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The local burger joint is a stupid magnet. Or: Happy Meal Mania

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  • The local burger joint is a stupid magnet. Or: Happy Meal Mania

    This stuff always has to happen when I'm in a hurry...

    The guy who cut in front of me in line at the McDonald's is placing a ridiculously elaborate order that possibly involves trying to feed an entire halftime marching band. This is odd in itself, because his only company on this journey is his little girl, a pigtailed sprout who looks to be about four.

    What's slowing things down isn't the fact that they've essentially depleted the inventory. No, it's the Happy Meal toy. This week, they're Pokemons. (I saw them in the display case. I never heard of any of them.) Only they don't have the Pokemon she wants. This is her cue to turn on the waterworks. The lady behind the counter went to the box and dug out each individual Pokemon toy and laid them out on the counter so that she could take her pick, but her preference wasn't represented. Now, not only is the child picking up steam, so's Dad, growing increasingly shouty and attracting the sort of attention the he probably doesn't want.

    Midpoint in the multigenerational temper tantrum, he demands to know, "Well, why are they on display if you don't have them, then?" (Shouty.)

    Dude, even I know the answer to that one. The display is provided by Corporate; the individual store doesn't get to choose how to set it up. It's a multi-week promotion, and they have yet to reach that week in the promotional arc. Also, grow up, sprout a pair, shut your howling daughter up, and get out of the store before you two embarrass yourself any more than is absolutely necessary. (Okay, maybe I added that last bit myself.)

    Dad let Little Precious scream herself red-faced for a few more minutes before taking his food and going to his table, and I swear he looked a bit smug when he did. Little Precious was more or less inconsolable the whole time she was there, doing that thing where children try to talk while they wail, resulting in an incoherent string of vowels: "Ooo ah way we muh wuh woh..."

    He was still eating when I left - God knows where he was putting it all, but he was plowing through those bags fairly well - and by that time Little Precious was more or less worn out.

    I wanted so badly to commiserate with the lady behind the counter. After all, I worked at McDonald's when the toy promotion was 101 Dalmatians. I saw worse tantrums from overweight 50 year old women.

  • #2
    Or "mini beanie babies memorial day weekend" 1998...I still have my t-shirt.
    Cruise Ship Brilliance: "Do the elevators go to the front of the ship?"

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    • #3
      Omg, I remember the beanie baby McDonalds toys. I remember driving there with my mom one day, we were gonna get lunch and the lines for both drive-thru and walk-in were curled around the building! Needless to say, we went elsewhere.

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      • #4
        Oh god, I feel the pain of the girl at the counter. A little known secret about the toys is that we have all of the toys in the back (unless we've used up the particular toy), but we CANNOT open a new box to get one toy out. We can't because we get reimbursed for the unopened boxes. The owner would throw a FIT if we couldn't get reimbursed because we opened a box for one toy. Oh man. But we still get people wanting us to go to the back and do just that. We always pretend to go look and tell them we don't have that one in stock if it's in an unopened box. I'm SO glad the customers can't go back there and check for themselves.

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        • #5
          i'm so glad kiddo is out of the stage of wanting those toys. she's "too big" for the happy meals! yay!

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          • #6
            I remember working at Micky D's a lifetime ago when the current toy promotion was mini plush muppet babies. There were more adults coming to get them than kids.
            The large print giveth, and the small print taketh away.

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            • #7
              what is it about some cheap-assed peice of plastic or fabric "prize" at a fast food place that sends people into a shark-like feeding frenzey????

              I remember back in 1987, Burger King (was an AM at the time) did a Xmas promotion of little colored teddy bears (Crayola brand colors). they got promoted locally or regionally on TV. people came out of the woodwork. then the threats of violence ("GIMME a bear you *&%&^$$%) and law suits for "false advertising" (well they DID sell well that we ran out just as we got more on the truck) began. on the day the supply truck came in there was a line out the door at my store.

