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Hot toys '07 | Retailers stocking shelves

The first trick-or-treater is barely out the door, and Christmas is already on retailers' minds.

Aisles down from the costumes and candy corn are fake fir trees and candy canes. And Columbia-area merchants are quickly stocking shelves for wide-eyed children — and adults.

Traditional dolls and character plushes, such as Fisher-Price's Tickle Me Elmo and Ganz's Webkinzs, are expected to sell big in Columbia, along with the new video console wonders of PlayStation 3, Xbox and Wii.

The Consumer Electronics Association found that households with Internet access will spend an average of $172 on electronic toys for their children.

In fact, the Guitar Hero III video game and controller set that retails for about $100 has been named an overall top seller this Christmas by Toys "R" Us.


Dolls gone wild: Unhappy moms want wholesome alternatives

Moms are hunting through toy aisles for more wholesome-looking dolls, concerned that the scantily clad Bratz dolls with their Party Palaces and Magic Make-up Studios are sending their daughters the wrong message about how they should dress and act.

With their heavily made-up faces, short shorts and halter tops, Bratz are the No. 2 best-selling dolls in the country, just behind Barbie, but creeping up on her with their own lines of clothing, school supplies, video games and, most recently, a live-action movie playing in theaters.

And some Moms are not happy about it.

"I don't want my daughter viewing herself that way," says Gloria Baca of Tempe, Ariz., who has steered her daughter, now 10, away from Barbie and Bratz in favor of an American Girl doll by Mattel named Josefina.


For the kids: Toy wishes

An avalanche of toys that encourage activity and imagination are here for the holidays.

For the rock star in the house, the latest musical-instrument video games and karaoke software should fill the bill.

For the budding builder, some new kits from Lego and a fast-paced, magnet-powered roller-coaster set might do the trick.

Among the other offerings: a soft puppy that grows (and speaks), remote-controlled helicopters that duel indoors and a Barbie "doll" that doubles as an MP3 player and interacts in her own virtual world online.

These ideas, of course, make up just a tiny fraction of the possibilities.

Today, in launching our annual holiday gift guide, we've consulted magazines, retailers and toy experts.

Most of the items suggested are sold at toy, retail and discount stores; and through online outlets.


Holiday wishbook

Straight from the mouths of Culpeper kids, here's the scoop on holiday gifts for grades 1-12.

Back in the day you were in the hot seat asking Santa Claus for an A.C. Gilbert Erector set, an Atari 2600 game or a scented Strawberry Shortcake doll with Berrykin case. However, times have changed. The toys that fueled our imaginations so many years ago are now called "vintage."

So what's a big bad adult supposed to do when a train set just doesn't cut it anymore?

The Star-Exponent set forth to find out what this generation of technology-savvy children wants these days.

We visited three Culpeper schools - Epiphany Catholic, St. Luke's Lutheran and Culpeper County High - and talked with a boy and girl from every grade to give you, oh clueless grownup, a better shot at getting it right this year.


Parents who worry about the message some toys send can face a doll dilemma

Moms are hunting through toy aisles for more wholesome-looking dolls, concerned that the scantily clad Bratz dolls with their Party Palaces and Magic Make-up Studios are sending their daughters the wrong message about how they should dress and act.

With their heavily made-up faces, short shorts and halter tops, Bratz are the No. 2 best-selling dolls in the country, just behind Barbie, but creeping up on her with their own lines of clothing, school supplies, video games and, most recently, a live-action movie playing in theaters.

And some moms are not happy about it.

"I don't want my daughter viewing herself that way," says Gloria Baca of Tempe, Ariz., who has steered her daughter, now 10, away from Barbie and Bratz in favor of an American Girl doll by Mattel named Josefina.


From an Iranian Childhood of More Work than Play, a Tycoon Rises

Were you to talk to Isaac Larian about his childhood in Iran, he would not wax nostalgic over childhood games or playthings. In fact, he would tell you that when his friends and cousins played or went on vacation, he did “constant, hard work" helping his father run a retail textile business.

Today, Larian is president and chief executive of the largest privately held toy company in the world, MGA Entertainment, based in Van Nuys, California. (The ranking is based on market share comparisons.)

On November 17, Larian was named national Entrepreneur of the Year at a ceremony in Palm Springs, California, for his “innovation, financial success and personal commitment" in building a world-class business, according to Ernst & Young, the accounting firm that sponsors the annual award.



 

 

 

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