← Autodidact Archive · Original Dissent · jesuisfier

New Hip-Hop Dolls For Six Year Olds

Thread ID: 9874 | Posts: 3 | Started: 2003-09-18

Wayback Archive


jesuisfier [OP]

2003-09-18 18:02 | User Profile

*The all-out assault for the minds of White girls is fully steamrolling over any opposition. The White daughters of today will breed mongrels tomorrow. *

[SIZE=3]Hip-hop dolls for 6-year-olds[/SIZE] Mattel offering tattooed figures with attitudes

              Posted: September 18, 2003
              1:00 a.m. Eastern


              © 2003 WorldNetDaily.com

              Saying they're simply appealing to the market,
              Mattel has unveiled a new line of hip-hop dolls
              sporting miniskirts, street-wise hairdos and
              tattoos – proudly aimed at the 6-12 age bracket.

              While "Flavas" are being sold by the company
              that makes the American icon Barbie, they have
              little in common with the more traditional
              dolls.

              "Our research told us that a lot of young girls
              are now aspiring to the world of rap and
              hip-hop music," Mattel spokeswoman Julia
              Jensen told the London Independent.

[IMG]http://www.worldnetdaily.com/images2/flavas.jpg[/IMG]

               Mattel's new Flava dolls


              Each of the six dolls, known as "the crew,"
              comes with accessories including ghetto
              blasters, cell phones and stick-on tattoos.
              According to the London paper, one character,
              "Tre," is a black track-suited doll in the "P.
              Diddy" mold – with goatee, string vest and
              diamond earrings. The Flavas' (pronounced
              flay-vuhs) names include: Happy D, P. Bo, Tika
              and Kiyoni Brown.

              Val Stedham, chairman of the British
              Association of Toy Retailers, says the new line
              of dolls speaks to the nature of the culture
              surrounding children.

              "Kids are getting older younger," he told the
              Independent. "Mattel can't afford to stand still,
              and if Barbie isn't fitting in with the desire of an
              8-year-old girl, they have to do something
              about it. I'd like to be more moralistic about
              some of these things, but this is what the kids
              want."

              On the company's website, Mattel describes the
              new line as "the first reality-based fashion doll
              brand that celebrates today's teen culture. …

              "Guaranteeing the Flavas crew maintains its
              distinct identity, each character has an
              individual face sculpt, ensuring that all six
              Flavas crew members reflect the look of real
              teens while differentiating each character from
              the other."

              While the website says the dolls are meant for
              the "older girl" age range, Amazon.com's
              description states the manufacturer sees the
              product as appropriate for ages "4 years and
              up."

              One young reviewer on the Amazon site
              enthused: "When I first saw these dolls on TV, I
              was like wow! I want one of those, they look so
              cool. Especially the girl with the braided hair."

              Said John Baulch, publisher of industry
              magazine Toys and Playthings, "Everything
              has to have 'attitude.' Parents might not like the
              dolls, but that will make them appeal to
              children even more."

[url]http://www.worldnetdaily.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=34662[/url]


madrussian

2003-09-18 18:14 | User Profile

Perhaps this should be countered with dolls a la VNN cartoons, and excursions to the inner city jungle.

Also, the proper name for this set should be niggers and whiggers.


Polish Noble

2003-09-19 08:34 | User Profile

[QUOTE]"Kids are getting older younger," he told the Independent. "Mattel can't afford to stand still, and if Barbie isn't fitting in with the desire of an 8-year-old girl, they have to do something about it. I'd like to be more moralistic about some of these things, but this is what the kids want." [/QUOTE]

Of course, this talking excrement knows what 8 year old kids want. Sickening.