Top 10 Saddest McDonald's Happy Meal Toys Ever (Part 2) - YouTube

Channel: BabbleTop

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Last time we covered some McDonald’s toy fails such as scary Ronald McDonald masks,
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gardening tools, and an MP3 player that only played the American Idol theme song.
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That list was pretty sad but to the dismay of McDonald’s-eating kids everywhere, there
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are a lot more of these unfortunate toys.
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These are the Top 10 Saddest McDonald’s Happy Meal Toys Part 2.
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Michael Jordan Fitness Fun
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Michael Jordan was one of the most popular players in the NBA during the 80s and 90s,
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and even kids who didn’t like watching basketball would know who he was.
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Similarly to how McDonald’s collaborates with movies to create new toys, they sometimes
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did the same thing with athletes.
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So in 1991, a Michael Jordan themed set of sports related Happy Meal toys was released
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to the public.
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The combination of the fitness craze and the face of a sports superstar was supposed to
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get kids wanting to go outside and be active, but it wasn’t very successful in doing so.
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The set of toys included 8 different ones: a jump rope, a basketball, an inflatable soccer
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ball, a stopwatch, a water bottle, a football, a frisbee, and a baseball.
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The stop watch and frisbee both have Michael Jordan’s smiling face plastered on them,
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while some of the other items look like they could be from anywhere.
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This set actually sounds pretty cool, but in reality there were a few problems with
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the products.
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The jump rope was quite short, making it difficult for some taller kids to use, and the water
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bottle was also pretty tiny, which isn’t the most practical.
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The stopwatch only counted to 30 seconds, so we’re really not sure what that was supposed
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to be used for.
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And unsurprisingly, the sports balls were low in quality and were not the best to actually
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play with.
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And on top of that we do need to point out the irony of an unhealthy fast food restaurant
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promoting health and activeness to kids as they eat greasy burgers and chicken nuggets.
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101 Dalmatians
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As we mentioned before, it’s common for McDonald’s Happy Meal toys to be in collaboration
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with the newest children’s movies that are out in theatres.
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For the promotion of the live action version of the film 101 Dalmatians, released in 1996,
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McDonald’s decided to release a set of toys based off of the film.
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The restaurant released a set of little dalmatian figurines in honor of the film, but here’s
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the thing: there were 101 different ones.
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Now this is perfect when it comes to accuracy, but sets of McDonald’s Happy Meal toys were
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usually something that kids would try to collect, and that was fairly easy if there were only
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5 or 6 items.
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But to collect 101 different toys meant that a kid would have to eat at McDonald’s 101
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different times in the period that the toy was being promoted, which would be nearly
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impossible.
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However, there is a positive note here, as the people who did manage to collect the entire
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set can make some pretty big bucks now.
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The full  set is considered one of the rarest Happy Meal toys and you can find full sets
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selling online for hundreds of dollars.
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So while most kids were disappointed knowing that they would never be able to collect them
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all, at least some of them managed to fulfil the dream.
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Hello Kitty Whistles
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Hello Kitty is a popular Japanese figure in the world of kids TV and basically any product
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you could buy worldwide.
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For the 40th anniversary of the character in 2014, McDonald’s decided to release a
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line of Happy Meal toys in her honor.
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Instead of simply being figurines though, Hello Kitty has a red whistle attached to
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her.
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This whistle could be detached and then blown into to make sound.
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However, there were some problems with this product.
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Shortly after the release of the toys, there were two reports of children choking on pieces
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of plastic that fell out of the whistle while it was in their mouths.
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Thankfully, both children were mostly unharmed, but one of them did need medical attention
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after the incident.
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The parents of the children obviously complained about the poorly manufactured product and
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informed McDonald’s that it was a choking hazard.
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McDonald’s took action immediately and warned parents to keep the toy away from their kids
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if they already owned it, and then started to recall the ones still being sold in its
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restaurants.
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2.3 million Hello Kitty Whistles were recalled around the United States and Canada and the
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Happy Meal toys were replaced by another one.
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Toothbrush
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Everybody knows that oral hygiene is important and you have to take care of your teeth.
