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sasha and maliaSo here is the question: do we take the Sasha and Malia Obama dolls as shameless profiteering, or do we take the dolls as part and parcel of wanting to celebrate everyone’s favorite new family?

To be honest, I’m hard-pressed not to see this as pretty shameless. But, at the same time, my perusal of the comments at sites like Huffington Post gets me feeling a little bit suspicious in the other direction. Most of the comments there and elsewhere, are pretty, well, poopy. A little more mean in spirit than snark; a vague hostility whose target is unclear. I can’t quite put my finger on it.

While poking about, sussing out my thoughts, I come across this website, called Dolls Like Me.

I must say, in the context of this site, Sasha and Malia dolls resume being awesome. Now they remind me of all the dolls so many Americans have wanted to exist for so long: black dolls, relevant dolls, gasp– dolls like me!

(Or maybe you.)

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Sasha and Malia dollsSo, what do you get when you put two ridiculously cute girls in the White House?

New role models? A pleasing visual jolt? A new sense of racial pride? Vague feelings of vindication, that black is indeed quite beautiful? 

Sure, you can have all those things. But, most importantly, you can package it all up and have it in a doll!

 

According to this AP story, Ty Inc., maker of Beanie Babies, has released two new dolls: Sweet Sasha and Marvelous Malia.

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Of interest from January 16th through January 17th:

miss france_chloe-mortaudNo, Miss Obama doesn’t refer Michelle Obama (and who would have the nerve to call her such a thing anyway?!). No, “Miss Obama” is what France has dubbed Chloe Mortaud, the first woman of African descent to be named Miss France. So I guess she’s Barack Obama’s sister!?

But, no, the “new” also isn’t about Mortaud being mixed race and bi-cultural, with a white French father and an African American mother. If she’s Obama’s sister, it’s in the good ole fashioned political sense. And that, I think, is a big step for France, which officially adheres to policies that do not  acknowledge racial difference. (Race riots? What riots?) 

But back to Miss France.
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Of interest from January 13th through January 15th:

mail_gogglesHat tip to Sadish over at Simple Inside. Apparently, GMail has a new feature, that you can set to keep yourself from sending late night, drunken emails.

Set with the proper times (the drinkin’ hours, I suppose), gmail will present you with challenge questions.

MATH questions!

Can’t you imagine so many situations where this might be awesome? About to curse someone out… but, wait, 6 x 4= 24! 567-121=446. Read the rest of this entry »

Doin’ the yes we can before we knew we could!

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Of interest for January 11th through January 12th:

  • National Endowment for the Arts Report Finds Fiction Reading on the Rise – “Nevertheless the proportion of overall literary reading increased among virtually all age groups, ethnic and demographic categories since 2002. It increased most dramatically among 18-to-24-year-olds, who had previously shown the most significant declines.”
  • ‘There’s no stress’: Couple weds at Taco Bell on Yahoo! News – Is this envy I feel?
  • Jerry Adler: Are Kidneys a Commodity? – “Cohen is a professor of law at George Mason University who for two decades has been fighting for the right to sell off his major organs—or to buy one from someone else, should he need it. …. Cohen has made his case at length in articles and books, but he can summarize it in a dozen words: “If you pay people for something, they will provide more of it.” This, he says, is as true of body parts as anything else.”
  • Organ Trafficking Is No Myth – “Some stories—especially the ones about kidnapped children, stolen limbs and tourists murdered for organs—were clearly false. But it was also clear that slums throughout the developing world were full of AWOL soldiers, desperate parents and anxious teenage boys willing to part with a kidney or a slice of liver in exchange for cash and a chance to see the world—or at least to buy a car. [....] But not all organs flowed from poor countries to rich ones; Americans, for example, were both buyers and sellers in this global market. A Kentucky woman once contacted Scheper-Hughes looking to sell her kidney or part of her liver so that she could buy some desperately needed dentures.”
  • First US count finds 1 in 200 kids are vegetarian – “Other surveys suggest the rate could be four to six times that among older teens who have more control over what they eat than young children do.”
  • In Obama, many see an end to baby boomer era – “Interestingly, Kennedy is often claimed by boomers to be one of their own, even though he was nothing of the kind; born in 1917, he’d be 91 now. In the same way, many Gen Xers and even Gen Yers like to claim Obama, too”
  • “Justices Will Hear Challenge to Voting Rights Act” – “The Supreme Court agreed yesterday to examine whether a central component of landmark civil rights legislation enacted to protect minority voters is still needed in a nation that has elected an African American president.”
  • Why so many Americans under 30 are greeting a black president as old news – “It may sound strange to people who lived through the civil rights era, but it’s true: if you were born after, say, 1978, a black president doesn’t necessarily feel like a milestone. It feels like something you’ve seen before. You’ve watched Morgan Freeman lead the free world as the planet was menaced by a comet in “Deep Impact.” You’ve seen Dennis Haysbert, on the TV drama “24,” Read the rest of this entry »

Of interest for November 17th from November 17th to November 17th:

These are my links for July 3rd through August 31st:

  • Daily Kos: Sarah Palin Is NOT The Mother [Photos+Video] – Gasp! No? What?!?
  • Blogging’s Glass Ceiling – "And though women and men are creating blogs in roughly equal numbers, many women at the conference were becoming very Katie Couric about their belief that they are not taken as seriously as their male counterparts"
  • Nantucket's cultural clash – "The declining homogeneity of Nantucket's population – town officials estimate there are about 20,000 full-time residents, more than double what the US Census Bureau documented in 2000 – has introduced new stresses to an island unaccustomed to culture cla
  • Poor Economy Slams Brakes on Women’s Workplace Progress – "When economists first started noticing this trend two or three years ago, many suggested that the pullback from paid employment was a matter of the women themselves deciding to stay home … But now, a different explanation is turning up in government da
  • From noses to hips, Rwandans start to redefine beauty – "A history of identity politics – and genocide – is challenged by university beauty pageants.[...] Here the shape of one's nose, hips, or eyes are overlaid with political and historical meaning."
  • On Campus, the ?60s Begin to Fade as Liberal Professors Retire – "But as educators have noted, the generation coming up appears less interested in ideological confrontations, summoning Barack Obama?s statement about the elections of 2000 and 2004: ?I sometimes felt as if I were watching the psychodrama of the Baby
  • Timothy Egan: Save the Press – "We could be left with a national snark brigade, sniping at the remaining dailies in their pajamas, never rubbing shoulders with a cop, a defense attorney or a distressed family in a Red Cross shelter after a flood."

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