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100 Greatest Toys with Jonathan Ross
Channel 4 ^ | Friday 10 December 2010 | Jonathan Ross

Posted on 12/20/2010 12:15:33 PM PST by arderkrag

1 Lego
2 Monopoly
3 Dungeons and Dragons
4 Wii
5 Nintendo consoles
6 Playstation consoles
7 Scrabble
8 Scalextrix
9 Trivial pursuit
10 Gameboy and other
11 Star wars toys
12 Transformers
13 Microsoft X-Box
14 He-Man & Masters of the
15 Cluedo
16 Meccano
17 Hornby train set
18 Connect 4
19 Airfix
20 Action man
21 Matchbox cars
22 Etch a sketch
23 Teddy bear
24 Rubik cube
25 Atari consoles
26 Play-doh
27 Plasticene
28 Subbuteo
29 Spirograph
30 Risk
31 Roller skates
32 Top trumps
33 Yo-yo
34 Teenage mutant ninja
35 Chemistry Set
36 Twister
37 Pokemon
38 Battleship
39 Hot Wheels
40 Mousetrap game
41 Sylvanian families
42 Fuzzy Felt
43 Jenga
44 Frisbee
45 Pictionary
46 Chopper Bike
47 Barbie
48 Mastermind
49 Yahtzee
50 Playmobil Play people
51 Slinky
52 Operation
53 Super soaker water pistol
54 Tamagotchi
55 Game of life
56 Tonka toys
57 Space hopper
58 My little pony
59 Kerplunk
60 Care bears
61 007 Aston martin
62 Mr Potato head
63 Evel Knievel stunt set
64 Hungry hippos
65 Thunderbirds toys
66 Hula hoop
67 Sindy doll
68 Tiny tears
69 Buckaroo
70 Power Rangers
71 Buzz Lightyear Action
72 TY beanie babies
73 Six million dollar man
74 Furby
75 Escape From Colditz
76 Polly Pocket
77 Simon
78 Cabbage patch kids
79 Weebles
80 Trolls
81 Stylophone
82 Girls world
83 Crossfire
84 Tickle Me Elmo
85 Stretch Armstrong
86 Magna doodle
87 Dr Who Cyberman mask
88 Pop-O-matic Games
89 Clackers
90 Johnny 7 machine gun
91 Beyblades
92 Striker
93 Pippa Doll
94 Peter Powell kites
95 Bratz dolls
96 Major Matt Mason action
97 Ben 10 Action Figures
98 Holly hobbie
99 Teletubbies
100 Raving Bonkers


TOPICS: Hobbies; Miscellaneous; Music/Entertainment; Society
KEYWORDS: dandd; dd; dungeonsanddragons; napl; popculture; toys
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To: arderkrag
He's got some great ones on this list, but a few of my old school childhood favorites are missing: pop guns, cap guns, stick horses and pogo sticks.


61 posted on 12/20/2010 12:58:50 PM PST by lonevoice (Where the Welfare State is on the march, the Police State is not far behind)
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To: Celtic Cross

Ok, I have to hear the rationale behind that statement.


62 posted on 12/20/2010 1:02:25 PM PST by arderkrag (Georgia is God's Country.)
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To: arderkrag

Which one?


63 posted on 12/20/2010 1:04:40 PM PST by Celtic Cross (I AM the Impeccable Hat. (AKA The Pope's Hat))
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To: Bloodclot

I always mentally file “toys and games” together. Of course, I consider my power tools, cars and electronic gadgets all toys - they’re just more expensive toys.


64 posted on 12/20/2010 1:05:23 PM PST by arderkrag (Georgia is God's Country.)
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To: wastedyears
I don’t know what at least half those things are and I’m 25.

That's Why
You are 25
Born in 1985

Hey, that rhymes...

65 posted on 12/20/2010 1:06:04 PM PST by libertarian27 (Ingsoc: Department of Life, Department of Liberty, Department of Happiness)
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To: Celtic Cross

The statement that board games aren’t toys.


66 posted on 12/20/2010 1:06:53 PM PST by arderkrag (Georgia is God's Country.)
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To: reagan_fanatic

A.C. Gilbert knew what boys wanted, all right. An all-American boy himself, Gilbert had grown up in the 1890s Old West, playing cowboys and Indians, doing magic tricks, starting his own athletic club in his father’s barn. So even though he grew up to become a world-champion pole vaulter with an M.D. from Yale, he chose to make a career out of boyhood. Boys would never be the same.

