Archive for May, 2007

Barbie gets online makeover

Saturday, May 12th, 2007

Cyberspace has become the new front line in the battle between Mattel’s Barbie line and MGA Entertainment’s Bratz collection.

Mattel has launched a test run of barbiegirls.com, an online community where girls can create their own Barbie dolls and interact with each other in a manner reminiscent of Second Life – a virtual world for adults that boasts more than 2 million users.

The website is the first glimpse into Mattel’s Barbie Girl initiative, its next generation fashion doll line and latest attempt to gain ground in its heated competition with Bratz.

At barbiegirls.com, users can customise their character’s look and style.

They can also shop for clothes, accessories and furniture for their online room.

They can even adopt a pet.

“I think it’ll definitely be a catalyst for winning girls back,” Reyne Rice, a toy trends expert at the Toy Industry Association said.

“They can go on the site and chat with their friends, compare outfits, rooms. It’s right on target with what girls are looking for.”

Barbie has lost out in recent years to Bratz, a line of big-headed dolls with scant, trendy clothing and very skinny bodies.

On Monday Mattel said international Barbie sales rose 2 per cent, but US sales of the doll declined 21 per cent.

Mattel said barbie.com – its older website devoted to all things Barbie, which debuted in 2000 – gets 65 million visitors a month.

- Reuters

Sugarbabes Barbie dolls.. Nikki, with clothes designed by Keisha

Saturday, May 12th, 2007

4d81_1_b.jpgBARBIE SUGABABES DOLLS
BARBIE DOLL’S WEARING FASHION DESIGNED BY THE SUGABABES!!

THIS LISTING IS FOR A NIKKI DOLL

NIKKI WEARS A DENIM SKIRT WITH PINK LEGGINGS AND WONDERFUL ZIPPED TOP WITH FLOWER’S AND BUTTERFLY’S DESIGNED BY KEISHA!

SHE ALSO COMES COMPLETE WITH PINK HIGH HEELS, EARRINGS AND LAPTOP.

PLUS BONUS SUGABABES T-SHIRT FOR HER TO CHANGE INTO!

Check out the ebay auction for this doll here.

Cher is becoming a Barbie Doll!

Saturday, May 12th, 2007

77d2_1.jpgLondon, May 1: She’s a singer, an actress and songwriter, and now Cher has one more accomplishment to add to the list – becoming a Barbie Doll.

Barbie creators Mattel, Inc is reportedly getting set to model the Oscar winning actress in plastic for two dolls.

As to whether or not the dolls will as flamboyant as the original, well Cher fans are not going to be let down.

While one doll will wear the leotard she wore in the 1989 Turn Back Time video, the other will be decked out in the famous squaw outfit the Grammy award winning singer wore in the 1973 hit Half-Breed, reports the Sun.

The outfits for the new Cher Barbie dolls will designed by fashion legend Bob Mackie, who besides being known for his exclusive designs of dress for high-priced Barbie dolls, also created Cher’s flamboyant outfits.

The dolls, that will hit toyshops in the US by June this year, will be available for 19.99 pounds, or 39.99 dollars.

New Barbie Dolls Take Kids Online

Saturday, May 12th, 2007

By Reuters

NEW YORK (Reuters) – Mattel Inc. is using technology to come up with a new twist on a toy launched in 1959 to appeal to today’s Web-savvy, multimedia girl shoppers.

On Thursday, Mattel unveiled Barbie Girls, a doll-shaped MP3 player that turns into a live character at BarbieGirls.com, a Web site where girls can interact with each other in a manner reminiscent of Second Life, the virtual world for adults.

The company hopes the new toy, which brings together Web surfing, shopping and music downloads, will cool demand for rival MGA Entertainment’s sassy Bratz dolls—a line of big-headed, skinny dolls with scant, trendy clothing.

The world’s largest toy maker is also taking aim at Apple Inc.’s iPod music players and Ganz’s Webkinz, furry animal toys that come alive online.

The official launch of BarbieGirls.com came a week after the company gave it a public test run.

Toy analysts say this latest addition to the 48-year-old Barbie line should be a hot seller, helping the brand reverse nearly five years of declining sales.

“If Mattel’s online community is successful—with penetration similar to Webkinz—we estimate maximum annual sales potential of about $100 million, or about 3 cents a share,” Oppenheimer & Co. analyst Lisa Bolton Weiser wrote in a research note.

Retailers said earlier this month that demand for Webkinz, which are sold at specialty retail shops such as Hallmark and American Greetings Corp., has skyrocketed.

MUSIC AND FASHION ONLINE

Reviving the Barbie brand has been a major priority for Mattel, who has seen her former target audience defect not only to Bratz, but also to flashier, high-tech items such as iPods and video games.

The Barbie Girls music players, which can hold up to 120 MP3 or 240 WMA-file songs, come to market in July and will cost $59.99, Mattel said.

“I think we’ve got a hit on our hands,” said Reyne Rice, a New York-based toy trends expert at the Toy Industry Association. “You’ve got music, you’ve got fashion and you’ve got online—all these components tied into today’s girls.”

At BarbieGirls.com, users can customize their characters’ looks and styles. They can also go to the online mall and shop for clothes, accessories and furniture for their online room. Users can even adopt a pet.

But more importantly, Rice added: “I think parents are going to like the safe online portal.”

To ensure girls’ safety in public chats, Mattel devised a limited vocabulary of 2,000 words the girls can use on the site, designed to prevent use of sexual language, profanity or hurtful words such as “stupid” or “hate”.

Filters also prevent users from giving out personal information including names, phone numbers or even the cities where they live. Only in private chats with a “best friend” can a girl divulge personal information.

Mattel said it ensures users are best friends by requiring one of them to physically connect their Barbie Girls MP3 player to a friend’s computer.

Each element of Barbie Girls—from safety to music—is designed to help Barbie win back market share from the brash Bratz line, said independent toy industry consultant Christopher Byrne.

“After the implosion of Lindsay Lohan and Britney Spears,” said Byrne, “Barbie seems like this wholesome, wonderful thing now. Bratz really got a lot of momentum from tying into those people.”