A few months ago,
Shannon and I were watching an episode of The Mindy Project (shut
up—it’s good!), and there was a scene where one of the characters was sitting
in his boyhood room at his mom’s house. Just over his left shoulder, in the
background, I saw a green blob.
“Oh
my God,” I said, scrambling for the remote. “Is that what I think it is?”
“Wuzzat?”
Shannon said, waking up.
I
paused the DVR, backed it up a hair, hit PLAY, paused again—and then repeated
this process four or five times until I was able to freeze the half-second that
the green blob was onscreen. It looked something like this:
By now, Shannon
was fully awake.
“What
the hell are you doing?”
“Nothing.
Oh my God. Go back to sleep. Holy shit. Do you know what that is?”
“What
what is?”
I
got up and pointed to the green blob on the screen. “I think it’s one of those
wax alligators.”
Sadly, I lack the words to describe the look
on her face.
For
the record, this is what I saw through the blur:
For many people
who grew up in the Chicagoland area, there should be a flash of recognition.
Especially if they, like me, were treated to any family or school field trips
to the nearby Brookfield Zoo. I loved the real animals, of course, but
what I looked forward to most were the wax ones. Stationed at the
entrances and exits of the various animal houses were Mold-a-Rama
machines—bubble-topped contraptions about the size of a hefty jukebox, where,
for fifty cents, you could partake in injection-mold magic. After receiving
your quarters, the machine rumbled into action. Two long pistons—each holding
half of a metal block (the mold) with hoses sprouting off the top—pushed slowly
together. Hums and clicks and hisses sounded as fluids and air were pumped into
and out of that mold. A light on top of the machine changed colors to signal
the different stages of manufacture. Then, a little over a minute later, the
mold halves separated, and there stood the red giraffe or black panther or
green alligator. A little blade on a long, thin arm would slide from the back of
the machine and knock the animal off the sloped metal surface, sending it
tumbling into the chute at the front of the machine. You then opened the little
door in front, scooped it out, and—holding it by the base—waved it
gently for a minute or so until it cooled completely. I learned this last step
the hard way when I grabbed a rhino with too much enthusiasm and put my thumb
through his chest.
You
can watch the process HERE, but it’s missing two key features of the
experience: the smell of melting crayons, and the sheer joy of retrieving your
prize.
I
write this description in the past tense, but that’s not completely accurate.
We live in a wonderful time where the collected wisdom and knowledge of the ages
exist—quite literally—at our fingertips, so for the twenty minutes following
my alligator sighting, I kept Mindy on pause while I Googled away and
discovered several things, but for the sake of brevity I’ll stick to the
highlights:
- Mold-a-Rama machines are still around
- They now cost $2
- The animals aren’t wax; they’re plastic
- I’m not the only one obsessed with this stuff
In fact, if you type “moldarama
animals” into Google Images, you get a pretty good look at the animals that
come out of the machines and those machines themselves. Really, you should do
that right now. I’ll wait.
Pretty
cool, right? Just in case you impatiently charged ahead in this post, here’s some of what you missed:
What
the images don’t tell is the larger story, which also exists on the internet
HERE, HERE, and HERE (to list just a few).
And because it’s very likely that you’re one of those readers who won’t
pause to Google mid-read, I’ll summarize.
Mold-a-Rama
was founded in the early 1960s in Chicago (and debuted at the 1964 World’s
Fair), and today it’s owned by a family business that’s run out of a house in
Brookfield, Illinois. The owner—Bill Jones—and his two sons—Bill Jr. and
Paul—are charged with maintaining these machines, the most-recently built of which
dates back to 1964. It’s their dedication that keeps this little piece of the
past alive.
After
I delivered this last news to Shannon, she paused before she spoke.
“Can
we please watch the rest of the show now?”
My
obsession might have ended there, but a couple of weeks later I happened to be
visiting Chicago and I found myself killing time in the suburb of Downers
Grove, where I grew up. I wandered into the library and was greeted by the
sight of glass display cases where local kids had put their collections on
display. There was a toy car collection, a Pez dispenser collection, a doll
collection, and then this one, belonging to a “Teddy N”:
I don’t have any Mold-a-Rama
animals any more, but even at its height, my collection would have paled in
comparison to his. In mine, animals were always in some state of injury—the
panther's tail missing, the gorilla’s hand snapped off, the elephant’s base
cracked. And it wasn’t nearly as comprehensive; I’m embarrassed to say that I
had no vehicles and not even a single dinosaur (somehow, I was in my twenties
before I ever visited the Field Museum). And I certainly didn’t have (but would
have fiercely coveted) this boss Komodo Dragon:
I don’t know anything about Teddy
N. other than his name (though, based on his writing, I can ballpark his age),
but I have a feeling that we would be great friends, he and I.
Needless to say, I
immediately texted pictures of Teddy N.’s collection to Shannon with the words
“SEE?!!” I felt vindicated.
Alas,
the feeling was short-lived. She texted back a blunt, withering question: “Why
can’t you be interested in normal things?”
She’s
referring, of course, to my obsession with “junk” (her word, not mine) from the
past—comic books, record albums, sports cards, monster/superhero models. In
what has become an ongoing haranguing conversation, she suggests that I
just get rid of the stuff.
At these moments, I could use a friend like Teddy N.
But I have to do without him and explain that these things aren’t junk; they’re
valuable artifacts of the past. My past. Because, really, so much of my
past—like anyone’s—is either going or already gone. Those collections are a way
to hold on to something. That’s why I’ve bought back issues of some of the
comics I had as a kid (but that my mom threw out)—especially old issues of The Incredible Hulk, and why I’ve bought and builtmodels I had as a kid, and why Shannon has caught
me more than once spending the better part of an afternoon watching 1970s TV
themes on Youtube.
I
don’t imagine that Teddy N. is reading this, but if he is, I hope that he
listens to what I have to tell him. Keep that collection safe. As you grow up,
move it from place to place with you, and don’t ever rent an apartment or buy a
house without making sure that there’s room for it somewhere. If it’s important
enough to you now to let the good folks at the Downers Grove Public Library put
it on display, then it’s going to be important to you later on. Trust me on
this.
But
something tells me that Teddy N. is the kind of kid that knows this already.
1. I am proud to say I still have my original 1970's Brookfield Zoo blue dolphin!
ReplyDelete2. The momentary finger wax burn is always worth it.
3. I didn't know these originated at Brookfield Zoo. Thank you for the background info!
4. Teddy is obviously a very cool kid.
5. Will you be at the reunion? Wanna get a group and go to the zoo? Bring your quarters!
I can't believe you still have a dolphin (and I thought I was a packrat)! Not sure about the reunion, though I guess I need to look into that soon if it's gonna happen...
DeleteThanks for reading!