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The ten most dangerous toys of all time
radarmagazine.com — To keep things interesting, we excluded BB guns, slingshots, throwing stars, and anything else actually intended to inflict harm. Below, our toy box from hell.
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- SteveisSuperMan, on 10/12/2007, -4/+36Aw, with kids, anything with movable parts is a dangerous object. What can you do? I miss the good ole' days when I would play with fire crackers all day...
- daRoach, on 10/12/2007, -22/+8Thank Ralph Nader.
- danglerman, on 10/12/2007, -4/+23The good old days of fire crackers? You must be talking about squibs or something because the good old days of fire crackers are still here for me pal.
- crgnetworks, on 10/12/2007, -5/+56LOL this articles writing style is great!
- snackdrag, on 10/12/2007, -18/+10None of these are dangerous with parental supervision, just like STAIRS AND THE ENTIRE REST OF THE WORLD.
- TheKidd, on 10/12/2007, -0/+7I was just talking to a girl at work who sat out all night several years ago to get her daughter the Snacktime Cabbage Patch Dolls. She said her daughter DID get her hair caught in it but she couldn't be bothered returning it.
- daxsymbiont, on 10/12/2007, -1/+64"None of these are dangerous with parental supervision"
does that "parental supervision" product stop radioactivity? - roosterjm2k2, on 10/12/2007, -2/+82Those toys served as both natural selection and teaching aids.
Burn yourself? Dont touch the hot thing. Get hit with a lawn dart...pay attention to your surroundings. Get hit by a flying barbie..wtf are you playing with a barbie doll for?
Now we wonder why kids grow up with no common sense...because they never have to think about what they are doing...
Im not even that old, 24, but my playgrounds were wood and steel. Run too fast under the slide without ducking enough....WHAM! You only do it once, i promise. Kids are supposed to grow up in an environment where they can be hurt, thats what helps to build our basic evasions skills at a young age...then again, another advantage we had, is Parents who actually gave a ***** and watched over us...so i guess there has to be a compromise thanks to lazy parenting. - freff, on 10/12/2007, -3/+7@daxsymbiont
No, but I'm assuming that the parental supervision in this case would involve holding the Geige counter and watching as your weeping child buried his new Atomic Kit in the backyard. - hiPpymIck, on 10/12/2007, -18/+1im looking forward to reading this thread later LOL
itll make up for the unbelievable grind of trying to follow live
"pauly shore gets knocked out on stage"
talk about going round in circles
sorry off topic but i cant help myself
im tired and off to bed now
:-) - FoxifiedNutjob, on 10/12/2007, -20/+2I can't believe Bicycles, skates or skateboards didn't make the list. We have all these recalls but per capita of plastica toys, however bicycles skates and skateboards are the most dangerous thing to a kid.
Wonder why the most dangerous toys invented were excluded.
No digg! - Kbennett, on 10/12/2007, -0/+11Reading that brought back some great memories. :)
- hiPpymIck, on 10/12/2007, -10/+4p.s.
lead paint tastes 'sweet'
wooden boomerangs
night - bradm81, on 10/12/2007, -2/+7They missed one:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3NERK2qZrY8 - Handyyz, on 10/12/2007, -2/+13Presumably, the child on the motorcycle was then taken on a hellish, intestine-twisting scream ride. At one point, he or she would face choices unthinkable except in an Evel Knievel meets Knightrider crossover episode: Do I jump? Or do I ride it out and see if I can clear the gully? Is it sentient? Can it be reasoned with?
HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA - darkamster07, on 10/12/2007, -0/+1sorry to be a comment abuser, but I did want to mention one "toy" they left off the list, I can't remember the name of it, but it was very dangerous. My best friend got one for his 7th birthday, and we would always play with it. It was basically a pot of molten metal that you could use to make cool skull rings n' stuff. The problem was that it actually openly melted metal that you had to pour into a mold! With no adult supervision, my friend soon got badly burned when he decided to see if it had cooled yet using his finger! (still wasn't as bad as when he told me the red faucet on his water cooler was the cold one! I was six and was so pissed at him!, he's still my friend to this day though)
- djlosch, on 10/12/2007, -0/+5the only 2 here that are really bad for normal kids are the motorcycle and the uranium kit. the rest were darwin awards waiting to happen.
