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December 19, 2024 • 22 mins
Happy holidays! What toys were your favorite from the 90's? Brady and Dan each drafted four toys. Take a listen and let us know who won the draft. Enjoy friends!
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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:01):
Number nine is hit Me Brady. That's awful One more Time.

Speaker 2 (00:08):
I'll look back on all things nineties and two thousands,
the movies.

Speaker 1 (00:14):
And music, the awkwardness. There's a new pet here.

Speaker 2 (00:23):
Here's your host Brady process.

Speaker 1 (00:25):
Welcome, Welcome, Welcome.

Speaker 2 (00:27):
It is the Hit Me Brady One More Time podcast.
We are reminiscing about life in the nineties and two thousands,
all the pop culture that happened back when the dollar
store used to actually sell things for a dollar.

Speaker 3 (00:38):
They used to do that back then. Are they just
gonna change it to the five dollars store.

Speaker 2 (00:43):
No, it's just that that's a brand. That's a brand
like radio shack. Nobody knows what that is. Soon we're
gonna we're gonna have to go back in time a
radio shack. I spent a lot of time in some
radio check. I'm your host radio personality. Some say DJ.
He's a DJ on air jock for almost two decades
in Top forty and other formats. At one point the
youngest human alive. I was at one point in alive.

(01:05):
We all were, and somehow I was still alive. After
our holiday party this past week, we survived. We survived.

Speaker 1 (01:12):
Think everyone did.

Speaker 2 (01:13):
I am Brady Burskane Joining me today is the Kickball King,
a fellow radio industry colleague, and the man who actually
almost had to drive me home from said holiday party.
I offered, you offered my smoke show of a wife.
Decided she was. She was good enough.

Speaker 1 (01:28):
She did not take shots of you chose her over me.

Speaker 2 (01:31):
I wonder why it was either your wife or your
podcast co host. Easy decision, no offense, but yeah, we
she did not have shots of tequila or a Red
Bull vodka revoka. That was pastor. I think everybody is
the sip of it? How am I not sick?

Speaker 1 (01:46):
Also?

Speaker 2 (01:46):
I was the first time I was pure pressured since
probably I was in high school. I was.

Speaker 1 (01:51):
I was.

Speaker 2 (01:51):
I was told I was not allowed to not take
a sip of that, and as soon as I did,
I said no twice and then finally I just gave
in and took a sip and immediately regretted it, especially
like home I forgot like Red Bull of vodkas, they
keep you awake.

Speaker 1 (02:04):
Yeah right, I ran away from that. Did You're smart?
So anyways with your caffeine on a Tuesday night?

Speaker 2 (02:10):
No, No, not good for any but back in the day, yeah,
now responsibilities and things to that nature. But anyways, we
are here for an awesome podcast episode today we are
not doing fashion.

Speaker 1 (02:21):
Unfortunately, got pushed back. Oh my god, I took so
many notes again.

Speaker 2 (02:25):
You're gonna have to save them, all right, all right, Dan,
and I know that everybody listening is here for it.

Speaker 1 (02:30):
But we'll do it next week. Okay, next week.

Speaker 2 (02:32):
The reason I got bummed this time is because we
are very very close to Christmas, and Hanukkah is right
around the corner as well. It's the holiday season. Gifts
are being given and when you're a kid growing up
in the nineties and the two thousands, the best part
of the holidays were the gifts, the toys.

Speaker 1 (02:48):
The toys.

Speaker 2 (02:48):
It wasn't the meaning, the spirit of the holidays or
anything like that.

Speaker 1 (02:51):
That sucked the family. That was the families, alright.

Speaker 2 (02:55):
It was really about waking up and getting what was
under the tree. Is that how it works for Hankah
We it was like by the fireplace, either eight nights
when you were a kid, you gotta we would get
a gift each of the eight nights, and they were
all wrapped and you would pick like you would try
to I like to save the best ones for last.
So I would try to open the most boring ones first.
How do you know which one's boring? To tell if

(03:17):
it's like socks, just by how it's wrapped. Oh, you
know socks versus like a Nintendo.

Speaker 1 (03:21):
Wow, that's smart. So you want to you want to go,
You want to save the best.

Speaker 2 (03:24):
I try to save the best for last. My sister
would try to open what you wanted the most first.

Speaker 1 (03:29):
Interesting, interesting strategies. Over here, I'm learning so much.

