Fall in Love with Witch Squishmallows this Halloween

By admin

Squishmallows have become a popular toy choice for children and collectors alike. With their soft and squishy texture, these stuffed animals are loved for their huggable nature. Halloween is a festive holiday that allows people to unleash their creativity and dress up in different costumes. As a result, it's no surprise that Squishmallows have embraced the Halloween theme with spooky and cute characters. One popular figure for Halloween is the witch Squishmallow. The witch Squishmallow is a charming and enchanting creature.



The inside story of the NBA’s first and only father-son mascots

In two different countries, some 1,700 miles apart, two costumed men walked to the center of two basketball courts, turned their backs to their respective hoops and let a signature family shot fly.

One of those backward, halfcourt shots on Dec. 12, hurled by Nuggets mascot Rocky, splashed through the net at the Pepsi Center in Denver. The other one, launched by Pistons mascot Hooper, soared through Mexico City Arena before dropping into the basket.

For fans in attendance, the shots were entertainment, fleeting moments of admiration for an impressive feat. But to the two men who made them, a father and son who ply their craft hidden in costume, they represented something deeper, a shared connection 30 years in the making that only they have experienced.

“To have this line up like this is pretty wild,” said the man who performs as Rocky. “The moons had to align.”

That’s because the men who perform as Rocky and Hooper are believed to be the first father-and-son mascot duo in NBA history. Their story is largely unknown to the public because of the strict code of secrecy the mascot world demands. But with assurances their identities would be sealed, both men agreed to speak with The Athletic and share how their unique, anonymous trade became a family business. (We will call the father “Tom” and the son “Jack” to help with reading ease.)

“We chuckle about it every time we meet up,” Jack says. “It’s really cool to look at each other, and I know where he’s been and what he’s been through.”

Tom and Jack shared a work stage at last week’s All-Star Game in Chicago. The father had taken his son to major events like this before, long before Jack had decided to follow in Tom’s footsteps. They had even performed together at the French league all-star event in Paris, but last weekend was the first time they had performed as peers at an NBA All-Star Game, one of the pinnacles of the profession.

Success for mascots is measured in the joy they bring to others, but the weekend at the United Center also served as an opportunity for Tom and Jack to reflect on their own gratitude.

“To look over and see your son on the same court with you performing and just killing it, it’s such a proud moment,” Tom said. “It’s hard to describe, but it’s emotions of being proud and happy for him and just wondering what the future is going to be like for him in this world.”

Before he started performing as Rocky, Tom was The Wolf, the mascot at Basic High School in Henderson, Nev.

It was love at first pep rally.

“After seeing the San Diego Chicken, I said, ‘That guy has the job!’” he said. “I did have a background in mime, actually. … That’s how I got familiar with telling a story without talking. So I became my high school mascot, got a scholarship at a junior college and was the mascot there and was then the mascot at Utah State.”

The summer before his final semester at Utah State, Tom moved to Denver for a summer internship at the Rocky Mountain News. He spent his free time hounding the Nuggets, inquiring about their plans to introduce a mascot. Former Nuggets executive Carl Scheer, who passed away in December, invited the eager kid to McNichols Arena to make his case.

“They ended up having tryouts and I made it,” Tom said. “I went back to school that fall, wrapped things up there and then headed out to Denver.”

On Dec. 15, 1990, Rocky came alive as one of the NBA’s original mascots. And less than two years later, the shot that has thrilled generations of Nuggets fans was born.

“It came with (former Nuggets president) Tim Leiweke,” Tom said. “I had done halfcourt shots before, but always forward. Tim Leiweke was out on the court one day and goes, ‘Hey, man. Why don’t you do it backward?’ I’m like, ‘You’re on.’ So it was a challenge at first. Then it just caught on from there. Now it has kind of taken on a life of its own.”

It took years for Jack to realize that his father, the man who would tuck him into bed and feed him dinner, was also a yellow mountain lion with eyes that never blinked. One moment, Jack would see Tom. A moment later, he’d see Rocky.

It never registered in Jack’s young mind that the only time Rocky was around, Tom wasn’t.

“Growing up, it was hard to piece the two together,” Jack said. “It was like, ‘Here’s my dad, and then here’s Rocky.’ I saw my dad, and then my dad went away, and then Rocky showed up.”

Jack’s father and mother separated when he was in kindergarten. Thus, Jack and his two younger brothers often spent many days at events around Denver and nights in the stands at the Pepsi Center while Dad earned his paycheck.

By then, Jack was able to separate his father from Tom’s alter ego, a sacred secret only he and his siblings were privy to. Children in the arena would jump out of their seats to touch Rocky’s velvet hands, shouting with all their might just to be acknowledged. Jack and his brothers, though, didn’t have to work as hard for attention.

