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A Bad Case of Worms!!!

A Bad Case of Worms is in all likelihood the earliest toy I can remember specifically asking for, and praise Nord the Barbarian, it's in my arms again.

God, how I loved these. People call you a liar when you say you remember things from when you were 4 or 5, unless you arbitrarily decided you were kidnapped or molested as a child after catching a Melrose Place rerun. I swear to you, I remember getting these. I remember getting these from the KB Toys in the Staten Island Mall, back when it was called "Kay-Bee Toys," and back when there was a McDonald's next to it filled with lightweight tin ashtrays with the golden arches etched in. The ABCOW tiny toy briefcases were stocked near the register along with all of the assorted candies and other impulse items, and every time my mother brought me to the mall, I got a new ABCOW toy. I cannot express the joy I found in these things, but I think I can explain it. I was really young. Maybe young enough to still have some lingering traits from that whole animism period all children go through. To me, these sticky and impossibly cute rubber worm figures weren't rubber worm figures at all -- they were pets, alive, ready to party and needing me.

For almost twenty years I sat by candlelight every night trying to remember what the fuck the toys were called, and it was actually an X-E blog poster who shed light on the mystery back in January of 2005. After that, I researched the holy hell out of ABCOW toys, not finding much outside of a few old marketing articles retelling the success of the toys' ad campaign. I have no idea if I wanted the toys because of the cool commercial or just because they were there, but after finding and reviewing the TV ad, the sight of bad cases of good worms made my mission clear: I had to find them again. And, as you've seen above, I have!

Each small plastic briefcase opened to reveal a pair of sticky (like, sticky for crawling down walls kind of sticky) worm figures in various colors, and because God loves me this week, the pair I found are greens, which was my favorite as a child because it was harder to roleplay faithfully with neon orange worms. The figures look much more like snakes, each with the most adorable facial features you've ever seen, including a smile that will make the day my parents die not as bad as I'm thinking it will be. Though the whole idea behind ABCOW toys was in their supposed "gross factor" and the idea that you could throw them at stuff and watch them creepily crawl down, I never saw them as anything but my own cute little pets. I treated them like gold, carried them everywhere and never once gave into the obvious temptation to turn their briefcase house into a coin purse. When you're five-years-old, every container is a piggy bank waiting to be had.

I purchased them recently at a price so ridiculously overblown that I'll never confess what it was, but that's the only ABCOW toy I've ever seen for sale since the line's retail days. If you're thinking what I was thinking, stop thinking it, because the chances of you finding A Bad Case of Worms toys are about as good as the chances of me living past 40. In other words, I'm here to brag and I'm here to spite you: I got worms and you don't, motherfucker.

Use the comments section to talk about some of the weirder, lesser and more obscure toys you worshipped as a kid. And get your damn hands off my worms.

Posted by Matt on 04/12/2006. E-mail me!



Discussion Thread: 193 comments

Darth Galvatron, just noticed that it didn’t show the markup on the bold words. It did on the preview.
(b)bold(/b)

replace the ( and ) with greater than and less than signs (shift+, and shift+.)

Chestnuts roasted by Jeff @ 04/12/2006 7:01 PM


Keep on Truckin’, Matt. What you do has changed my life for the better.

As for obscure toys, a puzzle toy from ’96 called Cortex stands out. Never owned it, but I wanted it bad. It was November, and of course the kiddy television programmes were clogged with ads singing the praises of that Christmas season’s newest toys. In the Cortex ad, you had a troop of middle school kids in silvery jumpsuits in some space station-type setting, playing with Cortex’s, while you heard some soft, operatic voice sing "Cooooorrrrtex…." And it looked awesome. Of course, my parents weren’t the type to sate my every toy urge, so it fell by the wayside. I still remember the ad, though, as well as trying to replicate to the best of my ability the opera voice’s song.

Chestnuts roasted by Der Super @ 04/12/2006 7:15 PM


I dont know how obscure they are, but I used to love the shit out of M.U.S.C.L.E. Men. I also remember another series of toys, they were little animal/warrior figures, about the size of the muscles, and they had holograms on their chest that told you were side they were on. Anyone remember there name, I must buy some on ebay immediately.

Chestnuts roasted by jesse @ 04/12/2006 7:27 PM


jesse- Matt did an article on those toys a while ago, sadly I don’t know the url of the article. :(

Chestnuts roasted by Darth Poop @ 04/12/2006 7:41 PM


Michael, you hit it with the American Idol chatter :) There’s also a fair chunk of talk about various procedural dramas (CSI, SVU, NCIS, ETC)…A buddy and I do our part to inject Lost into the conversations as well but it’s a losing battle, especially now that it’s baseball season :P

Chestnuts roasted by squee4242 @ 04/12/2006 7:41 PM


I’m not a obscure toy-guy either. Most of my favorite toys were of the popular stuff like:

Those Galoob Star Trek: NextGen figures mentioned above ruled.