Speaker 2 (03:32):
But so what we're gonna do is we're going to
do the first ever draft on the podcast. We're doing
a nineties toys podcast, So we each get four picks,
and when it's all said and done, we want to
know what you the podcast listener thinks is the better draft,
Dan or Brady. So we got a competition first before
we get into it. Christmas time for me, love, This

(03:57):
is my favorite time of the year.

Speaker 1 (03:58):
I go all out.

Speaker 2 (03:59):
I'm a little kid, even at my age now, as
a little kid, I don't know if you knew this.
What really started to took it to the next level.
I was the lead role. You're looking right here.

Speaker 3 (04:10):
Okay, now you're not gonna say Santa at the mall
based on that ho ho ho to start the.

Speaker 2 (04:15):
Awful ho ho ho and to work in my host
Wait what uh?

Speaker 1 (04:18):
No? I was the lead role close.

Speaker 2 (04:20):
I was Santa Santa Claus in the fourth grade production
of The North Pole Goes Rock and Roll.

Speaker 1 (04:27):
You do say, yep, there's a VHS tap. Do you
remember your lines?

Speaker 2 (04:31):
You know what's funny? If I watched it right now,
they'd probably come back to me. Okay, yeah, not off
the top of my head. But I practiced in the
living room for weeks and weeks nailed it started first. Anyways,
that we'll get into our acting careers in another podcast episode.
But yeah, so I'm just mister, I'm mister Holidays. I
love it this time of year and especially you know,

(04:51):
it's especially growing up, you know, struggling financially. Somehow, moms
and dads they made miracles happen. I don't know how
all they did it, but it was a day you
just expected to get things that you wanted. And that's uh,
that's kind of why I wanted to do this podcast,
because it's all about toys and toys make kids happy,
and that's what we were on Christmas Day. So love

(05:12):
it without any further ado, I think we jump. Do
you want to jump into the draft?

Speaker 1 (05:17):
Let's do it.

Speaker 3 (05:17):
I think, as the guy whose name is in the
podcast title, you can have the first pick.

Speaker 2 (05:22):
I'd like to share though, but let's go. So here
we go the nineties toy draft. With a first pick.
In the twenty twenty four nineties Toy Draft, Brady Brosky picks.

Speaker 1 (05:38):
Power Rangers. Okay, on your list.

Speaker 2 (05:41):
It was an alternate. Okay, good and good, and so
you agree the Power Ranger toys were amazing. Yeah, okay,
Power Rangers. Here's what my thought about putting this on
the list and me and being my number one pick.

Speaker 1 (05:52):
There was a.

Speaker 2 (05:53):
Toy in the eighties called Voltron that was very similar
to Power Rangers. They all came together, their individual toys,
but they all came together to make one giant thing,
and the Power Rangers had that same concept.

Speaker 1 (06:06):
It was kind of a ripoff, really a vulture, okay,
but never knew that. But I was.

Speaker 2 (06:10):
I was like, I was right at the age where
I shouldn't be asking for Power Ranger toys when they
came out, but my brother wasn't, so he got he
got every Power Ranger that year every toy and I
would play, I would air quote play with it. But
I was having fun, even though I was like, what
am I doing? This is the age on the box,
but I what was the age difference between you and

(06:31):
your brother? We're eight years apart? Okay, yeah, okay, so
he was uh, he was like on the young end,
really young end, and I was just passed. But I
thought that that was such a genius toy idea. Everybody
around our age had the biggest crush on the pink Ranger.

Speaker 1 (06:47):
Still do.

Speaker 2 (06:49):
But yeah, power Rangers my number one pick. If you
were born in the nineties grew up in the nineties,
power Rangers were your jam, all right, So that's my
number one.

Speaker 1 (06:58):
I love it. Are you ready?

Speaker 2 (06:59):
I'm ready with the second pick of the twenty twenty
four nineties toy Draft, Dan Ginsburg, Your selection.

Speaker 1 (07:10):
Is Caleb Williams.

Speaker 3 (07:15):
Wait, nope, hold on wrong theme same too soon Okay,
I'm soon.

Speaker 2 (07:22):
People not in Chicago are like, huh okay, No.

Speaker 3 (07:26):
My first pick is going to be the Tamagatchi. Dude,
great pick. One of the first like big, just like
electronic things that you could carry around. It was a
way to have a pet without I think it was
kind of a way to introduce kids to the responsibility
that came along with having a pet.

Speaker 1 (07:45):
But they loved it. You could it was. It was
just this very primitive little digital thing. You could attach
it to your keychain.