“Whenever he would come up and visit us in the crowd, he wasn’t Rocky anymore. He was Dad,” Jack said. “We’d be screaming ‘Dad!’ in the crowd, and people would look at us like, ‘What? They really think he’s their dad?’”

Jack and Tom at Rocky’s birthday party last season in Denver.

One would imagine that a kid whose dad gets to be a mountain lion for a living would be forever enthralled by the reality of it all. However, that wasn’t always the case.

In elementary school, Jack knew he’d have to fight for attention with other children to spend time with his dad. There were long nights. Homework got done in a locker room inside the Pepsi Center while his dad was shooting T-shirts out of a gun. Jack and his brothers had to make their own fun.

“We had policemen stationed outside our locker-room door, and every now and then they’d poke their head in and say, ‘Jack, can you stop banging the soccer ball on the wall? The other team is on the other side of the wall complaining,’” Tom said.

It wasn’t until Jack was a teenager that he realized the perks that came with his father’s profession. When he was 15, Jack and his brothers made up the Nuggets’ first junior NBA dunk team. The three brothers and father would perform in front of the home crowd, jumping off trampolines and doing contorted dunks off the launching pad.

“It was really cool to spend that much time with him at his own job and at home,” Jack said. “We did things together.”

Tom vividly remembers a time when a young Jack sprung himself off the trampoline and did a front flip over Harlem Globetrotters legend Curly Neal.

“It started to click for him,” Tom said.

Aside from being able to entertain, Tom’s job allowed Jack to meet his heroes. Jack distinctly recalls a night when the Lakers were in town, and after the game, he got photos with Kobe Bryant and Shaquille O’Neal.

“ That’s when I was like, ‘Wow! People don’t do this. None of my friends are doing this,’” he said. “That’s when I started realizing that this is pretty cool.”

After graduating high school, Jack went on to Dixie State University in Utah. At this point, he didn’t have aspirations of following in his father’s footsteps. Then, an opportunity to land a scholarship as the school’s mascot turned Jack into “Big Dee,” a devilish-looking bull with a James Harden beard.

Sometime during Jack’s freshman year, he attended the Mascot Bowl, a charity event that raises money to take underprivileged children Christmas shopping. Jack had heard about these types of events from his dad. He recalled countless nights in which Tom would come home visibly emotional after visiting children at hospitals.

Those interactions are what made Tom so invested in the business.

“It’s always a reminder of the impact you really have when you see the joy on these kids’ faces and the impact you can have not only at that moment, but in lasting moments,” Tom said. “When you go in and visit these kids and you’re able to raise money for them to go shopping at Christmas and to have surgeries that they need, with those types of things you never get to see the follow-up to their story, but you know they are being positively impacted far beyond what you’re able to do in that moment.”

When Jack experienced at the Mascot Bowl the warmth Big Dee brought to these children, he was hooked. It was then and there that he decided to pursue a career inside a costume.

“I knew of (the effect) from my dad, but I had never experienced it for myself until that day,” Jack said. “That’s when I decided that this is what I want to do.”

Shortly after graduating college, Jack applied to be Moondog, the floppy-eared pup that represents the Cleveland Cavaliers. Jack knew the man who was soon retiring after 15 years because, well, all mascots appear to know each other, and Jack’s dad had been around longer than anyone.

Tom and Jack at Rocky’s birthday three years ago in Denver.

After a brief audition, Jack got the job and moved across the country to Cleveland. A month later, he was back in Denver for Rocky’s birthday, an annual event every mascot has that brings others from across the country for an in-game entertainment extravaganza.

It wasn’t the first time Jack and Tom had performed together, but it was the first time Jack was able to share a stage with his father as a professional in his hometown.

“I know everyone in that organization, so it was really cool to see everyone,” said Jack, who spent two years as Moondog before moving to Detroit and becoming Hooper this season. “Performing with my dad … I had just gotten on the same level as my dad. ‘I’m a professional now!’”

Tom and Jack don’t have a running tally of who is most efficient with the family shot.

“We don’t compete in costume because I never want to create that sort of pressure,” Tom said. “But when we get together, we’ll have little contests out of costume when we’re fooling around the court, put a dollar on it.”

Still, the two men wouldn’t have signed up for a life around professional sports if they didn’t share a competitive streak. Jack is astutely aware that Rocky once nailed the shot in 17 straight games.

Asked if he wanted to break that streak one day, Jack replied: “Uh, yes, I do.”

The professional relationship between this father and son is built on a respect for the craft, and it cuts both ways. Tom talks to Jack on the phone “almost daily,” with conversations hitting on all aspects of the job.

