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  2. Category:1990s toys - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:1990s_toys

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  3. Earring Magic Ken - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Earring_Magic_Ken

    [6] 1993 saw Mattel and other toy companies experimenting with selling girl toys to boys, and vice versa as a larger sales trend. [6] Manager of marketing communications for Mattel, Lisa McKendall, told The New York Times "We never would have done this a few years ago. But now you see more earrings on men. They are more accepted in day-to-day life.

  4. Inflatable Furniture: What Was That All About? Remembering ...

    www.aol.com/entertainment/inflatable-furniture...

    A classic 90s teen bedroom Getty Images You’re talking about boys while listening to The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill and/or the Spice Girls. Your mom shouts up the stairs that dinner is ready.

  5. Mighty Max (toyline) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mighty_Max_(toyline)

    Mighty Max was a series of toys that were manufactured by Bluebird Toys PLC in the UK in 1992. The toys were similar to the earlier Polly Pocket toyline, but these toys were marketed primarily towards young boys. In Canada and the United States, they were distributed by Irwin Toy Limited and Mattel Inc. respectively.

  6. Gogo's Crazy Bones - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gogo's_Crazy_Bones

    Toy Craze racked up 3.5 million dollars of sales in 1998 from Crazy Bones. [1] Toy stores that carried Crazy Bones include: Zany Brainy, Learningsmith, and FAO Schwarz. Zany Brainy even partnered with Toy Craze and came out with their own original gogo's "Zany-Ack" and "Brainy-Ack".

  7. The ‘90s are back – also in Naima Mohamud’s upcoming “Halima,” produced by Finland’s It’s Alive Films, behind Oscar entry “Euthanizer,” and No-Office Films. “It was a wild time.

  8. Anyone flipping past a cable channel late at night in the back half of the 1990s and early aughts probably had ads for “Girls Gone Wild” seared into their brains.

  9. Sindy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sindy

    The 2006 Sindy was aimed at three- to five-year-old girls, younger than the audience targeted by Bratz dolls, and mothers who wanted a more innocent-looking doll for their daughters than Barbie or Bratz dolls. [22] Tonner Doll Company released a collection of high end dolls in 2013, the first one made for the 2013 Sindy Convention in the U.K.