Speaker 3 (07:52):
You would feed it, you would walk it, you would
take it to the bathroom. And I would say it
wasn't just it was clearly targeted at kids, but parents
had those, like everyone had those.

Speaker 1 (08:05):
They were everywhere. It was. It was a unisex toy.
Yeah as well, oh for sure. Right. So yeah.

Speaker 2 (08:10):
I texted my brother and sister when before we did
this podcast, and I was like, we're doing a draft
and my sister said, Tom, I got you right after
bat So that's a really good one.

Speaker 1 (08:17):
Okay, We're off to a good start.

Speaker 2 (08:19):
Game Pick number three in the nineties toy Draft the
twenty twenty four Nineties Toy Draft is Brady Broski Selects
had to put a gaming system on on my in
my draft.

Speaker 3 (08:33):
I was wondering if those qualified or not they do
I thought they should they should.

Speaker 2 (08:38):
Okay, Super Nintendo going Super I'm not going and sixty
four I'm going Super Nintendo. The reason why I spent
more time in this gaming system than any other. I
got it on a Christmas that we were broke. I
was like, hot, what Santa's real? Super Nintendo wasn't the
best graphics, right.

Speaker 1 (08:54):
Didn't have It wasn't the time. It wasn't the time
para to regular Nintendo didn't have the best game.

Speaker 2 (09:00):
But with the one thing I loved about it, well,
it came with Ken Griffy Junior baseball.

Speaker 1 (09:04):
We talked about that. Oh yeah, I love that.

Speaker 2 (09:06):
I was really in my baseball era and it was
the first gaming system I remember not having to blow
into the cartridge like work.

Speaker 1 (09:16):
Damn it.

Speaker 3 (09:16):
It just worked when essential nineties memory with the original Nintendo.

Speaker 2 (09:20):
But it just worked, and I spent a lot of time.
So Super Nintendo is my second pick.

Speaker 1 (09:24):
You ready, that is a great pick.

Speaker 2 (09:26):
I'm ready when the fourth pick in the twenty twenty
four nineties toy Draft Dan Ginsburg selects.

Speaker 3 (09:33):
I'm gonna go with something I was dorcally obsessed with
in middle school, Magic, the gathering cards, which I understand
are still a thing today.

Speaker 2 (09:44):
Of course, there's probably a clubs in clubs everywhere.

Speaker 3 (09:49):
I told my Yeah, I told my niece the other
day apparently like and she's like, she's miss popular in
her middle school, but they still play with them sometimes.
I told her, next time we're both home with the parents,
she can have my old magic cards. Do you know
that I once traded a Michael Jordan rookie baseball card

(10:10):
for a Leviathon. I don't know what that is anymore,
but it was a rare magic the Gathering card that
I really wanted. The Michael Jordan rookie baseball cards probably
worth hundreds now, the leviathon maybe not, but we used to.
You'd bring your It was like a two It was
two things in one, right. It was collecting the cards. Yeah,

(10:30):
in sort of because I was a baseball Were you
a baseball card guy?

Speaker 1 (10:33):
Bet?

Speaker 3 (10:34):
Yeah, I was too, So you know you had the
collection aspect, but then you also had the actual plane
of the game. I couldn't tell you how it worked.
I remember you would tap cards for MANA or mana
and then attack.

Speaker 1 (10:46):
But it was it had its uh, it had.

Speaker 3 (10:49):
Its moment when it was pretty mainstream in the I
would say, like mid nineties.

Speaker 2 (10:53):
Now, when you were doing the magic the gathering with
the gathering of the friends, would that eventually turn into
a spinn in the bottle type situation, or was that?

Speaker 3 (11:01):
You know what's funny is we played a lot of
spin the bottle in middle school.

Speaker 1 (11:05):
But I don't feel like there was overlap.

Speaker 2 (11:07):
I was gonna say that was that was actually a
rhetorical question because I thought that the two groups couldn't
be anymore so.

Speaker 1 (11:13):
When you're hanging with the bros. That's why I got
a fire Shan, Sean, come make out with me.

Speaker 3 (11:18):
When you're hanging with the bros, you're playing magic the
gathering in video games. When you're hanging with the co
ed group, we would go, we go play roller hockey
on the tennis courts in the park, and then we'd
go to someone's basement.

Speaker 1 (11:30):
Magic the gathering.

Speaker 2 (11:31):
Magic the gathering did not make pimpin easy when the
lady when the ladies were around in middle school, in
not early high school.

