What's old is new again, especially when it comes to collectibles like GI Joe toys from the sixties and eighties. If you’ve ever wondered why these vintage toys continue to garner interest and demand, ...
Maybe you had a hundred GI Joe figures when you were a kid, but if you didn’t get your hands on the USS Flagg you probably still feel unfulfilled. Maybe you still remember the sense of dejection you ...
Hasbro is bringing back classic '80s GI Joe characters to life. The latest reveals in the Classified line feel like they were ripped from the cartoon. During Fan First Friday, Hasbro revealed Flint ...
GI Joe's popularity over the years has seen it become the world's most popular toy for boys As a child, Ace Allgood served in the army on Mondays, chased gorillas on Tuesdays, and went parachuting on ...
If you grew up in the 80s or 90s, which unfortunately is now referred to as the late 1900s, chances are you have a nostalgic connection to figurines, TV shows and comic books featuring everything from ...
Stanley Weston, who created the toys that would become known as G.I. Joe in an attempt to translate the popularity of Barbie to boys and sold it to Hasbro for $100,000 in the 1960s, died last week at ...
Replete with often indecipherable action sequences, Stephen Sommers’ GI Joe: The Rise of Cobra is a mélange of fight scenes, hackneyed dialogue, and irredeemably soppy or angry flashbacks. Based on ...
The large post World War II birth rate between 1946 and 1964 became labeled as the baby boomer or “boomer” years. My previous article about dangerous baby boomer toys resulted in a number of readers ...
This article was originally on a blog post platform and may be missing photos, graphics or links. See About archive blog posts. Today a guest post from one of our faithful readers, Ambrose Kalifornia, ...
Don Levine. You may not know him, but you know his son: GI Joe. Levine was Hasbro's director of development in 1963 when Stan Weston, who ran a merchandising agency, pitched an idea for a military ...
There was a very strange and wonderful period of time in the late 1980s and early 1990s where Sgt. Slaughter, actual real (enough) person and successful pro wrestler, lent his voice and wild visage to ...
As a child, Ace Allgood served in the army on Mondays, chased gorillas on Tuesdays, and went parachuting on Wednesdays. No, he wasn't the world's most accomplished 10-year-old. His mum just bought him ...