Guys and Dolls: Veteran Toy Designer Wrestles With the Industry's Gender Divide

The more modern Americans wants to expand gender roles and the career and lifestyle choices for their children, the more the toy aisles become segregated. Once upon a time, toys were mostly small and safer versions of adult objects of all kinds, but over time they were divided into boys toys and girls toys, with color-coding to match. Now they are in entirely different sections of stores. Stefanie Eskander is the Design Manager for girls’ toys at Toys “R” Us, and also collects vintage toys. She has some thoughts to pass along about how toy lines have changed over the years, and how gender preferences have complicated the business.  

Pink is a funny thing. In the early days of the 20th century, pink was not necessarily a girl color. I’ve even heard that pink was considered a popular color for boys because it was a lighter version of red, which has always been seen as powerful and masculine. But as the 20th century went by, pink became a much more popular color for girls. I’ve heard they’ve done scientific studies that show that women and girls and even female babies are more attracted to redder colors than boys, but I take all of that with a grain of salt. I think girls’ attraction to pink is societal for the most part.

For my entire life, my favorite color was always red. From the time I was little, I loved wearing red shoes or a red dress. And if I had loved blue, I would’ve worn blue. So even though I didn’t wear a lot of pink growing up, I can see why pink is popular.

Do you know that when Barbie came out in the 1950s, her original look didn’t have a smidgen of pink in it? I don’t think Barbie started using pink as her primary color until the ’70s. Barbie was supposed to be a high-fashion doll, so her first outfit was black and white, not pink. But Barbie really is to blame for all the pink: Mattel actually has a copyrighted color now called Barbie Pink. They own rights to that pink, and you can’t use that exact formula on anything that isn’t Barbie.

Today, pink is a very young color. In other words, younger girls tend to like pink much more than older girls. Older girls are a little more sophisticated. By the time they’re 8 or 9 years old, they’re more conscious of the fashions they’re wearing and the media trends they see, which isn’t all pink. So younger girls tend to like pink and the older girls tend to like other colors. You don’t see the Monster High girls wearing pink. That’s not their schtick. They’re wearing colors that are more edgy and modern.

Eskander has more to tell us, about the lack of toys for school-age girls, the effect of licensing on toy design, and some neat tidbits about the toys of decades past, at Collectors Weekly.


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Brutally Honest Mother’s Day Cards From Kids

Kids know how to lie, alright, but the art of overlooking the brutal truth is sometimes beyond their powers. Buzzfeed has a collection of 15 Mothers Day cards, made by kids, that disclose way more of their underlying feelings than they should. And you know that these are the cards that Mom will keep forever, if not for sentimental reasons, then for the laughs. What do you wanna bet they'll be pulled out twenty years later and shared at the family holiday gathering? And thanks to the internet, these cards will be available public long after the kids have grown and learned better.  

Oh, in case you need to be reminded, this Sunday is Mothers Day.


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To The Moon

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Google made this video for Teacher Appreciation Week. It’s only coincidence that it’s composed of Google products. But it would be nice to send this to your favorite teacher and tell him/her how much you appreciate what they do.


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Kids are Salsa Champs

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When I was six years old, I couldn’t tie my shoes, and I fell off my bicycle almost every day. Then there’s Kevin and Beverly from New Jersey, who are the world champion salsa dancers in the 6-7 year age group. Here is one of their performances in the Israeli Salsa Congress & Holy Land Salsa Tour 2014. Not only are they super good dancers, but they are fearless and charming as well. You can see their official stage performance here. -via Daily Picks and Flicks


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The Doozers Are Back And Teaching Kids About Engineering

Do you remember the Doozers from Fraggle Rock? They were those little construction working cuties who were always trying to finish building stuff before a hungry Fraggle came along and ate up all their hard work.

They were tiny and green and adorable, and they seemed to know much more about construction than any Fraggle besides Travelling Matt, of course, because he knew everything!

Now the Jim Henson company is bringing the Doozers back in a brand new animated series to be released on Hulu. It's a fun way to teach kids about engineering, and any new project that may bring the Fraggles back is alright with me!

-Via Geekosystem


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Creative Father Makes Crazy Photo Manipulations Starring His Three Daughters

Being the proud father of three girls can be an adventure in itself, but real life adventures in fatherhood rarely make for epic photographs.

However, when daddy has some serious Photoshop skills he can turn even the most mundane fatherly activities into an epic scene straight out of a movie!

John Wilhelm is an IT Director at a Swiss university and the father of three adorable little girls, and he uses his digital art skills to spice up his family's home life by casting his daughters, and occasionally his wife, in imaginative adventures. The photos in his series are not only full of fantasy imagery- they're fantastically well made, and represent a father's love of both his art and his family.

