To do this without parental permission was not right:
<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Quote:</div><div class="ubbcode-body">Obama dolls: Exploitation or role models?
Article Comments (29) TRALEE PEARCE
From Monday's Globe and Mail
January 26, 2009 at 9:21 AM EST
You could call it a tempest in a toy box. While the J. Crew-clad Obama daughters, Malia, 10, and Sasha, 7, are busy settling into life in the White House, controversy is swirling over their 12-inch doll doppelgangers, Sweet Sasha and Marvelous Malia.
In one corner are those who believe the makers of the new dolls have shamelessly breached the girls' privacy to make a buck. In the other are those who say Malia and Sasha are just the kinds of black role models American girls need today.
The two figures are part of toy manufacturer Ty's Ty Girlz line and were introduced earlier this month.
The company, best known as the maker of Beanie Babies, said last week that the brown-skinned brunette dolls are not based on the Obama girls.
Enlarge Image
Toy maker Ty produced the dolls Marvelous Malia, left, and Sweet Sasha. (CHARLES REX ARBOGAST/AP)
Like many observers, the White House isn't buying it.
"We feel it is inappropriate to use young, private citizens for marketing purposes," first lady Michelle Obama's press secretary, Katie McCormick Lelyveld, said in a statement Saturday
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<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Quote:</div><div class="ubbcode-body">Obama dolls: Exploitation or role models?
Article Comments (29) TRALEE PEARCE
From Monday's Globe and Mail
January 26, 2009 at 9:21 AM EST
You could call it a tempest in a toy box. While the J. Crew-clad Obama daughters, Malia, 10, and Sasha, 7, are busy settling into life in the White House, controversy is swirling over their 12-inch doll doppelgangers, Sweet Sasha and Marvelous Malia.
In one corner are those who believe the makers of the new dolls have shamelessly breached the girls' privacy to make a buck. In the other are those who say Malia and Sasha are just the kinds of black role models American girls need today.
The two figures are part of toy manufacturer Ty's Ty Girlz line and were introduced earlier this month.
The company, best known as the maker of Beanie Babies, said last week that the brown-skinned brunette dolls are not based on the Obama girls.
Enlarge Image
Toy maker Ty produced the dolls Marvelous Malia, left, and Sweet Sasha. (CHARLES REX ARBOGAST/AP)
Like many observers, the White House isn't buying it.
"We feel it is inappropriate to use young, private citizens for marketing purposes," first lady Michelle Obama's press secretary, Katie McCormick Lelyveld, said in a statement Saturday
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yu late
Jan 20th if I remember correctly
Was survey posted too? Den how come me just hear bout de dollie dem. Mi ave fi crawl out from unda mi rock and out a mi cave more often.
like wind
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