Pink sauce burgers, hot pink knit leggings: Everyone wants a piece of the Barbie movie marketing mania
Even the organisation I Support The Girls – a nonprofit that has provided 22 million bras and menstrual hygiene products to homeless people, refugees and immigrants – is creating a social media campaign around menstrual periods using Barbie and having volunteers create miniature packages of Barbie-sized menstrual pads and tampons as teaching tools.
“The capability to share stories and knowledge through playing with Barbie is what made us realize we need to jump on this pop culture Barbie bandwagon,” said Dana Marlowe, founder and executive of I Support The Girls. “If you can see yourself in a toy or in a doll, we want to also make sure that we’re raising awareness about bras and and clean underwear and the like.”
Some experts say all the marketing beyond the movie is only good for the 64-year-old brand, helping to attract multi-generations of fans.
“When a brand owns something as iconic as the color pink, it’s good news and bad news,” said Marc Rosenberg, a Chicago-based toy consultant who led the global marketing teams for Hasbro’s brands like Furby, GigaPets, and Hit Clips. “In this case, I think it’s all good news. Everyone in the world wants a piece of pink now.”
But pundits also say it’s going to be hard for many of the products to stand out when the world is awash in pink.
“There is such a stampede toward this that most people are going to get stepped on and will not be noticed,” said Allen Adamson, co-founder of marketing consultancy Metaforce, noting he believes there will be more losers than winners.
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