- JasonHoekstra, on 10/12/2007, -21/+2It’s hard to believe these were ever on the market, but I’m especially surprised by the lawn darts, Glibert U-238 atomic energy lab, mini-hammocks, Snacktime Cabbage Patch dolls, Sky Dancers, Derringer belt gun, creepy crawlers, Johnny Reb cannon, Battlestar Galactica missile launcher and the non-stop fun of the Power Wheels motorcycle.
- barryq, on 10/12/2007, -0/+34I had #1 lawn darts. It was less dangerous than the bow and arrows I had.
Also had #7 Creepy Crawlers my favorite toy at the time. I loved it. I never burned myself. I did that with the wood burning set I also had. Never thought to eat them.
- MiddleGirth, on 10/12/2007, -3/+24Lawn Darts. What a load of crap that these are banned. FTA:
During their brief (and generally awesome) reign in 1980s suburbia, Jarts racked up 6,700 injuries and four deaths.
From the DOT: Total bicyclist deaths in 2005: 784 (Up 26% from 2003) - repins, on 10/12/2007, -1/+12I too had lawn darts and creepy crawlers, and there where no injuries from either of those toys, they where fun and safe if you followed the directions.
- Psych77, on 10/12/2007, -0/+55Lawn darts were fantastic. I think possibly we tried to play the game once (throw them into the circle a set distance away).
After that, it was throw them as high as you could and see who dared stand still below them the longest before running. - CTRaider, on 10/12/2007, -1/+7We still have lawn darts and still play with them and we've never had any accidents.
- ChemEng, on 10/12/2007, -0/+32@ CTRaider
I dont think you are using them correctly then... In fact, I was surprise to find out in thie artcile that Lawn Darts was a game. - AMSRay, on 10/12/2007, -0/+11Lawn Darts were awesome. When the limited altitude of throwing them by hand wasn't thrilling enough we started shooting target arrows into the air and trying to catch them before they stuck in the ground. It's hard to believe looking back that the worst injury we had was some small cuts from the cheap plastic feathers going through our fingers if we grabbed them too late!
- xtrememotion, on 10/12/2007, -0/+11the possiblity of injury is what makes lawn darts fun
- jasper976, on 10/12/2007, -0/+32lawn darts were great, i still have them in the attic, but i also have a 1 inch scar and bald spot on the top of my head. throwing heavy pointed objects very high in the air with no attention span wasn't a good combo... "a lawn dart, wheeee!.... oh look a caterpillar... *thud:
- CedEx, on 10/12/2007, -1/+3@ MiddleGirthth
"From the DOT: Total bicyclist deaths in 2005: 784 (Up 26% from 2003)"
I only have youtube and other online video webpages to blame for that. Kids are filming themselves doing more and more stupid things to outdo whatever they last saw.
The abundance of "pwned" video compilations of dumb stunts are growing exponentially.
Personally I find it amusing to watch someone else's kids, but unfortunately, with the death rate, the supply is not going to be able to meet the demand if this trend keeps up. - CedEx, on 10/12/2007, -0/+7@ jasper976
Joel? Is that you?
My buddy threw a Jart high in the air backwards above his head, then Joel (who was probably 5 years old at the time) ran over to see what we were doing. He managed to catch the Jart with his skull. The Jart ended up sticking straight out of his head.
It was awesome until he started to cry, then we knew we'd never see the Jarts ever again. It was a sad day. Oh, and we were sad about Joel too. - daprice, on 10/12/2007, -0/+3There was a related toy to Creepy Crawlers called Incredible Edibles. I had Incredible Edibles and the Thingmaker (similar to Creepy Crawlers). They both had the same hot plate to cook liquid in the metal molds. Creepy Crawlers and Thingmaker used the toxic plastic liquid, and Incredible Edibles had an edible candy liquid, so you could eat your creations. I personally liked the Thingmaker better since you could keep your creations longer. I had a favorite rubber dragon from the Thingmaker that I kept on my desk for years.
- MiddleGirth, on 10/12/2007, -3/+24Lawn Darts. What a load of crap that these are banned. FTA:
- ghm101, on 10/12/2007, -37/+1No pictures?
thats dumb - HoosbinPharteen, on 10/12/2007, -3/+6lawn darts were sooooooooo much fun.