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Even though kids are taught this from a young age, it’s still sometimes hard to get them
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to do it.
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In the early 1980s McDonald’s determined it needed to help this issue and promote better
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oral hygiene to kids so it decided it would be a good idea to place a toothbrush and toothpaste
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in its Happy Meals, to get kids to scrub off all that grease from their teeth after eating
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the fast food.
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While it’s a great idea to get kids to care more about their health, it’s also well
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known that toothbrushes and toothpaste definitely do not count as a toy.
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Parents might have loved seeing these in their kids’ Happy Meals but no kid would be happy
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upon seeing a toothbrush after anticipating a toy.
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After all, this isn’t a trip to the dentist.
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McDonald’s actually used this promotion multiple times throughout the 80s, but it’s
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unlikely kids ever started liking it.
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Some of these toothbrushes featured the mascot Ronald McDonald’s face on them, but others
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were just plain colors, so you couldn’t even tell that they were a Happy Meal toy
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by looking at them.
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Eventually, the restaurant did stop giving kids toothbrushes and toothpaste in their
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Happy Meals, so kids today will hopefully never have to live through the same disappointment
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some kids in the 80s had to.
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Those were some tough times.
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McDonald’s Airport
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Before the whole McDonaldland marketing concept was dropped from the restaurant in recent
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years, it was common for some McDonald’s Happy Meal toys to feature popular characters
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from the series.
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These characters included Ronald McDonald of course, along with others such as the Hamburglar,
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Grimace, the Fry Kids, and many, many others.
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Unfortunately though, some of these toys ended up being some of the worst ever released by
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the restaurant, like we saw with the Ronald McDonald themed glove puppet, mask, and sunglasses.
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In this case the toy was a set of plastic airplanes featuring a different McDonaldland
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character as the pilot.
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Released in 1986, it featured Officer Big Mac, Grimace, Ronald, and Birdie, among others,
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flying things like helicopters and seaplanes.
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Each figurine was a different solid color with little detail in the design.
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They were a hard plastic with no moving parts, so that probably makes them some of the cheapest,
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most boring toys to come out of a Happy Meal.
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On top of that, McDonald’s encouraged customers to unfold their Happy Meal boxes to use as
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an airport.
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The greasy cardboard along with cheap plastic planes doesn’t exactly make the most exciting
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toy, and even though we shouldn’t expect much from a Happy Meal toy, there still was
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depressingly little effort put it into this one.
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Camp McDonaldland
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This next toy combines themes of two previous categories of bad McDonald’s Happy Meal
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toys we’ve seen: encouraging kids to be active and go outdoors, and basing things
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off of McDonaldland.
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Kids love camping, there’s nothing better than spending some time outside in the wilderness,
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and imagine just how much better camping would be if it was McDonald’s themed?
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In 1989 McDonald’s released a set of camping themed Happy Meal toys to get kids ready to
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go to the fictional Camp McDonaldland.
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The set included 4 different items each decorated with images of McDonaldland characters.
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There was a set of utensils composed of a plastic spoon, fork, and knife with the face
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of the Fry Guys on them, a collapsible cup with the face of Ronald McDonald on it, a
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mess kit with the face of Birdie on it, and a canteen with Grimace on it.
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Now this would have been a great idea to get kids outdoors if the items had actually been
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practical.
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But we have to remember that this is a set of cheap McDonald Happy Meal toys so we know
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they won’t be the best.
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The quality of the products wasn’t good enough for them to actually be used properly,
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and if they were just being used as an indoor toy, they couldn’t have been much fun to
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play with.
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Mighty Ducks Pucks
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While hockey isn’t as popular a sport in the United States as it is with our Northern
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neighbors, it has gained some traction over the years, and many kids do play the sport.
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In 1992, the Disney film Mighty Ducks was released, gaining lots of popularity and grossing
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over 50 million dollars domestically at the box office.
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This led to an animated television show spin off that featured actual half human half ducks
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who played hockey.
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Shortly after the release of the show in 1996, McDonald’s released a line of Happy meal
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toys based off of it.
