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-   -   Did you collect Wacky Packages or Garbage Pail Kids? (https://thetfp.com/tfp/general-discussion/138966-did-you-collect-wacky-packages-garbage-pail-kids.html)

Cynthetiq 08-12-2008 10:53 AM

Did you collect Wacky Packages or Garbage Pail Kids?
 
Quote:

View: When Wacky Packages ruled
Source: CNN
posted with the TFP thread generator

When Wacky Packages ruled
When Wacky Packages ruled
Story Highlights
Wacky Packages, a product parody card series, were a huge fad in 1970s

Some gags were created by Art "Maus" Spiegelman

"This was before satire became a national industry," says writer Jay Lynch

Cards would recast Crest as "Crust" and Dial soap as "Vile" soap

By Todd Leopold
CNN
(CNN) -- I blame Wacky Packages for making me the man I am today.

At 9 years old, I became hooked on the Topps-brand sticker series of product parodies, which recast Cap'n Crunch as "Cap'n Crud" and Nestle's Quik as "Nutlee's Quit" ("Explodes Instantly with Milk").

From there, it was a short trip to Mad magazine, "Saturday Night Live," National Lampoon, punk rock, trolling used-book stores and record stores, and indulging in other mind-rotting activities (memorizing trivia, creating puns) until I became the skeptical, disillusioned writer you have before you.

So, to Wacky Packages, I can only say: Thank you. Gallery: Some Wacky Packages products »

Not that Topps, or more specifically illustrator Art Spiegelman and writer Jay Lynch -- goaded by Topps' Woody Gelman and Len Brown -- knew the import of the work. In the preface to the new book "Wacky Packages" (Abrams), a collection of the first seven series of the Topps cards, Spiegelman -- yes, the same Art Spiegelman who won a Pulitzer Prize for "Maus" -- remembers the creation of Wackies as being "a dream job," but something that would probably be forgotten.

"It was all done as Part of a Day's Work, much like the way early comic books were made: they certainly weren't made as art, they weren't sold as art, and they weren't thought of as art," he says in the book's introduction. "Wacky Packages just formed an island of subversive underground culture in the surrounding sea of junk."

Lynch, a childhood friend of Spiegelman's who worked on Wacky Packages, Garbage Pail Kids and other Topps series, agrees.

"I didn't know they were that memorable until about 12 years ago, with the Internet," he says in an interview. (Several Web sites have been devoted to the cards, notably Greg Grant's Wacky Packages pages.) "Before that, I didn't think of it as any more important than the other series."

Lynch says that in the beginning, he and Spiegelman earned eight dollars for their basic gags, which would later be fleshed out into paintings by illustrator Norm Saunders or one of the Mad crowd. (They got $50.) Eventually, Topps raised the price of a rough to $20: "Art used to say, 'I like to think of it as drawing twenty-dollar bills,' " Lynch remembers.

It wasn't much, but since he and Spiegelman were barely out of their teens when Wackies peaked, it did the job: "A rough would buy a week's worth of groceries," Lynch says, and they'd get to eat their models.

At their 1973-75 zenith, Wacky Packages were a phenomenon. The stickers made the cover of a 1973 issue of New York magazine (by coincidence, the same issue included an article on Mad, then at its Nixon-roasting height), and were also written about in The New York Times and Philadelphia Inquirer. Lynch remembers Wackies outselling baseball cards one year.
iReport: Show us your Wacky Packages collection

"This was before satire became a national industry," Lynch recalls. "It wasn't like, every day, a thousand people would mock Tide."

Some companies would issue cease-and-desist orders, he recalls, but since they usually gave a 90-day window to pull the offending card from the shelves -- and the gum that accompanied the cards was supposed to be on sale for only 90 days -- the orders were effectively moot. (You can make your own gum joke here.)

As with all fads, Wackies eventually ran out of steam, and Topps moved on to other series: "Happy Days" cards, the Garbage Pail Kids and superheroes among them.

But the memory lingers.

"Anything that happens when you're eight years old can mark you for life -- just ask Sigmund Freud!" Spiegelman says in the book's introduction. "Wackies were a young child's first exposure to subverting adult consumer culture.

"Now," he adds wickedly, "thirty-five years later, that generation has matured into adults who can afford to nostalgically consume a deluxe volume brimming with that subversion. Yessirree -- I am proud to have been a worker in the debased basement of the great temple of commerce that is America's popular culture."

Oh, don't sell yourself short, Art. There's a whole generation you've warped, too. And I, for one, can't be more pleased.
Ahhhh nostalgia!!!!

I remember collecthing these as a kid. I didn't collect baseball cards or football cards, but I did buy these things. They always gave me a chuckle and a laugh. Even today when I see them.

Go check out the site that has them, there's just too many to even pick a few for sampling. Maybe someone else can post a few. I can't seem to settle on just one.

My sister was too young for this, but she loved Garbage Pail Kids World

Enjoy the trip!

xepherys 08-12-2008 11:04 AM

Yeah, I had Garbage Pail Kids when I was younger. I remember my school district banning them, and we'd have underground swap meets during lunch recess. Ahhh... fun times!

Grancey 08-12-2008 11:12 AM

I remember these, though I never collected them. I would wonder why other kids thought they were so funny when the words were spelled incorrectly. One of my oddities at he time. But I did enjoy the graphics.

Jinn 08-12-2008 11:15 AM

Alas I'm too young.. my generation was Pogs, I think..