- ImTheDarkcyde, on 10/12/2007, -1/+4what about rubber-wheel hotwheels?
- UGM2099, on 10/12/2007, -0/+45Most dangerous: Johnny Switchblade or Bag 'o Glass.
- ilyag, on 10/12/2007, -6/+35Okay, Sir, I wanna correct you, alright. The full name of this product, as it appears in stores all over the county, is Johnny Switchblade: Adventure Punk. I mean, nothing goes wrong. Little girls buy 'em, you know, they play games, they make up stories, nobody gets hurt. I mean, so Barbie takes a knife once in a while, or Ken gets cut. You know, there's no harm in that. I mean, as far as I can see, you know?
As for the "Bag O' Glass" - you know, the average kid, he picks up, you know, broken glass anywhere, you know? The beach, the street, garbage cans, parking lots, all over the place in any big city. We're just packaging what the kids want! I mean, it's a creative toy, you know? If you hold this up, you know, you see colors, every color of the rainbow! I mean, it teaches him about light refraction, you know? Prisms, and that stuff! You know what I mean?
Plus, we put a label on every bag that says, "Kid! Be careful - broken glass!" I mean, we sell a lot of products in the "Bag O'" line.. like Bag O' Glass, Bag O' Nails, Bag O' Bugs, Bag O' Vipers, Bag O' Sulfuric Acid. They're decent toys, you know what I mean?
- ilyag, on 10/12/2007, -6/+35Okay, Sir, I wanna correct you, alright. The full name of this product, as it appears in stores all over the county, is Johnny Switchblade: Adventure Punk. I mean, nothing goes wrong. Little girls buy 'em, you know, they play games, they make up stories, nobody gets hurt. I mean, so Barbie takes a knife once in a while, or Ken gets cut. You know, there's no harm in that. I mean, as far as I can see, you know?
- thorn101, on 10/12/2007, -6/+30Ah, the "Atomic Energy Lab" for the little terrorist in the making.
- wolfkeeper, on 10/12/2007, -0/+6That one was a bit lame really. Nobody got sick. Nobody got dead.
The article consisted largely of pointing out that the box contained real radiation! Gee. So does my glow-in-the-dark keyring.
If they had managed to prove that it had 1 million times the current safe limit and several boxes had reached critical mass in the store when placed on top of each other I would have been impressed!
- wolfkeeper, on 10/12/2007, -0/+6That one was a bit lame really. Nobody got sick. Nobody got dead.
- floorman56, on 10/12/2007, -1/+13What? No Clackers balls?
- VesperDEM, on 10/12/2007, -0/+4Ahh, Click-Clacks (or clackers). I have so many fond memories of that toy...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clackers
I never had one shatter, but I sure had some welts on my arms from those damn balls flying all over the place.
Sure looked cool when they were going full tilt though, and sounded great too! - MacTornado, on 10/12/2007, -0/+1Clackers were awesome, and the shear danger of them is what made them so fun. The fact that they made an excellent weapon didn't hurt either.
- VesperDEM, on 10/12/2007, -0/+4Ahh, Click-Clacks (or clackers). I have so many fond memories of that toy...
- dan_s, on 10/12/2007, -0/+10Ahh... the "No Warning, Not Dangerous" culture in action. Still, some great toys there.
- DenTPuzz, on 10/12/2007, -0/+27What about Tonka toys? I'm not talking about the soft plastic things they market now, but the metallic finger nipping sharp edged contraptions of the 70's that, according to the TV commercial of the time, could withstand an elephants weight! Oh happy days...
- Elfman, on 10/12/2007, -0/+8Absolutely! I even had the hydraulic dump truck. Digits were just waiting to be snipped off with that one.
- diecastbeatdown, on 10/12/2007, -0/+12ah yea, i had many tonka trucks. don't forget that if you left them outside they would get rusted! rusty sharp jagged metal toy trucks.
i used to take the tonka car carrier up to the top of the hill in my neighborhood, lay down on it with my face inches from the ground and go full speed down the hill. i was 7 at the time and probably came up to the center of a hubcap on a car, if that. there is no way someone would have seen me while backing out of their driveway. damn that was some of the best fun ever. - szembek, on 10/12/2007, -1/+3They were the best. I'll be checkin' eBay when I have kids old enough.
