"Teletubbies" is billed as the first children's show designed for the very young. If you can't talk, walk, or even sit up straight, it's the show for you, they say. It's also something of a first in children's marketing. Unlike "Sesame Street" and "Barney," where the tremendous television popularity came first and the merchandising tie-ins followed, Teletubbies dolls will be hitting the store shelves about the time the television show debuts in this country.
The "Teletubbies" show has been a hit in England for the past year, making millions for the BBC. It caused near-riots in London toy stores at Christmas, as desperate parents and older fans fought over Teletubbies dolls and paid as much as $1,300 for black-market Tinky Winky dolls. Britain's teenage clubbers also adopted the show, turning it on in the mornings to relax after a hard night out. And the London tabloids have elevated the actors inside the Teletubbies costumes to celebrity status, "outing" the human beings who play Tinky Winky, Dipsy, Laa-Laa, and Po.
Now, American retailers and toy manufacturers are betting that the Teletubbies will be bigger than Barney by Christmas, and that every child under 3 will be clamoring for one (or all) of the Teletubbies dolls.
If they're wrong, there will be a lot of Teletubbies products at the flea markets and off-price stores next year. But they believe the Teletubbies are a safe bet, for several reasons.
First, the Teletubbies are being brought to America by the same people -- The Itsy Bitsy Entertainment Co. in New York -- who handled the licensing and merchandising for "Thomas the Tank Engine" a few years back. If all of the "Thomas the Tank Engine" tie-ins sold during its heyday were lined up, they'd stretch to England and back.
Itsy Bitsy President Kenn Viselman also has a reputation for picking, and promoting, winners, and he's giving "Teletubbies" his best marketing effort. He hosted a premiere party last month for the show at Roseland in New York that drew 3,000. (One attendee reports that some adults at the party were snapping up the Teletubbies toys intended for the kids at the party, a good sign that the toys, at least, will be a hit.)
Hasbro Inc. will produce the mass-market Teletubbies toys that will reach stores like Toys "R" Us, Kay-Bee, and Wal-Mart in the fall. Eden Toys, the New York-based company that makes the Madeline and Arthur dolls sold in specialty toy stores, is producing a line of Teletubbies dolls that are scheduled to arrive at The Grow-cery in Glen Rock, the Learning Express in Westwood, and other small toy stores by the end of the month.
Dee Stevens, owner of The Grow-cery, said she took the advice of the Eden sales rep who said "you have to order these," even though she hesitated because it was yet another toy tied to a television show, albeit a show on PBS.
Valerie Watson, owner of another specialty toy store, The Gifted Child in Westwood, is taking a wait-and-see attitude. Watson notes that not all British hits have been a success in America. "Fergie was doing that helicopter one and that never went anywhere," she said, referring to the Duchess of York's "Budgie" books and TV show.
"Teletubbies" and Itsy Bitsy Entertainment have reaped a bonanza of free publicity from the debates over whether children as young as 1 should be watching television, and whether the "eh-ohs" and baby talk of the Teletubbies and the show's simple songs and endless repetition represents a dumbing down of children's programming.
Much of the recent World Summit on Children's Television held in London was devoted to speeches attacking or defending "Teletubbies." Critics charged that the show provides no mental stimulation, while supporters praised it for the same reason.
The show is completely child-focused, using camera angles from the perspective of a toddler, and the show, in a way, plays with children the way an adoring adult would -- repeating songs and stories, engaging in silly peekaboo games, and letting them say "again, again."
Eileen Potrock, director of communications for Itsy Bitsy Entertainment, said the creator of the show, Anne Wood, developed the program by watching how very young children watch and react to television. "If children don't love something in the show, she takes it out."
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