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Tickle Me Elmo is a child's toy from Tyco, introduced in the United States in 1996, becoming that year's top fad. Bright red in color and based on Elmo, a Muppet character from Sesame Street, when squeezed, Elmo would chortle. When squeezed three times in a row, Elmo would begin to shake and laugh hysterically. On its back is a velcro access slit wherein the batteries reside.

In 1996, the Tickle Me Elmo was the "Must Have" toy. Many parents literally fought other parents in North American toy stores to purchase one of the toys for Christmas. The short supply of the toy, due to unexpected demand, meant that stores hiked the price on the dolls drastically. Newspaper classifieds even sold the plush toy for hundreds of US dollars. People reports that the USD$28.99 toy fetched as much as $1500., accessed in EBSCOhost.

A clerk at the Wal-Mart in Fredericton, New Brunswick was among those injured by "Elmo-mania". A crowd of 300 stampeded into the store on 14 December 1996; spotting him with one of the remaining toys, he "was pulled under, trampled—the crotch was yanked out of my brand-new jeans." According to People, the clerk "suffered a pulled hamstring, injuries to his back, jaw and knee, a broken rib and a concussion.", accessed in EBSCOhost.

The vibrating laughter produced by the Tickle Me Elmo uses the same motorized device found in many cellular phones and used for vibrate mode.How Stuff Works: How does a vibrating cell phone or pager work?

Further Tickle Me toys


By February 1997, Tickle Me Ernie and Tickle Me Big Bird toys were released, followed by Tickle Me Cookie Monster in May., accessed in EBSCOhost. None of these toys achieved nearly as much fame, or sales.

The "Surprise Edition" of Tickle Me Elmo, issued in the Fall of 2001, was an elaborate contest. Five of the "Surprise Edition" Elmos stopped laughing on 9 January 2002, and announced to the people squeezing them that they had won a prize. The grand prize was US$200,000.

TMX

The new Elmo doll, announced at the American Toy Fair 2006, is called TMX (meaning Tickle Me (Elmo) Ten or Tickle Me Extreme). The full look of the doll won't be revealed until it gets onto shelves on 19 September 2006. It will require six AA batteries, and cost USD$40. Toy experts say that the delay is unprecedented, with only a few people in the media allowed to preview the product, all signing confidentiality agreements. In a promotional clip, Jim Silver, co-publisher of Toy Wishes magazine says "The first reaction I had was, 'Where are the wires?' Because I didn't think anything like that could move on its own."

Toy analyst Chris Byrne told USA Today, "This is a quantum leap forward, another breakthrough in the preschool plush category." Byrne believes sales will be high, but the reaction won't be as unprecedented. "The culture has moved beyond that, the whole hot-toy phenomenon." He cites the fact there hasn't been such a craze since Furby in 1998. However, some members of the media are expecting a large response.

Toys R Us stores have already began a pre-sale program for the doll, along with elaborate in-store displays with a digital countdown to the doll's launch.

Tickle Me Elmo in culture


While Elmo has been referenced to or seen in three episodes of The Simpsons, the doll version of the character made an appearance in Moe's bar once. Elmo slaps Moe in the episode, after Moe tries to fondle him, yelling "No means no to Elmo!"

Tickle Me Elmo was the subject of an art exposition at the Ronald Feldman Gallery, in New York City, in September of 2003. Kelly Heaton, the artist, engineered a vibrating coat out of dissected Tickle Me Elmo dolls. The title of the show was Live Pelt.

Tickle Me Elmo has also appeared in Get Fuzzy. In the first cartoon, we find out Bucky Katt beat the stuffing out of it, causing $40 dollars worth of damage. Bucky explains, "It was laughin at me!"

On the religious parody website Landover Baptist, it was claimed that if Tickle Me Elmo is tickled on the crotch, between his "hairy red testicles" and posterior, instead of giggling, he would twitch and moan in a suggestive manner, squirting warm yogurt from its mouth.

In Jhonen Vasquez's comic SQUEE! there is a Tickle Me Elmo parody called "tickle me hellmo" which comes with many dark functions.

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Footnotes

External links

1990s fads | Sesame Street | 1996 introductions

 

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the "Tickle Me Elmo".

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