WWF Hasbro figures

DC Superpowers figures

Total Justice/JLA/Legends of the Dark Knight (as you can see, I’m a comic guy).
Ghostbusters
TMNT

Chestnuts roasted by JLAJRC @ 04/12/2006 7:54 PM


Jesse, are you refering to http://www.x-entertainment.com/messages/524.html"> Battle Beasts?

Chestnuts roasted by Jeff @ 04/12/2006 8:14 PM


Jedoc – Alas, I can only smell the faintest, tiniest hint of peanutty goodness from him. But maybe it’s my imagination, too. :D

Ummm, ok I figured out a toy. The… Magical Musical Thing! I freakin’ LOVED that instrument. I still have it, up on the attic. I’ll have to see if it still works if I can brave going up there…

Chestnuts roasted by Ryane @ 04/12/2006 8:54 PM


I don’t know how obscure this is, but I’m thinkin it was called Monster Face. It was like a skull on a platform. you could move the mouth and stick nails and screws and pussing throbbing slime things in his head, and there were all these facial features you could change. It was awesome.

Chestnuts roasted by Mattman @ 04/12/2006 8:56 PM


Ooh! violetdied! They actually remade Get In Shape Girl toys, but they’re not under Hasbro anymore. I have the new ones in my closet. There’s a Yoga set now. Gotta do a review at some point. So much to do, so little time. ^_^

Chestnuts roasted by Mystie @ 04/12/2006 9:14 PM


Greg – I totally got Mexican jumping beans for my birthday a couple weeks ago! They’re awesome.

I had some random obscure toys as a kid because of my Austrian mother, but they were mostly of the old fashioned wood persuasion. Some of those are really, really awesome.

I had those dolls whose skirts you flipped up and they became rubber cupcakes. And they supposedly smelled like the kind of cupcake that they were, but they all pretty much smelled like a more potent Cabbage Patch Kid. I don’t think they were terribly obscure though.

Chestnuts roasted by Mara @ 04/12/2006 9:19 PM


Thanks to the magic of photography, I think I can remember back to when I was about two, and likely before. There’s one photo of me sitting on my great-grandma’s lap playing with a toy clock from when I was about 1.5 years old. Maybe this was a different time I’m thinking of, but I definitely remember that toy. Then there’s another time when I stole a toy from my little brother and my mom scolded me. I must have been about 2; he looks really little in that picture, like a couple months old. And even without photos, I can remember a time when I was hiking in this cave, and my brother was crying; I was about 3 and he would have been about 1. Ah, old memories…

Chestnuts roasted by Andrew @ 04/12/2006 10:00 PM


I TOTALLY HAD A BAD CASE OF WORMS!!!! I got these the same year I got my Popeye acrylic bubble set in my stocking. I always thought the coolest thing about the worms was the little suitcase. I think I dropped one of my sticky worms down the bathroom sink, and the other one became irreversibly unsticky because I used to play with them on the carpet all the time.

Chestnuts roasted by Domicinator @ 04/12/2006 10:02 PM


I remember the "Go-Bot" Happy Meal toys. I think we had two Big Macs and a Chicken McNugget, though we may have had others, too. They were among the Happy Meal toys to linger into the 90s, though I know I haven’t seen them since then.

How many girls here remember "Lady Lovely Locks?" They were a 10-inch fantasy-based doll collection from about 1988. Each doll wore an elaborate lace gown and had several clips of some cute animal with a long tail attatched to her very long hair. (Or his – there was also a boy doll with pants, a cape, a shirt, and shorter hair.)

We had Lady Curly Crown (red curly hair), Maiden Fair Hair (wavy-haired brunette), villaness Dutchess Raven Waves (just what her name says), the mermaid Lady Lovely Locks from a later line (straight blond hair), Prince Strongheart (short brown hair), another mermaid with blond hair with blue streaks, and two pink treehouse playsets (one for my sister and one for me) that came with more animal clips. There was also a short-lived TV show and at least one video of cartoons we used to rent every other weekend.

Chestnuts roasted by starwenn @ 04/12/2006 10:07 PM


My parents got my brother and I a bunch of car toys, including…Micro Machines! Do they still make those? Anyway, we also had a Hot Wheels (or Matchbox?) car wash center with drying rollers made of foam rubber. We sure had a ton of toy cars; wonder if there are still some lying around. Heh, I remember I tried to color one (a white ’57 T-Bird) with a magic marker.

We didn’t have a Ghostbusters Ghost Trap, but we did have a Ghost Zapper. It projected images of the ghosts on walls, and you would zap them and something (I forget what) would happen. Except I was more intrigued by the ghosts. Heh, I must have been about 6 or 7 when we had that, but I don’t think I ever saw Ghostbusters till I was 13. We used to not be very much into many movies or TV shows made after 1980.

Chestnuts roasted by Andrew @ 04/12/2006 10:20 PM


Hahaha, I was just watching the Lady Lovely Locks cartoon the other day. Oh man, there was an ad at the end for those terrible "Your kid stars in their own cartoon!" things for it. It was hilarious. I totally have to hunt down a video of the Lady Lovely Locks tape with some kid’s random picture pasted into it.

