I never knew that existed either until many years later. The cartoon ended in 1985 and stuff like GI Joe and Transformers were more at the forefront with the Transformers Movie and such. Plus, Thundercats was also around then, I think He-Man was just losing ground to other toys by then.
Speaking of 1986, that's the year I got another one of the more popular Christmas toys of the 1980s. I can still recall the commercial, "My name is Teddy Ruxpin, can you and I be friends?"
I don't know because I was 7 or 8 when I got him, but I must've been extra good that year. Heck, even the Mets won the World Series in 1986 so I was living large! Teddy retailed for a hefty $59.99 in 1986, the equivalent of roughly $169 today. That's one expensive talking cassette player! Speaking of cassettes, there was no WiFi back then so Teddy used good ol' fashion cassette tapes to simulate interaction. And those cassettes alone ran about $20 back then or the relative cost of a video game these days ($56).
So, Teddy was one pricey talking teddy in the 80s, but his popularity cannot be understated. A former Disney Imagineer named Ken Forsse created the cuddly, animatronic teddy bear using the same technology that Disney used for animatronic theme park attractions. Even with the somewhat hefty price tag, Teddy Ruxpin was the bestselling toy of 1985 and 1986.
Since it was the 80s, Teddy even got his own short-lived Saturday Morning cartoon that ran from 1986-1987 that may've even helped crash the Iron Curtain as it was one of the first Western cartoons to air in Bulgaria of all places in the late 80s, so it's very possible a young Rusev watched the show.
But not only was Teddy Ruxpin that stay at home friend for latchkey kids whose parents didn't get home from work until hours after the kids got home from school, but shortly after his debut, Teddy Ruxpin was dubbed the "Official Spokesbear for the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children" in 1985. The cartoon would always have a PSA called Protect Yourself, to help protect kids from the dangers of the world, this one below sadly and ironically done by Corey Feldman.
And if it weren't for the popularity of this anthropomorphic furry the rebirth of the modern video game system may've never gotten off the ground and two plumbers may still be working their 8-bit day job. But that's a story for another time.
THE END