My (15 year old) sister in law sent me that and I watched it for about 3 loops. It was stuck in my head all day.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VVCEQ-543ak The scene when they're talking about the protest of the parents for their show, was a direct result of this stupid book and video. This was also the reason my childhood was shitty... For a hillarious scene of adults who hate He-man playing with snake mountain skip to 7:38
Occultic toys are an abomination! Those videos are scary. Part 7 talks about GID toys. We're all going to burn.
"this could be" "this seems like" I'm glad these guys put some research and long thought into their witch hunts, these guys had to have shit enough bricks to build a church when yugioh hit the market
The funny thing is my parents bought the books this guy put out, and it had photos of all the stuff that I really liked, so I used it as kind of dream toy guide (although at the age of 10 you don't think of things that way), The book had a big section in it about skateboards, and more importantly Zorlac skateboards, and Pusheads art... It was a major influence on me artistically. I'll never understand how my dad was such a smart guy, but could fall for this B.S. hook, line, and sinker... The author of the second book in this series is Joan Hake Robie, who also wrote the classic, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: EXPOSED.
hey Slip, consider yourself lucky. my father fell for it as well, but my mother did not. It drove them apart.
I love this stuff. My parents never bought into it but I had friends who were convinced by their parents that the smurfs were demons, etc etc... I don't recall the big deal about heman, but I remember it for a lot of other toys. I wasn't allowed to have garbage pail kids though.
Does anyone remember when the Simpsons shirts were getting banned from public schools all over the country? Those sure were some repressed times...
We couldn't even wear shirts with any band/musician on them when I was in grade school. No visible tattoos or piercings in highschool. Then I went to private school with a uniform.