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Category Archives: Street Lifestyle

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As a kid my big thing was…

Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on April 4, 2006 by Streetplay DiscussionsMay 9, 2019
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As a kid my big thing was horror. I drew horror comics, hung horror posters in my room, and collected an impressive assortment of horror related toys. I made my own super-8 movies about axe murderers, the dead coming back to life and aliens in miniature spaceships who could render you horribly deformed with a blast of their ray guns. My notebooks were filled with drawings of freaks, multi-limbed oddities and all sorts of straight-jacketed loonies. I wasn’t just a ghoulish kid, mind you – as this was juxtoposed against my other interests of a more joyful nature such as The Beatles, The Marx Bros, super heros and the like. But if I spotted anything creepy or strange in my neighborhood candy and magazine store, my eyes would instantly light up and I would start digging in my pockets to see if I could afford it. An old after school haunt of mine was a small candy shop in Queens Village known only as “Helen’s”. I used to go there to get my “Wacky Packages” bubble gum cards. It was run by a cantankerous old woman who was suspicious of just about any kid she didn’t know who would wander in for an egg cream or a comic book. Even though I had been there hundreds of times I was usually rushed to make my purchase and get out, along with the rest of them – but she always had these dusty old model kits in the back of her store which I’d always gravitate to. The old Universal Monsters of yesteryear were Gods in my eyes… and I eagerly assembled and painted my horror model kits with the care and detail of a fine surgeon. I had ’em all… Frankenstein, The Werewolf, The Phantom of the Opera, Dracula, Godzilla and King Kong. These kits came with alternate glow in the dark heads and hands… which I always thought was pretty damn cool. I also collected the lesser known, but even more intriguing Aurora Monster Scenes kits which included Doctor Deadly, The Hanging Cage, The Pendulum and the beautiful Vampirella, also with interchangable arms and legs. Also available was “the victim”, a plastic model kit of a scantly clad woman in hot pants and a torn blouse, that I’d assumed, was intended for the hanging cage. Today, of course, in our politically correct environment – you’d NEVER see toys like this again! One of Queens Village’s best kept secrets was the basement of Stevens department store on Hillside Avenue (now long gone) where, similiar to Helen’s, also seemed to have it’s share of creepy, long forgotten toys. Sort of the land of Misfit toys, I’d say! It was there my older brother bought me one of the creepiest toys I still own today – a ventriloquist doll made by the old Juro company, famous for it’s Jerry Mahoney knock-offs. With his unblinking stare and wearing his dapper little red suit – he was the sort of toy you couldn’t tear your eyes from – yet he was petrifying. It was the same sort of ventriloquist dummy you’d see coming to life in those old, black n’ white Twilight Zone episodes. He must’ve felt right at home sitting up there on my shelf, alongside my other toys of horror. Alas, the great monsters of yesterday have all but dissappeared. Even a trip to Universal Studios last summer left me gravely dissapointed (excuse the pun!) as the store where I had previously bought my wolfman head drinking cup, my animated battery-operated Frankenstein and my Dracula doll – was sadly monster deprived. The nearest thing to a ghoul were their plush mummy figures from the recent Brendan Fraser movies – almost as cute and cuddly as their Shrek dolls. Not the same thing, I’m afraid. Today, these horror model kits sell for big bucks on eBay, and those old ventriloquist dummies can fetch anything up to $300-500 bucks a piece. During my earliest introduction to the internet auction scene I ended up being reunited with many of my childhood “friends” once again – and more recently I was thrilled to meet and talk to some other ghoulish icons from my past at the Big Apple Comic Con this April, the alluring Elvira – Mistress of the Dark, and George Romero, the legendary director of “Night Of The Living Dead”. I was in monster heaven. Once a ghoul enthusiast, always a ghoul enthusiast.

