Evolution | Page 3

News The Evolution of Barbie PAGE 3 Sarah Chen Staff Writer Children come in all different skin tones and body types; however for its 57-year history, kids captured their youthful imagination through Barbie dolls with solely one body and skin kind. But on Jan. 28, 2015, Mattel unveiled three new body shapes— curvy, tall, and petite— to its iconic Barbie line. Following the nation’s shift in the demograhics and beauty ideals, the new Barbie doll collection more accurately reflects real-life girls. The new dolls include seven different skin tones, 24 hair styles, and 22 eye colors, allowing more kids to find a doll that speaks to them. “From the ages four to eight, I have been a Barbie doll enthusiast,” said junior Sydney Dardis (CV). “Barbie dolls made me feel like I could accomplish anything I put my mind to! I would take my Barbie doll everywhere I went.” Seventh grader Zola Franchi (IA) remarked, “I started playing with Barbie dolls when I was three, and I was really into them. I stopped around seven when I got into other types of dolls because none of the [Barbie] dolls looked like us. I like dressing up dolls that look like me more than just Barbie.” Many OCSA students supported the new face of Barbie and the company’s vision for the Barbie collection. Spring 2016 Super Bold Hayden Lyskoski Staff Writer “I feel the new Barbie dolls are definitely a step in the right direction for female beauty ideals,” explained Dardis. “I believe the new Barbie dolls will increase young girls’ self-esteem as they are more likely to accept themselves for who they are without the unrealistic beauty standards set by the old Barbie.” Although the new Barbie collection seems to move towards a positive direction in terms of beauty ideals, some say Mattel could expand their consumers to more than simply young girls. Senior Jason Risdana (CV) shared his view on the new Barbie dolls. “I’ve always had a problem with beauty ideals and the demographic Barbie dolls are marketed to. I personally enjoyed my doll,” said Risdana. “I’m perfectly aware that society’s constructed this collective hallucination of what manhood is, and I don’t think any kid should feel bad, weird, or not ‘manly’ for having a Barbie Doll. I think Barbie shouldn’t gender clothing and should market their pro