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Retro-graphic Evidence: Xardion Lives!
Retro-graphic Evidence
“Xardion Lives!”
Around the same time I that I decided to begin sorting through old photos, my brother came by for a visit. It was Christmas Eve, and we were preparing for our grand feast of the seven fishes, so there wasn’t a whole lot of time to reminisce. But somewhere between pulling the innards out of calamari and chopping garlic, Mike and I dug a few envelopes from the now infamous suitcase of photographs.
Upon discovery of this next picture, I exclaimed, “Man I wish I still had that shirt!”
“You remember that shirt?” my brother asked, surprised.
“Sure,” I said, and went on to explain that I had won the Xardion shirt in a contest.
Mike laughed at me. You see, it’s been a long-standing joke that I’m obsessed with mail, contests, and collecting things. At any given opportunity, I would send out for mail-in prizes. Sometimes that meant collecting cereal box tops, sometimes it meant Kool Aid points, and other times it meant entering giveaways. No matter what, I sought to receive a package every day of my life. (This of course was long before I knew that the mail could be used for evil, like bills and junk mail).
I can turn around right now and spot at least a couple items from my childhood. I can see the signed Tony the Tiger baseball and an envelope from the Burger King Kids Club, for instance. So when I casually mentioned to Mike that even though I don’t have the shirt anymore, I definitely still have the envelope it came in, I expected him to believe me.
He did not.
“Why would you still have the envelope? That’s ridiculous.”
“I swear!”
“Yeah, right.”
“How about this,” I challenged. “I bet you five bucks I can find it in less than one minute.”
He hesitated, perhaps aware that I rarely make a bet I can’t win. But after only a moment’s consideration, he shook my hand. “You’re on.”
Mike was right to be suspicious. But it was too late. The deal was done. I ran off and dug through my closet. I pulled out a shoe box and rummaged through it. Not there. No wait, I remembered. Back to the closet, an old airplane model box. I opened it and pulled out a number of old pieces of paper, envelopes, and yes, there! I booked back down the stairs. Mike hit a button on his cell phone and turned it so I could read: 57 seconds. I had made it!
He said, “So? You find it?”
And that’s when I unveiled the keepsake.
He read the letter and shook his head. He handed me a fiver. “You’ve got a problem, dude.”
“Yeah,” I replied. “I have to figure out how to spend your five bucks!”
Footnote: In preparation for this article, I did some minor research on Xardion, because honestly, I had no idea what it was. I’d apparently only entered the contest because it was through the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtle Magazine. What I found is that Xardion was a Super Nintendo game. I, of course, had opted for the Sega Genesis, and so missed out on many SNES games. It is one of my few regrets.
onipar Posted on Jul 10, 2015 at 03:11 AM
Thanks, Hoju! I agree, and I still enter as many as many as I can. It's too much fun not to. Ah, cool shirt! I only have a few left from my childhood.
Hoju Koolander Posted on Jul 09, 2015 at 04:25 AM
Great story. Contests and Sweepstakes were awesome as a kid, especially to toy store runs, but I also just love treasured shirts of childhood. I had a shirt that said Pope Tour on it, listing all the destination cities for Pope John Paul II. I'm not Catholic, he was just a pop culture icon to me. I finally broke down and bought one on eBay a few years back. Doesn't even fit, but I love it.
onipar Posted on Jul 08, 2015 at 04:12 PM
Yeah, the wait was killer. Probably partly why I entered so many things. I won quite a few contests back in the day. I won a Wolverine figure through the Fox Kid's Club, and a grand prize from Nickelodeon. I actually still have those prizes too. Perhaps the topic of a future article? :-)
pikachulover Posted on Jul 07, 2015 at 05:39 AM
I would always send away for Koolaid points stuff and occasionally enter contests, but I usually never won anything.
massreality Posted on Jul 07, 2015 at 01:46 AM
Man, I hated that six-eight week turn around for stuff you ordered back then.
Vaporman87 Posted on Jul 06, 2015 at 06:52 PM
I was probably not as big a "mail-in" nut as you, but I know that I was always ecstatic when something arrived in the mail box that I knew was the result of my efforts to get such items. Typically from cereal boxes, but sometimes from toys and other products. The hardest part was the wait. You would be so excited for something, mail out the necessary documents, and then expect your prize to arrive an hour later. It didn't take long for me to simply forget I had even made the effort at all. Then, like six weeks later, there would be the prize. That excitement would instantly come back, and just make may day.
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