Posted in Ace King Queen, Food & Drink, Johnny on the Pony, Locales, Queens, Toys | Tagged egg cream, Queens Village, Summer

I said a piece a plum a…

Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on March 31, 2006 by Streetplay DiscussionsOctober 20, 2014
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I said a piece a plum a piece of bubble gum n mo piece no plum no piece of bubble gum I like cofee I like cream I like a color and like me so step back white boy you dont shine ima get black boyfriend to beat your behind last night the night before I met my boyfriend at the candy store he bought me ice cream he bought me cake he bought me home with a stomach ache i said mama mama im so sick call the doctor quick quick quick doctor doctor will I die he said count to 5 and youll be alive 12345 im alive see that house on tom of that hill thats where me and my boyfriend live cook that chicken burn that rice come on baby lets shoot some dice that how me and my cousins do it

Posted in Food & Drink, Girl games | Tagged candy store, songs

I LOVE COFFEE I love…

Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on February 26, 2006 by Streetplay DiscussionsOctober 20, 2014
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I LOVE COFFEE I love coffee I love tea I love {boy’s name} and he loves me [or] I love the boys and they love me [or] I love a Black boy and he loves me so step back White boy you don’t shine I’mma get a Black boy to beat your behind **** [the rest of this handclap rhyme then goes] I met my boyfriend at the candy store. He bought me ice-cream, he bought me cake, he brought me home with a belly-ache. Mamma, Mamma, I feel sick. Call the doctor – quick, quick, quick. Doctor, Doctor, will I die? Count to five and you’ll be alive. 1-2-3-4-5. I’m alive. **** [I’m posting this especially for Anonymous on Tuesday, September 19, 2000 – 12:47 pm who said ” I came to this site, hoping to find the first line to a verse — someone typed it here, but the first line is still missing”… These are some first lines for that rhyme. The last example is the way I’ve heard it most often in Pittsburgh, PA in late 1980s and now; I’ve seen that version on other websites too].

Posted in Clap and Rhyme, Food & Drink, Girl games | Tagged candy store

Here’s another version of…

Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on February 11, 2006 by Streetplay DiscussionsOctober 20, 2014
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Here’s another version of Down Down Baby {also known as Shimmy Shimmy Co Co Pa}. This one comes from Tanya who lives near Atlanta, Ga, but I’ve collected other similar versions from Pittsburgh, PA and other cities: Down, down, baby down by the roller coaster Sweet, sweet baby I’ll never let you go Shemie, shemie coco butter, shemie shemie pop I like coffee, I like tea, I like a black boy and he likes me So step back white boy, you don’t shine I’ll get a black boy to beat your behind Last night and the night before I met my boyfriend at the candy store He bought me ice cream he bought me cake He brought me home with a belly ache Mama, mama, I feel sick Call the doctor, quick, quick, quick Doctor, doctor, will I die Close your eyes and count to five 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, I’m Alive!

Posted in Food & Drink, Girl games | Tagged candy store, songs

Played stick ball at PS…

Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on December 15, 2005 by Streetplay DiscussionsOctober 20, 2014
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Played stick ball at PS 46 in Bayside (Queens) N.Y. from 1960-1967. The ‘field’ consisted of the fence (used for the handball court) behind home plate (that was drawn on the ground), a fence from home plate with a distance of approximately 125-175 feet (it ran on a diagonal) and a fence (that was the foul pole) that ran down the right side of the field until it met the other fence in the right corner of the field. The foul pole on the left side of the field was a post on the fence approximately 175 feet from home plate. The pitcher stood approximately 50-60 feet away from home plate. There was no running. The batter would hit the ball and the result would be as follows: 1. A grounder caught by the pitcher was an out. 2. A grounder not caught by the pitcher was a single. 3. A fly ball caught by the pitcher was an out. 4. A fly ball that landed between the pitcher and the fence was a double. 5. A fly ball that hit the fence was a triple. 6. A fly ball over the fence was a home run. I used a number of bats that I purchased for 59 or 69 cents at the local candy store. These bats came in a variety of colors, were regulation size and width and of course they had the unmistakable black tape wrapped around the upper portion of the bat. The ball used was either a Spaldeen or a Pensie Pinkie. What a great game.