“It’s funny because I thought I would be handing him more,” Tom said. “Like, ‘OK, go do this and do it this way. The timing is this and get this prop.’ I thought I would be handing him more, but what it’s actually turned out to be is giving him advice on his ideas. He has really hit the ground running. He’s come up with ideas where I’ve actually taken them as well. I’ll be like, ‘Hey, man, do you mind if I use that?’ He’ll say, ‘Ah, man, let me do it first.’”

In time, Jack has developed his own unique routine. He has pulled some from his father’s work. He’s borrowed bits and pieces from the acts of other mascots, too. It’s an industry, one with its own annual convention, that encourages that kind of sharing.

But as much as he’s learned along the way, the truth is that Jack was always destined for this work. After all, his first performance came when he was just 2 weeks old.

“I took him out there on the court and we played the song ‘Twist and Shout’ by the Beatles,” Tom said. “You know, ‘Shake it up baby now!’ … It’s come full circle. Kind of like a ‘Lion King’ thing.”

This season is Tom’s 30th performing as Rocky. After three decades on the job, life after the mascot world is approaching. He wishes he could do the job forever, but the next best thing to an infinite life under the hood is watching his children put their own spin on this wild, beloved craft they share. One of Tom’s other sons has also joined the mascot industry.

“It’s the ultimate compliment,” Tom said. “To me, it means that you’ve done something right as a father and mentor when your kids want to follow in your footsteps.”

(Photos courtesy of the men who perform as Rocky and Hooper)

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Denver Nuggets Mascot “Rocky” Earns Around $1 Million A Year

A report from Sports Business Journal recently named the highest-paid mascots in the NBA and its findings may inspire a career change. Rocky, the beloved mountain lion mascot for the Denver Nuggets, rakes in around US$625,000 (AU$957,000) every year in exchange for having the absolute time of his life.

The Denver Nuggets first introduced Rocky back in 1990, when the franchise was at an all-time low and struggling to get people to come to home games that weren’t against the Bulls or Lakers. He’d instantly become a staple of the team with fans filling out the 17,000 seats of McNichols Sports Arena just to get a glimpse of the great man.

Since then, Rocky has earned the rare status of a “SuperMascot” thanks to his daring acrobatics and innovative skits. He’s been involved in the community programs of the Denver Nuggets, travels to different schools around the state of Colorado, made appearances for the other professional sports teams in the area, and even showed up at international functions. Suffice it to say, Rocky is the real deal.

Rocky is beloved by fans and players alike. He gets to perform crazy stunts, interact with the crowd, make some great coin, then go home and remain completely anonymous. It’s a pretty sweet arrangement.

The average earnings for an NBA mascot currently sit at around US$60,000 (AU$92,000). The top five highest-paid are as follows:

  1. Rocky the Mountain Lion (Denver Nuggets) – US$625,000 / AU$957,000
  2. Harry the Hawk (Atlanta Hawks) – US$600,000 / AU$920,000
  3. Benny the Bull (Chicago Bulls) – US$400,000 / AU$613,000
  4. Go the Gorilla (Phoenix Suns) – US$200,000 / AU$306,000
  5. Hugo the Hornet (Charlotte Hornets) – $100,000 / AU$153,000

It’s a bit of a stitch-up for the Los Angeles Clippers’ Chuck the Condor, who missed out on the top five despite being recognised as the league’s top performer and taking home the Mascot of the Year award last season. I wouldn’t feel too bad for Chuck, though. He’s still the newest mascot in the league and shows some great promise.

Some teams – such as the Brooklyn Nets, Golden State Warriors, New York Knicks, and the Los Angeles Lakers – still insist on not having a mascot for their team. But as the Denver Nuggets have shown us, it quite literally pays to have one.

SuperMascot Rocky Denver Nuggets 2023 NBA Champions Mascot Bobblehead

All season long, this beloved mascot brought the energy to the court and to the crowd. Now, he's bringing that same energy to your championship collection with this SuperMascot Rocky Denver Nuggets 2023 NBA Champions Mascot Bobblehead.

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Denver Nuggets All Time Greatest – The one and only “Supermascot Rocky”

While compiling my list of the 20 greatest Denver Nuggets of all time, I realized I was leaving one great Nugget off the list. He never played a single minute for the team but he has been a valuable asset to the Nuggets franchise for 24 years. So before I reveal my 10th greatest Nuggets player of all time, I thought I would pay homage to the greatest non-playing Nugget athlete of all time, Supermascot Rocky. Rocky the Mountain Lion” was the brainchild in 1990 of then Nuggets President Tim Leiweke.

The Nuggets were going through one of the worst runs of bad basketball in the franchise’s history. They had just come off of the fallout of the unceremonious firing of the winningest coach in franchise history, Doug Moe. They would win only 20 games in the 1990-1991 season and attendance was at an all time low at McNichols Arena.

