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The Upside Down Bumper Sticker Set

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The Upside Down Bumper Sticker Set

  • (3) 11.5" x 3" Bumper Stickers
  • Artwork by Kyle Crawford

  • About Stranger Things (2016-2025)

    The Duffer Brothers' Stranger Things (2016-2025) became a global phenomenon by channeling the spirit of 1980s Spielberg, King, and Carpenter into a Netflix series about a group of kids in small-town Indiana confronting interdimensional horrors while searching for their missing friend. Millie Bobby Brown, just 12 years old when the series premiered, delivered a breakout performance as Eleven that launched her into international stardom, while Winona Ryder's casting as the desperate mother Joyce Byers was a perfect piece of nostalgic meta-casting. The show's meticulous recreation of 1980s aesthetics—from the D&D campaigns to the walkie-talkies to the synth-heavy score by Kyle Dixon and Michael Stein—went beyond simple nostalgia to capture the genuine feeling of childhood adventure and terror from that era. The series revived careers, launched new ones, and proved that long-form horror storytelling could achieve mainstream popularity on a scale previously reserved for prestige drama.

    $5.25

    Original: $15.00

    -65%
    The Upside Down Bumper Sticker Set—

    $15.00

    $5.25

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  • (3) 11.5" x 3" Bumper Stickers
  • Artwork by Kyle Crawford

  • About Stranger Things (2016-2025)

    The Duffer Brothers' Stranger Things (2016-2025) became a global phenomenon by channeling the spirit of 1980s Spielberg, King, and Carpenter into a Netflix series about a group of kids in small-town Indiana confronting interdimensional horrors while searching for their missing friend. Millie Bobby Brown, just 12 years old when the series premiered, delivered a breakout performance as Eleven that launched her into international stardom, while Winona Ryder's casting as the desperate mother Joyce Byers was a perfect piece of nostalgic meta-casting. The show's meticulous recreation of 1980s aesthetics—from the D&D campaigns to the walkie-talkies to the synth-heavy score by Kyle Dixon and Michael Stein—went beyond simple nostalgia to capture the genuine feeling of childhood adventure and terror from that era. The series revived careers, launched new ones, and proved that long-form horror storytelling could achieve mainstream popularity on a scale previously reserved for prestige drama.