For the people who are getting recommended this video, allow me to explain: This is a Canadian commercial from the 90s that is meant to teach kids to ask their parents before they eat something they find in their home, because it might be something dangerous like medicine pills, cough syrup, or cleaning products. "Don't put it in your mouth."
They should do that when the Winnipeg Jets play the New York Islanders (this commercial aired in Winnipeg and the were not candy one is from Long Island)
Yes folks this is real. This was on tv all the time when I was a kid in the 90s here in southern Ontario, Canada. It is the source of all my nightmares.
Lower Mainland (Vancouver and surrounding cities), B.C., also...it was fantastic...my fave was the house hippo though and I do miss seeing that as a random commercial now and then; tbh I feel like they need to bring that back too many people have forgotten that not everything on the internets and tv is real and to do your own research folks
No joke just showed it to my dog that got something stuck in his gut lol I figured can't hurt might help reinforce not to do that in the future in case the pain and whatnot wasn't enough
Hear that ladies (and gay men), always ask before putting dicks in your mouth, men hate having their dicks put in mouths without their consent. Ugh it's the worst
Honestly. everyone is saying how disturbing this is but I just think they are goofy and sweet looking. I adore puppets, these guys might be a tad uncanny but they aren't anything I'd be scared of when I was little.
Who else is here randomly? I just found this after finding other videos like this that are over 10 year old, and comme4cial themselves look over 20 years old. Also puppets primarily.
@@niamhgreatdane Considering the medical advice that Captain Covfefe has been giving, they need to bring this back, put it on US networks, AND have it play as an emergency alert.
@MacKinley you realize i was born in 1998 and im 21 right. Don't blame my generation, I grew up on this commercial loll, blame anything born after 2000
This song has stayed with me my entire life. I can’t tell if it’s just because it’s a good kids’ song or if it’s because I was traumatized by these blue puppets
Same. It's because youtube tells us what to watch. JUST DONT CLICK ANYMORE RANDOM SHIT. They're owning us rn. We're giving them ad time, views, blah blah blah. I'm going to rumble.
It's brought us all together, lol. We are now the blue pill contingent of RU-vid. Wait a minute.... We are getting blue pilled! It's all subliminal political trickery! Like that Chinese balloon! Run away run away!
... poison is very easy to find for a baby, all those chemicals under the sink for example. They're brightly colored and many smell good, some even taste good (lead paint is sweet like candy aparently). Toddlers and small children need to be told the brutal truth or else they won't learn.
This is the time of year most babies poison themselves due to being inside the house all the time due to cold weather. I once had a sister who ate the lawn fertilizer in the garage and died, luckily I wasn't born yet so never met her but my parents said she was a nice baby.
I was looking for it because another video used the song. (before I found the video I thought the other video was something kinky but apparently it was based in part on the video)
I like how most people here reminiscing about this aren't even Canadians who saw this appear on TV like me. I'm pretty sure this is cultural appropriation and I demand our innuendo PSAs be kept sacred.
BikerBoyNJ You got that right. How dare you be born in the time and place you had no choice over and use the institutional power I accuse you of having with no hard evidence to STEAL my culture! Non-Canadians who sing about what's okay to put in your mouth are just CREEPY, and as a tolerant Liberal I think they should be executed.
"You could get sick. Ick!" NC: "Really? We're trying to think of words that rhyme with sick, and that's the best one you can come up with in this scenario?" LOL.
I'm teaching a course on radiation safety, and found an opportunity to use this in one of my lectures. This is either going to go over very well, or land with an audible *THUD* if they don't get the reference.