CherryPizza
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- Joined
- Aug 15, 2002
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So, while we spend another thread speculating about the possibility of McDonald's having movie-themed Happy Meal toys, another much deeper issue surfaces:
It's been acknowledged that the Disney/McDonald's arranged marriage was anulled by the fact that McDonald's can't pull off the 'wholesome family outing' image that was so heavily pimped in the 70s and 80s. It's understandable, with health and obesity concerns now being rife. However, as we've also mentioned, kill fast food toys and you kill budget-conscious collectors. So, it's time to speculate: where else could these cheap little toys make an appearance?
While toys and fast food are always going to be a match made in a marketing exec's wet dreams, there must be other places that can benefit from using toys to lure in kids (Hmmmm, that sentence sounds really creepy in a Hansel and Gretel way). Personally, I think it's time to take a page out of the history books.
I grew up in Adelaide, Australia. Even as kids, we knew that we were in the backwaters of Australian capital cities. However, one thing that the city did well was having mute animal characters for children's television. The local bank did wonders for getting the kids lured into the bank's fold by giving away free plastic money boxes in the shapes of those characters (for those keeping score, their names were Humphrey and Fat Cat). In the days where more and more people are staying out of bank branches and doing their banking online, would the promise of little toys get parents taking their kids into branches and doing their business in person?
In a year when Borders has closed physical stores across the world in favour of online shopping, could the surviving book shops maybe consider having free figurines for kids whose parents make purchases in-store? If the kids in The Brady Bunch could spend an entire episode fighting over who gets to claim the trading stamps from their housekeeper's shopping expeditions, maybe an idea like this is crazy enough to work.
BTW, do American cereal boxes still contain the obligatory free gift, or are those days long gone?
It's been acknowledged that the Disney/McDonald's arranged marriage was anulled by the fact that McDonald's can't pull off the 'wholesome family outing' image that was so heavily pimped in the 70s and 80s. It's understandable, with health and obesity concerns now being rife. However, as we've also mentioned, kill fast food toys and you kill budget-conscious collectors. So, it's time to speculate: where else could these cheap little toys make an appearance?
While toys and fast food are always going to be a match made in a marketing exec's wet dreams, there must be other places that can benefit from using toys to lure in kids (Hmmmm, that sentence sounds really creepy in a Hansel and Gretel way). Personally, I think it's time to take a page out of the history books.
I grew up in Adelaide, Australia. Even as kids, we knew that we were in the backwaters of Australian capital cities. However, one thing that the city did well was having mute animal characters for children's television. The local bank did wonders for getting the kids lured into the bank's fold by giving away free plastic money boxes in the shapes of those characters (for those keeping score, their names were Humphrey and Fat Cat). In the days where more and more people are staying out of bank branches and doing their banking online, would the promise of little toys get parents taking their kids into branches and doing their business in person?
In a year when Borders has closed physical stores across the world in favour of online shopping, could the surviving book shops maybe consider having free figurines for kids whose parents make purchases in-store? If the kids in The Brady Bunch could spend an entire episode fighting over who gets to claim the trading stamps from their housekeeper's shopping expeditions, maybe an idea like this is crazy enough to work.
BTW, do American cereal boxes still contain the obligatory free gift, or are those days long gone?