Tag Archives: Mattel

‘Bob The Builder’ Animated Film In Works From Anthony Ramos, Jennifer Lopez, Mattel Films & ShadowMachine; Ramos Voicing Title Character – Deadline

  1. ‘Bob The Builder’ Animated Film In Works From Anthony Ramos, Jennifer Lopez, Mattel Films & ShadowMachine; Ramos Voicing Title Character Deadline
  2. Jennifer Lopez to Produce ‘Bob the Builder’ Animated Movie at Mattel, Starring Anthony Ramos Variety
  3. Anthony Ramos Tapped to Play Latin ‘Bob the Builder,’ Sparks Outrage TMZ
  4. From ‘Barbie’ to ‘Bob the Builder’: All about Mattel’s next big movie (and how Jlo is involved) CNN
  5. Anthony Ramos to Star in ‘Bob the Builder’ Movie From Mattel, Jennifer Lopez Hollywood Reporter

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Mattel announces limited-edition ‘Weird Barbie’ doll for sale – CNN

  1. Mattel announces limited-edition ‘Weird Barbie’ doll for sale CNN
  2. ‘Weird Barbie,’ based on Kate McKinnon’s character, can now be yours for $50, says Mattel. Is a store-bought mutilated doll missing the point? Yahoo Life
  3. The Perfect Weird Barbie Doll Is Here & She Can “Do The Splits” Romper
  4. ‘Weird Barbie’ Inspired by Kate McKinnon in ‘Barbie’ Movie Is Now a Mattel Doll: Details and How to Buy WWD
  5. Everybody Owned That One Weird Barbie. Now She’s A Symbol Of Embracing One’s Physical Imperfections NDTV Swirlster
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Mattel CEO Says ‘Barbie’ Movie “Will Be Remembered As A Key Milestone In Our Company’s History” – Deadline

  1. Mattel CEO Says ‘Barbie’ Movie “Will Be Remembered As A Key Milestone In Our Company’s History” Deadline
  2. Mattel Execs on Next Hollywood Moves: ‘Barney,’ ‘Polly Pocket’ and ‘Barbie’ Sequels (EXCLUSIVE) Variety
  3. Mattel hails ‘Barbie’ movie success as ‘showcase’ for more brand tie-ups Financial Times
  4. After BARBIE, Mattel’s Cinematic Universe Is Ready with 14 Movies Nerdist
  5. Mattel bets on Barbie revival, posts surprise quarterly profit Yahoo Finance
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Mattel Execs on Next Hollywood Moves: ‘Barney,’ ‘Polly Pocket’ and ‘Barbie’ Sequels (EXCLUSIVE) – Variety

  1. Mattel Execs on Next Hollywood Moves: ‘Barney,’ ‘Polly Pocket’ and ‘Barbie’ Sequels (EXCLUSIVE) Variety
  2. Mattel’s shares have soared 33% in the run up to ‘Barbie.’ But the doll’s new Hollywood stardom isn’t expected to lift the company’s sales until later this year Fortune
  3. I watched ‘Barbenheimer’ opening weekend: photos, review, experience Insider
  4. Barbie Box Office Records: A Complete List TheWrap
  5. Was ‘Barbie’ what you expected it to be? Share your review with us. Boston.com
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Mattel exec dared to question Margot Robbie’s take on Barbie – Yahoo Entertainment

  1. Mattel exec dared to question Margot Robbie’s take on Barbie Yahoo Entertainment
  2. Margot Robbie’s Best Looks From the ‘Barbie’ Movie Press Tour: Polka Dots, Pink Blazers and More Us Weekly
  3. Margot Robbie Wearing Pink In Australia Ahead of ‘Barbie’ Movie Release TMZ
  4. Mattel President Flew to London to Argue With Margot Robbie and Greta Gerwig Over an Off-Brand ‘Barbie’ Scene: ‘The Nuance Isn’t There’ on the Page Yahoo Entertainment
  5. Margot Robbie Goes Full Barbie in a Vintage Pink Blazer — Get the Look Us Weekly
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Why ‘Barbie’ Creatives and Mattel Execs Struggle to Agree on Whether the Film Is Feminist – Hollywood Reporter

  1. Why ‘Barbie’ Creatives and Mattel Execs Struggle to Agree on Whether the Film Is Feminist Hollywood Reporter
  2. Mattel President Flew to London to Argue With Margot Robbie and Greta Gerwig Over an Off-Brand ‘Barbie’ Scene: ‘The Nuance Isn’t There’ on the Page Yahoo Entertainment
  3. Greta Gerwig Says She Played With Barbie Dolls “Too Long” Inside the Magic
  4. Fans react to ‘Barbie’ cast wearing neutrals at LA event: ‘What in the grayscale?’ Yahoo Life
  5. Time’s Honest Reaction to ‘Barbie’; Sequel Already in the Works — World of Reel Jordan Ruimy
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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RIP Bernie Stolar, Former Sega, Atari & PlayStation Executive

Stolar pictured during the Dreamcast’s launch
Photo: Associated Press (AP)

Bernie Stolar, one of the most important video game executives of the 1990s, has passed away at the age of 75, GamesBeat reports.

Stolar began working in the video game business in 1980, first founding a coin-op company before moving to Atari, where he did everything from working on their arcade games to their later home console efforts to, of all things, leading development on the Lynx, Atari’s infamously enormous handheld device.

He then moved to Sony where he helped found the American division of the company’s PlayStation brand, serving as the company’s first executive vice president. While at Sony his biggest achievement was lining up a number of studios and properties for the PlayStation’s early library of games—forming relationships that in many cases endure in 2022—including Ridge Racer, Crash Bandicoot and Spyro.

After the PlayStation’s launch Stolar moved to rivals Sega, where he did not mess around. As GamesBeat remembers:

“When I got to Sega I immediately said, ‘We have to kill Saturn. We have to stop Saturn and start building the new technology.’ That’s what I did. I brought in a new team of people and cleaned house. There were 300-some-odd employees and I took the company down to 90 employees to start rebuilding,” Stolar said.

While with Sega Stolar made another visionary long-term signing, buying a studio called Visual Concepts who would go on to become 2K Sports, and who continue to release the NBA 2K series to this day.

Stolar’s post-90s career was marked by spells at Mattel (where he pushed the company to double down on the production of Barbie video games) and Google, where he served as the company’s first ever “Games Evangelist”, a position he tried to use to champion the idea of a streaming game service, something the company waved off at the time and then…would revisit a decade later, long after Stolar had left, before completely screwing it up.

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Mattel Wins Disney Princess Toy Deal, Joining Elsa of ‘Frozen’ With Barbie

Cinderella, Elsa and their friends are moving back in with Barbie.

Mattel Inc.

MAT 9.05%

has won the license to produce toys based on

Walt Disney Co.

DIS 0.59%

’s princess lineup and from the recent blockbuster “Frozen” franchise, wresting the properties back from its rival

Hasbro Inc.,

HAS -2.23%

according to Mattel executives.

The deal reunites the characters with their previous home. Mattel lost the license to Hasbro in 2016, a financial and symbolic setback that precipitated a period of four chief executive officers at Mattel and compounding challenges as they tried to fill the $440 million hole from losing the business.

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Much has changed since then. Mattel CEO

Ynon Kreiz,

who joined in 2018, has stabilized operations with over $1 billion in cost cuts, overhauled leadership, revived key brands such as Barbie and rebuilt relationships with Hollywood studios. Since the day the Disney properties walked away, Mattel executives vowed to win them back.

“It was an important priority, and it’s something we worked hard to win,” Mr. Kreiz said. Mattel showed it could manage evergreen brands that aren’t dependent on big movies, he said.

Mattel will start selling new Disney toys in 2023, and the business will be managed by the same group that has overseen Barbie’s comeback. Financial terms of the deal weren’t disclosed.

For Hasbro, the change comes as the maker of Nerf guns and Monopoly games is making the transition to a new CEO following the death of its longtime leader,

Brian Goldner,

last year. Under his watch, Hasbro surpassed Mattel in annual sales and made an unsuccessful approach to take over its rival.

Hasbro declined to comment on losing the Disney princess and “Frozen” line but said it renewed its Star Wars license recently and will soon start making Indiana Jones toys too. Both are properties of Lucasfilm, which is owned by Disney.

