And more about the Nimbus 2000
Sep. 22nd, 2002 11:33 am![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Must have been a slow news day - I can't believe that people would be this concerned about a silly toy. I mean come on, Tickle Me Elmo vibrates as well......
http://www.nationalpost.com/utilities/story.html?id={1636EECF-83AF-4FD2-9CA2-26E1F2CD96FD}
Sunday » September 22 » 2002
A broom of one's own
A vibrating Harry Potter toy has parents buzzing
Anne Kingston
Saturday Post
Saturday, September 21, 2002
As the manufacturer of Barbie, Hot Wheels and Tickle Me Elmo, Mattel
Inc. is known for toys that resonate with a juvenile sensibility.
Recently, though, the company has found itself at the centre of a very
adult mini-scandal -- one in which it's been accused of marketing what's
been construed as the world's first masturbatory kiddie plaything.
The product in question is the Nimbus 2000, a plastic battery-powered
replica of the broom used in Quidditch matches by J.K. Rowling's boy
wizard in Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone. According to
Amazon.com, the toy, which retails for $29.99 in Canada, features a
"grooved stick and handle for easy riding." It goes on to enthuse that
"enhancing the excitement are the vibrating effects and magical swooping
and whooshing sounds the broom makes when on.... Requires three AA
batteries (included)."
Well, it would seem the broom's "vibrating effects" are a little too
"exciting" for some hyper-sensitive parents. On the review section for
the toy on the Web site, in a posting that has spread like wildfire by
e-mail, one irate mother from New Jersey writes of buying her daughter
the toy: "It wasn't until after she opened her gift and started playing
with it that I realized the toy may offer a more than sensational
experience. The broomstick has cute sound effects and ***VIBRATES***
when they put it between their legs to fly. Come on -- what were the
creators of this toy thinking?
She'll keep playing with the Nimbus 2000, but with the batteries
removed."
Well, we know what the creators of the toy were thinking, and that was
probably the resounding "ka-ching" that has accompanied practically all
Harry Potter-related products. The question is, What was this mother
thinking? Clearly, her agitation had to stem more from her own
experience, or lack of, with vibrating items, rather than any concern
for the moral probity of a 12-year-old who certainly doesn't require a
cheap piece of battery-fuelled plastic should self-exploration be her
goal.
But, once read, the mother's posting can't help but cast other rave
reviews in a salacious light. So much so, in fact, that after a while it
starts reading like the parody news Web site The Onion.
"Ashley from Texas" writes she was concerned that her 12-year-old
daughter would find the toy "too babyish, but she LOVES this toy. Even
my daughter's friends enjoy playing with this fun toy. I was surprised
at how long they can just sit in her room and play with this magic
broomstick! A great buy for any Harry Potter fan!"
A "toy enthusiast from Maine" said she bought the toy for her son,
Vanto, who is a rather indulged little boy in that he was taken to the
movie 32 times. She writes: "My only problem I see with the toy is the
batteries drain too fast and his sister fights him over it, so now I
need to buy her one."
A posting titled "poola13 from Ohio" says she wondered whether her
12-year-old was too old for it, but "she seems to LOVE it. Her friends
love it too! They play for hours in her bedroom with this great toy.
They really seem to like the special effects it offers (the sound
effects and vibrating). My oldest daughter (17) really likes it too! I
recommend this for all children."
At Mattel, the notion that the Nimbus 2000 is being perceived as some
kind of pre-adolescent sex aid is greeted with incredulity. Company
spokeswoman Sara Rosales says she's been fielding calls on the subject
for the past few weeks.
She deflects any suggestion that the vibrating broom is in any way
inappropriate; rather, she presents it as "part of the Harry Potter
charm, which is all about magic and fantasy."
The thinking behind the toy, she says -- which, like all other Mattel
offerings, was subjected to intense focus groups -- was "to give kids
the effect of flying."
Of course, the untainted child imagination is such that any ordinary
broom could convey the same "illusion of flying." It's only when
children -- and their parents -- are relentlessly marketed to that the
expensive, imagination-limiting paraphernalia served up with
child-targeted entertainment becomes a need.
And the toy monolith Mattel is at the forefront of such pitches to
children with an "entertainment" division that franchises not only Harry
Potter and Walt Disney products, but the hugely popular Yu-Gi-Oh! and
SpongeBob SquarePants.
Indeed, a skeptic might suggest the Nimbus 2000 scandale is good news
for Mattel in that it puts the spotlight on Harry Potter just as the
hype about the fall release of the next Harry Potter movie, Chamber of
Secrets, is revving up.
Certainly, the once white-hot Harry Potter franchise has been under
strain of late. Not only are the toys under scrutiny, but the books have
even been censored by Christian groups for their allegedly Satanic,
anti-Christian message. A pastor in New Mexico said he planned to burn
them in a "holy bonfire." The volumes have also been banned at a
Christian school in Australia and a toy store chain in England.
The marketing momentum that once surrounded the series has also died
down, given that Rowling is late in delivering book number five (though
the recent news that Chris Columbus, who directed the first two Harry
Potter movies, might be replaced for the third by Alfonso Cuarón,
director of the sexually explicit coming-of-age flick Y Tu Mamá También
should spice things up a bit).
Mattel could use the buzz. The company has profited mightily from the
Harry Potter brand, one Rosales refers to as being "gender friendly,"
meaning both girls and boys like it. A new slate of products tied to the
movie will be introduced within the month, she says, with elves, huge
spiders and a flying car the dominant themes.
Once that happens, the Nimbus 2000 becomes "old cycle," says Rosales,
who notes that the toy industry is very much like the fashion industry
in terms of built-in obsolescence. She figures there probably aren't a
lot of the vibrating brooms on toy store shelves any more anyway. Which
means that stressed-out moms had better grab one before it's too late.
akingston@nationalpost.com
© Copyright 2002 National Post