Bald Barbie for cancer kids urged

Last updated 15:15 12/01/2012
Barbie
INSPIRATION: The photoshopped bald Barbie posted online.

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Barbie has been an astronaut, an architect, a race car driver and a news anchor.

Now, there is an online movement to get her to attempt what could be her biggest feat yet: going bald to fight cancer.

A Facebook page titled ''Beautiful and Bald Barbie! Let's see if we can get it made'' was started in late December a few days before Christmas. By Wednesday afternoon, the page had more than 15,000 fans. The goal is to get toy maker Mattel to create a bald Barbie in support of children with cancer.

Friends Rebecca Sypin and Jane Bingham, who live on opposite sides of the US but have both been affected by the disease, hatched the idea for the social media movement because Barbie is an influential children's toy.

Bingham has lost her hair due to chemotherapy treatments to treat lymphoma. Sypin's 12-year-old daughter, Kin Inich, also lost her hair this year in her own battle to treat leukemia.

Mattel did not return calls on Wednesday seeking comment, but the women said they have contacted the company through some general form letters. In return, they said, they have received form letters that say Mattel does not accept ideas from outside sources.

The women say a bald Barbie would provide a huge platform to raise awareness for children with cancer.

Barbie, all 11.5 inches of her, is one of the best-known toys of all time. She can sell for $10 at Walmart or $7000 on e-Bay. She has taken on all sorts of incarnations throughout her nearly 53 years of existence, crushing stereotypes and showing little girls that they can be whatever they want to be.

There has been an elegant Grace Kelly Barbie; a Barbie in thigh-high pink boots; a tattooed Barbie; a pregnant Barbie friend, and another Barbie friend in a wheelchair.

Barbie also has been criticised for not being as socially responsible as she could have been.

She is best known for her curves, which long have sparked complaints by women's groups who say she imposes an unachievable physical standard on young girls.

She also was lambasted when a talking version uttered an exclamation about math class being hard.

The friends who started the ''Beautiful and Bald Barbie'' movement are not natural activists.

Sypin, 32, is a special-education teacher's aide in Lancaster, California. Bingham, 41, is a photographer in Sewell, New Jersey.

''We're not demanding that the company do anything,'' Sypin said. ''We're just hoping somebody sees this and can help us make it happen.''

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Overall, Sypin said she has been pleased with the response to the Facebook page. One fan of the Facebook page wrote about Mattel: ''If they are making dolls that are inspiring young girls with careers then why not make a doll that would inspire young girls who are dealing with Cancer.''

Some commenters suggested the friends take the movement further and extend it to boys. So, over the weekend, they started an accompanying Facebook page, ''Bald G.I. Joe Movement".

Hasbro, the maker of G.I. Joe, did not immediately return a call for comment.

The movement has its critics, too.

Some people have told the women to just take a normal Barbie and shave her hair off to make the same point. Bingham posted photos where she did just that - resulting in patchy, unattractive clumps on Barbie's head. She also posted digitally doctored pictures of a bald Barbie to show how beautiful the doll could be.

And to people who say that it makes more sense just to donate to cancer research rather than to buy a bald Barbie?

''A lot of these people wouldn't have even thought about doing that without this movement,'' Bingham said.

Do you think Mattel should make a bald Barbie?

- AP

101 comments
Post a comment
Chriss   #101   02:12 am Jan 15 2012

I did a review on this, check it out

http://rougeratings.blogspot.com

Minnie   #100   04:12 pm Jan 14 2012

How ridiculous! I remember several bald Barbies from when my kids were younger (kid hairdressed) and even a Barbie amputee or two with missing legs or arms. There is no need for a bald Barbie to be manufactured - kids have been making their own bald Barbies for years!!!!

Christie   #99   03:41 pm Jan 14 2012

When children are playing you are wanting them to be happy. I know people are wanting to bring awareness to childhood cancer what about making clothing for barbie that is pink that represents awareness instead of shaving her head.

Reason   #98   09:08 am Jan 14 2012

This idea is well founded and all of the snide and ignorant comments are unfounded. Barbie is an iconic symbol of femininity for young and old across the globe. When going through these treatment the loss of hair is one of the hardest physical side effects for woman do deal with as with seeing my partner go through they feel they are no longer a woman. To have (like it or not) a globe feminine icon to denote that losing your hair does not make you less of a woman is a brilliant motivator and informant. Imagine being a teenage girl insecure already about looks and weight and going through puberty then losing one of the main things that makes you feel feminine.

Mark V   #97   06:14 pm Jan 13 2012

How about an unemployment Barbie? Have a sneek peek at your future kid.

C   #96   04:30 pm Jan 13 2012

I had an operation when I was 3 and the nurses bandaged my soft toy the same way I had been bandaged and he had a little hospital bracelet too. If I was a kid it I think it would be nice/comforting to have a wee toy that is "going through" what I was going through.

It's not about being morbid or giving healthy kids an ill doll to play with. It is about letting these kids feel a bit more normal and a bit special. Money from each sale coudl go to charity too. Stop being a pack of whingers.

Obzen   #95   03:49 pm Jan 13 2012

Mum: "Happy birthday sweetie, here's a present from your father and I"

Daughter: "Oh yey! thanks!"

Mum: "Go on, open it darling"

Daughter: "Okay hehe ..... ... oh, it's um.. barbie?"

Mum: "Yes sweetie, but it's not JUST a barbie, this barbie has cancer"

Daughter: "Oh.."

Oh C'mon!   #94   03:18 pm Jan 13 2012

Could we start with Barbie having a REALISTIC figure FIRST and then move on to her supporting different causes?

That way, at least the girls (and occasional boys) who play with Barbie and have cancer and lose their hair won't have body issues after the play...

Kerry   #93   01:35 pm Jan 13 2012

I like the idea, but where does it end? My son has Autism, it's more prevalent than childhood cancer, should there be an 'autistic' barbie too? lol

Jaffa   #92   01:33 pm Jan 13 2012

Most of my daughters Barbie's are already amputees, isn't that enough


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