Tue, 3 April 2007 ![]() It's a whole new month and I'm back to a more theme-less Peel Here. This week I thought I'd dip back into 1979 and share a bunch of Buck Rogers in the 25th Century stickers. I have a bunch of vague memories of watching this show from when I was about three or four, but for the life of me I don't recall all that much about the plot besides what the tag line on the DVD set says. I remember a cool looking hawk guy, Erin Gray (mostly because of her stint in Silver Spoons), and Twiki the annoying robot saying stuff like "B-b-b-but B-b-b-buck!" and "Deebee deebee deebee" (which, even though it was annoying, it was done by Mel Blanc, so I have to give it some credit.) When I looked the show upon IMDB, the whole subplot of Buck hooking up with the Draconians, Princess Ardala, and the whole conspiracy to have Buck lead them to Earth was a complete mystery to me, so maybe I didn't watch the show as much as I thought. In fact, when I tracked these stickers down and took a good look at what I had, I really didn't remember most of what was pictured, and I think it's because they're scenes from this plot. One of these days I plan on renting these DVDs from Netflix as buying the set is out of the question. I have a hard enough time paying $25 for a nostalgia DVD set, let alone the $75 price tag that the set is listed at. I guess for right now I'll just have to be happy with the stickers themselves. First up we have four packages of somewhat miss-colored puffy stickers (called Puffy Stick-A-Toons), which were manufactured by the Imperial Toy Corporation in 1979. Most of these images were stripped from a single piece of promotional (or production) art that we'll get to in a minute. Now, all my memories of Twiki have him as silver, though both here and on the original production painting he's painted gold with a silver faceplate. I know that there was a pilot movie for the series that I think aired separately, and when I flipped though some fan sites I saw Twiki as both silver and pale gold, so I'm not sure but maybe he was gold for the movie and silver for the series. ![]() The space fighters look pretty hideous here though, all multi colored with miss matched pairings of baby blue and pink flesh. Like a lot of puffy sticker series most of the stickers are offered in multiple sizes through out the different packages, so that's kid of cool. I was always a fan of multiple stickers so that I could keep some in a photo album and stick the rest elsewhere. I also think it's kind of cool that they've supplied space fighter stickers in practically every angle imaginable. ![]() ![]() Now for the second part of today's Buck Rogers fest, I present the entire 1979 Topps sticker card set and both card-back puzzles. These stickers showcase some of the more 70's-esque styling that Topps was employing such as weird die-cuts on the cards and simple background drawings, I assume to make the card collecting more exciting. They did much the same thing with the Mork and Mindy set, though those had a field of stars in the background that might have been a little better suited with this set. ![]() There were 22 sticker cards in this sub-set of the regular series of cards, which is a pretty common number for Topps as they're fond of having the subsets be a multiple of 11. I think it's kind of weird though, that only two of the stickers are in the more traditional "die-cut with heavy border around the character" form, as that type was pretty much the standard for Topps all throughout the 70's on up until the 90's. ![]() ![]() There were two puzzles with this set, and there were no duplicate card backs, so by completing the sticker sub-set you had just enough for both puzzles, and one of each of these "How your completed puzzle should look" card backs. ![]() Puzzle A, the red-bordered puzzle, is my favorite being a nice blow-up of a piece of promotional/production art from the series. Most of the merchandising, video, and DVD covers have used this art in one form or another, not to mention the puffy stickers above. I kind of wich Topps had gone with a larger puzzle instead of breaking it into two because I know that there is a lot more to this artwork. ![]() The B puzzle, which was blue bordered, was a little bit less on the cool side. Featuring Buck in a ridiculous Draconian (I'm assuming) helmet, it's a lot less stellar that the A puzzle. ![]() Next week on Peel Here, "Sweep the leg, Johnny!" Category: Peel Here Volume 2 -- posted at: 11:17 AM Comments[0] |































