Friday, February 27, 2026
The Hallmark Millennium Time Capsule Ornament
Friday, January 30, 2026
Now, Bear With Me...
Where shopping is concerned, there's no institution more quintessentially British than Harrods Department Store in Knightsbridge, London. It began as a grocer and wholesaler in the 1830s, and from there, it expanded and grew until its profile became comparable to Marshall Field's in Chicago, or Macy's in New York.
Per Wikipedia, notable customers included Beatrix Potter, Dame Agatha Christie, Charlie Chaplin, and A.A. Milne, who bought for his son Christopher Robin the teddy bear that would go on to inspire Winnie-the-Pooh.
Almost every department store has had an annual Christmas teddy bear. This is the 2000 edition of Harrods', and I found it at a secondhand shop in Ford City Mall, which is set to be demolished some time this year. Sad, really--I remember when it was a big thing, back in the 90s...
Sunday, January 25, 2026
A Plushie from the Elks Lodge
(I apologize for the smudge photos. I just had my phone outside in the cold, shoveling snow.)
The Elks Lodge is a fraternal order, not unlike the Masons and the Knights of Columbus, that has enjoyed more than 150 years of service throughout the United States. Headquartered in Chicago, Illinois, the Elks engage in community outreach and drug awareness programs, among many, many other acts of charity.
As an interesting side note, I found out on Wikipedia that their anthem is the signature tune of New Year's Eve: "Auld Lang Syne." Which brings us to this plush elk, which I found at the Family Discount Outlet on Milwaukee Avenue. He's all dressed up for the big night, when the clock strikes midnight and the date changes from 1999 to 2000. His cummerbund bears the Elks logo with "2000" underneath it, as well as the slogans "ELKS CARE, ELKS SHARE" and "SAY NO TO DRUGS."
I assume these were given out at some kind of a kid's event.
Saturday, January 24, 2026
Future Farmers of America Beanie Bear
Thursday, January 22, 2026
Annalee Mobilitee 2000 Doll
Wednesday, January 21, 2026
A simple gift bag.
I've had this gift bag ever since the Museum started back in 2012, but it never seemed to make its way onto the blog...until now.
It's a simple black bag with a satin texture, silver stars, Milky Way-esque spirals, and a "warping" starfield like Star Wars' hyperdrive effects in the background, evoking the idea that the 21st Century will involve new frontiers and exploration to further into space than we had ever dreamed.
All around the foreground, "HAPPY NEW YEAR 2000" is presented in futuristic, MICR number-inspired fonts, invoking greater use of computers than ever before.
There's not much else to say here, really.
Sunday, January 18, 2026
The Pillsbury Doughboy
When you think of baking, the first name that probably comes to mind is Pillsbury. Their ready-to-bake dough products have been well-known on supermarket shelves for as long as I can remember. I even managed to get their Crescent Rolls onto our Thanksgiving table for a few years on the strength of an ad campaign in which the Pilgrims had them on their table!
Grandma once told me a story about when she was in Chicago in about the mid-60s. Some gentlemen took her into a small room and played on a film projector the first commercial to feature their mascot, the Pillsbury Doughboy. After that, they asked her on a survey card what she thought. She must have liked him a great deal, because he went on to much fame and fortune! And he even went on to ring in the new millennium.
Saturday, January 10, 2026
The Sacagawea Dollar Coin
Friday, January 9, 2026
Sears Wish Book, 1999 and 2000 Editions
Hello, everyone, and welcome to our 200TH POST!
The Sears Wish Book. That most anticipated of direct-mail publications, rivaled only by Fingerhut's and J.C. Penney's annual volumes of Yuletide delights. Every year, it was like holding the key to Aladdin's Cave of Wonders in my hands, packed as it was to the brim with all the most fabulous presents a kid could open on Christmas day...or dream of opening.
Sears began as Sears, Roebuck, and Co. as a mail-order catalog at the beginning of the 20th Century, and later moved on to brick-and-mortar retail locations. For decades, Sears called the Windy City its home, and the skyscraper which once bore its name served as a broadcasting antenna for all of Chicago's television stations.
More than that, though, Sears represented stability. Ever since I was very little, Chicago Ridge Mall had Sears as its most prominent anchor store, and Dad used to get our cars checked up and repaired all the time at their auto center. The company made a good name for me by subsidizing children's fare on PBS like Mister Rogers' Neighborhood and also by backing the North American leg of Phil Collins' Both Sides of the World tour in 1995.
This past year, when the Chicago Ridge branch closed for good, the world felt a little less stable. Walking into the Spirit Halloween pop-up this past October felt oddly ghoulish in a way that it normally doesn't: Sears' corpse was still comparatively warm. In truth, we all know that the company's days were numbered following reports of competition within the company, its stores, and its subsidiaries--K-Mart's demise heralded the first tolling of the bells--but it's still saddening.
All right, let's get to it and rekindle some nostalgia with the 1999 and 2000 volumes. I chose 1999 because it seemed more likely to have some Millennium-themed goodies, and 2000 because it might hold more of the same, but as leftovers.
Thursday, January 8, 2026
Jack In The Box
Tuesday, January 6, 2026
Millennium Princess Teresa
Saturday, January 3, 2026
CNN 2000 (Part One)
I can't remember where this came from. It might have been eBay. It's something I always meant to post, but never got around to doing so.
Like the earlier ABC 2000 Millennium Highlights video, this is a compilation of New Year's 1999/2000 celebrations from all around the world.
CNN is the very first 24-hour cable news channel. The brainchild of media mogul Ted Turner, CNN launched on June 1st, 1980, which means that, this June, it will be on the near side of 50. It's frightening how swiftly the years fly by.
