's birthday on Christmas. Not so cool memories. ~R~
Does it count if you bought all theses things for your kids? Funny, funny, thanks for the memories
"The problem with Spirograph was that the box would tell you that you can make designs like the one on the right, when in fact, you can’t. "

Oh my friend, I have to disagree with this, yes you could!! Well, maybe not you, definitely not me, but I had a friend(who happened to be a girl!! Teehee!!) and she could make that design and hundreds of others, but she was also weird, she could actually draw cool pics with EtchaSketch.

She dumped me shortly after third grade for some cooler friends.

I made a new friend, who had RockEm SockEm Robots!!!! WOOOO!!

:) (my family was and still is poor...I had to find friends to play with their toys!! ;) )

Thanks for the laugh, I needed it. Rated!
rated for minutes of fun
Way too funny! Those Clackers were the rage until the balls shattered and kids started losing eyes and things like that. They were more like Martial Arts weaponry than toys.
Love it. And hey! The Etch-a-Sketch lives on in overrated toy glory. You can still buy one of those frustrating bastards today.
I have an etch a sketch that has a one inch screen. It's my favorite toy.

Otherwise, I never got those goodies.
wow---thanks so much for taking this little memory trip with me...
CarolinaBlue: I'm guessing you also had to walk ten miles uphill in the snow to school every day?
Placebostudman: that's the holiday spirit!
Roger: i loved mine too for about an hour...
Caroline: you are too kind...
surly: bad news--just found out they stopped making viewmasters this year...sorry...
Chuck: yikes! my stepdad's birthday was just after christmas and he said he always got screwed on gifts...
Lunchlady: i hope you also got them--fun things...
Tink: those damn girls and their ability to do stuff!
Roy: glad to add a little silly to your day--now get back to thinking about serious things...
Michael: yeah, i seriously clobbered myself with mine--not the toy for a ten year-old klutz...
JustJuli: i...think i'll pass...
zuma: the little one might be fun--less pressure to make it look like art...
it shows that persistence can accomplish great things
The Ant Farm at 17. Priceless. I'm older than you so we longed for the Barbie Game (Oh no! You got the date with Pointdexter!), the Thumbelina doll that squirmed in our arms, and the ever-popular Betsy-Wetsy (whose sick idea was THAT?). One year, we made a list for David, Leslie, Melissa and All. God bless Mom and Dad, but they went to every store in town looking for a board game called "All." I still feel the guilt.

Bravo on another fabulous column!
Not to cast religious aspersions here, but all of the toys you mentioned are still more fun than a dreidel.
Fun read. Thanks for the trip back. rated
Chag Sameach

(random thought re Slinky)
From a poem by Emo Philips to this ex, " You look slinky, I said to her at the bottom of the stairs."
A bit younger than you, but I loved playing with my mom's vintage spirograph, of course.... it was a wild riot compared to the usual 'pointing at things.' Great post. I got lame stuff, too, like a rocking chair and a beanbag chair and a strawberry shortcake sleeping bag; as if to say - enjoy being lazy, ya bum.
as already mentioned, you had me with Walgreens celebrating Mary's last trimester. Santa on the Norelco -- wonderous back then.
I could never get the Slinky to work, and we had stairs in our apartment building.
Loved this. Loved the ViewMaster, too. It was amazing to see things in 3-D (but I'm older than you and easily amused). Wish I still had it but my sister took all the good toys in the basement when my parents sold the house. Kids today just don't know what they're missing! Ha!

Crated and Appreciated!
We must be the same age. I never thought my gifts were cool, either, what I got of them, being Jewish in a Christian world. Read my new post for more on the benighted holiday.
I think I had most of those, including the SST, which I snagged or traded from/with my younger brothers. They always got cooler toys. I got 6 copies of "Heidi."