- jlebrech, on 10/12/2007, -10/+3What about Wii, it should be #1. It's like: arms/intelligence = danger. A very similar concept to those lawn darts actually.
- Flannigan, on 10/12/2007, -3/+20I was just waiting for Doom or other violent video games to appear as I scrolled down... Thankfully this article wasn't written by Jack Thompson.
- ray023, on 10/12/2007, -19/+3Since some of these toys involve the deaths of children, this article is more sad than anything else.
- DeviantBoi, on 10/12/2007, -5/+10That was a very funny read!
Dugg! - mookiemookie, on 10/12/2007, -1/+26Johnny Reb cannon, complete with Confederate battle flag?
Yeah just TRY to put that on the market today. - Pottersquash, on 10/12/2007, -1/+14this is hilarous. I love that Ive owned half of them. I remember when the the Cabbage Snack Time catatropshe came, me, my mom and my lil sis spent hours trying to get it to eat hair. LIARS!!! the damn thing was perfectly safe!!!
"And will all be gay when Johnny comes walking home"- missflibbles, on 10/12/2007, -0/+6I did have the flying Barbie, and that was my favorite toy for quite a while.
I read the article and thought, "Now, hey, you can't get a concussion from that thing. It's not dangerous at all."
But then I remembered how we used to play with that toy: hurl it in the air and see who could stand still the longest. Very much like lawn darts, without the risk of death.
For the record, that thing hurts like hell if you get hit.
- missflibbles, on 10/12/2007, -0/+6I did have the flying Barbie, and that was my favorite toy for quite a while.
- datastorageguy, on 10/12/2007, -1/+30"In 2000, the CPSC announced that over 150 children fell prey to Sky Dancer's helicopter-blade arms and erratic "Oh-Jesus-it's-chasing-me!" flying patterns"
That really mad me laugh- mecole21, on 10/12/2007, -0/+14man, i loved to play with my sister's sky dancer... fire it straight at her or straight at the cat and see if they flinch or not... fun game...
- GeneralAntilles, on 10/12/2007, -1/+13"At one point, he or she would face choices unthinkable except in an Evel Knievel meets Knightrider crossover episode: Do I jump? Or do I ride it out and see if I can clear the gully? Is it sentient? Can it be reasoned with?"
That cracked me up, too. - Monk1932, on 10/12/2007, -1/+10That's my new phrase of the week
"Oh-Jesus-it's-chasing-me!" - CedEx, on 10/12/2007, -2/+3@ monk1932
"That's my new phrase of the week
"Oh-Jesus-it's-chasing-me!""
That's funny, even more funny is that in my head I pictured Jesus giving Allah an elbow nudge and saying, "Hey, Allah, check this out, that kid is telling me that the helicopter is chasing him. WTF does he expect me to do?"
- daxsymbiont, on 10/12/2007, -14/+3informative
- xtmno3, on 10/12/2007, -2/+6you missed the point...
- DArangio, on 10/12/2007, -0/+19When I was younger my friend taught me how to make M-80's after the ones his dad gave us ran out. We also played with butane torches, bows and arrows, bb guns, and the occasional molotov. One time my friend's father got drunk and lit an assload of magnesium off in the house, and burned a hole through the kitchen table. When we were ten he helped us build a potato gun with pvc pipe and duct tape.
Looking back, my friend's parents were insanely irresponsible and would have been better off giving us jarts and creepy crawlers. It's a miracle i still have all my fingers. - southport, on 10/12/2007, -29/+3What about the "talking" George W. Bush doll?
"We're winning the hearts of the Iraqi people." Right. I guess that's why they want us to stay.
"Freedom itself was attacked" - ZombyWoof78, on 10/12/2007, -0/+7I want the Atomic Energy Lab so the I can breed my own army of mutant fire ants. If I was caught with any amount of U 238 I would be sharing a cell in Guantanamo and taking up the butt from Bubba. Of course U 238 is a alpha emitter so it does not take much at all to stop the particles so its safe to handle if you know what you are doing.
- denkc, on 10/12/2007, -0/+6Darts is above Uranium? Crazy.
- Cruelapollo, on 10/12/2007, -0/+13Well, one emits alpha particles, which are easily stopped by a piece of paper or dead skin. The other is a fun game in which you find out who has the most balls.
