Gay barbie dolls

Grooms-to-be might make a gay Barbie doll wedding set a reality 

An engaged couple based in Scottsdale, Arizona, say they design to meet with toy company Mattel in the hopes of convincing the company to include homosexual couples among their selection of Barbie dolls, according to the Huffington Post.

Matt Jacobi and Nick Caprio wanted to surprise their niece, Natalie, for her eighth birthday. They were looking for a present that would get her excited about being a flower girl in their upcoming May wedding. Matt and Nick decided to buy her a Barbie Wedding Set, they said on Good Morning America, and swap out Barbie for a second Ken doll.

RELATED: HERE’S WHY WE’RE ADDING BARBIE TO OUR HOLIDAY SHOPPING LISTS

&#;We have a delightful, loving and caring Italian family,&#; Jacobi tells ABC News. &#;Everyone is so delighted for our big evening, especially my two nieces. They have been talking about our wedding all year long and acquire been raised to realize and only know that love is love!&#;

Matt and Nick gave Natalie her gift and Matt po

Let's face it: "Barbie" was going to be gay. Maybe not gay enough, according to some gays. Maybe too gay, according to anti-gays.

The fact is, this is a movie about Barbie, and wherever Barbie goes, some characteristic queerness will move, too. As a kid, I recall wanting to be Barbie's best queer friend - I imagined we'd own some pretty amusement sleepovers in her Dreamhouse. I also imagined some adorable fun sleepovers with Ken.

So now that "Barbie" is a splashy, pink-soaked blockbuster, director Greta Gerwig serves up a feminist fantasia in which a diverse group of Barbies, including several played by LGBTQ+ actors, reclaim their earth from their Ken-ruling counterparts. As a gay boy led into gay adulthood by strong women, I am on board with all that girl authority in Gerwig's "Barbie."



I also appreciate that the film, starring Margot Robbie as the leading Barbie and Ryan Gosling as the primary Ken, is complete of queer subtext that has sent right-wingers into a anti-queer meltdown because, god forbid, dolls should be for everyone. Fox News reported that a Christian news site "warns" that the fil

Author's Personal Journey in Collecting

Source: Peter Danzig/Personal Collection

In the world of collecting, passions often run intense and defy conventional expectations. That’s a good thing, or else I don’t think I’d hold a job as a geek therapist and toy analyst. On the other hand, I also wouldn’t have found a delightful community of toy collectors worldwide. One such fascination that has intrigued clinicians, theorists, marketing departments, and collectors alike is the affinity that some gay men have for Barbie dolls. It might seem unconventional or even paradoxical, but a closer and more affirming examination reveals a complex interplay of personal self, intersectionality, diversity, cultural influence, and psychological factors.

Nostalgia, Identity, and Representation

Let's be clear: No theory can speak for a whole population of people. Yet, after 6 years of research, podcast interviews, and consulting for toy companies and innovation departments, one thing is clear: Barbie is for everyone. For many gay men I’ve interviewed or supported in therapy, collecting Barbi

How Barbie's Boyfriend Ken Became an Accidental Gay Icon

"He's always read gay," said Dan Savage, internationally famous columnist and podcaster, in an email, "but has he ever read gayer than he did with a gay sex toy around his neck?"

Savage originally wrote about Earring Magic Ken in the summer of , when much of the pop customs world was having a good laugh at Mattel's lack of understanding that while little kids saw what Prince, the members of Right Said Fred or Madonna's backup dancers were wearing simply as "cool," the adult nature was clued in to how gay it was.

"It was hilarious that they thought the earring was going to be the headline-making aspect of Ken's new look," said Savage.

The doll flew off the shelves, especially since queer men, including Savage, rushed out to buy a Ken doll. The kitsch factor drove Earring Magic Ken to become the best-selling Ken doll at the time.

We reached out to Mattel for comment multiple times — to find out just how well the doll sold and whether it remains the No. 1 Ken, as well as for the curre