Los Angeles Times

Black Friday message to toymakers and other firms: Get a clue

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It’s Black Friday, holiday shopping once again has transforme­d into a Darwinian struggle, and as a public service, I’m here with a helpful suggestion for business leaders.

It’s time for all large companies to create a new position: vice president of you-can’t-be-serious.

All ideas for new products and marketing campaigns would be vetted by the vice president of you-can’t-be-serious, who would be empowered to tell colleagues, “You can’t be serious.”

For example, luxury fashion house Loewe decided to offer a striped ensemble that closely resembled a Holocaust concentrat­ion-camp uniform. The company apologized last week “to anyone who might feel we were insensitiv­e to sacred memories” and removed the product from its website.

Earlier this year, Gucci introduced (and sub

sequently pulled) a sweater year that resembled minstrel-show blackface.

Before these astonishin­gly stupid blunders made their way to store shelves, a vice president of you-can’tbe-serious at each company would have told colleagues, “You can’t be serious.”

That, in turn, could have prevented costly recalls and public-relations disasters.

I’ve been mulling this idea for a while. It returned to mind the other day when World Against Toys Causing Harm, a.k.a. Watch, a consumer safety group, released its annual list of dangerous toys.

The list includes Hasbro’s $53.99 Nerf Ultra One gun, which can fire foam Nerf darts up to 120 feet. “The darts provided can shoot with enough force to potentiall­y cause eye injuries,” Watch says.

There’s also the $14.99 Spike the Fine Motor Hedgehog from Learning Resources, which Watch says is for kids as young as 18 months and includes “12 removable, rigid-plastic ‘quills’ measuring approximat­ely 3.5 inches long” that pose a choking hazard.

Let’s not overlook the $8.99 Nickelodeo­n Frozen Treat Slime from LaRose Industries, which Watch notes appears to come in flavors such as “mint chocolate chip,” “berry smoothie” and “soft serve.” Yet the package says “harmful chemicals” are present and warns: “Not real food — do not eat.”

And my personal favorite: the $19.99 Power Rangers

Beast Morphers Electronic Cheetah Claw, also from Hasbro. Small children are encouraged to “take on enemies” with retractabl­e plastic claws designed “for slashing action.” Yet Hasbro’s website says kids shouldn’t “swing or jab at people or animals.”

It’s no secret that kids like playing with dangerous objects. Is there a kid alive who wouldn’t love receiving a set of lawn darts for the holidays?

But that doesn’t mean responsibl­e parents should give such things to their young ones — or that responsibl­e companies should make them available.

I can state with absolute confidence that if I served as Hasbro’s vice president of you-can’t-be-serious, and the company’s designers approached me with plans for a wearable claw that offers “slashing action” for kids as young as 5, I’d say without hesitation, “You can’t be serious.”

The Toy Assn., an industry group, issued a statement dismissing Watch’s worries.

“By law, all toys sold in the United States must meet 100-plus rigorous safety tests and standards,” the group said. “On the other hand, Watch does not test the toys in its report to check their safety; their allegation­s appear to be based on their misreprese­ntation or misunderst­anding of the mandatory toy standards.”

Watch says it relies on common sense in issuing its warnings, which may not be scientific but strikes this parent, who is no stranger to toy purchases, as a reasonable approach.

Times change. When I was a kid, I had a toy called Creepy Crawlers from Mattel. It consisted of a handful of metal molds of insects into which I’d pour “Plastigoop.”

What made Creepy Crawlers (a.k.a. Thingmaker) both totally cool and incredibly unsafe was that the kit included a hot plate you’d use to cook the Plastigoop and create your rubbery little bugs.

The fact that I never burned myself or destroyed our house speaks more to dumb luck than good design.

Apparently, Mattel’s lawyers didn’t bat an eye in the 1960s when the company sold kids with an exposed hot plate. Nowadays, it’s hard to imagine any such toy passing legal muster.

Instead we have plastic claws that offer hours of good, clean fun — as long as you don’t “swing or jab at people or animals.” Maybe a warning such as that from the manufactur­er provides safe harbor from lawsuits, but, I mean, really? You can’t be serious. In fact, the beauty of a vice president of you-can’tbe-serious is that the job basically pays for itself. Those four words can save millions in legal and PR costs.

Remember a couple of years ago when Pepsi thought it was a good idea to feature Kendall Jenner in a commercial that appeared to be using the Black Lives Matter movement as an excuse to sell soda pop?

“Pepsi was trying to project a global message of unity, peace and understand­ing,” the company said after pulling the ad a day after its debut. “Clearly, we missed the mark and apologize.”

It was reported that this spectacula­rly bad TV spot cost Pepsi $2 million to produce.

The company’s vice president of you-can’t-beserious could have put that money to much better use.

That’s my Black Friday present to you, corporate America.

You’re welcome.

David Lazarus’ column runs Tuesdays and Fridays. He also can be seen daily on KTLA-TV Channel 5 and followed on Twitter at @davidlaz. Send tips or feedback to david.lazarus @latimes.com.

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 ?? Gary Coronado Los Angeles Times ?? SHOPPERS at the Glendale Galleria. Responsibl­e parents shouldn’t give dangerous toys to their kids — and responsibl­e companies shouldn’t make them available.
Gary Coronado Los Angeles Times SHOPPERS at the Glendale Galleria. Responsibl­e parents shouldn’t give dangerous toys to their kids — and responsibl­e companies shouldn’t make them available.

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