Review of The Playmakers by Tim Walsh

Written by Anita Campbell
Published September 24, 2004

Full disclosure: The Playmakers is a fascinating book about classic toys — but this review is not about the book. It's about the blog that was established to promote the book, a trend we're seeing much more frequently on the Web.

The following post is from a weekly feature over at Small Business Trends, called PowerBlog Reviews, where we review some of the best business blogs and business blogging models on the Web today.

The Playmakers blog is a lot of fun because it is about toys.


The blog is the online home for the book The Playmakers, by author Tim Walsh.

Of course, there's a lot more to this blog than promoting a book. The blog is also a place to find information on toys, games, dolls and play sets ... and the people who created them.

The book and the blog are about classic toys — the kind of toys that we grew up with. Many of these toys are now collectibles. Some can be found in museums and have real monetary value as collectibles. Others will be found only in our attics and basements, and have value of a different kind — nostalgic value.

In this blog you'll find information on everything from Crayola crayons (remember the big 64 crayon box that every kid wanted?), to Play-Doh, to G.I. Joe.

One of my favorite posts highlights a visit to Babyland General Hospital, home of the Cabbage Patch Kids (who could forget them?):

    "Call them funny looking, but don't call them "dolls." Cabbage Patch Kids may have a certain homely allure, but it was the elaborate fantasy surrounding them — the pretense of their being real — that drove their popularity from the start. While other dolls crawled, ate, cried, slept or mimicked some other human bodily function in an effort to create realism, Cabbage Patch Kids sustained an illusion that was bigger than anything the dolls themselves could do. They weren't for sale, they were "available for adoption." They weren't found in any stores, only at "Official Adoption Agencies." They weren't made, they were "born" in a hospital staffed by women in white nurses' outfits and a man with no medical degree named Dr. Roberts."
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Anita Campbell is the Editor of the award-winning Small Business Trends (www.smallbiztrends.com) website and host of her own talk radio program, Small Business Trends Radio, on the WSRadio.com Internet network.
Keep reading for information and comments on this article, and add some feedback of your own!
Review of The Playmakers by Tim Walsh
Published: September 24, 2004
Type:
Section: Sci/Tech
Filed Under: Books: Entertainment, Culture: Business and Economics, Sci/Tech: Internet
Writer: Anita Campbell
Anita Campbell's BC Writer page
Anita Campbell's personal site
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