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Mattel recalls more toys...

Drtooth

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In further proof that Mattel sucks when it comes to toys....

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20070814/ap_on_bi_ge/toy_recall

WASHINGTON - Mattel announced recalls Tuesday for 9 million more Chinese-made toys, including popular Barbie, Polly Pocket and "Cars" movie items, and warned that more could be ordered off store shelves because of lead paint and tiny magnets that could be swallowed.

The recalls came nearly two weeks after Mattel Inc., the nation's largest toy-maker, recalled 1.5 million Fisher-Price infant toys worldwide, which were also made in China, because of possible lead-paint hazards for children.

The government warned parents to make sure children are not playing with any of the recalled toys.

Nancy A. Nord, acting Consumer Product Safety Commission chairman, said no injuries had been reported with any of the products involved in Tuesday's recalls. She said the recalls were intentionally broad to prevent injuries.

Several injuries had been reported in an earlier Polly Pocket recall last November. At least one U.S. child has died and 19 others have needed surgery since 2003 after swallowing magnets used in toys, the government said.

The recall announced Tuesday include about 9.3 million play sets that contain small, powerful magnets. Among the toys are Polly Pocket dolls and Barbie and Tanner play sets, along with Batman and OnePiece Triple Slash Zolo Roronoa action figures, and Doggie Day Care. Many of the magnetic toys are older and may have been purchased as early as 2003.

Also recalled Tuesday were 253,000 of Mattel's die-cast cars modeled after "Sarge" in the cartoon movie "Cars" that contain lead paint.

"Another week, another recall of Chinese-made toys," said Sen. Dick Durbin, D-Ill., who suggested detaining and inspecting all Chinese toy imports for lead paint. "We can't wait any longer for China to crack down on its lax safety standards. This needs to stop now before more children and more families are put at risk."

Rep. Mike Ferguson, R-N.J., said companies whose toys are made in China need to be sure their products meet U.S. safety standards. "If they don't, I believe Congress must give federal regulators the authority to ensure that our kids' toys won't actually harm them," he said.

In a conference call with reporters, Mattel chief executive Bob Eckert said the company is stepping up its oversight and testing in its production processes. As a result, he noted, more recalls may occur.

"There is no guarantee that we will not be here again and have more recalls," Eckert said. "We are testing at a very high level here."

In full-page ads in the New York Times, Wall Street Journal and USA Today on Tuesday, Mattel said it has "one of the most trusted names with parents" and was "working extremely hard to address your concerns and continue creating safe, entertaining toys for you and your children."

Tuesday's recalls were the latest blows to the nation's toy industry, which relies on China for about 80 percent of toys sold in the United States.

On Aug. 2, Mattel recalled about 1.5 million Chinese-made Fisher-Price toys — including characters such as Dora the Explorer, Big Bird and Elmo — that contain lead paint. In June, about 1.5 million Thomas & Friends wooden railway toys, imported from China and distributed by the RC2 Corp. were recalled because of lead paint.

Lead is toxic if ingested by young children. Under current regulations, children's products found to have more than .06 percent lead accessible to users are subject to a recall.

"There is no excuse for lead to be found in toys entering this country," Nord said. "It's totally unacceptable and it needs to stop."

Nord said the company has stopped selling the recalled products, instructed retailers to pull them from the shelves and made a production change. Mattel is also offering replacement products.

The Consumer Product Safety Commission, which negotiated details of Mattel's recalls, reported that in the previous recall of Polly Pocket play sets Nov. 21, 2006, three children had been injured by swallowing more than one magnet. All three suffered intestinal perforations that required surgery.

When more than one magnet is swallowed, they can attach to each other and cause intestinal perforation, infection or blockage, which can be fatal.

In March 2006, another toy company, Mega Brands Inc., recalled 3.8 million Magnetix magnetic building sets after one child died and four others were seriously injured after swallowing tiny magnets in them.

Mattel officials said they became aware in late July of potential problems at factories in China and began investigating. While testing to determine which products might be affected, the company alerted the CPSC, Eckert said.

The Mattel executive said the decision to move forward with a recall was made at the end of last week. When The Associated Press learned late Monday that another Mattel recall was in the works and contacted the CPSC, a spokesman declined to comment.

CPSC spokesman Scott Wolfson said the time between this decision and the announcement was spent determining the scope and exact nature of the problem, as well as negotiating with the company on the remedy for the recall, the logistics of an information hotline and a Web presence for recall information. He said these logistical considerations are necessary to "ensure that at the point of CPSC's announcement, the consumer will have those tools and they will know what the next steps are."

Days after the Aug. 2 Fisher-Price recall, Chinese officials temporarily banned the toys' manufacturer, Lee Der Industrial Co., from exporting products. A Lee Der co-owner, Cheung Shu-hung, committed suicide at a warehouse over the weekend, apparently by hanging himself, a state-run newspaper reported Monday.

For information about Tuesday's recalls, consumers should call Mattel at 888-597-6597 for information about toys with magnets, or 800-916-4997 for information about the die cast cars.
You know I actually have the Zoro One Piece figure... and out of the entire line, it's one of the few toys that doesn't completely chew on crap.

Plus, I wonder if the Cars "Sarge" also includes the Filmore/ Sarge 2 car set.

I wonder if this means both of them are worth anything... especially since I got Zoro for a dollar.
 

CensoredAlso

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This is beyond an outrage. In my opinion, China has no business hosting the next Olympics. I have nothing against the people of China, but their government should in no way be supported. And I'm just as upset with our own country for allowing this to happen.
 