Don’t remember the Go-Bots Happy Meal, but I still have my milkshake from the Food Changables Happy Meal! And the commercial! :)

Chestnuts roasted by Mystie @ 04/12/2006 10:24 PM


Thanks, XE- this is exactly what I needed tonight- a blog about old treasured things.

I am sure I mentioned before the fact that I don’t have a large intestine…well, this is due to my Crohn’s disease. On Monday night I suffered a horrible attack and have been in the hospital ever since. I just got home, and was hoping for a little XE to cheer me up- and it did.

Thanks XE bloggers, and MATT of course, for making this place be the bright spot of my day more times than I can count.

Chestnuts roasted by Muppet Baby @ 04/12/2006 10:36 PM


i can’t think of any real obscure toys, cuz as a kid i mostly sold my soul to the man, and bought into the commercial hype of gi joe, transformers, he man.. who could resist?

but i do remember having fondness for the casket of bones, these would normally pop up around halloween time and were like sweetarts in the shape of bones.. i’d buy a little plastic casket full of them and try to put together the complete skeleton, good times.. halloween always was and still is my fav holiday

Chestnuts roasted by doc bong @ 04/12/2006 10:46 PM


Around 1992, I had one of those special moments where I picked out a completely unfamiliar toy, basing its potential merits on the packaging features alone. I was nicely rewarded.

The toy, a member of the "Trash Bag Bunch," was an unseen action figure, contained within a shiny green opaque little bag. I followed the directions on the outside package, dipping the bag in hot water to watch a weird bubbling green chemical reaction, in which the bag dissolved and revealed the figure inside! The figure itself was not that great–it was a robot member of the mean polluting bad guy team, with unposable limbs. But the chemical reaction alone was worth it.

Trash Bag Bunch!!

Chestnuts roasted by Venison @ 04/12/2006 10:52 PM


I admit that I haven’t read most of the thread (yet) but I searched through and didn’t find any mention of… Spinjas. Spinjas were little metal tops that came with little plastic spinny launchers. Not unlike Beyblades. Each top had a little figure torso sticking out of it. I still have mine, though one of them is missing a horn from his head because I tried to spin him upside down once. Oops.

Chestnuts roasted by Stormdragon @ 04/12/2006 11:04 PM


Yes, I remember that blog post back in January 2005. Probably my longest post.
How is everybody? Everybody good? (I’ve been out of the X-E world awhile, could you tell?)

Chestnuts roasted by The Manimal @ 04/12/2006 11:53 PM


i dunno if these are obscure but i came home from kindergarten one day and found these giant plastic robot figures on my porch. they were about as tall as i was at the time and had to be japanese. they had on armor and had wheels on their feet and one of them could shoot his fist when you pushed a button on his back; the other one had three plastic missiles that shot out of his hand. my parents claimed not to know were they came from and i still have no idea who left them there. anybody know what on earth these things are/were?

Chestnuts roasted by consulatsunset @ 04/13/2006 12:05 PM


hey Muppet Baby, glad to hear you’re out and about! Hospital stays were always scary, but routine, for too long. I’ll keep you in my thoughts, and hope you stay well!

One time when I was in, they found an old NES for me to play with, and that was the friggin bomb! I would be up til like 3 in the morning playing that thing for like 4 days straight! It ruled!

I didn’t like staying in the hospital, but there are certain ways to make it better ;) ;) like getting your meals off the childrens menu!

Anyway, Muppet Baby, glad you’re home.

Chestnuts roasted by kidneyboy @ 04/13/2006 12:08 PM


What great responses! :) Just finished reading ‘em all — most of mine have been mentioned earlier…

Army Ants were a huge passion, particularly the blue ones. (The figures came in either orange or blue, blue being a thousand times cooler, because hey, BLUE ANTS.) If you’d consider Sectaurs or Super Naturals obscure, throw them in the hat because they’re two of my all-time favorite toy lines.

The Nintendo "Trophy" figures were also a big interest, mainly because they were put on clearance and left out on a display in TRU’s video game section for years, and every time I’d go there, I’d admire video games I couldn’t possibly afford and instead walk away with a new shiny plastic Mario or Link action scene.

Less obscure and more oddball was my obsession with Dick Tracy movie figures from 1990. I fell in love with the lore because I loved the wide assortment of wacky villains, and made collecting every figure in the line my life’s mission. Sadly, the one I wanted most — The Blank — was impossible to find in this country and almost as impossible to find in every other country. The figures were made by the folks at Playmates, who were also doing the original TMNT line at the time. Dick Tracy figures shared a lot of traits with the Toitles, including size, general articulation points and progressively shinier paint jobs.

Chestnuts roasted by Matt @ 04/13/2006 12:19 PM


oh the toy.

prob. one of those little tiny musical keyboards, like 5 inches long, with little tiny rubber keys, and it came with a little paper insert to show you how to play songs.

I always liked those balsa planes with the big ass rubber band that you would twist up to make it fly!! I would twist that thing so damn tight and then it would usually fly into the wall and splinter all to shit.

Chestnuts roasted by kidneyboy @ 04/13/2006 12:29 PM


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