My heart sank when I saw the ads for 'Lego Friends', for all the reasons already articulated on this thread.
I agree with KRITIQ that Lego clearly focuses its marketing efforts on appealing to boys. Actually, it?s not a matter of opinion. The company has acknowledged in the press surrounding the launch of these Bratz with snap-on hair ?Lego Friends? that their strategy since 2005 has been to market Lego to boys, and that they 'now want to appeal to the other 50% of the world's children'
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Sarky, perhaps the reason why many ?apparently sensible women? complain that Lego leaves their girls out is not because they think that girls can only play with pink and purple bricks, or that girls can?t enjoy Star Wars or Ninjago, but because girl / women figures are hugely under-represented in the world of Lego.
The Lego Annual for 2012, which I recently bought for my Lego-loving niece, features six figures on the cover. All of them are male (with the possible exception of the astronaut who is in a full spacesuit / helmet but probably has stubble underneath ). Inside is a 'which Legoland citizen are you?' quiz, where you answer a bunch of questions about your preferences and it leads you to one of four options: Policeman , Fire fighter (with a beard), Pilot (male, suit and tie), and Railwayman (beard).
I looked on the Lego website at the full collection of minifigures. Of the 96 figures released over 6 series, only 19 have been female. Nineteen out of ninety-six. They included a surgeon, a zookeeper, and a nurse, and a few athletes (tennis player, figure skater). But other than that they are all along the lines of ?hula girl?, pop star, witch, ?kimono girl?, cheerleader, flamenco dancer, and Pam Anderson-style lifeguard. Oh, and the Statue of Liberty.
So now Lego wants to appeal to girls. Why not start by just ceasing to exclude them? By introducing more interesting female figures, in equal numbers to the male ones? Why not put girls in their advertisements, building with the multi-coloured bricks or flying the Millenium Falcon? Or put out sets that appeal to children who like sci-fi / adventure and children who like playing house / veterinarian, but that are packaged in a way that doesn't clearly indicate that they're intended for one particular gender?
Could it be because the girl toys / boy toys divide suits Lego just fine, in that it creates two different markets to sell to, instead of just one? So that families with both boys and girls will buy twice as much, because heaven forbid that brothers and sisters share or pass down sets that are clearly meant for one gender only?
Instead of making a better effort to include girls in what is already a time-tested and classic toy (that generations of girls have been enjoying in spite of the company's disregard for them), they have launched a whole separate line that looks much less challenging construction-wise, but is coloured lavender and features shapely, skinny figures in fashionable short skirts and made-up faces.
I really hope it flops, but I think that if it does, the dunderheads who came up with this will think ?Well, we tried to appeal to the girls but they just don?t go for Lego.?
There?s an interesting article here that also has pictures of the new sets and figures and a timeline of Lego?s previous attempts to market to girls.