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  • Brat Girl Summer Is Making Everyone Obsess Over Their Childhood Dolls Again

    Brat Girl Summer Is Making Everyone Obsess Over Their Childhood Dolls Again

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    Girlies, it’s time to rummage through your storage boxes to find your Barbie, Bratz, or American Girl Doll, because the doll renaissance has officially arrived. Conversations about all things dolls have been slowly re-entering the public psyche since the Barbie movie dominated everyone’s minds last summer. But now that Charli XCX has dubbed this a “Brat Girl Summer”, girls have an excuse to pull out their beloved Bratz dolls.

    Brat Girl Summer has been taking over our FYPs since the release of Charli XCX’s sixth album, Brat in June. Neon green, cigarettes, a strappy white top with no bra, and trashiness are the essentials of this trend, Charli XCX explained in an interview with BBC. While that aesthetic is not necessarily what you think of when you think of Bratz dolls, Bratz is certainly a fan of Charli XCX. The official Bratz Instagram commented on Charli XCX’s album release post on Instagram, and they posted dolls inspired by her Brat aesthetic on their story

    This resurgence of Bratz has been a long time coming, and they’re making way for other dolls, which I’m so here for. (We can’t forget the Sonny Angels, a.k.a. “little boyfriends,” every Gen Z girl seems to carry around.) Here is a breakdown of why there’s an uprising of women embracing the dolls of their childhood, and what this trend means.

    StyleCaster | Zodiac Signs as Bratz Dolls
    Courtesy: MGA Entertainment. Background: Adobe.

    For a lot of Gen Z and millennial women, dolls were at the forefront of our childhoods. I took my American Girl Doll everywhere growing up—Kit Kittredge was literally my bestie. Whether it was your Cabbage Patch Doll (major throwback), American Girl Doll, Barbie, Bratz, or even your Strawberry Shortcake Doll, the connection girls have with their dolls is universal. And we all remember that sad moment when we put our dolls on the shelf for the last time or even into the storage box that’s now somewhere in your closet or basement. 

    We don’t need Margot Robbie (although I believe she’s a real-life Barbie) or Charli XCX to remind us of all our fond memories with our dolls, but it’s the perfect moment to remember that dolls don’t have to be exclusive to our childhoods. 39 percent of Gen Z women consider Barbie dolls to be role models, according to a Harmony Healthcare IT survey. From the massive success of the Barbie movie, it’s not surprising that many women are embracing the significant role dolls took in their lives. Coco Mocoe broke down this trend on her TikTok, where she discussed the doll that perfectly represents different pop culture icons.

    The next doll on the docket? Polly Pocket. A live-action Polly Pocket movie is in the works, and people have already been obsessing over all things Polly Pocket-coded, such as mini skirts and chunky platform shoes. “Not only will [Polly Pocket] be in the media zeitgeist, but I can also see an artist like Sabrina Carpenter leaning into this 100 percent—she literally looks like a Polly Pocket,” says Mocoe. Mocoe also suggested that Chappell Roan should go full Strawberry Shortcake aesthetic.

    One user commented, “I fear we may be headed toward American Girl Doll Summer.” Another commented, “I will thrive in a monster high summer.”

    StyleCaster | Here's the Barbie Doll That Matches Each Zodiac Sign
    Image: Mattel; Adobe. Design: Sasha Purdy / StyleCaster

    The doll renaissance may be healing your inner child 

    To some, adult women obsessing over their childhood dolls and getting fashion inspiration from their dolls might seem… weird. But normalizing conversations around these toys can actually help heal your inner child. The amount of people connecting online because of their shared interest in a toy is beautiful, and with celebrities and musicians embracing the aesthetic of dolls like Barbie or Bratz, a tiny part of us is healing. 

    Saba Harouni Lurie—a licensed marriage and family therapist, board certified art therapist, and the owner and founder of Take Root Therapy—weighed in: “While some trends are just trends, sometimes we can meet unspoken needs through trends, consciously or subconsciously.”

    We don’t usually have opportunities to play and be lighthearted, and women may seize these opportunities when they’re available.

    Saba Harouni Lurie

    With all the stress and responsibilities of adulthood, the women who connect with dolls becoming popular again should just enjoy it. These memories bring us to a simpler time when all we had to worry about was making sure our Barbie DreamHouse was in order. Our dolls will always have a special place in our hearts. “We don’t usually have opportunities to play and be lighthearted, and women may seize these opportunities when they’re available. Some women could definitely be tapping into their inner child or reliving experiences that they miss or may never have experienced in the first place,” said Lurie. 

    We cannot forget to have fun and enjoy this youthful bliss. So, throw on your bratty white tank top or your clunky loafers, and meet me in my pink convertible Corvette.

