X-Entertainment.com X-Entertainment.com A Proud UGO Affiliate
My dying wish is for an owl/camel hybrid, which I call camowl.

Halloween Countdown ’08: SLIME TIME Watches!

At various points during the Halloween Countdown, I'll be covering some of yesteryear's finest spooky toys -- even if they're only connected to the season in a borderline way, such as wristwatches with giant rubber frogs attached. Some would call it filler...Hasbro called it SLIME TIME!

I've long had a soft spot for these obscure 1986 time-telling creatures. Most of you probably haven't heard of the Slime Time brand, so it's my duty to tell you that it was a series of wristwatches with the timepieces hidden inside the rubbery mouths of several slimy animals who all shared the unjust reputation of being evil and/or gruesome. "Gross toys" were a major trend in the mid '80s, and it seemed that all anyone had to do to create brand loyalty among preteen boys was market their wares as disgusting and girl-scaring. It's why half of the toy commercials from this era started off with a little girl quietly reading on the couch, and ended with her brother popping up from behind said couch with a monstrous, rubber plaything in tow.

Still, the idea of "frog watches" and "snake watches" seemed a little low-fi for a toy giant like Hasbro. These seemed more like the kind of bargain basement things you'd find alongside plastic army men and knockoff Slinkies in some local pharmacy's token toy aisle. This is not a complaint. Even frog watches deserve their fifteen minutes, and in 1986, they fucking got it.

The actual timepieces were just your standard cheapo digital watches, and assuming you had super strength and a surplus of patience, they were removable. The real stars of the show were the rubber animals, such as the malformed, piggish purple bat shown above.

Now, here's the problem with Slime Time: Watches weren't exactly fun to play with. Watches were for wearing. And since us kids weren't privy to an extensive array of fashion accessories, if any of us had a watch, we wore it everywhere. That includes school, family functions...everywhere. Normally, this wouldn't have been a problem, but normally, a kid's watch wasn't attached to a rubber bat three times the length of his wrist.

I wore my Slime Time watch constantly, beginning the process with great pride and ending it with tremendous shame. I was in elementary school in 1986, but even kids that young tend to be a little "aspirational." Things that were fine to enjoy at home weren't always fine to enjoy in front of your peers, and the sight of this hideous rubber animal clanking against the pockmarked desk in my old classroom didn't bring me the predicted fame and fortune, but rather, complete ridicule.

Kids like dumb stuff, but wearing a giant rubber bat to school was a definite line-crosser.

I spent a week or so wearing the watch, believing that new fashion trends could only be sparked by determined repetition. But my classmates didn't budge. I gave up, and not only did I stop wearing my Slime Time watch, I went so far as to toss the thing into depths of my closet, too hurt and daunted to even look at it ever again. Suicide seemed like the noble course, but I settled on taking it out on my sister, who gave me the stupid watch for my birthday.

There were six Slime Time watches in all, but the final three were just palette swaps of the first three. I don't know if I have a favorite, but the green snake always seemed to get the most attention from Hasbro. I have a hard time reconciling the idea that a series of wristwatches with rubber animals attached had a main character, but if it was possible, that green snake was it.

My childhood was rife with toys that were intended to be worn, including everything from Transformers zipper clips to little Skeletors that snapped onto shoelaces. Unfortunately, I was never any good at knowing when I had become too old to shout my passions from the rooftops, and if I had to assign pie graph slices to the list of reasons why I got punched in grade school, wearing things like this would equate to a pretty large sliver. In fact, the only sliver bigger would be the one dedicated to all the times I blew a kickball game with three fouls. I said it was because I was a lefty, but really, I just sucked.

Posted by Matt on 09/25/2008. E-mail me!



Discussion Thread: 151 comments

Yeah, wearing one of those watches would have been a game-time decision for me, but ultimately I’d probably air on the side of caution and bench ‘em.

Chestnuts roasted by Jeff Mack @ 09/25/2008 11:48 AM


This posting thing is crazy.  It just seems so….large and in charge…..  Not a bad thing, just takes some time to get used to.

Chestnuts roasted by Leigha @ 09/25/2008 11:52 AM


OMFG! ROTFL!!

Chestnuts roasted by Jake the snake @ 09/25/2008 11:55 AM


Did I mention the caliber of this years Halloween countdown far exceeds that of past years. Keep us the awesome work!

Chestnuts roasted by Jake the snake @ 09/25/2008 11:58 AM


Don’t remember those, but I had, and I think I still have, the girly version, the “watchamal,” which was a watch covered by a cute stuffed toy!

Chestnuts roasted by Tresjolie9 @ 09/25/2008 12:02 PM


Isn’t it odd that we go through this bell curve in life. Like when you’re 0-5 years old, wearing these watches would be cool. Then is slowly becomes more unacceptable from the ages of 6-16, then suddenly it gets a little cooler to bring back something like this, but only moderately and only in certain situations. All of a sudden, when you hit 23 or 24 it suddenly becomes cool to wear these watches. I’m 26 and would wear this watch all over the place, even at work and in meetings. At this point the bell curve really peaks out and it becomes trendy, unique and awesome to own a watch hidden inside of a giant purple bat. The next thing you know you hit your 40′s and you’re crazy for wearing something like this. But don’t worry, once you hit retirement you can wear all four slime time watches at once and demand discounts from cashiers at places, and it’s perfectly acceptable.

Chestnuts roasted by Fox @ 09/25/2008 12:24 PM


Also, I love reading this stuff.