Leiweke had gotten his start in the entertainment industry and knew that he needed to do something to put butts in the seats. He figured if he did something that would appeal to younger fans, their parents would bring them to the game to see the “Show” that is an NBA basketball game and increase attendance despite his teams woeful performance on the court. That’s when he realized that a mascot might do the trick. The Phoenix Gorilla was already a staple at Suns games and the Nuggets had never had a mascot before.

So Leiweke went to the local media and set up a contest to determine what the Nuggets new mascot would be. There were a slew of entries, some logical and some ridiculous, but the winner was a Colorado Mountain Lion as the Nuggets first mascot.

The design that stuck came from Tom Sapp of Real Characters, Inc, who’s designed hundreds of characters over the years. The Nuggets asked Tom to come up with a mascot concept, design, costume construction, and creation story of how Rocky ended up with a lightning bolt tail.

Once the “species” of the mascot was chosen, it was time to find the person to put inside of the costume. There were auditions held at the Nuggets facility inside of McNichols Arena and after the first day it was already obvious who was the perfect person to introduce Rocky the Mountain Lion to the world. His name is Ken Solomon and he is the only person to reside inside of Rocky’s now iconic costume. He is a great athlete, was and still is a fine acrobat, and had obviously played some hoops in his life.

Solomon debuted Rocky the Mountain Lion on December 15, 1990 at McNichols Arena in a game against, ironically, the Phoenix Suns. Rocky has become a fixture at Nuggets games since that night and his antics have gotten him national recognition, along with a couple of pretty impressive awards.

Rocky’s shtick includes a bevy of athletic skits including dunking off of a trampoline, doing backflips over the Denver Nugget Dancers, riding his Harley onto the floor for playoff games among many others. His most popular feat may be Rocky’s Half Court Shot that he does during the final timeout of the 4th quarter in every Nuggets home game.

It’s popular not only because of what he does, (shoot from half court backwards over his head, facing the opposite basket) but how many times he has made this incredibly difficult shot (I think he is over 25% for his career making this shot but I have not been able to find documentation to back this up).

On April 1st, 2013 Rocky put out a Press release saying that he would be retiring after the 2013 season. This was met with some sadness around the Denver area because he has become such a beloved figure in this City.

Alas, the old Mountain Lion was just dropping an “April Fool’s Joke” on Nuggets fans far and wide. He showed up at the Nuggets next home game and had the P.A. Announcer tell the crowd that it was just an April Fool’s joke and he would be returning for his 24th season in 2013-2014.

Rocky has become a fixture around the Denver area doing appearances at Children’s Hospital, Benefits and other Charitable causes. It’s very common to see the “Rockymobile” around town at various venues including doing private parties, Holiday Parties and Birthdays. Rocky is so good at his job that he has been bestowed with 2 awards in his 24 years as Nuggets Mascot.

He was awarded “Most Awesome Mascot” at the Cartoon Network’s Hall of Game Awards and was inducted into the Mascot Hall of Fame in 2008. Rocky the Mountain Lion has become more than just the Denver Nuggets Mascot but a fixture in the Denver Community for 24 years.

And that’s why it would have been impossible to do a Denver Nuggets top anything list without including the one and only……. “Supermascot Rocky”!

The witch Squishmallow is a charming and enchanting creature. Donning a classic witch's hat and a black and purple outfit, this Squishmallow is the epitome of Halloween fun. Some witch Squishmallows even have adorable accessories like brooms or cauldrons that add to their magical appearance.

Halloween squishmallows witcj

The softness of these toys makes them perfect for snuggling with during a spooky movie marathon or placing them on your bed as a charming decoration for the Halloween season. Children love the witch Squishmallow because it combines the excitement of Halloween with the comfort of a cuddly friend. These toys can accompany children during trick-or-treating adventures or be a source of comfort during Halloween parties or events. Their attractive colors and cute expressions make them appealing to both children and adults. Collectors also appreciate the witch Squishmallow for its unique Halloween flair. Squishmallows have gained a devoted following of collectors who enjoy collecting different characters and variations. The witch Squishmallow is a sought-after addition to any collection, and its limited edition releases often create excitement within the Squishmallows community. Overall, the Halloween witch Squishmallow is a delightful and whimsical addition to the Halloween festivities. Its softness, charm, and festive appearance make it a beloved choice for children and collectors alike. Whether it's used as a cuddly companion or showcased as a cute decoration, the witch Squishmallow is sure to bring a touch of magic to the Halloween season..

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Spooktacular Witch Squishmallows for a Hauntingly Fun Halloween

Experience Enchanting Fun with Witch Squishmallows for Halloween