Speaker 1 (11:37):
Okay, all right, that's a good one. Magic the Gathering.

Speaker 2 (11:39):
Here we go. I don't know what pick arom, but
with my next pick it is this is my third pick, right, yeah,
here we go, third pick number five. Overall, I'm going, uh,
this was more for the girls. Okay, again, I have
a younger brother, younger sister. So obviously I saw a
lot of the barbies come through and the toys that
were year towards females. This defines nineties to me. Polly

(12:06):
Pockets Okay, yep, polly Pockets. I don't even know if
they're around. Still, that's a great question I had, did
so you agree, Polypocket's my sister got a bunch. I
don't remember, like what I know. They're small and there's
I feel like there was a billion pieces. Somebody can
correct me on that, but I do remember stepping on them.

Speaker 1 (12:24):
Sucked.

Speaker 2 (12:25):
Stepped on a polly pocket, your foot would be very achy.
So I'm gonna go pollypockets with my third pick.

Speaker 1 (12:31):
You're ready for It was like a little mini dull, right.

Speaker 2 (12:34):
Little tiny Yeah, that's why you can probably lose the
pieces very easily.

Speaker 1 (12:39):
And there was a bunch of them.

Speaker 2 (12:40):
Yeah yeah, So whoever thought that up wasn't wasn't that genius?
Or maybe they were and they were like now they
have to buy more, you know.

Speaker 1 (12:47):
So there you go. Okay, ready, I'm ready, let's go
number pick number three? What you got?

Speaker 3 (12:53):
I'm gonna go with beanie Babies more almost more a
collector's thing than a play.

Speaker 1 (12:58):
With the thing on my honorable mention list. Okay, there
you go.

Speaker 2 (13:02):
I consider that a toy. It's a toy and they're
worth millions now, right, certain one.

Speaker 1 (13:07):
Right, Yeah, No, you had.

Speaker 3 (13:08):
If you had the common ones, the rare ones, I
mean they were they had a lot of the speaking
of magic, the gathering and baseball cards. They had a
lot of the same kind of trading you know, yeah,
angle as as all that.

Speaker 1 (13:21):
Like as a culture. It's a subculture. Yeah, yeah, they had.

Speaker 2 (13:25):
I remember them being was it McDonald's would have them
in happy meals that's probably right, and people would go nuts.
They would go the would buy the happy They don't
care about the fod they got. They'd be buying them
for the beanie babies. Beanie babies is a great one. Yeah,
that defines the nineties.

Speaker 3 (13:38):
Are those people would have do you remember? I mean
some people would have literally hundreds.

Speaker 2 (13:41):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (13:42):
Like you'd go over to your your.

Speaker 3 (13:44):
Maybe rich friend's house, Yeah, and in the corner of
their bedroom was just like a display of like four hundred.

Speaker 1 (13:50):
And fifty baby babies.

Speaker 2 (13:50):
I had.

Speaker 1 (13:51):
Uh.

Speaker 2 (13:52):
I had an ex girlfriend where it dawned on me
that maybe I'm dating a little too young When I
went into her bedroom and there was like a chest
with her beanie babies from a case. We're in her
childhood bedroom. It wasn't like our adult bedroom. Okay, but
I was.

Speaker 1 (14:06):
Like, hmm, this is odd but interesting.

Speaker 2 (14:10):
Yeah, but yeah, beanie babies were were the rage, and
I can't believe how much money they ended up becoming.

Speaker 1 (14:15):
Yeah, worth it. We didn't know at the time.

Speaker 3 (14:17):
No, well, it's all like artificial, Like how did you
never you know, who decided that this one rare beanie
baby is now worth three thousand.

Speaker 1 (14:25):
Dollars beanie babies?

Speaker 2 (14:26):
Great pick? Here we go my last pick. Oh boy,
so we're going going back. I'm gonna bookend with a
with with the action figure. So I started with Power Rangers.
Is my number one? My number four?

Speaker 1 (14:37):
I have a feeling you do, let's see it. Teenage
Mutant Ninja Turtles. Okay. I thought it might be Transformers. Nope, Nope.
Both both felt Transformers felt more eighties. I thought that
was like probably Ladies into nineties.

Speaker 2 (14:50):
Ninja Turtles crossed over because they started in the late eighties,
but by like ninety ninety one when they're the movies,
the live action movies and Vanilla Ice did the song.
They were were everywhere, and the toys were legit, and
you could you could pick your favorite. Oh, who's your
favorite Ninja Turtle on the count of three? Ready, okay, one, two, three?

