I guess Hasbro released a few Sea Ponies and then killed off the subline because of disappointing sales. A lot of toy lines have their spinoffs that seem like a fantastic idea at first, then the sales numbers start rolling in and they realize they should have gone in another direction.
I bought a frame for my first published piece of writing. It was a Cracked.com Photoshop contest, but it's mostly writing, and they published it, so it counts. I bought a new frame for my first rejection letter as well, because I can't find the one I bought years ago. It's empty because I haven't received a rejection letter yet. Although, I just submitted a poem to Poetry Magazine because I'm required to for my creative writing class, so I should have one in 6 to 8 weeks, then I'll be a real writer!
They are in your mother's attic next to your hula-hoop and lite-brite that you only used once and you used it to make a swear word.
This one. I'm #5. A bunch of people in the comments said it should have been #1, and those people are awesome. Especially this: I'm not the only one here who has been in one. I remember seeing Trekker4747's name once, but I don't remember which one. I'm sure he knows though.
No, that's your My Little Pony collection, hula hoop, and Lite Brite, and your mom's attic. My mom doesn't have an attic.
I think I did play with the Lite Brite only a few times, but that was because it was really my big brother and sister's toy. You know, the thing I remember playing the most was Robin Hood. I used to make my own bows and arrows out of sticks, ivy vines, and found feathers. When I was 9 I brought one to school for show and tell. It was my best one, and could shoot 50 feet.
^ I once made the Battlestar Galactica out of the styrofoam from a box of ice cream cones. I used a poker chip for the "window".
I once found a way to play Star Trek with G.I. Joe figures. I was a creative and pretty warped little boy. I just pretended that the Joe gang were Enterprise landing party officers wearing military-style protective gear and helmets. Don't ask why the Enterprise armory had bazookas and shotguns, though.
Playing around with a new camera-app on my ancient (= four years old) phone the other night, I took this of the dig the town has turned our street into: