
Belle Taylor: Reborns, Labubus and Annabelle — the whole world is playing with dolls
My house is full of babies.
The toy baskets are full of them. There is one face down on the living-room floor and I suspect one or two under the couch. They seem to sprout, mushroom-like, from the deep recesses of doll-ville.
These are my daughter's babies. I guess that technically makes me their grandmother but I'm usually assigned the role of sister, which seems to involve setting up the tea party while mum vigorously jiggles baby while yelling 'STOP CRYING' before declaring 'BABY HAPPY NOW' and flinging it head first to the corner of the room. It's probably important to point out my daughter is three.
Although when it comes to dolls, age is no guarantee people won't get a little weird.
There has been a spate of doll news of late. The strangest might be the rising craze for 'Reborn' dolls. These are incredibly lifelike baby dolls collected mainly by adults. A trend has emerged where people take these dolls out for walks in the pram, to the park and even on hospital visits. There are multiple videos online of people showing their 'evening routine' with their dolls — bathing them, dressing them, putting them in their cot for the night. It's all very calm and serene and at no point is anyone screaming: 'I'm not reading that book a sixth time! No! In the bed, not under it! I don't know why elephants have trunks. Wait, how did you get naked?' So it's not exactly true to life.
The trend is particularly big in Brazil, where the craze has sparked something of a moral panic. Politicians across the country have filed at least 30 Bills to bar the dolls from accessing public services, with concerns the doll owners will try to take their charges to doctors or attempt to enrol them in day care. Other politicians are less worried, with MP Manoel Isidorio bringing his reborn 'granddaughter' into parliament, arguing that it was 'not a sin' to play with dolls. Pfft, Australian politicians would never take a doll to parliament. A lump of coal, a burqa, a full-sized dead salmon and a cardboard cut-out of Kevin Rudd maybe. But not a doll.
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Labubu Plushies.
Credit: Instagram
/ TheWest
At least the Reborn dolls are cute. The other doll craze sweeping the globe are Labubus — ugly, furry elf-like creatures with nine fang-like teeth. Labubus are sold by the Chinese chain store Pop Mart, but have become a global consumer phenomenon with people lining up to purchase the popular dolls. They have 'become a benchmark for China's pop culture making inroads overseas', according to China's Communist Party mouthpiece newspaper, People's Daily.
'The enthusiasm over Labubu may pass like any other viral trend,' The New York Times opined this week. 'But it could also be another sign that China, which has struggled to build cultural cachet overseas amid longstanding concerns about its authoritarian politics, is starting to claim some victories.'
A headline in Foreign Policy in Focus this week: 'Labubu's rise mirrors declining trust in US leadership'.
Sheesh. It's never just about the doll, huh?
While Brazil nurtures their Reborns and China queues to buy Labubus, in the US it is one particular doll making headlines — a Raggedy Ann doll called Annabelle.
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The doll Annabelle in the movie Annabelle Comes Home.
Credit: Warner Bros. Pictures
/ AP
The doll, which has featured in several horror movies, is supposedly haunted. It was part of a travelling exhibition of 'spooky' objects called the Devils On The Run tour when it supposedly went missing in New Orleans. By complete coincidence, the doll's disappearance coincided with a local fire and a jail break, leading people to blame the doll. That's a great example of taking two and two and getting 5 million.
Of course Annabelle had nothing to do with either of those things. It's just a doll, a blank vessel on which to project our innermost desires and fears. Cuddle them, collect them, accuse them of arson. Dolls are just tiny mirrors and here we are, all over the world, staring back at them.
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7NEWS
an hour ago
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But there is 'limited evidence' that they would be effective as children grow up or allow kids the right to participate in the breadth of digital experiences. Even after the coalition helped secure an amendment to ensure Australians wouldn't have to provide any form of government identification to verify their age, the trial found there was a risk of privacy breaches. Some age assurance service providers had over-anticipated the needs of regulators and built tools that led to an 'unnecessary and disproportionate collection and retention of data'. Opposition communications spokeswoman Melissa McIntosh has urged Labor to confirm what technology or verification tools will be used to protect kids online. 'No more young lives can be lost or families destroyed because of the toxicity of social media,' she said in a statement. The Age Assurance Technology Trial's final report is expected to be published later in 2025.