- geekymonkey, on 10/12/2007, -0/+3Or who ends up with the most, anyway . . .
- madrox, on 10/12/2007, -0/+12what about rocks? I seem to remember my brother and I exchanging many many many volleys of them as kids... i dont see anyone banning those. :)~
- freff, on 10/12/2007, -1/+229. Battlestar Galactica Missile Launcher:
A spokesperson from the CPSC explained that "the barrel shape of the toy seemed to invite children to put it in their mouths." Something you could apparently say in 1979 without too much snickering.
==================================
OMG....can't stop....laughing....- gromnie, on 10/12/2007, -0/+1"More proof that God exists!" -Kirk Cameron
- BigSlacker, on 10/12/2007, -1/+5It was you irresponsible "throw up in the air" types that got the things banned and ruined it for the rest of us. Okay...we did it too. Impending blunt trauma was a great motivator to get your butt moving.
- CedEx, on 10/12/2007, -0/+3You must have got the ***** Jarts if yours only inflict *blunt* trauma. The ones that the rest of us played with allowed you to produce impaling and stabbing type trauma.
- astrotrain, on 10/12/2007, -0/+9Where's the original Megatron (Transformers) G1 who transformed into a realistic P-38 Magnum with all sniper accessories?
http://mykooltoyz.tripod.com/images/16-s_meg_cweap.JPG
If that didn't get some eyebrows raises (especially by law enforcement). - RoboPimp3000, on 10/12/2007, -5/+11What about an official red ryder carbine-action 200-shot range model BB rifle with a compass in the stock? It'll shoot your eye out.
- kb9vgr, on 10/12/2007, -2/+10they intentionally left out guns and other objects intended to do damage
- DigeratiPrime, on 10/12/2007, -1/+2bah humbug!
- pants428, on 10/12/2007, -7/+2about halfway through that movie I want to shoot the kid's eye out, to end the schmaltzy nostalgic crap...
- kb9vgr, on 10/12/2007, -2/+10they intentionally left out guns and other objects intended to do damage
- TheKidd, on 10/12/2007, -0/+11It's a miracle I survived my childhood.
- mecole21, on 10/12/2007, -1/+5What about the barbie roller blades that sparked... my cousin had these... u used to roll them as fast as you could and create as many sparks as possible... somebody HAD to have burned down a house with them...
- LoudOrangeCat, on 10/12/2007, -0/+6Holy crap! My kid owns that motorized motorcycle!
- tulpe, on 10/12/2007, -1/+20"But between the years of 1984–1995 the EZ Sales mini-hammock, oft marketed under the name "Hang Ten," managed to hang 12."
ROFL... make it stop.. it hurts!! *tearsineyes* - LostOnion, on 10/12/2007, -0/+15Being an old digger, I had one of those creepy crawler thing makers from Mattel back in 1965. I loved it but I never burned myself because I was not a dumbass 10 year old. My little kid fingers could sense heat. The creepy crawler maker was cool because you could mix the colors of the plastigoo and make all kinds of psychedelic bugs, which were all the rage in the 60's. And I am alive 40 years later so apparently the toxins in that goo weren't too toxic. I am living proof that a dangerous toy is only in the eye of the beholder or is that a lawn dart in your eye?
- Boatpunc, on 10/12/2007, -0/+7I had a Fright Factory too. I can still remember the taste of that crap in my mouth. We should all go back to the days when a child could burn themself making shrunken zombie heads out of molten plastic. Those were the days.
- ja1217, on 10/12/2007, -0/+2Yeah, when did they stop making those, I remember having a creepy crawler set for my 5th or 6th birthday, and that was the early 90's. I don't think that I ever tried eating my creations, but I do know that I got my fingers singed more than once.
- Elfman, on 10/12/2007, -1/+5Oh man, I have tears in my eyes from laughing so hard at the first segment alone.
Jarts ruled! - agent888, on 10/12/2007, -1/+15Favorite part in article: "Oh-Jesus-it's-chasing-me!" flying patterns.
Cant think of how many toys and fireworks i had that followed that flight plan~ - tdkme, on 10/12/2007, -14/+3you forgot the bag of broken glass that Dan akroyd was selling on SNL in the early 80's!
