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Toys Just Want to Have FUN!

slip-and-slide-1.jpgSLIP AND SLIDE!

Throughout my Childhood, throngs of toys came in and out of my life, probably on a weekly basis. I was a very destructive child, and smashing my toys in the driveway with a rock or other large blunt object was one of my favorite pastimes. Often, when I was finished “playing” with my toys, I would move onto my older sister’s doll collection, which soon formed into a headless heap of small limbs and discarded hair. There is, however, a very specific toy which I remember sharing with all my siblings; a Slip and Slide.

Growing up with two older siblings and a younger one, finding a communal toy was a difficult task, which explains why I can recall so few. The Slip and Slide proved to be a game we could all play together, albeit in different ways. A basic slip and slide consists of a long, narrow strip of thin yellow rubber, which is connected to a garden hose, which in turn lubricates the entire surface to create a wet, slippery strip of summer fun!slip-and-slide-2.jpg

When the Slip and Slide was ready to be used, we would take turns running and sliding across the surface. I remember trying to purposely fall off the edges of the Slip and Slide, sending me tumbling into wet grass. Also, when it wasn’t my turn, I would pick up the hose, and spray the next sliding subject directly, creating a more intense, high-risk variation of the Slip and Slide, or so I thought. Although I can’t recall any specifics about the difference in how I played with the Slip and Slide as opposed to my siblings, I’m almost certain I was much rougher on the equiptment. I also remember playing with the Slip and Slide by myself, long after everyone was onto the next activity.

My Childhood and the Yo-Yo

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When I was in the 4th and 5th grades, a popular toy that had come back into the light was the Yo-Yo.

Everyone had a Yo-Yo, but not just any Yo-Yo, a Yomega Yo-Yo. My mother at the time was not up on the current pop culture and one day bought meet a Yo-Yo (it wasn’t a Yomega). I brought the Yo-Yo to school to show my friends, and I was laughed out of the schoolyard, because it wasn’t a Yomega.

I look back now and see how popular culture truly affected how cool you were in school. If I had a Yomega maybe my status with the other kids wold stay the same, but because of a little toy my life in the 4th and 5th grades was changed forever

Generations and their toys

It was great meeting for the first time on Wednesday. We were discussing the toys we played with as kids, and how we remember them with nostalgia. The example I gave was a parody of the season one finale of “Gossip Girl” by Heather Fink. Take a look at this and see if you can see “generational identity” in the playing of Hungry Hungry Hippos.

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SOC 325 Popular Culture in America

I am Professor John C. Holley, and this blog is for Sociology 325 “Popular Culture in America” Fall 2008. I will be posting information for students, my own thoughts on popular culture, and commenting on the activities of this class. For my students reading this, welcome to the Sociology Department and this course on television, movies, entertainment – and especially the people who watch them. This includes us. In this course we will talk about what we ourselves are watching and post a kind of “media journal” about our use of popular culture.