The Incredible Crash Dummies (Master System)

Channel:
Subscribers:
682
Published on ● Video Link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_eifcMVOh4E



Duration: 26:49
55 views
1


▶ If you don't subscribe right now nothing bad will happen to you honestly you'll be fine
▶Thanks for watching and if it's not too much trouble hit that like button, it helps a bunch!

I hope no dummies were harmed in the making of this video or did they


**From the Manual**

- Hello! I am Spin.

- And me, Slick. We are a couple of fools.

To tell the truth, we are stunt doubles, people specialized in accidents. We don't get paid very well for this, but we like it. In reality, we just want to remind people that they must wear seat belts. So, we put our lives at risk with some collisions and collisions to demonstrate our ideas.

— We've been working hard, but it seems like there's still a lot of work to be done because people forgetting to use their seat belts. This means that there is still lots of work to do.

— That's right, Spin. But I'm blown away by everything we've been doing lately. Maybe we could take some vacation and discover a very beautiful beach to cause some accidents for one week. The problem is that saving for a traveling is not that easy, especially with the skyrocketing auto parts prices!

~ And what are we going to do?

Why don't we get some extra work, Slick?

- It's a good idea! But I think that for guys like us It will not be very easy for us to get a job as a bus driver or parking valet. What to do, Spin? Will we never be able to go on vacation?

~ Now, be optimistic, Slick! We have a lot of work waiting. The better we do at these jobs, the better We'll be paid — and we'll be able to go on vacation sooner!


**Trivia**

The Incredible Crash Dummies is a line of action figures designed by David McDonald and Jim Byrne, styled after the eponymous crash test dummy popularized in a public service advertising campaign of the late 1980s, to educate people on the safety of wearing seat belts. The toys were first released by Tyco Toys in the early 1990s and discontinued in 1994. From 2004 on, a new series of animated shorts involving the crash dummies was produced and the action figures subsequently revived under the Hot Wheels brand, another subdivision of Mattel.