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Some
fads are based
on long-standing practices or activities and explode
into wide-scale popularity years later - such was the
case with the game of pogs.
The
game of pogs originated in the 1920s on the Hawaiian
island of Maui. There dairy workers played the game
during breaks using simple milkcaps. Almost 70 years
later, a Hawaiian schoolteacher reintroduced the game
and mass appeal soon followed.
Pogs,
(an acronym for a popular Hawaiian drink made from Passion
fruit, Oranges and Guava juices) is played
with disc-like object which have pictures on its face
side. Each player would take an equal number of pogs
and would stack at least four pogs one on top of another
with the faces down. One of the players would then take
a different-sized disc (called a slammer) and would
strike a stack of the pogs with it. Whichever pogs landed
faceup would be retained by that player. After each
player had taken their turn(s), the one with the most
pogs was the winner.
The
pogs came in many colors and styles with various emblems,
symbols or pictures on their faces. Originally, the
game gained popularity through word of mouth but as
it reached the mainland of the United States, its popularity
went through the roof. With a low price tag and multiplicity
of styles and colors, the pogs became a very popular
collectors item which children traded back and forth.
By 1995, the game had reached the pinnacle of its popularity.
While this put smiles on the faces of children, not
everyone was happy with the fad. Some school systems
banned the discs because of dangers with throwing the
slammer and because of overly aggressive play by some
of the children.
Pogs,
like the frisbee, show that
sometimes workers in their spare time can find the most
interesting use for the most ordinary of objects.
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