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The line of toys released featured a set of 4 different hockey pucks, each with a figurine
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of the torso of a Mighty Ducks animated character sitting on top of it.
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This sounds like it could have been one of the more successful ways to get kids active
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that McDonald’s has attempted, but unfortunately that was not the case.
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Hockey is a pretty intense game, and as we know McDonald’s toys aren’t exactly made
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of the best quality, so these pucks were nowhere near the actual quality needed for them to
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be used in a game.
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When the pucks were hit with a hockey stick, the Mighty Ducks figurines on top of them
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easily broke and fell off,  turning the toy into just any old cheap hockey puck.
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And if kids didn’t use the pucks for hockey, then what were they supposed to do with them?
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Just leave them on a shelf and stare?
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Maybe McDonald’s does need to stop trying to get kids active.
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McWrist Wallet
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When the McDonald’s Happy Meal first made its debut in 1979, its toys were pretty basic.
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This was before the days of collaboration with kids’ movies and famous sports players,
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so the restaurant had to come up with ideas on it’s own.
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The first ever Happy Meal toy set included a McDoodle stencil, an ID bracelet, a puzzle
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lock, a spinning top, a McDonald’s character shaped eraser, and most bizarre of them all,
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a McWrist Wallet.
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The McWrist Wallet came in several different colors and looked like a plastic wrist watch,
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except there was no clock on it, just a blank circle.
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But that circle opened up into a compartment that you could put stuff in.
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This compartment was so small though, that it’s hard to imagine what else could be
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stored inside of it other than a penny.
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Though the product claims to be both a watch and a wallet, it actually fails at being both,
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as it doesn’t tell the time nor carry enough coins or anything else to be able to qualify
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as an actual wallet.
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Thankfully Happy Meal toys have developed a lot since then, and even though there’s
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some occasional duds, overall the toys have been pretty decent in recent years.
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Swearing Minion
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Whether you love them or hate them, you can’t deny the fact that minions have been everywhere
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since the release of the first Despicable Me in 2010.
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Kids love these little yellow creatures so it was to be expected that McDonald’s would
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release a line of minion toys for the promotion of the film Minions in 2015.
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It’s extremely common for McDonald’s to collaborate with current kids movies and normally
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the toys are quite loved, but there was a slight problem with these minion toys.
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The toys were little plastic figurines of the creatures who spoke a few different phrases
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when you tapped the bottom of them on a hard surface.
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The three phrases were “ha ha ha”, “eh eh”, and the gibberish minion language phrase
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“para la bukay”.
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These all sound innocent enough, but some parents listening to their kids playing with
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the new toys thought otherwise.
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Many people claimed that they heard the minion figurines saying, “what the eff” and deemed
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them inappropriate for their children to interact with.
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McDonald’s received many angry calls from customers but refused to pull the toy from
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its Happy Meals, stating that the minions were not actually saying any profanities and
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that the parents were simply mishearing the nonsense words.
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There are plenty of videos of the toy speaking on the internet, so take a listen and see
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what you hear.
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Teenie Beanie Babies
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Beanie Babies were all the rage among kids in the late 90s and nearly everyone you know
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had one, or even an extensive collection.
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The immense popularity of the toys led to McDonald’s using miniature versions of them
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called Teenie Beanie Babies in its Happy Meals between 1997 and 2000.
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The 1997 series included 20 different Beanies, 1998 included 12, 1999 included 16, and 2000
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included 32 different ones.
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It’s said that McDonald’s sold over 100 million of them, and fights even broke out
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in the store over trying to buy the remaining ones near the end of promotions.
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While this was a great toy to receive at the time of their release, it’s making this
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list because of how the toys are received in today’s world.
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Beanie Babies were a hugely popular collectible in the 90s and 2000s, but the problem is that
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too many people collected them.
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Nowadays, some Beanie Babies are worth thousands of dollars if they’re really rare, but millions
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of kids tried collecting these McDonald’s Teenie Beanie Babies, leading to them being
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worth a whopping zero dollars.
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So if you have any left over from your childhood, unfortunately if you were counting on these
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to be your retirement fund, you’re out of luck.
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