(15:10):
Michael Angelo near Leonardo Guy. I would have guessed Donna Tello.

Speaker 1 (15:14):
I was. I was in between those two. Yeah, I
was always Michael Angelo.

Speaker 3 (15:18):
The party couldn't go wrong, the movies, the I mean
that was a franchise, the Speaking of Superintendent.

Speaker 1 (15:23):
You have the video game? So good? Yeah, so good.

Speaker 2 (15:26):
So teenage Meeting Turtles. I feel like we played with those,
my brother and I. Again, that was another toy that
I think I passed a long mind to him, and.

Speaker 1 (15:33):
Because it was because it was still cool.

Speaker 2 (15:35):
Yeah, that's a rare thing, right like old toys kind
of I don't play that.

Speaker 1 (15:39):
That's old.

Speaker 2 (15:39):
No, I don't think they ever felt uncool. They're still
cool now too. You go to you go to any target.
I almost said toy store, but then I stopped myself
because those don't exist anymore.

Speaker 1 (15:49):
Amazon, that's your toys.

Speaker 2 (15:50):
I could still smell toys r us smell. Yeah, So
Ninja Turtles my last pick. Here we go, Dan, Here
we go. The last pick of the twenty twenty four
nineties toy draft is.

Speaker 1 (16:02):
Skip It, Skip It I have.

Speaker 3 (16:05):
The jingle went something like that little known fact about
the skip It actually initially released in nineteen eighty seven
and flopped. Reissued in nineteen ninety. You know what changed
the game and made it a success?

Speaker 2 (16:19):
Was it an episode of Full House? No I could
see Stephanie Tanner do.

Speaker 3 (16:22):
It's an actual change to the product itself, right, go ahead.
They added a counter so that you knew how many
times If you don't know what a skipp it is
out there, it's it's kind of like a half a
jump rope, but it's this plastic thing. You put it
around one foot and so you're swinging one foot kind
of like hula hoop style, and then you're jumping over

(16:44):
it like a jump rope with the other foot, and
you're trying to get that counter. You're trying to do
as many in a row as you can before it
hits your other foot in your great exercise. Yeah, yeah, right,
great exercy. It may have been away for parents to
trick their kids into getting exercise.

Speaker 1 (16:57):
After We love.

Speaker 2 (16:58):
That after or those pixie sticks, the sugar that get
on they would get on the old Skip It was
that the the younger, older sister of bopp It.

Speaker 1 (17:08):
I had bop It too? Which one was first considered?
Which it was first Bop or Skip?

Speaker 3 (17:12):
I will tell you I want I'm gonna guess Skip,
but I've got it.

Speaker 1 (17:15):
Yeah, bop It was ninety six Skip It the counter
version twist bop you had. Yeah, suck.

Speaker 2 (17:22):
No, you didn't do that. You No, there's no sucking. Okay,
So he would those bop It commercials too.

Speaker 1 (17:28):
Yeah, it was like flip it bop it. But it
was a lot of it's honorable mention.

Speaker 2 (17:35):
I had beanie babies, which I was going to ask
you if they qualified towards I think they do.

Speaker 1 (17:38):
We both had a yeah, I think it's a broad definition.

Speaker 2 (17:41):
Tickle Me Elmo was just a huge to just creeped
me out too much to put it on.

Speaker 1 (17:47):
Yeah, he was creepy.

Speaker 2 (17:48):
But speaking of creepy unpopular opinion, Oh boy, the worst
toy ever invented, and whoever marketed it did a great
job because they sold out everywhere in the nineties. Ferbie
the hell so dumb we found we had to go
everywhere to find my sister a Ferbie. We found this thing,
you put the batteries in it.

Speaker 3 (18:10):
It like it was supposed to like learn from what
you said, right, I didn't. Yeah, like like there was
the technology to do that.

Speaker 2 (18:17):
Back on popular opinion, Ferbie's with the worst toy ever invented.

Speaker 3 (18:21):
I'll give you a horrible toy, although it's not an
unpopular opinion because I feel like a lot of people
thought it was horrible?

Speaker 1 (18:26):
Was it? Remember POGs? POGs? I did enjoy me a pause.
It was it was like the cheatle cap basically.

Speaker 3 (18:33):
So cheap their cardboard weren't that The game was, Yeah,
the game was like the dumbest thing you I don't
remember exactly the you like you.

