Toy makers invent stories about Barbie and friends



Mattel started the melodrama by announcing the breakup of Barbie and Ken.
NEW YORK (AP) -- It's not quite "Sex and the City" or "Friends," but the nation's largest toy makers are creating secrets and story lines surrounding Barbie and her pals.
Their goal? To get the 7-to-12 age group so hooked on the tales that they'll spend time on the companies' Web sites and buy more dolls and accessories.
Earlier this month, Mattel Inc. announced the breakup of Ken and Barbie, in an apparent move to shake up her image.
And the nation's largest toy maker is creating more stories about the fashion queen and her other friends, detailing everything from their latest crushes to their trips to the mall, and spreading them via the Web and an upcoming magazine that will come with the dolls.
Meanwhile, second-ranked Hasbro Inc. is pushing Secret Central, a group of 20 miniature dolls that are sold individually and come with secret combinations that unlock the character's locker on its Web site, secretcentral.com.
There, girls find more gossip about who's taking who to the prom, who will be selected class athlete and other tales of high school life. The miniature dolls, which include class diva Rhonda and skater Dean, arrived on store shelves this month.
'The buzz'
The strategy is far different from the past, when toy makers just delivered the dolls and let the girls use their imaginations.
"It's all about the buzz," said Valerie Jurries, vice president of girls' marketing at Hasbro. "These girls want to know everything, all the details. Who is going shopping? What car is he driving?"
Chris Bryne, an independent toy consultant, based in New York, applauds the marketing move.
"This gives an energy to Barbie and the other dolls. The stories serve as a springboard but won't drive the play," he said.
But some observers are wary.
Stephanie Oppenheim, co-editor of Oppenheim Toy Portfolio, an independent guide to toys, believes these stories -- many of them focused on boy-girl relationships -- are not appropriate for the under-12 age group.
"The agenda is way over the heads of these kids," said Oppenheim, who studied these Web sites. She added, "Kids should spin their own age-appropriate stories."
Lisa McLeod, 40, a mother and general marketing consultant, agrees.
"As a marketer, it's brilliant, but as a mother, I am appalled," said the Atlanta resident, who has two daughters, ages 6 and 11.
"Do we need 6- and 11-year-olds to have a heightened sense of anticipation about who they are going to go the prom with?" she asked.
But her 6-year-old, Alex, who likes to click on Mattel's Web site, myscene.com, and recently visited secretcentral.com, is a big fan.
"I like hearing all their secrets," she said.
More alive
Mattel and Hasbro executives contend that the stories make the dolls more alive.
"When you build richness and depth, it does not become just a plastic product on the shelf," said Tim Kilpin, senior vice president of marketing and design at Mattel. "[Children] engage much more deeply, and keeps them coming back. They use it as a springboard, and then create their own stories."
Mattel's detailed story line approach started with My Scene Barbie, aimed at the preteen set, launched in conjunction with myscene.com two years ago. The site -- which features journal entries updated every month from various characters-- attracts 9 million visits per month, Kilpin said.
This month, Mattel heightened the drama with the breakup of Ken and Barbie and the reintroduction of Cali Girl Barbie, who sports shorts and bikini tops to better reflect her single status.
Kilpin promises to keep the story going with a new admirer for Barbie, Australian surfboarder Blaine, who will arrive in stores this summer.
Girls will be asked to vote on how they feel about Ken and Blaine on its Barbie.com Web site.
Meanwhile, Hasbro reports that Secret Central dolls have done well, and that its Web site, launched last November, has attracted a total of 600,000 visitors.
The stories on the site are updated twice a week, and the more dolls a girl collects, the more she'll find out about them.
"It's about all their events in their lives," said Jodie Neville, Hasbro's brand manager for girls.