Vigilante 08-12-2008 11:47 AM

Haha I grew up on those. I always remember "Stormy Heather" because my cousin's name is heather :lol:

HAHAH I love google....
http://i6.photobucket.com/albums/y20...s%201/007a.jpg

abaya 08-12-2008 12:52 PM

I totally collected Garbage Pail Kids. I guess that makes me semi-old.

lotsofmagnets 08-12-2008 12:57 PM

must be an american thing. never heard of them...

*Nikki* 08-12-2008 01:26 PM

Yep, I loved the Garbage Pail kids. I think it was the whole shock value they had on my parents.

Daemon1313 08-12-2008 01:32 PM

Garbage pail kids were great. I'm going to have to go dig out my collection now. Anyone else ever see the horrific movie they made of them?

Tully Mars 08-12-2008 01:36 PM

All my friends and I collected Odd Rods

http://www.oddrods.com/gallery_02/so...dd_rods_04.jpg

Ayashe 08-12-2008 01:48 PM

I remember the garbage pail kids, never truly collected them but I did have a few. I absolutely couldn't stand the Cabbage Patch Dolls that everyone had collected, I thought they were the ugliest thing ever. That was a little bit of a draw for me, almost as if I was getting even with the ugly(yet popular) dolls. I got a kick out of the gross factor of them.

Charlatan 08-12-2008 02:14 PM

Garbagepail Kids came after whacky packages... I remember having the whacky packages stickers as kids and noticed that my girlfriend's little brother was heavily into the garbage pail kids.

mixedmedia 08-12-2008 02:29 PM

Garbage Pail Kids were after my time, but I did have quite a few Wacky Packages cards in my day. Not enough to be considered a collector, though.

Jetée 08-12-2008 04:14 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Jinn (Post 2505707)
Alas I'm too young.. my generation was Pogs, I think..

How right you are. I miss them, but I don't quite recall what they were used for.. I collected pogs, but was oblivious to their function; were they a cardboard version of marbles?

eribrav 08-12-2008 04:18 PM

Wacky Packages!
Hadn't even thought of those in decades, but you just brought a smile to my face with fond memories!

snowy 08-12-2008 04:22 PM

Too young :)

Pogs were more in line with my day, though in my school only the boys were into them.

Speed_Gibson 08-12-2008 06:17 PM

I fondly remember Garabage Pail Kids from my younger years - it has been several years since they even crossed my mind though.

Fotzlid 08-12-2008 09:48 PM

I was obsessed with the Wacky Packages. I spent way too much money on them and had a shoebox full of them.
Wish I still had them.

jewels 08-13-2008 05:15 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by abaya (Post 2505777)
I totally collected Garbage Pail Kids. I guess that makes me semi-old.

My oldest daughter collected them. I thought they were horrid at the time.
I flipped baseball cards with my big brother and his friends when I was that age.

Poppinjay 08-13-2008 05:20 AM

I collected Garbage Pail Kids. Later on, I graduated to graphic novels and girls who wear black nail polish.

Bill O'Rights 08-13-2008 08:44 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by abaya (Post 2505777)
I totally collected Garbage Pail Kids. I guess that makes me semi-old.

Oh...I see...so the fact that I was too old for Garbage Pail Kids makes me old? :grumpy:

That's fine. I already knew that. ;)

Actually, although I remember fondly the Wacky Packages cards...I was getting a little too old for even them. Ah...the seventies. Good times...good times.

SSJTWIZTA 08-13-2008 11:24 AM

when i lived at the old pad, i arose one hungover morning to find garbage pail kid stickers wallpapered all over my puke plastered toilet.

memories.

Nikilidstrom 08-13-2008 03:07 PM

I had a ton of Garbage Pail Kids cards, but the only one I can remember was the one that had the kid shaving large chunks of skin off of his face. Gruesome. My dad found them and after seeing that one, banned them from the house. So I traded them all to my buddy for his Voltron action figure with the individual lions that linked together. Ahh, the old days.

abaya 08-13-2008 03:23 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Bill O'Rights (Post 2506274)
Oh...I see...so the fact that I was too old for Garbage Pail Kids makes me old? :grumpy:

That's fine. I already knew that. ;)

:lol: Sorry, BoR. :) But you said it, not me!

radioguy 08-13-2008 03:54 PM

i still have my garbage pail kids!!!!

Poppinjay 08-13-2008 06:13 PM

BOR, you are old. Turn in your coolness badge and hike up your beltline to just below your nipples.

We can tag off in the despensary. I like statins.

Supple Cow 08-13-2008 06:55 PM

Oh HELL yeah, Garbage Pail Kids! I used to collect the stickers and put them all over my desk. I even kept a t-shirt of Luke Warm for years (I think I just got rid of it a couple of months ago). Already, I miss it!

m0rpheus 08-13-2008 07:36 PM

Yeah I totally collected Garbage Pail Kids. I remember a buddy of mine trading me like two packs worth for Phil 'Erup because his name was Phil.

Cynthetiq 08-13-2008 07:42 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Daemon1313 (Post 2505807)
Garbage pail kids were great. I'm going to have to go dig out my collection now. Anyone else ever see the horrific movie they made of them?

yes, I had to take my sister to see the movie... I didn't want to see it but had to.


Speed_Gibson 08-20-2008 09:46 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Nikilidstrom (Post 2506505)
..... So I traded them all to my buddy for his Voltron action figure with the individual lions that linked together. Ahh, the old days.

I still have my full Voltron lion figure with the sword at my parent's house - or I put it in storage out here. The two action figures/pilots are long gone but everything else is intact.


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