Nov. 2, 2009 Not sure which part of this creeps me out more, the fact that 21st century baby dolls have a Wiimote crammed up the wazoo to ‘bring the baby to life’ as a Wii system accessory, the passive pink gender cues for girls and total absence of boys as video parenting poppas, or the product picture being a dead-ringer look alike of my own offspring at that age. Ewww all … [Read more...]
“Bring Your Baby to Life With Your Wii Remote?”
Filed Under: Advertising, Branding & Consumerism, Consumerism, Emerging trends & STEM, Marketing Shaping Youth, Media Literacy, Product Placement, Sexualization & Body Image, Shaping Youth, Stereotypes & Diversity Tagged With: 21st century, Australia, Baby and Me, baby glutton, babydolls, balance board, Bebe Gloton, behavioral cues, boys, Case for Make Believe, CES, Consumer Electronics Show 2009, consumption, digital play, dolls, exergames, gaming, Gender, girls, health games, mommy bloggers, National Institute of Play, NextNow Collaboratory, Nintendo, Packaging-Girlhood, parenting, Pink Think, play, realism, simulations, Stuart Brown, Tech toys, totally wired, Toys, video games, Wii, Wii remote, wiimote, Wired
Teen Webby Winners Talk About Old vs. New Media
May 12, 2009 Hat tip to Ypulse for linking these Webby winning student journalists who reinforce that this blog fits into my own "don't do as I do" persona of 'long form blogging' in a microblog era. I'm adding a 'must read' by Jerry Bowles on Social Media Today titled, "The Internet is Killing America's Free Press & Why It Matters" and I also agree with On Living By … [Read more...]
Filed Under: Emerging trends & STEM, Marketing Shaping Youth, Media Literacy, Shaping Youth, Viral & Buzz Media Tagged With: Bonnie DeVarco, Boston, digital web, Doug Engelbart, eHow, Facebook, FriendFeed, journalism, Kill your blog, Media X, Microblogging, NCEN, new media, newspaper industry, newspapers, NextNow Collaboratory, old media, On Living By Learning, online student journalists, over-sharing, Paul Boutin, Sandra-Foyt, Science related wikipedian activity map, Stanford, teens, The Girl Revolution, Twitter, webby winners, Wired, youth