Please Read This.

Once you read the article, you'll see what I'm talking about.

ugly-collage.jpg


Taken from: http://www.blueluxe.com/uglydolls.php

Each Ugly Doll comes with a short biography, explaining itslikes/dislikes, hobbies, and favorite foods. These biographies are an effective marketing tool and are what make the Ugly Dolls so appealing. There is no doubt that these stories are what sell the dolls. The company produces a variety of "ugly" products.

According to the biographies, one doll, Wage, is an orange creature that wears an apron and works at the local Super Mart. He is a hard worker and just wants to please his customers.

Babo is blue with short, skinny arms and two huge front teeth. Although Babo is not very smart, he is loyal. When something scary happens, he will send a greeting card from wherever it is he runs away to.

Jeero, a green little guy who looks pretty "normal" compared to the rest, is a tad bit spacey. He doesn't know how to answer any questions and likes to just hang out, eat snacks, and exercise.

Tray, the only girl of the group, is "the brain." It's not that she's particularly intelligent, but she has three brains. She is also the hungriest of the Ugly Dolls, always in desperate need of blueberry pie.

Ice-Bat lives in an ice-box inside an ice cave and has extra pointy ears so he can hear the ice cream truck coming from miles away.

Target is the oldest of the Ugly Dolls, which is why he has extra legs and hair. He bails the others out of trouble, but gets them into more sophisticated kinds of mischief.

Wedgehead, who is bright blue with a flat head, sees the world just as you do, but only when he balances on his head. Wedgehead is on a mission to prove that humans really do exist.

OX is lime green, with long droopy ears and an X for a left eye. He is best friends with Wedgehead and is great at magic. He loves turning your stuff into his, but Wedgehead calls it stealing.

And Cinko, with three eyes and flipper-like paws, is the only Ugly Doll from the deep. The problem is that he is afraid of water. Are tears water?

The funny thing about ugly dolls is that they are the result of a globalized business world and the mixed-up human relationships which can emerge. These days business can be done seamlessly though fiber optic cables and telephone calls. Even small firms can operate on an international basis, managing world-wide human resource pools and product development processes with just a few clicks of a mouse or a cell phone call to set up a global video conference.

The creative genius behind Ugly Dolls taps into the global business networks and results from the fact that in today's world people can be simultaneusly so close and so far apart.

For example, Ugly Dolls is a company that got its start from the international love letters of a couple in a long-distance relationship. David Horvath and Sun-Min Kim met while attending Parsons School of Design in New York City, but after September 11, Sun-Min's family wanted her to move back to Korea to be with them in a less volatile environment.

Horvath, who was living in Los Angeles, and Kim sent frequent pining love letters back and forth. An illustrator for Japanese market animation and video games, Horvath drew one of these little characters at the end of each letter. That Christmas, Kim surprised Horvath by sending him a plush, hand-sewn version of Wage - the first character that Horvath created.

When Horvath received the hand-sewn doll, he showed it off to Eric Nakamura, owner of a shop called Giant Robot in L.A. that sells books, toys, and t-shirts made by artists. "He thought I was pitching him a product," Horvath said, "He said, 'Yeah, man, that's great, I'll take 20.'" And so, in 2002, the handmade Ugly Dolls began selling batch after batch.

Eventually, the sewing got to be too large a job for Kim to do; she stopped hand sewing them and they are now handmade in China by a Korean company. Today, Ugly Dolls are sold at stores that usually would not carry toys - Urban Outfitters, Barney's New York and the Whitney Museum, among others. "There's a reason that the dolls sell in places more suitable to a fashionable bit of home décor than Hokey Pokey Elmo," comments one New York Times reporter.

The question that everyone seems to be asking is why are these dolls so popular? They don't even fit our conception of "cute" or "cuddly." David Horvath told the Los Angeles Times, "we're kind of taking away from the modern-day meaning of ugly."

In an article that appeared in the New York Times in 2004, the writer explains, "Early interest in the stuffed toys came from hipsters who were into design and ambivalent about adulthood." In fact, it turns out that the primary demographic of Ugly Dolls customers is not even children.

About half of the people buying Ugly Dolls are adults who have no intention of giving the toy to a child. It looks as if the reputation of the Ugly Dolls has spread more like a fashion designer or hip-hop artist than like a toy. The reason that the Ugly Dolls have caught on with the twenty- and thirty-something crowd is that they have the aura of fashionable chic, without the fashionable chic price-tag.


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So here's what I have to say:

They are so cute, and makes you think a bit about what exactly 'ugly' looks like. And, exactly what is so wrong with ugly? Personally, I have no problem with finding beauty in everybody else. I have not seen anyone, except myself, whom I would think is ugly. I find everyone has something beautiful about them... their eyes, their personality, their laughter, etc. I just simply don't find myself attractive, but then, I fear that if I did, then I would probably be unable to find beauty in everything else.

Just read the biographies... they don't have to be the BEST... they just are. And they are comfortable and kind with who they are. If only we could instill this into all our children. Life isn't a competition. We've made it into one. Animals in nature don't compete for throphies, they compete for survival. But, technically, we are not animals, though we are part of nature. We don't respect the cycle, though. Think about it. We truly don't.