- Dycacian, on 10/12/2007, -0/+5That was a good article. I got some good laughs and learned some things too. :D
- lnf69, on 10/12/2007, -0/+9Anyone remember Click-Clacks?
Two GLASS balls on the ends of a string. You hold the middle and wave your arm up and down trying to get the glass balls to bounce off each other.
Some kids got so good at it, they were able to get the balls to smash into each other and exploding into little glass fragments that went into eyes and skin, etc.- Ascus, on 10/12/2007, -0/+5Those clackers where great toys, and even better weapons. For while you could take them to school, :)
- CedEx, on 10/12/2007, -0/+1Click clacks? I never seen that before until today, and even after that the first thing I thought of was that "It can't be a toy!", since it resembles a South American hunting weapon called Bolas.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bolas
- AMSRay, on 10/12/2007, -0/+25I also had a 1961 Robot Commando. It had a wired remote with "voice activation". You had to move the selector to the activity you wanted (fire rocket, throw grenade, forward, reverse, etc. The voice activation was a membrane that you shouted into, and no matter what you said, if you shouted loud enough it would do only task you set the switch to. It was taken from me when I got mad at my mom and instructed it to fire a rocket at her. I guided up to her feet and it fired the rocket right into her face, narrowly missing her eye. That ass-beating was like a scene from Fight Club.
- luma, on 10/12/2007, -0/+17U-238 Atomic Energy Lab? Working cloud chamber and spinthariscope included? ARE YOU ***** ***** ME! I soooo want one of these - what a kick-ass toy! And hey, if you can't take a little alpha radiation you are no friend of mine, fella.
- general13, on 10/12/2007, -0/+6I like your motivation.
- profOblivion, on 10/12/2007, -1/+1Suddenly the Litvinenko thing becomes clearer...
- saska, on 10/12/2007, -0/+23I used to watch my parents play lawn darts while lounging in my Mini Hammock, no lie.
When I see them at Christmas I'm going to ask if it was their intention to KILL me. - ghandlin, on 10/12/2007, -8/+0If you like this style, you'll like Brad Stine. http://www.bradstine.com - I've seen him in concert.
- DoubtingThomas, on 10/12/2007, -0/+6Wow, I can't believed they missed this bad boy, http://scientificsonline.com/product.asp_Q_pn_E_3110400
I had one for these water rockets (same model as the classic in the link) as a kid and they packed a serious punch! The flanged tail fins created a spinning motion which gave this little projectile frightening accuracy. - GALILEE77, on 10/12/2007, -1/+19Am I the only person who looked at this list and wanted at least half the stuff on there?
- Lazybones, on 10/12/2007, -0/+3I want real lawn darts! Not the crappy bean bags they have now that tend to bounce.
- GALILEE77, on 10/12/2007, -3/+5Oh, and what about Happy Fun Ball? As long as you don't taunt it or, you know, expose it to direct sunlight it is one fun toy.
- Ascus, on 10/12/2007, -0/+6Jarts! Dang I miss those. When my gradfather died, his set of Jarts was the most sought after item he left.
So what did we do, We played a tournament, the winner kept the set. I think he was watching, the brother without kids won.
I also had hte creapy crawly, Sky dancer, and even the CeC Disco ball. No injuries so far. The Skydancers are no more dangerous that the balsa wood planes with wind up plastic propellers, The creapy crawly was less angerous tha an Ezbake oven, and the Disco balls i no more dangerous than any elertic toy (a lightbright can catch fire too)
But The Jarts, they where dangerous and every one new it. It made it more fun.- TheKillDoctor, on 10/12/2007, -1/+7Oh gawd Light-Brights and bare feet.
I think I still have scars....
- TheKillDoctor, on 10/12/2007, -1/+7Oh gawd Light-Brights and bare feet.
- twilo, on 10/12/2007, -4/+0cool.
- drkansm, on 10/12/2007, -1/+1I wanted sooo much more than half of those.
like 8/10 i asked my parents for sometime or another.
6/10 i owned! - Jiffylush, on 10/12/2007, -0/+3That was hilarious, I am always talking about those awesome battlestar galactica toys that actually shot projectiles.
Very funny righting too. - Topher06, on 10/12/2007, -3/+1Doesn't everybody know you start a top 10 list at 10, not 1?
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