Posted in Food & Drink, Queens, Stickball, Stickball rules | Tagged candy store, Pennsy Pinkie, spaldeen types

Love this site! I grew…

Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on October 31, 2005 by Streetplay DiscussionsNovember 19, 2014
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Love this site! I grew up in Astoria, very familiar with “Last Licks” and “Chips on the Ball”. The home team, or team batting in the bottom of the inning was the team who got “Last licks”. “Chips on the Ball” meant, if the ball was lost or split ( Spaldings had way of splitting at the seams) the person who hit it had to give the guy who brought the ball money to buy a new one.

Posted in Locales, Queens, Stickball, Street Lifestyle | Tagged Astoria, chips on the ball, I grew up..., last licks

Gary, I grew up in Howard…

Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on October 30, 2005 by Streetplay DiscussionsNovember 19, 2014
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Gary, I grew up in Howard Beach , Queens and although 12 years your senior, even “back then” we used the term ‘chips on the ball’. Which indictaed the owner of the ball expected to be re-imbumbursed or have the ball replaced by anyone who caused it be lost (sewer, roof top), or broken. And I agree with your definition of “last licks”. Don’t see why anything one of the Yankee announcers (corporate shills) say should bother you. The default is that they’re wrong. I’ve been a Yankee fan since 1956 and this is the worst crew (by far) they’ve ever had.

Posted in Queens, Stickball, Street Lifestyle | Tagged chips on the ball, I grew up..., last licks

First I’d like to thank this…

Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on October 30, 2005 by Streetplay DiscussionsNovember 13, 2014
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First I’d like to thank this site. I was startled at my job that no one who I eat lunch with was familiar with the expression “chips on the ball” even though a few are my contemporaries (I’m 43), and they insisted “it must have been a Mineola thing.” I proved them wrong via your site. I am now seeking to clear up something that bothered me a lot this baseball season–hearing Yankee announcer Michael Kay referring to the 9th inning as being “last licks” for both teams. My childhood interpretation from our neighborhood was that ONLY the home team could get “last licks”, because they were the last to have an opportunity to bat. Indeed, in our neighborhood stickball contests, the ONLY advantage of being designated the home team was that you had last licks and the other team didn’t. What say you? Please reply either publicly or privately. Gary callisto [at] optonline [dot] net

Posted in Stickball, Street Lifestyle | Tagged chips on the ball, last licks

Hey, Loved playing Cracktop…

Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on October 19, 2005 by Streetplay DiscussionsFebruary 16, 2019
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Hey, Loved playing Cracktop as a kid growing up in the Ravenswood projects on 21 st. and 35 ave. in Astoria It involved the use of small wooden tops. We would get in a circle and spin all of our tops at the same time. The first top to come to a stop on it’s side was the top that was put in the middle of our circle. Then each of us in turn would try to “Crack” the top in the middle by hitting it with our top as hard as we could as we threw it to spin it. If you hit the top in the middle on your throw and your top kept spinning, you were good till next turn. If you hit the top or missed and your top did not spin, it was your turn in the middle. But if you missed the top in the middle, as your top was spinning you could pick it up in the palm of your hand ( the top had to remain spinning all the while ) and drop it on the top in the middle, if yours kept spinning after that, you were good to go. We had hours of fun playing this game and we became quite adept at hitting and even Cracking the tops in the middle. We would show off the Paint of other tops that would rub off on ours after hitting them. We also had a name for hitting the top in the middle. I have no freakin idea where it came from, but we called it a ” Kosky ” LOL I have no clue what that means, but when we hit the top in the middle it was called a Kosky! Hope this brings back some good memories, it does for me.

Posted in Locales, Other Games, Queens, Toys | Tagged "The Projects", Astoria, cracktop, Ravenswood, tops and yo-yos

My Candy stores were: …

Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on August 12, 2005 by Streetplay DiscussionsOctober 20, 2014
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My Candy stores were: Oscar’s On Kings Highway right off Ocean Parkway. Even into the 70s, they used to jerk the soda, and serve it in a little paper cup with plastiuc holder. They also always had one pinball game. Near PS 215, we went to Nats. It was right on the corner of east 3rd Street and Kings Highway. Great Lunch Special. There was Nat, a heavy chef guy, and some women that did the register. Anyone else from Kings Highway?

Posted in Food & Drink, Locales | Tagged candy store

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