Featuring 900 color photographs, this book provides a complete listing and updated price guide for thousands of toys, promotional items, and other McDonald's collectibles distributed in the United States from January, 1990 through mid-1998.--Back cover.
Here is the thorough list and newly updated price guide for the thousands of toys and collectibles distributed by McDonald's restaurants with Happy Meal*r boxes and bags, given out in all countries around the world except the U.S. (they are in the companion volume). Thousands of all-color photographs show the toys, boxes, bags, advertising materials, buttons, pins, value range and variations.
Provides a complete listing and price guide of toys, promotional items, and other collectibles offered by McDonald's from June 1979 until the end of 1989. Highlights include check-off boxes to organize and document your own collection and brief historical comments that trace the incredible growth of the McDonald's Corporation through the 1980s.
The toys distributed by the McDonald's Corporation from its start in 1955 through the creation of the Happy Meal concept in 1979 are described here with over 850 photographs and stories about the McDonaldland characters, slogans, signs, and themes. Check-off boxes and index are provided to help in organizing your own collection, plus the authors' established numbering system is used to identify all items in the book.
From Happy Meal prizes to special promos, the colorful and kitschy collectibles from that most American of institutions, McDonald's "TM", are featured here.
This is the only book that combines McDonald's Happy Meals collectibles with miscellaneous items. Over 1,000 color photos feature giveaways, advertising and restaurant materials with toys and manufacturer items. The book lists dates, sizes, marks and current collector values for both unpackaged and in-package items. Photos.
Popular toys that have been offered as premiums by "fast food" restaurants, including vehicles and sports items, are presented in this new addition with current values. Photographs show the groups in alphabetical order by restaurant names from Arby's, Burger King, and Hardee's to McDonald's, Wendy's and many more.
Don’t eat this groundbreaking, hilarious book—but if you care about your country’s health, your children’s, and your own, you better read it. For thirty days, Morgan Spurlock ate nothing but McDonald’s as part of an investigation into the effects of fast food on American health. The resulting documentary earned him an Academy Award nomination and broke box-office records worldwide. But there’s more to the story, and in Don’t Eat This Book, Spurlock examines everything from school lunch programs and the marketing of fast food to the decline of physical education. He looks at why fast food is so tasty, cheap, and ultimately seductive—and interviews experts from surgeons general and kids to marketing gurus and lawmakers, who share their research and opinions on what we can do to offset a health crisis of supersized proportions.