Friday, January 26, 2024

finally, something fun to share... Farbs. Mattel / Hot Wheels was selling these in 1971, and Kellogs even had one if kids mailed away for it


the series was the brainchild of independent toy designer Eddy Goldfarb; the series was named after Goldfarb as tribute.

 While the series was manufactured by Mattel and feature wheels also used on Hot Wheels products these were not officially branded as Hot Wheels products.

It turns out, Eddy, was a WW2 submariner, a radar and sonar operator on the USS Batfish, SS 310 from 43 to 45! 

Eddy enlisted in 1942, and is the last surviving crewmember of the Batfish. In its seven war patrols, the Batfish is credited with sinking nine Japanese ships, including three Imperial Japanese Navy submarines in a 76-hour period, in February 1945 — a feat unsurpassed to this day 

AND Eddy is most famous for inventing the Yakity Yak Talking Teeth! (plus 795 other toys!) 
https://chicago.suntimes.com/movies-and-tv/2023/12/1/23984756/eddy-goldfarb-102-year-old-toy-inventor-documentary-yakity-yak-talking-teeth-kerplunk-games







https://hotwheels.fandom.com/wiki/Bye-A-Nose  says this was a prototype, and didn't make it to production



One Farbs track set Mattel produced with the cars was actually a Kellogg's Cereal promotion featuring the Hy Gear model and a short piece of Hot Wheels track, along with a green plastic boot that would "kick" the car down the track. It was called the "Booter Booster Set".






7 comments:

  1. Shared on my blog's Facebook group! Very interesting content, thank you Jesse!

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    1. you're welcome... a very unexpected discovery

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    2. what is your blog's facebook page? I'd love to see what else is there!

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    3. You're honouring me: https://www.facebook.com/share/p/NbewAi6hZ6QR3ykh/

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    4. Your memory is perfect! Yes and yes. 8-) I am one of your regular readers, probably one of the very few from Hungary. You published a post many years ago of my childhood neighborhood with pictures of downtown Budapest, with quotes from some sort of traveling diary. Because there was many errors - the author obviously misunderstood lots of things the locals told to him, washed many different things together, honest mistakes really about Soviet troops and special shops for them - I wrote a long comment to you. We started to chat back then. 8-)

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  2. I never saw these. Great imagination of Mr. Goldfarb and quite a member of Americana as a WWII submariner.

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  3. Holy cow, I had that yellow guy on his hands and knees! I'd totally forgotten about that! Yeah, I'm old.

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