The Advertiser
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There was speculation of a quick conclusion with the Australian Financial Review reporting European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen had flagged a trip to Australia for late July or early August in anticipation of signing a deal. This echoed the fact she had also been quick to flag an agreement while offering Anthony Albanese her congratulations on becoming prime minister via Twitter in 2022. But multiple EU spokespeople have declined to confirm the travel, telling AAP a Down Under trip is "not on the radar". Despite acknowledging renewed political will, various sources in Brussels are cautioning patience. "There is no rush," according to one inside the EU Commission. "I wouldn't even say the end of the year, I would say more next year." Jacob Funk Kirkegaard, a senior fellow with Brussels think-tank Bruegel, estimates it could take at least another six months to resolve outstanding issues on agricultural tariffs and quotas. 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Back in Melbourne, Sicilian-born cheesemaker Giorgio Linguanti from That's Amore Cheese faces an anxious wait to find out whether he can continue to market his wares using generic terms like parmesan or mozzarella. Yet he is open to compromise. "We should call it Australian parmesan and Australian feta because Australian milk is the best in the world," he said. Canberra and Brussels announced on Wednesday separate negotiations on a defence pact to boost defence industry, cyber-security and counter-terrorism co-operation. But it would not have military deployment obligations. There is appetite for the European Union and Australia to signal a "middle finger to Trump" by uniting on a long-awaited free trade deal but some in Brussels are tempering expectations of a quick turnaround. Trade talks kicked off in 2018 but Canberra walked away about 18 months ago over unsatisfactory market access for beef and lamb producers, and a reluctance to give up naming rights on products for geographical origin reasons, including feta, parmesan and prosecco. Fast forward to 2025 and US President Donald Trump's tariff antics have brought both parties back to the negotiating table. There was speculation of a quick conclusion with the Australian Financial Review reporting European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen had flagged a trip to Australia for late July or early August in anticipation of signing a deal. This echoed the fact she had also been quick to flag an agreement while offering Anthony Albanese her congratulations on becoming prime minister via Twitter in 2022. But multiple EU spokespeople have declined to confirm the travel, telling AAP a Down Under trip is "not on the radar". Despite acknowledging renewed political will, various sources in Brussels are cautioning patience. "There is no rush," according to one inside the EU Commission. "I wouldn't even say the end of the year, I would say more next year." Jacob Funk Kirkegaard, a senior fellow with Brussels think-tank Bruegel, estimates it could take at least another six months to resolve outstanding issues on agricultural tariffs and quotas. "The broad contour of the deal is already negotiated," he told AAP. "They know where the skeletons are buried. It takes a political grand bargain to do it." He noted that if the EU makes concessions, it would likely encounter an angry backlash from French and Polish farmers, who also opposed the EU's deal last year with Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay and Uruguay. However tractor and manure street protests wouldn't be enough to block a deal with Canberra, he said. Amid Washington's shift to extreme trade protectionism, an EU-Australian free trade deal would send a strong message to the Trump administration, Kirkegaard said. "As two of America's traditional allies, if both the EU and Australia find themselves subject to US tariffs, what better way than to do a deal with each other," he said. "So perhaps both countries feel this political signal is kind of a middle finger to Trump as well." Back in Melbourne, Sicilian-born cheesemaker Giorgio Linguanti from That's Amore Cheese faces an anxious wait to find out whether he can continue to market his wares using generic terms like parmesan or mozzarella. Yet he is open to compromise. "We should call it Australian parmesan and Australian feta because Australian milk is the best in the world," he said. Canberra and Brussels announced on Wednesday separate negotiations on a defence pact to boost defence industry, cyber-security and counter-terrorism co-operation. But it would not have military deployment obligations. There is appetite for the European Union and Australia to signal a "middle finger to Trump" by uniting on a long-awaited free trade deal but some in Brussels are tempering expectations of a quick turnaround. Trade talks kicked off in 2018 but Canberra walked away about 18 months ago over unsatisfactory market access for beef and lamb producers, and a reluctance to give up naming rights on products for geographical origin reasons, including feta, parmesan and prosecco. Fast forward to 2025 and US President Donald Trump's tariff antics have brought both parties back to the negotiating table. There was speculation of a quick conclusion with the Australian Financial Review reporting European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen had flagged a trip to Australia for late July or early August in anticipation of signing a deal. 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He noted that if the EU makes concessions, it would likely encounter an angry backlash from French and Polish farmers, who also opposed the EU's deal last year with Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay and Uruguay. However tractor and manure street protests wouldn't be enough to block a deal with Canberra, he said. Amid Washington's shift to extreme trade protectionism, an EU-Australian free trade deal would send a strong message to the Trump administration, Kirkegaard said. "As two of America's traditional allies, if both the EU and Australia find themselves subject to US tariffs, what better way than to do a deal with each other," he said. "So perhaps both countries feel this political signal is kind of a middle finger to Trump as well." Back in Melbourne, Sicilian-born cheesemaker Giorgio Linguanti from That's Amore Cheese faces an anxious wait to find out whether he can continue to market his wares using generic terms like parmesan or mozzarella. Yet he is open to compromise. "We should call it Australian parmesan and Australian feta because Australian milk is the best in the world," he said. Canberra and Brussels announced on Wednesday separate negotiations on a defence pact to boost defence industry, cyber-security and counter-terrorism co-operation. But it would not have military deployment obligations.

Sky News AU
9 hours ago
- Sky News AU
Channel 7 journalist forced to hide between buildings as Iran launches ballistic missiles into Israel day on eight of conflict
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