              There has only been a couple of those promo items that get touted as "collector Items" that have attained "superstar status". one of them being a really simple Ronald McDonald Doll/stuffy from the early 1970's (and that was a while back)

              anything else just gets played with and broken then thrown away. most things like the Beenie Baby's are pricy in the short term marketplace then fade to obscuriety and low prices. then throw in E-bay and the like and you are lucky these days to get pennies for something that once sold for thousands of dollars

              anyone remember the "rare" sold only in Japan Charazard gold foil "Special Edition" card from the late 90's. I remember it being sold for $10,000. now it is most likey worth maybe $50.



              Yes I know there are "serious" collectors out there, but.........
              I'm lost without a paddle and headed up SH*T creek.
              -- Life Sucks Then You Die.


              "I'll believe corp. are people when Texas executes one."

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              • #8
                Ummm, I did make a point of collecting a complete set of the Lego Bionicles in 2001.
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                • #9
                  um...I might have had every Happy Meal toy from about 1988/89-1998. It was our family treat on Saturdays..

                  But I never threw a fit if they didn't have the toy I wanted!
                  Now, if you smell the roses but it doesn't lift your spirits, you're either allergic to rose pollen or you need medical intervention. ~ Seshat

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                  • #10
                    The 101 Dalmatians one was insane, because there were 101 TOYS. And they all hooked together to make a choo-choo train. They were kinda cute, so I bought a few on my discount, plus an engine, and set them up on my home computer workstation. Woo woo!

                    However, the very idea of trying to collect the lot...It was the usual four-week promotion, which meant that they were pumping these things out at a rate of twenty-five per week. They weren't sorted - they were random in the box. Try to find a particular one. Just try. Cue half an hour of "No, I got that one...I got that one...no, I got that one...I got that one too...and that one..."

                    We weren't really supposed to let the customers pick and choose, but we weren't supposed to let people stand in the middle of the lobby screaming at the top of their lungs, either. People would come in at the beginning of the week and buy ARMLOADS of the damn things. They were a buck a pop in those days if you didn't buy a Happy Meal (onion, belt...) and we were always thoroughly supplied, but jeez...I think roughly six to eight percent of the total stock actually went in Happy Meals and were given to children. The rest went to the crazy hoarder people who went psycho every week if Their Toy wasn't in.

                    I still have the scars.

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                    • #11
                      My sisters and I loved the barbie toys they had with the happy meals.
                      I don't get paid enough to kiss your a**! -Groezig 5/31/08
                      Another day...another million braincells lost...-Sarlon 6/16/08
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                      • #12
                        Quoth Ben_Who View Post
                        The 101 Dalmatians one was insane, because there were 101 TOYS. And they all hooked together to make a choo-choo train.

                        We had similar toys back in my BK days. They were like a dozen Lord of the Rings characters that talked or lit up. There was also a plastic ring that you could connect all of them to.

                        The toys were first come first serve, no expections. The parents would get pissed, they were tantrums, begging, attempted bribing. It was insane.
                        My Horror Blog

                        Cinemania

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                        • #13
                          I remember the mini beanie babies. >.>

                          My mom was selling the big beanies at the time, so we spent all of our spare time at mcdonalds. We'd drive to every one in the city to get those darned things...

                          What not for us kids, oh no! So mom could sell them in her store of course. What, you think she was one of those loving parents?
                          https://purplefish-quilting.square.site/

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                          • #14
                            we still have some of the happy meal christmas ornaments from "Oliver & Company" and some star wars glasses somewhere

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                            • #15
                              The only happy meal toy [?] I wish I could get again was the Flintstones horn cup ... I used to make a killer bread that it was the perfect proportioner for ...

                              But I am not going to try to get one on an auction site, I don't feel like spending any real amount of money to get one.
                              EVE Online: 99% of the time you sit around waiting for something to happen, but that 1% of action is what hooks people like crack, you don't get interviewed by the BBC for a WoW raid.

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