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Mr. Potato Head is back in the news — wait, was Mr. Potato Head ever previously in the news? I seem to remember unsubstantiated reports of a harassment suit from Barbie’s lawyers back in the ...
& MRS. POTATO HEAD.” The classic dress-up statuette with changeable facial features including removable noses, eyes and ears will be packaged to reflect the brand’s updated name.
Mr. Potato Head first hit the toy scene in 1952, when it didn’t even come with a plastic potato — kids had to supply their own vegetable to poke eyes, a nose or mustache into.
Mr. Potato Head will no longer be a ... eyes, nose, mouth, shoes, hat, pants) has been distributed ... The following year, Hasbro introduced a Mrs. Potato Head version to the world. In February ...
In 1953, Hasbro rolled out a Mrs. Potato Head and potato kids Spud and Yam. ... The early iteration was a collection that included 28 hands, feet, eyes, mouths, hair and hats — potato not included.
In 2012, Hasbro celebrated the 60th wedding anniversary of Mr. and Mrs. Potato Head with a boxed set featuring the couple. But now, the company wants to move beyond the traditional family structure.
Hasbro created confusion on Thursday when it removed the gender from its Mr. Potato Head brand, but not from the actual toy. Skip to main content. Open Main Menu Navigation. Open Search.
Hasbro is dropping the honorific “mister” from the “Mr. Potato Head” brand, renaming the shapeshifting plastic spud to the gender-neutral “Potato Head.” ...
Is it Mr. Potato Head or not? Hasbro created confusion Thursday when it announced that it would drop the “Mr.” from the brand’s name in order to be more inclusive and so all could feel ...
Is it Mr. Potato Head or not? Hasbro created confusion Thursday when it announced that it would drop the “Mr.” from the brand’s name in order to be more inclusive and so all could… ...
Hasbro is dropping the Mr. from the logo and overall brand to “promote gender equality and inclusion,” but clarified that Mr. and Mrs. Potato Head will still be available.