Speaker 1 (18:42):
Basically it was like if.

Speaker 3 (18:43):
It landed on one side, you got to add it,
remove it from your pile.

Speaker 1 (18:46):
If it landed on the other side, you didn't. It
was basically like flipping a coin. A bunch of times.

Speaker 2 (18:51):
People did not put a lot of thought into some
of these toys back then because they were just like,
let's just give them cardboard and if you flip it, you.

Speaker 1 (18:57):
In that color.

Speaker 2 (18:58):
That. Yeah, and another one I was gonna put on
there for honorable mention.

Speaker 1 (19:02):
I forgot this on the board game side of things.
Oh yeah, we didn't do anything. We didn't do it.

Speaker 2 (19:06):
Maybe that's another podcast. But mouse Trap, Oh dude, we
played mousetrap. I Oh my god, My sister and I
loved mouse Trap. Wait are you about to bash mouse trap?
I wasn't about to bash mouse trap. What I was
about to say about mousetrap is we never played mouse trap.
We just set up the whole trap like. We didn't
play the actual rules. We skipped that and we just
wanted to build the trap.

Speaker 3 (19:27):
Let me tell you what we did one time when
my sister and I had a babysitter.

Speaker 1 (19:30):
We was your babysitter's name, Brian. What up, Brian? Hope
you're doing well? He lived next door. Okay.

Speaker 3 (19:37):
We took the the pool. You know how the diver
at one point it gets flipped into a pool.

Speaker 1 (19:46):
He does like a backflip. Yeah right, yeah, he does
a backflip.

Speaker 3 (19:48):
We filled the pool with water because we wanted him
to really take a dip in the pool. It ended
up warping the board and we could never build our
mouse trap properly.

Speaker 1 (19:56):
Again. It never it never functioned. Right after, did you
ever get a second mouse trap? I don't think so.
Do kids still playboard games like that? I wonder if
that's still a thing.

Speaker 2 (20:05):
I remember the commercial too, Yeah, commercial made the commercial
for these toys, by the way, always made things look
so direct, right, like you're playing with g I Joe's,
You're on an actual like volcano.

Speaker 1 (20:17):
And then you get it and you're like, he has
all these features in the commercial.

Speaker 2 (20:19):
That he does not have, and you're playing it at
home and you're like this, the couch doesn't look like
a volcano.

Speaker 1 (20:24):
This isn't as fun as the thing.

Speaker 2 (20:26):
But anyways, Okay, so that is our two thousand and
twenty four nineties toy draft. I'm gonna go over Mine
Power Rangers, Super Nintendo Pollypockets, and Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles.

Speaker 3 (20:40):
In yours, Dan, I had Tamagatchi Magic, the Gathering Cards,
Beanie Babies, and Skip It.

Speaker 1 (20:48):
I like it.

Speaker 2 (20:49):
Both lists are good because they're kind of each a
little all over the place. Yeah, so now it is
up to you. You decide who had the better draft.

Speaker 1 (20:58):
You can vote.

Speaker 2 (20:58):
We have this on Instagram right now if you follow
at Brady Radio.

Speaker 1 (21:03):
At Dan G zero four eight two and.

Speaker 2 (21:06):
If we missed, tell us a toy we miss I
know we're thousands of people are gonna let us know.
They're gonna bow up the DMS and let us know
which toy Stretch arms Strong.

Speaker 1 (21:13):
That's what we missed. Stretch arm Strong.

Speaker 3 (21:16):
Is that eighties or nineties, so that was probably reissued
in ninety three.

Speaker 1 (21:20):
Okay, came back. This is fun. It was. Now let's go.
I want to go play with some of these I
do too good magic the gathering.

Speaker 2 (21:28):
No, do not crashing magic the gathering party. That will
be creepy. I will have to bail you out of jail.
You will not be allowed in your hundred yards in
your school. Hey, that's it for the podcast. Make sure
that you like and follow, subscribe. If you're on the
iHeartRadio app, you can put you could put us as
your preset.

Speaker 1 (21:46):
Just debut. You know what, it's my number one preset.

Speaker 2 (21:49):
It should be because we are number one, uh in
the nineties reminiscing podcast iHeart genre in that in that genre,
it's its own thing. Till next time when we talk
about fashion lens go. It's gonna happen next week.

Speaker 1 (22:05):
I can't wait. Thanks for listening. We'll see you soon later.
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