Since its debut, it has been ubiquitous in airports and hotel lobbies all around the world. That's pretty much my only experience with it, for we were antenna-only until the early 2010s. Well, that, and M's snarky quip in GoldenEye: "Unlike the Americans, we [at MI-6] prefer not to get our bad news from CNN."
Like the earlier ABC video, this begins on Millennium Island in Kiribati and moves across 26 time zones from New Zealand and Australia to Asia, Europe, Africa, the United Kingdom, and finally the United States.
The most notable moments, the ones that I personally found the most interesting:
In Australia, Sydney Harbour Bridge exploded with a gorgeous fireworks show all along its length, accompanied to a majestic orchestral arrangement of "Auld Lang Syne."
In South Korea ("the good side, where they make all the widgets," as my high-school Consumer Education teacher would have said), the news displayed the first 21st Century baby born in the country, while a huge pendulum swung for the Countdown.
In Hong Kong, the government's official celebration saw a wingsuit-clad Jackie Chan fly toward the stage on wires to deliver the keynote speech.
In Moscow, Boris Yeltsin passed the presidential torch to Vladimir Putin.
In Egypt, the Great Pyramids and the Sphinx--the last surviving Wonder of the World--basked in the glow of a fireworks show in a dusk-to-dawn celebration with a full soundtrack composed by Jean-Michel Jarre. The year 2000 marked Egypt's seventh millennium.
In South Africa, Nelson Mandela passed a presidential candle to his successor, Thabo Mbeki. He lit this candle in his former prison cell on Robben Island, where he served an 18-year sentence as a prisoner of conscience.
In Paris, the Eiffel Tower boasted a gorgeous pyrotechnics show, with sparklers beginning at its base, as if to resemble a shuttle preparing to launch, followed by a countdown fireworks going up along its length and top and, at the stroke of midnight, little comets shooting out from along the tower.
In a unified Berlin, the Brandenburg Gate lit up with fireworks and lasers. It's meaningful because Berlin spent most of the 20th Century carved in half, with a wall stretching for miles to separate the East and West. In fact, the Gate is where Ronald Reagan delivered his speech: "Mr. Gorbachev, tear down this wall!" The new, healed Berlin was only a little more than eleven years old in 2000.
In Rome, Pope John Paul II delivered his annual speech from St. Peter's Basilica. The Pope will become very important in a long-form book report for the Lenten season...stay tuned.
In London, the Millennium Dome, the world's largest domed structure, hosted a huge party, while the Queen of England lit a beacon in the Thames River, which in turn lit beacons elsewhere in England and in Scotland and Wales. 39 tons of fireworks erupted along the Thames in a 15-minute show that you could see from space.
In North America...ah, that one deserves its own article, because almost every state had its own celebration. The North America side of things gets very short shrift in this video, since we're all aware of Times Square and Las Vegas, and they all get their own local news coverage. This video served much more as a way of bringing the world's parties to American viewers.
Friday, January 2, 2026
Pheasant Run Millennium Dinner Plate
Unfortunately, the resort complex struggled in the late 2010s and especially during the COVID-19 pandemic. The management company couldn't find a new buyer, and it foundered. Two fires in 2022 and 2023 served as its funeral pyre.
(The Kane County area is well-known to my family. Ever since 1992 or so, we would make an annual trip to the Kane County Fairgrounds for their triannual toy show. Mom bought dolls, and I grew my Ghostbusters and later Doctor Who collections. The last time we went as a family was 2004; the last time Dad and I attended was 2021. The first thing I remember asking for was an ERTL Batmobile, which I still have.)
https://wildcatchronicle.org/25164/features/with-pheasant-run-demolished-st-charles-looks-for-new-development/
Thursday, January 1, 2026
A Brief History of Nabisco and Oreo Cookies
Ah, Oreo. That wonderful treat, two chocolate biscuits with cream between them. Now 113 years old, it seems they've been around for as long as anyone can remember, and they show no signs of going anywhere. Most of that staying power, I'd wager, is down to the name: it has a pleasant ring to it and it makes you smile every time you say it. No other cookie has become a staple of Americana in quite the way that Oreo has.
But what of Nabisco, that fine purveyor of Chips Ahoy, Nutter Butter, Chicken-in-a-Biskit, Ritz Crackers, and countless other goodies? Well, just sit down and hear a maritime tale. It all begins in 1792 with Pearson & Sons, which produced a foodstuff for sea voyages called "pilot bread," or, as it's more commonly called, hardtack, a dense, almost inedible biscuit most commonly used for military rations.
In 1889, a businessman named William Moore bought and merged Pearson & Sons along with five other companies to form the New York Biscuit Company; nearly a decade later, NYBC merged with rival American Biscuit and Manufacturing Company to form the National Biscuit Company. Over the years, Nabisco changed hands a few times, being owned by R.J. Reynolds in the 80s, Kraft in the 90s, and, finally, it became part of the Mondelez conglomerate in the 21st Century.
(Source: https://www.thoughtco.com/history-of-nabisco-1991760)
The Nabisco factory on 73rd and Kedzie has for decades been something of a historical landmark to those who live in and around my hometown of Evergreen Park, and long may it continue to stand.
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For as long as I can remember, Oreo cookies were sold in collector's tins with special artwork every Christmas season. Several companies engaged in similar promotions--Coca-Cola sells Coke in retro glass bottles to mimic the famous advertisement of Santa enjoying an ice-cold Coke instead of the traditional milk and cookies.
Here is the 1999 Millennium edition of the Oreo tin.






























