Boglin

A selection of Boglins from an advertisement.

Boglins were a series of toy puppets distributed by Mattel. They were created by Tim Clarke, Maureen Trotto, and Larry Mass, and licensed by Seven Towns. The original run of Boglins was released in 1987, coinciding with a "creatures" craze that included Ghoulies, Critters, and Gremlins. Boglins were made of flexible rubber and could be manipulated to represent speech and facial expressions. Several series of Boglins were released, themed around goblins, aquatic creatures, and Halloween, or with tufts of hair.

Re-released Boglins

Mattel restarted the Boglins line in 2000 with two new series of puppets: large, electronic ones that talked, and several smaller ones that stuck out their tongues or spat water when squeezed.

Mini Boglins

Mini Boglins were first released in 1991 by Ideal. They were solid PVC with no movable parts (similar to Monster in My Pocket) and sold in randomised blister packs. Mini Boglins were usable in a Boglins-themed game, were assigned various "ranks", and were arranged into "Tribes". Many models featured a "secret code" with utility in-game that would appear after it was heated and left to cool. There was also a Mini Boglins Swamp Carry Case. It unfolded to resemble a small landscape. Slime Boglins were Mini Boglins sold in plastic toilets filled with toy slime.

In Media

Video games journalist Jim Sterling began his highly popular Youtube series "Boglin Watch" in late 2016. This has led to him earning him the self-appointed title of "Number 1 Boglin Boy" which was later made official by Tim Clarke himself when he signed one of Jim Sterling's '2016 Mini Boglin' packages "No 1 Boglin Boy Jim, From Tim Clarke".[1]

References

  1. "Jim Sterling showcasing his autographed Boglin signed by Tim Clarke". "VLOBB REVIEWED! (Boglinwatch 2016)" Published Oct 14, 2016

Sources

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 12/1/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.