Synopses & Reviews
The American toy business is massive, world dominating, cutthroat, exciting, and increasingly willing to sacrifice our kids in its frantic rush for profit. And yet, for all its rapaciousness, the industry is in the business of delighting and fascinating our children. Toys are one of the most emotive subjects in the world. We all remember our own toys; we care desperately about those we choose for our kids, knowing these objects help shape children's lives. They are also a constantly newsworthy item: every Christmas, which toys are hot -- and the scramble by parents to grab them before the stores are empty -- is front-page and TV bulletin news.
The Real Toy Story tells the tales of these toys and of the vast, world-dominating $22 billion American industry that creates them. The rewards for success are enormous: a top toy can earn billions -- H. Ty Warner shot into Forbes's World's Richest People list with his creation of Beanie Babies. The price of failure is just as huge -- the battlefield is littered with the corpses of once-successful toy companies whose multimillion-dollar gambles did not pay off.
It is a world of contrasts. The Real Toy Story looks at both sides: at Slinky, Elmo, Barbie, Transformers, and their creators, but also at the dark side of an industry that leads the way in cold-blooded marketing targeted at children. Parents will want to learn about how this seemingly benign industry exploits, sometimes surreptitiously, the many new media: cable television, the internet, CD-ROMs, sometimes even invading the playgrounds to peddle their wares to unsuspecting young people.
Perhaps more disturbingly, this hard-hitting book examines the vast gap between the cuddly image of toys and how almost all toys destined for America are actually produced in China under sweatshop conditions.
Today the toy industry is in the midst of rapid change. Tapping into the concern millions of adults have about the toys they choose for the children in their lives, this riveting exposé is essential reading for everyone who cares about kids.
Review
"A fascinating exposé of the $20 billion- a-year toy industry, in which...executives jockey for market share with alarming bloodthirstiness."
-- Atlantic Monthly
Synopsis
A profile of the darker side of America's toy industry traces the way toys are developed, manufactured, and marketed, drawing on inside interviews to contend that the industry is compromising consumer and worker well-being for the sake of high profits. By the author of The Want Makers. 35,000 first printing.
About the Author
Eric Clark, acclaimed investigative journalist formerly with the London Observer and the Guardian (Manchester), now specializes in marketing and advertising, on which he writes and lectures worldwide. The Want Makers, his major study of the advertising industry, was published in twenty countries. His nine other books include five novels. Father of three (and custodian of countless toys over the years), he lives in London with his wife, the author Marcelle Bernstein.
Table of Contents
Introduction
1. If It's February, It Must Be Toy Fair
2. The Inventors
3. What Hasbro Wants
4. Barbie Goes to War: Battle of the Dolls
5. The (Vicious) Business of Toys
6. War of the Aisles: The Retail Battleground
7. Grabbing Them Young
8. Santa's Sweatshop
Afterword
Bibliography
Acknowledgments
Sources
Index