This
week at Flashbak, I remembered Gre-gory, Mattel’s toy bat.
Here’s
a snippet and the url: (http://flashbak.com/hes-the-bat-youll-love-to-hate-remembering-mattels-gre-gory-1980-366456/)
“It was
great to be a kid growing in the 1970s and 1980s, in part because of great and
weird Halloween toys like this one, “Gre-gory, Big Bad Vampire Bat” from
Mattel.
This toy
bat was made of reddish-brown, soft vinyl, and intended for kids aged seven and
up. And Gre-gory could be all yours for under $12.00 dollars.
As the ads
claimed, children would “go bats” for
Gre-gory as they enjoyed “hours of
frightening fun” playing with their new friend. Gre-gory’s red eyes would never close, either,
which only added to the nightmare fodder.
Maybe you could perch him over your bed at night?
What else
could Gre-gory do?
Well at
eight inches tall, he could literally bite the hand that fed him. “Put
your finger in his mouth and see what happens when you squeeze him!” the
Gre-gory advertisements urged. If that
wasn’t wicked enough, kids were also implored to “see if your friend dare stick their fingers” in his mouth.
Gre-gory
also had a see-through belly so you could watch “the red fluid” -- blood? -- “flow.”
Gre-gory
couldn’t do much else, though if you wiggled his wings and shook him, it
apparently looked like he was in flight. Not very high-tech, in today’s world,
I guess.”
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