Gilbert is best-known as the inventor of the Erector Set. In their heyday, thirty million of the build-it-yourself toys were sold, creating generations of engineers, tinkerers, and backyard builders. But Gilbert was as skilled at marketing as he was at magic. To promote the Erector Set and his other toys, he created an entire world for boys. Contests, magazines, the Erector Institute of Engineering, and the A.C. Gilbert Hall of Science in Manhattan were just some of his innovations. By the time he died in 1961, millions of “Gilbert boys” had built America.

The Man Who Changed How Boys and Toys Were Made is not a biography. Nor is it pure nostalgia. In telling Gilbert’s story, Bruce Watson interweaves magic, fun, and fascinating stories. We learn how, during World War I, Gilbert “saved Christmas” from the clutches of government bureaucrats. We watch him win set world records in the pole vault only to become the “hatchet man” of the Olympics. We see his Erector Set mushroom into the amazing 1920s models weighing 70 pounds and building boy-sized replicas of zeppelins and airplanes. And we watch Watson try to improve upon his ham-handed childhood by building Erector toys to entice his seven-year-old son.

Along the way, Watson asks serious questions about how boys play these days. Can computer games convey an understanding of a 3-D world? Does anyone build anything anymore? What about girls? Can’t they understand engineering as well as boys? And are kids growing up too fast these days?

Not just for Erector aficionados, The Man Who Changed How Boys and Toys Were Made is a delightful romp through a forgotten time when toys mattered, when one big boy made magic and when one man made boys into builders.


67 posted on 12/20/2010 1:07:52 PM PST by JoeProBono (A closed mouth gathers no feet - Visualize)
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To: arderkrag
Well, a a boardgame is something you play. A toy is something you play with.
68 posted on 12/20/2010 1:08:31 PM PST by Celtic Cross (I AM the Impeccable Hat. (AKA The Pope's Hat))
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To: JoeProBono

The Erector set was my answer too. They lasted for years until my Dad eventually stole all the nuts and bolts and girders to ‘fix’ various stuff around the house. ;~))


69 posted on 12/20/2010 1:12:36 PM PST by Ditto (Nov 2, 2010 -- Partial cleaning accomplished. More trash to remove in 2012)
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To: Celtic Cross

So, in mousetrap, you would consider the game not a toy, but the trap itself you would consider a toy? You’re entitled to your opinion, of course, but that seems like picking a nit to me.


70 posted on 12/20/2010 1:13:49 PM PST by arderkrag (Georgia is God's Country.)
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To: arderkrag

Lionel Trains? Did I miss that on the list?
Erector Set?
Lincoln logs?
Tinker Toys?
GI Joe?


71 posted on 12/20/2010 1:14:29 PM PST by Hatteras
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To: arderkrag

Chemistry sets used to be great, but not anymore. They’ve been heavily dumbed-down with all the government regs and fear of lawsuits. The fun chlorates, perchlorates and nitrates are pretty much gone. You used to even get a lump of mildly radioactive stuff and a geiger counter.


72 posted on 12/20/2010 1:14:59 PM PST by antiRepublicrat
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To: arderkrag
I always mentally file “toys and games” together.

Then Chess should be number 1 on that list.

73 posted on 12/20/2010 1:15:44 PM PST by Bloodclot
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To: arderkrag
Also missing this:


74 posted on 12/20/2010 1:17:28 PM PST by antiRepublicrat
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To: antiRepublicrat

Yeh, we had one of those. Microscope, petri dish samples... it was my ma’s way of placating my desire to become a mad scientist.


75 posted on 12/20/2010 1:18:33 PM PST by arderkrag (Georgia is God's Country.)
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To: arderkrag

Either way, it doesn’t really matter.


76 posted on 12/20/2010 1:19:04 PM PST by Celtic Cross (I AM the Impeccable Hat. (AKA The Pope's Hat))
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To: arderkrag
No jump rope? No Spaulding pink ball? I must have been a weird kid!
77 posted on 12/20/2010 1:19:14 PM PST by Neverforget01 (It Could Have Been Worse Is Not A Defense For Bad Policy)
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To: antiRepublicrat
They’ve been heavily dumbed-down with all the government regs and fear of lawsuits

Yeah, if you want to have some real fun you have to make it yourself.

like racing chainsaws.

78 posted on 12/20/2010 1:19:29 PM PST by Cowman (How can the IRS seize property without a warrant if the 4th amendment still stands?)
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To: Waverunner

It’s number 90.


79 posted on 12/20/2010 1:19:39 PM PST by Pan_Yan
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To: arderkrag

How many kids will get a toy with "safe radioactive materials" this Christmas.

80 posted on 12/20/2010 1:20:58 PM PST by KarlInOhio (All monopolies are detestable, but the worst of all is the monopoly of education. -Frederic Bastiat)
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