-Via Bored Panda


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Humble Beginnings

Maryanna had high aspirations when she was four years old. Her older sister kept this preschool document because she knew it would be meaningful someday. And when Maryanna recently received her acceptance letter from Berkeley, it was time to bring it out. The top comment:

I've heard that Berkeley has one of the top postgraduate dishwashing programs in America. Go for your dream!

-via reddit


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Synchronized Air Swimming

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These 5th grade students came up with a clever entry for the talent show at W. A. Porter Elementary School in Hurst, Texas, earlier this month. You know they put a lot of practice in, plus they had to watch videos to see what synchronized swimming was all about. They deserve a medal! -via Pleated-Jeans


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Boyhood- A Film Featuring A Child Star Actually Growing Up

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Many filmmakers feel the only way to show a character grow up during a movie is to actually shoot the film over a period long enough to allow the actor to age naturally, but this is generally not feasible because Hollywood demands sacrificial offerings movies on a yearly, if not quarterly, basis. 

A new film called Boyhood is about to change those rules, because this feature film depicts a child star actually growing up during production, a feat that took twelve years of filming to accomplish.

Director Richard Linklater wanted to make a film that showed "a parent-child relationship that follows a boy from the 1st through the 12th grade and ends with him going off to college", but to do that he had to film scenes once a year for twelve years, changing the script as needed to keep up with how the boy changed in real life over the years.

It's a bold experiment in humanistic filmmaking, one which movie studios are unlikely to repeat anytime soon.

-Via 22 Words


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"Do You Expect Me to Talk, Son?"

"No, Daddy. I expect you to die."

A few months ago, we introduced you to Cardboard Office, an ongoing project by parents Lilly and Leon and baby Orson to recreate famous movie scenes using cardboard boxes from an international move. Most recently, they made the iconic laser scene from the 1964 James Bond movie Goldfinger.


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-via Super Punch


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Anti-Bullying Messages

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I’m not sure what to think about this PSA from VH1. The kids who are victimized by bullies as children dream of growing up and being just as cruel in adulthood. Well, maybe it’s supposed to be entertainment instead of a PSA. I don’t think there are too many children watching VH1 anyway. -via Time Newsfeed


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A much better teaching moment comes in author George Saunders’ commencement speech to the 2013 graduating class of Syracuse University, animated by Above Average. The world can be changed by kindness becoming the cool thing. Because that’s one thing you will not regret 40 years later. If the coolest, most popular kids stood up for the underdog, things would change for the cool kids, the victims, and the bullies. -also via Time Newsfeed


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You’re Going to be a Grandpa

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Jessica Hickey is an only child, and her father has been a widower for twenty years. Since she got married, he’s wanted a grandchild, and the moment finally came to break the news to him. This is short and terribly sweet, so you might want to have a hanky ready. The top comment at reddit brings us back down to earth:

He is crying because being a Cubs fan, he is not used to getting what he wants.

We wish the entire family all the happiness in the world. -via reddit


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Empathy

Children aren’t born knowing empathy. Even if they were, it wouldn’t extend to putting someone else’s needs before theirs. That takes years of living -sometimes decades. And some people never get that far! Parents just have to deal with it. This undoubtedly true-life vignette is brought to you by Lunarbaboon.


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Teens React to Mean Girls 10th Anniversary

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Mean Girls is only ten years old? I thought it was much older than that. But I recall when it came out, that I meant to watch it because I love Tina Fey. But I didn’t get around to it. Then when my daughters hit middle school, I made a point to watch Mean Girls with them, because I trust Tina Fey. Now the movie is ten years old, and these teenagers think that’s, like, ancient. But it has a universal message that’s still as relevant now as it was then -or even forty years ago when I was in high school. My message to my daughters was “Don’t ever be a mean girl,” although I suspected that they would more likely need a defense against mean girls, which first comes with understanding what is happening. I know from experience how such dishonesty, manipulation, and head games can mess with your adolescent years.

Mean Girls should be required viewing for every middle school student, and the book it is based on should be required reading for parents. Besides, if you’re not in the midst of dealing with teen angst, it’s hilarious. -via Viral Viral Videos


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Poem: I Hate Poetry

A fifth-grader named Panajotis wrote a poem for a slam poetry project during an Adventures in Creative Writing field trip. He obviously hates poetry, which is surprising, because it’s a rather good poem.

I hate poetry!
Poetry looks like a demon rising.
I don’t want to do this.
Poetry sounds like nails on a chalkboard.
I still don’t want to do this.
Poetry smells like skunk spray times

I still will not don’t want to do this.
Poetry tastes like rotten eggs with human brains.
I will never do this again.
Poetry feels like being frozen by a freeze ray.
Doesn’t everybody hate poetry?

Hey, Panajotis, poems are like everything else. There’s some very good poetry, and then there’s a lot of very bad poetry. I think he is well on his way to telling the difference. -via The Daily Dot


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