Chestnuts roasted by Justin @ 09/25/2008 12:49 PM


I understand about sucking at kickball… know where I always was during P.E. in grade school? Either making daisy chains in the outfield or hiding some place reading Tolkien.

Chestnuts roasted by Cheetara @ 09/25/2008 12:56 PM


I hated PE so much.  Mostly because I couldn’t do anything right– couldn’t shoot baskets, couldn’t do chin-ups, push-ups, or sit-ups, couldn’t run fast.  I think the running was the worst part.

Chestnuts roasted by Annette @ 09/25/2008 1:11 PM


Aye, I’m with all of ye on the subject of kickball.  I were horrible at it, and the wee buggers in me P.E. class would get mad at me because of it.  But me teacher, mean ol’ bastard, told us it was either kickball or a keelhaulin’.

I guess the ridicule were better than the alternative.  Garr…

Chestnuts roasted by Captain Will @ 09/25/2008 1:14 PM


Hmm, 31 here and I think maybe the bell curve in the theory above has swung back to not being so cool to wear there, to meetings or otherwise.
Also snakes are not slimy.  I don’t understand why this misconception is around.  Most toads are not either, unless they piss all over you or secrete some special hallucinogenic sauce…yum!

Chestnuts roasted by 20 eyes in my head meepy @ 09/25/2008 1:15 PM


Testing the various features of the chicken comment form. Money mouth

Chestnuts roasted by Matt @ 09/25/2008 1:15 PM


I just went to : http://www.juliedesigns.com/watchimal/pictures.html (a watchimal fan site) and found that the one I had was a watchimal knock-off! Oh, the shame.

Chestnuts roasted by Jessica Marie @ 09/25/2008 1:24 PM


Works for you me too I guess.

Chestnuts roasted by 20 eyes in my head meepy @ 09/25/2008 1:25 PM


Then again, I guess not.  Well, who needs to cross stuff off and underline stuff ANYWAY!!  And who needs emoticons…. :-(

Chestnuts roasted by 20 eyes in my head meepy @ 09/25/2008 1:26 PM


I remember Slime Time. I thought that it would have been easy to slap people around with the bat.

Chestnuts roasted by kingklash @ 09/25/2008 1:29 PM


Matt, I’m just a blog lurker, but I need the kind of help that only you can provide.  There was a toy, in the eighties…   it was sort of a factory, wherein you could create Matchbox cars (or Matchbox knock-off cars), by pouring what appeared to be hot molten metal into pre-made car shapes in the factory.  Once the lava hot metal cooled, you could then build your car and add wheels and stickers, etc…  This, according to the commerical, at least.  Not only did this toy look incredibly dangerous, but it joined my top ten list of toys that I never got, including a rock tumbler, a Snoopy Sno-Cone maker, and the Star Wars ‘Star Destroyer.’

Please use your powers to tell me what the name of this toy was.  Typing things like ‘matchbox car making kit’ into Google has been failing me completely.

Chestnuts roasted by slcgrad @ 09/25/2008 1:30 PM


An above poster beat me to it; the frog is the only animal that could be considered slimy.  While you went for the splashy Slime Time watches, I opted for the subtler (and arguably dorkier) calculator watch.  Back in the 80s they were pretty cutting edge.

Chestnuts roasted by Clockwork @ 09/25/2008 1:37 PM


slcgrad, I’m no Matt, but do you mean the Mattel Hot Wheels Factory injector set?

Chestnuts roasted by Guise @ 09/25/2008 1:39 PM


Yeah, it’s the Hot Wheels Car Factory.  The “injector” prefix was used for the older, original versions of the set.

Chestnuts roasted by Matt @ 09/25/2008 1:42 PM


More toys need injector sets, I would have loved a GI Joe grunts/Cobra trooper injector set. I’d have even bought whatever paints and decals they sold seperately. An army of Cobra following my every command as long as I spoke with a lisp.

Chestnuts roasted by Guise @ 09/25/2008 1:46 PM


I had the green snake one!!!! Man i completely forgot about that shit!

Matt I’m sure you get this all of the time but I recently went through the attic at my parents house and found dozens of old VHS tapes with late 80′s programming on them. There are some commercial jems in there, are you interested??

Chestnuts roasted by Gralf @ 09/25/2008 1:52 PM


I still wear novelty crap to this day.  I bought a Casio camera-watch a few years back and that was the biggest waste of money I have spent in a long while.  The damn thing doesn’t work unless you are standing directly in the sunlight.  I guess it would eat up the battery too much to have a flash, but its virtually useless without one.

P.S. I don’t know about the rest of the world, but this year it actually feels like Fall outside here.  I think last year it was in the 80s and 90s up until late October in Maryland.  Considering Fall is my favorite season that pretty much ruined it for me.

Chestnuts roasted by Jack @ 09/25/2008 1:54 PM


Gralf: Verily!  Please e-mail me! :)

Chestnuts roasted by Matt @ 09/25/2008 1:55 PM


Oh, you guys…  are good.  Not only are you right, and not only did typing Hot Wheels Car Factory into Google instantly work, but this webpage produces evidence that it is yes indeed the coolest toy of all time:  http://www.creepyfun.com/HWF_Main.htm

Now, I must pay $300 or whatever to buy one, and try to figure out a way to make the plastic “slugs” melt after twenty years.

And yes, I am all for the “more toys need injector sets” stance.  The only way I could have loved my G.I. Joes or my Star Wars figures more is if I had built and designed them myself.  How great…  would that have been.

More injector sets for all!  Thank you fellow commentators, and thank YOU, X-E.

Chestnuts roasted by slcgrad @ 09/25/2008 1:56 PM


Add A New Comment!