Ilikemuppets

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Can anything that say "Made in China" be trusted again, LOL! Toothpaste, soap, shrimp, toys and a whole bunch of other stuff. This isn't the story about the Toy Executive who took his life because of the toy recall is it? I mean that taking honer just a little to far isn't it? That was sad to here about.
 

Drtooth

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This is beyond an outrage. In my opinion, China has no business hosting the next Olympics. I have nothing against the people of China, but their government should in no way be supported. And I'm just as upset with our own country for allowing this to happen.
What do you expect from a government that is corrupt, and believes their greatest leader did things he didn't do and was actually a monster.

For clarification, that was China I was talking about.

Now the lead paint is one thing. In this day and age, why do we have lead paint? I mean, anywhere. They should even have it in the parts of Africa where everyone is starving to death and have to drink mud so they don't dehydrate.

But the Magnets... that's all Mattel's fault. It's all them. they could have designed them to conceal the magnets better (i.e. the magnetic hats that came with 50% of the Muppet action figures). But then again, if you give someone under the age of 6 something that says 6 and up, maybe you should take a good look at what you're doing. Unless the kid doesn't pick up his toys and he has a younger sibling. Then you have a problem.

But quality isn't Mattel's strong suit. Their toys are horribly overpriced and horribly undermade. The One Piece line (of which one of the toys was recalled for due to Magnets) was a total joke. Poorly designed, poor articulation, and overcompensatingly over priced at 10 bucks a pop... no wonder why they didn't sell. Then I look at the Playmates Turtles figures, and they've got it right. Not the best quality, but for 5 and 6 bucks a figure, you can't beat that price with a stick.
 

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Yeah, like I said, China's government has time and again committed acts against humanity. The Chinese people themselves have even protested against it for years. I will not be watching the Olympics that year, it's just wrong.

That's awful about that person hanging himself. And I can't imagine how parents in general are feeling right now. They bought these toys for their children, thinking they were safe. Now they're told these toys could be seriously hurting them. And Mattell is offering replacement toys? This isn't about replacement toys, it's about a child's life.

Everyone should be horrified at this, particularly Muppet fans, since they have been part of kids lives for so long. The whole thing is such a tragedy for everyone involved. I seriously hope something good comes from all of this eventually.
 

Drtooth

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When people value human life over money, I'll try to be shocked then. AS I said multiple times, I'm surprised lobbiests don't pay off politicos to have them repeal that silly little "anit-slavery" thing Abe Lincon pushed for.

AS for the guy who killed himself? You do realize he pretty much was a higher up who killed himself ONLY to escape crimilan procedings and losing money. So I can't feel sorry for him.
 

CensoredAlso

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AS for the guy who killed himself? You do realize he pretty much was a higher up who killed himself ONLY to escape crimilan procedings and losing money. So I can't feel sorry for him.
Actually yeah I did kinda suspect that, heh. Incredible. Well, he was clearly responsible for something terrible that's hurt a lot of people, including himself. I feel sorry for him a bit because it didn't have to happen, he could have done better things with his life. He could have tried to correct the problem, instead he made it worse for himself. I feel sorry that he thought losing money was more important than losing his life.

I don't like anyone getting killed. It's easy to feel for the children (and we should, because others clearly did not). It's not so easy to feel for someone like that.

I'm not trying to sound preachy, lol, just how I feel. :smile:
 

Drtooth

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Well, what he did was selfish. I mean, he was the moneyed class in China. he probably had a Greedy Trophy wife to support and a spoiled rotten child to buy an education for.

If he was one of the millions of Chinese that was pretty much starving and had to work at these crappy, non-union low paying jobs it would actually be a true tragidy. And they dare call themselves a Communist nation. At least in Soviet Russia, they had it right. Everyone was poor except the government, so there was no way anyone could make a fortune.

At the loss of a human life it is sad, but considering how many unnamed factory workers either died on the job or from many things that resulted from lack of money to get various needs, it's not a great loss.
 

CensoredAlso

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That's fine, you definitely won't get an argument from me that he was selfish and that their government is hurting so many innocent people.

How do I put this...I think what I'm trying to say is like this quote from the book Raisin in the Sun:

"When do you think is the time to love somebody the most; when they done good and made things easy for everybody?...that ain't the time at all. It's when he's at his lowest...When you starts measuring somebody, measure him right....Make sure you done taken into account what hills and valleys he come through before he got to wherever he is."

I guess what I'm saying is, mercy isn't something people deserve, but it's something you should give them. But all the same, I hope the situation improves over there, especially for the children. Actually, I say the same for our country too. We don't treat children very well. Otherwise this, and so many other crimes, would never happen.
 

karamazov80

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I keep thinking about the scene in Fight Club where "Jack" talks about his job working for an automobile industry. They know that their cars will explode on impact in certain situations, but "Jack"'s job is, despite this, to calculate the probability of an explosion, the probability of being sued, and the average out of court settlement and to compare that to the net profits that are made from selling the car. If the profits outweigh the losses, then the car keeps getting produced. I honestly believe that that's how all major corporations work, including toy companies.

Another thought: You say that Palisades hid their magnets well unlike Mattel. Well, if Palisades had cut corners, used cheap material, etc. (like mega-monster corporations like Mattel do), they might still actually be in business, but they didn't. Its a profit-making dog eat dog-with-good-intentions world.
 
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