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    Roya Backlund

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  • Barbie, Baby!

    Barbie, Baby!

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    Growing up as a girl, I played with all sorts of dolls: American Girl, Bratz, Polly Pocket, and of course, Barbies. I had the Dream House, the Dream Car, the color changing mermaid, and don’t forget about Ken. But as I aged, Barbie became a bit more problematic.

    Suddenly, we grew up and realized that Barbie wasn’t representing diversity (by any means) very well. She was dimensionally impossible, but she grew up as our role model! How could we spend our lives aspiring for blonde-haired, cinched-waisted, pink-loving Barbie if the girl selling the dream was unattainable?

    And then there were the controversial Barbies…1965 Slumber Party Barbie had a scale set to 110 pounds and a dieting book titled “How To Lose Weight” with the advice “Don’t Eat!” Not our role model promoting eating disorder culture!

    1965 Slumber Party Barbie

    Daily Mail

    Mattel was failing to realize that by making Barbie a doctor, lawyer, homeowner, extraordinaire, she truly was our role model as little girls. We were looking at these dolls potentially seeing what our future could look like. And if it meant being 110 pounds to have the Dream Car, that sends the opposite message.

    But there is no one I have more faith in than Greta Gerwig to do the injustices of Barbie justice. We have just under one month until Gerwig’s
    Barbie movie releases into theaters…on the same day as Christopher Nolan’s polar opposite Oppenheimer, which has started its own collection of memes for a double-header day.

    Barbie has already stolen the hearts of social media with perhaps the best marketing we’ve seen for a movie in a long time (barring the accidental chaos marketing of Don’t Worry Darling). We’ve gotten picturesque stills of BarbieLand, the Architectural Digest tour of the Dream House, hilarious trailers, and of course the iconic movie posters. The main message of the posters? Barbie (Margot Robbie) is everything, and he’s just Ken (Ryan Gosling).



    From the trailer we can tell that Barbie lives in her pink world with other Barbies and Kens, like Dua Lipa being Mermaid Barbie. But one day when Barbie throws her party (complete with synchronized dance and bespoke song), she lets a thought out:
    “Do you guys ever think about dying?” Party halts.

    Now that she’s contempating her mortality, things for Barbie become less than perfect: her heels touch the ground (gag) and she falls off her roof (gasp)..So she’s given a choice: return to her world (presented as a high heel) or go to the Real World and figure out what life’s really about (presented as a worn out Birkenstock). Unfortunately for Barbie, she has to choose the latter.

    In BarbieLand, she explains, “
    Basically everything men do in your world, women do in ours.” As for the Kens? “I honestly don’t know.” If you can tell the theme of this film so far, it’s that women are running the show.

    But what Greta Gerwig gets right with
    Barbie so far is that BarbieLand is impractical. In the Architectural Digest tour, Margot Robbie shows us how the pool is fake because there are no elements in Barbie’s world. She showers without water, has a fridge filled with decal food, and a lot, she admits with a laugh, is “not super practical, but nothing is for Barbie.”

    The success of the movie already is proving to be major. With Ryan Gosling’s fierce dedication to being Ken, you find it hard
    not to root for this movie in the box office. He’s given us quotes like “If you really cared about Ken, you would know that nobody cared about Ken” and coined the term “Ken-ergy.”

    On Jimmy Fallon, Gosling likened Ken to an un-cool accessory, saying that nobody really ever played with a Ken doll. “
    I was surprised how…some people were clutching their pearls about my Ken, as though they ever thought about Ken for a second. They never played with Ken! Nobody ever plays with Ken.”



    And we’ve already seen the blazing hot pink merchandise that has scattered stores. You can buy Barbie-inspired satin pillowcases, Barbie glassware, Barbie cookware. Our lives are suddenly immersed in our picturesque Barbie DreamWorld,
    but this time with a grown-up twist.

    We’re no longer emulating the Barbie look, per-se…but the Barbie Dream. It’s about female empowerment and uplifting others, becoming successful in your own way, and loving the color pink always. It’s more of the Barbie mindset than the Barbie body.

    With a star-studded cast consisting of Will Ferrell, Margot Robbie, Ryan Gosling, Simu Liu, Emma Mackey, Kate McKinnon, and more…and an equally studded soundtrack with features from Nicki Minaj and Ice Spice, Dua Lipa, Ava Max, Charli XCX, Khalid, Lizzo, etc. This movie radiates power.

    As a lover of all things pink, I’m here for the Barbie collabs. Here are my faves to get you ready for the movie of the summer:

    Kitsch x Barbie

    Homesick Barbie Dreamhouse Candle

    Barbie x Barbie

    Bloomingdales Barbie The Movie Popup Shop

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    Jai Phillips

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