Hasbro’s products inspired by Disney movies included a princess pop-up play set.



Photo:

Charles Sykes/Invision/Hasbro/Associated Press

Shares of Mattel jumped about 8% in early morning trading, after The Wall Street Journal reported on the deal. Shares of Hasbro slipped about 2.5%.

Mattel’s loss of the Disney license originally represented a high-profile fracturing of a relationship between one of the largest toy manufacturers and one of the most powerful companies in entertainment. It was a rare dust-up between companies whose founders worked together since the 1950s, when Mattel advertised toys during the “Mickey Mouse Club” show.

In the early 2010s, Barbie was floundering, with sales dropping for several years. Mattel devoted more resources to shoring up its marquee property. Disney’s princess dolls, meanwhile, were managed by a separate team in a competing unit.

Then, in 2013, Mattel came up with a toy line called Ever After High, which featured dolls based on the children of classic fairy tale characters, including Cinderella, Sleeping Beauty and Snow White. That flew too close to the Disney princess orbit. The following year Disney notified Mattel that it was going to Hasbro. (Mattel no longer sells the Ever After High toys.)

“Losing the franchise was not only a financial challenge for us but a really emotional one,” said Mattel President and Chief Operating Officer

Richard Dickson,

who rejoined Mattel for a second stint months before Disney made its decision. “It was a wake-up call for Mattel.”

The fallout started soon after. In early 2015, Mattel fired CEO

Bryan Stockton.

His successor,

Chris Sinclair,

focused on plugging revenue lost from the license with a range of items without staying power, which added complexity and extra costs to operations. Another CEO, former Google executive

Margo Georgiadis,

lasted about a year before leaving.

Mr. Kreiz has brought stability to the top job at Mattel. The former television executive cut one-third of jobs and closed several factories to stem ongoing losses. He helped patch up Mattel’s fractured relationships with retailers and Hollywood studios. Key brands such as Barbie and Hot Wheels responded to new marketing and items. Fisher-Price has stabilized, too.

Though sales are still below their peak of $6.5 billion in 2013, Mattel is on pace for more than $5.3 billion in revenue for 2021, according to analysts, up more than 15% from 2020. Projections for net income of $789 million are the highest since 2013. Analysts expect Hasbro to bring in more than $6 billion in 2021 sales, according to FactSet estimates.

A bit of corporate restructuring allowed Mattel to present a stronger case to Disney that the properties would get appropriate attention, Mr. Kreiz said. Instead of organizing its business around boys, girls and infant products, Mattel is now structured around categories such as dolls, vehicles and action figures. The Disney characters will slide into the doll division and be managed by the same group that has overseen Barbie’s comeback.

Barbie has a more open-ended play pattern than the Disney characters, whose stories are imprinted on film and in books. “Side by side, we know that we can exponentially create more value, more play and more business by complementing the narrative rather than competing with it,” Mr. Dickson said.

The transition raises some questions for Hasbro, which aimed to use the Disney princess and Frozen license to build up its catalog of toys geared toward girls. But the property faltered a bit under its new owner, people in the toy industry said.

Jim Silver, CEO of TTPM, an online toy-review site, estimates that the Disney property is about half as big as it was when it left Mattel, in part because of a lack of new content to boost consumer interest in the characters. The Disney deal didn’t reach the levels Hasbro was hoping to achieve, he said.

Mr. Silver said Hasbro has other toys for girls on the upswing, including My Little Pony toys boosted by a recent Netflix movie, so the shift of the Disney license might not be as dramatic as it was when Mattel lost it. “I think Mattel will do very well with it, and for Hasbro, I don’t think the economics made sense,” he said.

UBS analyst Arpiné Kocharyan estimates the Disney princess and Frozen license could bring in about $300 million in a nonmovie year. Even after paying royalties to Disney, it could still produce a higher profit margin for Mattel than it did at Hasbro, she said, because Mattel owns much of its doll manufacturing, making it more economical to produce incremental units.

Ms. Kocharyan said Hasbro’s addition of the Indiana Jones license, with a feature film due in 2023, could offset more than half of the lost revenue. Hasbro also has the Disney license for Marvel characters.

Write to Paul Ziobro at Paul.Ziobro@wsj.com

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