Still, the world is beautiful, not because it is, but because it exists.

Given, there are some gloomy, and bad things that happen in the world that can not be considered beautiful, but there's beauty in the hope and unity that stems from these bad things... mostly because as long as there are nice people in the world, there will always be hope and love and the world will remain beautiful. We can't destroy the beauty in this world, and we shouldn't try. I'm not preaching.

There are bad things out there. There's global warming, the drowning of the polar bears, places like Darfur, East Timor, etc, but the human element, the human factor, makes all the difference. Possibility... the ability to change things and make things better for the world, to change, brings beauty to the world.

One day, go outside in the morning and look around. Look at how green the trees are, and how bright the sun is. In winter, look at how white and pure snow is. Listen to the sound of thunder and smile. Know that amidst all this nature, you exist and you are part of it. Away from the cities that grow everyday, and the man-made reality we have created, nature was here before it all... and it will all be here after we leave this world.

Isn't that beautiful?

I don't like feeling pity for people. I think everyone has the ability to display so much strength that they should be admired, not felt pity for. I was watching a show today that deals with violence... beautiful faces scarred by the anger of others, and you know what? They are still beautiful. The glow, the purity, the strength that stems from these people that have survived so much... that have learned to see beyond surface to enter the depth... how lucky. There is pain when one finally comes to see the depth of the world. Everything is surface until you look at it closer, until you see beyond what is there... and when you do that... you see the truth behind things, and the truth can hurt. But, from everything, there is a bigger picture that is created.

We must learn to look for depth.

We must learn to see the truth behind things.

Beyond surface, beyond just what we think beauty is... because beauty is an ideal, but if we try to see beauty in the face of children's innocence, in the wisdom of an elderly person, in the smile of the mother with a newborn baby... we create a new vision of beauty. We bring it to the world. We bring it to another level... we learn to be beautiful as well.

And why not? Go on, look at yourself in the mirror and say it... I am beautiful.

I can see the beauty, the possibility, the drive inside me. I'm worth so much. And you can't tell me otherwise.
 
Aww. Thanks Whisper *blush* I didn't think it would make it there... lol. And the title is perfect. I appreciate it so much, especially since it was written for my two best friends. :D Hopefully people will like it.
 

whisperAdmin

Administrator
Staff member
uranusbluedanger1;193818 said:
Aww. Thanks Whisper *blush* I didn't think it would make it there... lol. And the title is perfect. I appreciate it so much, especially since it was written for my two best friends. :D Hopefully people will like it.
:thumbsup
 

mysteriousone

New member
I really liked it too, Uranusbluedanger! Kinda reminds me of those Cabbage Patch Dolls! The majority of adults found them to be ugly but children loved them! They weren't like the pretty, cute little dolls that were around, they were the complete opposite, but still, children loved them! Loved the article and congratulations for making it to WhisperDISPATCH! Well done! :thumbsup

Mysti!
 
Thanks Mysti! I really appreciate your comment, and I didn't know that about Cabbage Patch dolls... though I did love mine until I made a circle around its eye with Sharpie... Ah yeah... I wanted her to be a pirate. I was a weird three year old. And the thing is that these 'ugly' dolls are not being marketed to children, but to adults, so a powerful message that should be translated to kids is being given to adults that are buying them because they are 'chic.'

If anyone liked the ugly dolls, here are others... http://www.giantmicrobes.com/us/ Some actually help research! Go take a look...

Don't ask how I find these things. I swear I don't go looking around for them...
 

mysteriousone

New member
uranusbluedanger1;193865 said:
Thanks Mysti! I really appreciate your comment, and I didn't know that about Cabbage Patch dolls... though I did love mine until I made a circle around its eye with Sharpie... Ah yeah... I wanted her to be a pirate. I was a weird three year old. And the thing is that these 'ugly' dolls are not being marketed to children, but to adults, so a powerful message that should be translated to kids is being given to adults that are buying them because they are 'chic.'

If anyone liked the ugly dolls, here are others... http://www.giantmicrobes.com/us/ Some actually help research! Go take a look...

Don't ask how I find these things. I swear I don't go looking around for them...
:lol@ made a circle around its eye....aww! What about Peek-a-boo dolls? You heard of them? They're dolls that have no face, and they're dressed in clothes and look like a real kid from back on! You don't have their face showing, and they're for adults, not children--the no face could be a powerful message to adults too i.e. looks don't mean a thing!! I used to make them and give them to friends as gifts--:D

Mysti!
 

HeavenSent

New member
This is awesome...I agree with all of your sentiments. Very well written. Congrats on getting it added to dispatch!

We must learn to see the truth behind things.

Beyond surface, beyond just what we think beauty is... because beauty is an ideal, but if we try to see beauty in the face of children's innocence, in the wisdom of an elderly person, in the smile of the mother with a newborn baby... we create a new vision of beauty. We bring it to the world. We bring it to another level... we learn to be beautiful as well.

And why not? Go on, look at yourself in the mirror and say it... I am beautiful.

I can see the beauty, the possibility, the drive inside me. I'm worth so much. And you can't tell me otherwise.

The truth behind things...That's great. I loved this. :8-26-03respect:
 
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