Happy Meals for Happy
Kids
by Bob Brooke
Happy
Meals and the toys included in them have been a part of McDonald’s
offerings for several decades. Kids loved them. But to be of any value
to a collector, Happy Meal toys need to still be encased in their
packaging and not used. There are some rare pieces that have value even
if out of their packages, but generally, as with other toy collectibles,
mint in package is the rule.
Believe it or not, some of those little toys are actually little
treasures, depending on their condition. McDonald's is famous for its
Happy Meals, and kids the world over I have been fattened up on weekly
doses of them for over 40 years. Since the early 1980s, the main hook
has been the toy included with the meal.
Many collectors of McDonald's Happy Meal memorabilia are mostly
interested in toys that relate to specific McDonald's characters, but
there have also been many tie-ins with established movie, TV and toy
lines. Those tie-in items appeal to collectors who are specifically
interested in what the Happy Meals promoted.
T.V. Tie-ins
The
first major tie-in to the action adventure market was with Star Trek.
The series returned from TV limbo in the form of a highly promoted film
in 1979, and producers planned a huge promotion. This included Star Trek
Happy Meals based on the movie. Six different boxes featured activities.
One box encouraged kids to fill in the dots to complete a picture of the
Enterprise while another offered a chance to decode a message with Mr.
Spock, and so on. Toys and premiums included plastic Video
Communicators, iron-on transfers of the characters and the Federation
symbol, and "Navigational" wrist bracelets.
Just
as collectible are the items that McDonald’s made available to their
restaurants, such as display signs, a cardboard Enterprise, and, rarest
of all, a silver smock worn by McDonald's employees, which featured an
emblem that combined the Star Trek and McDonald's logos.
Another heavily merchandised franchise was The Dukes of Hazzard, the
campy rural action show that dominated TV in the early 1980s. In the
summer of 1982, McDonald’s test marketed a Dukes of Hazzard promotion in
St. Louis. The items included plastic cups with pictures of the various
characters, and vacuumed plastic meal containers in the shape of the
vehicles from the series, including the General Lee car and Daisy's
Jeep.
Ghostbusters,
the cartoon TV show known as the Real Ghostbusters spun off of the hit
movie, became the next big craze for kids in the action/adventure genre.
Ghostbusters appeared in McDonald's Happy Meals in 1977 with four
different boxes and school supplies based on the Marshmallow Man and
Slimer ghosts seen in the film and cartoon series. These included a
pencil case, ruler, note pad and eraser, pencil and pencil topper, and
pencil sharpener. All are difficult to find and highly collectible.
Toy Cars
Hot
Wheels came to McDonald's in 1983.The cars were the subject of a
national promotion, but there were also certain cars distributed only on
the East Coast, and some only on the West Coast. Others appeared
nationwide. McDonald’s offered 14 Hot Wheels cars in Happy Meals at any
given location. There were "Collect All 14" store displays that included
these 14 cars. The cars from this promotion individually sell for $10 to
$15, but the 14-car display unit commands can sell for between $300 and
$400.
Hot Wheels returned in
1989 with more cars available in different regions. There was a 12-ear
display that now sells for $300, followed by repeated promotions, shared
by Mattel's other titan, Barbie, throughout the 1990s.
Not to be outdone, Matchbox also had a promotion in 1988, featuring a
16-car counter display and cars that now sell for $8 to $10 each.
Movie Promotions
E.T. was a huge promotion for McDonald's, thanks to the family-friendly
appeal of the movie. Although E.T. appeared in theaters in the early
1980s, the first Happy Meal with an ET theme didn’t go on sale until
1985. It offered two different box designs and a series of four posters
depicting scenes from the film.
Hasbro, the toy industry giant, got into Happy Meals with a combined
promotion for Transformers and My Little Pony. Transformers, robots that
became vehicles and other mechanical devices, were one of the top
selling action figure lines of the 1980s. Each original Happy Meal
promotion include four different small Transformers. Today, they sell
for between $40 and150 each for diehard Transformers collectors and up
to $100 if they’re still in their cellophane baggie packs.
The
I990s proved to be even mare interesting for action-adventure tie-ins,
as several popular super heroes became involved with Happy Meal
promotions.
McDonald's teamed up with Disney in 1991 to promote Hook, the retelling
of Peter Pan with Robin Williams and Dustin Hoffman. The official Hook
Happy Meal boxes, which featured striking artwork, contained four Hook
floating bathtub toys.
A
tie-in with the TV cartoon version of Back To The Future caused some
controversy. The assortment consisted of four rolling toys, but Doc's
time traveling Delorean car had wheels that small children could remove
and swallow. McDonald's issued an advisory to parents, urging them to
avoid giving the cars to small children. The next big promotion also had
its share of problems.
In 1992, McDonald's was ready to cash in on Batman merchandising and
featured a big promotion involving Batman Returns with four vehicle
toys, including Catwoman’s car.
The McDonald’s Happy Meal for Disney Toy Story2 in 1999 includes pretty
much every recognizable toy from the "Toy Story 2" movie. The complete
set included an incredible 20 toys, which doesn’t seem possible for the
movie.
Halloween Specials
For
some reason, Halloween toys are usually big hits. The Ronald and Pals
Haunted Halloween McDonald’s Happy Meal set featured a 20-inch display
used at McDonald's restaurants in the 1990s. The company ran their 1998
promotion nationally during October. Unfortunately, many store managers
trashed most of the displays afterward. The promotion included six
toys—I am Hungry, Witch Birdie, Black Cat Grimace, Jack-o-lantern
McNugget Buddy, Ghost Ronald, Scarecrow Hamburglar and Ghoul.
Not
all McDonald's toys were tiny plastic junk. Some, like It’s Happy Meal
Girl Doll from 1997, were big plastic junk, part of a series of Happy
Meal baby dolls. Actually, these dolls were surprisingly well made for
something produced by a burger chain.
And while the intention of Happy Meals was to get kids to eat McDonald’s
foods and make them happy, those same little toys are making many
collectors happy as well.
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