Before Ty Warner became the billionaire architect of the notorious Beanie Babies bubble, he was minor royalty in the niche world of plush toys. His big innovation, unique at the time, was a line of Himalayan cats that were under-stuffed to make them floppier, and hence more poseable. “Fifty poses for the head alone!” bellows Zach Galifianakis, who plays Warner in new film The Beanie Bubble, which tracks how, for five magical years in the late Nineties, an obsessed public turned miniature stuffed animals into the hottest investment commodity around.
Beanie Babies were designed to be a child’s plaything. About the size of a human hand and made to look like animals — although there was the occasional seasonal ghost or pumpkin or snowman — each character came with a heart-shaped “Ty” tag with a bespoke poem inside. That tag became an avatar for the evolving role of Beanie Babies in American culture; as a secondary market began to boom on sites like eBay, a mint condition Beanie with its authentic tag still in place fetched the highest price.
Beanie Babies followed the trajectory of other collectible crazes from the Eighties and Nineties — baseball cards, Hummel figurines, Pokémon — but their rise was stratospheric by comparison, and, eventually, a whole lot more embarrassing. The Beanie Baby Bubble was not just a significant moment in American consumer history but also a uniquely shameful one. The divorcing couple dividing their Beanie collection on the floor of a Vegas courtroom; the drivers brawling for Beanies on a freeway after a Ty truck tipped over and spilled its contents; the petty criminal who went to prison after killing someone in a Beanie Baby buy gone wrong: these incidents say a lot about our country, and our culture, none of it flattering.
Perhaps this is why The Beanie Bubble seems so ambivalent about the man responsible for the national shame of Beanie mania — and so torn on the question of how responsible he actually was. A central paradox of this story is the view it takes of Warner, who it wants to at once blame for inflicting Beanie Babies on us, while also undermining his claims to having made them a success. Was Ty Warner the evil architect behind the bubble, or a bumbling man-child whose greatest talent was stealing the ideas of the more intelligent women with whom he partnered professionally, as well as, often, romantically?
About two-thirds of the way through, one gets the distinct sense that the film views its central subject with what can only be described as complete and total contempt. The middle-aged Warner is discovered weeping, on the floor, in the dark, by Sheila, his bewildered fiancé (played by Sarah Snook). Ty is supposed to become a stepfather to her daughters — but he’s having an existential crisis. “I can’t be a parent. I’m the child. I need to be taken care of,” he sobs, and collapses with his head in her lap. “Hold me like I’m a little boy!”
Sheila acquiesces, grimacing all the while. She’s completely revolted — as are we, the audience — and yet, also sort of empowered. Who really has the upper hand here: the middle-aged man having a blubbering meltdown, or the woman looking down at him as if a large slug had just crawled into her lap?
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Subscribe“an avatar for the evolving role of Beanie Babies in American culture”
The role of Beanie Babies?
Culture has a problem.
“an avatar for the evolving role of Beanie Babies in American culture”
The role of Beanie Babies?
Culture has a problem.
As a British 90s kid who’s mother brought him excessive amounts of beanie babies, I’m distraught that all my childhood memories and joy in these fairly innocent little toys, supposedly needs to analysed and offset now by the haunting reality of the man child who made them .
Really, who cares about this man? If America is any worse because of beanie babies and a big t**t of a man, just imagine what anti-depressants, therapy and safe spaces are doing for mass shootings.
Oh, can it. This is so disingenuous and has nothing to do with the article.
I imagine you live in the UK? Remind me isn’t that the loser island with constant knife attacks, rapes, and you pay the offending parties in five star hotel stays? On top of it you don’t even have freedom of speech? You’re so pale and weak you can’t even get to work without begging an eco-terrorist to let you by.
You’re all so envious of America and it’s embarrassingly transparent.
Britain is a mess, to be sure, but most of what’s bad in our culture comes from America, and we have a long way to go before violent crime reaches American levels.
First of all, thank you for admitting that British people are weak can’t think for themselves. Thank you, thank you.
Secondly, you’d have to increase the size of your country by ten times before you can reach any levels, jackass.
Not the sharpest tool in the shed are you?
Has someone hidden your medication? As Bruce Lee* said: A quick temper will make a fool of you soon enough.
*A fine citizen of your country.
You and Charles Stanhope should go at it. Really, you deserve each other.
– A fellow American
Not the sharpest tool in the shed are you?
Has someone hidden your medication? As Bruce Lee* said: A quick temper will make a fool of you soon enough.
*A fine citizen of your country.
You and Charles Stanhope should go at it. Really, you deserve each other.
– A fellow American
First of all, thank you for admitting that British people are weak can’t think for themselves. Thank you, thank you.
Secondly, you’d have to increase the size of your country by ten times before you can reach any levels, jackass.
Britain is a mess, to be sure, but most of what’s bad in our culture comes from America, and we have a long way to go before violent crime reaches American levels.
Oh, can it. This is so disingenuous and has nothing to do with the article.
I imagine you live in the UK? Remind me isn’t that the loser island with constant knife attacks, rapes, and you pay the offending parties in five star hotel stays? On top of it you don’t even have freedom of speech? You’re so pale and weak you can’t even get to work without begging an eco-terrorist to let you by.
You’re all so envious of America and it’s embarrassingly transparent.
As a British 90s kid who’s mother brought him excessive amounts of beanie babies, I’m distraught that all my childhood memories and joy in these fairly innocent little toys, supposedly needs to analysed and offset now by the haunting reality of the man child who made them .
Really, who cares about this man? If America is any worse because of beanie babies and a big t**t of a man, just imagine what anti-depressants, therapy and safe spaces are doing for mass shootings.
He obviously belonged to the world he helped nurture with his creations, but how is he responsible for the obsessive response to them? He read the room right and then hung out.
He obviously belonged to the world he helped nurture with his creations, but how is he responsible for the obsessive response to them? He read the room right and then hung out.
‘Not just a significant moment in American consumer history but also a uniquely shameful one’. Good god, what overdramatic tripe.
‘Not just a significant moment in American consumer history but also a uniquely shameful one’. Good god, what overdramatic tripe.
The man seems to be a git (bugging someone’s home; awful) but a monster? That makes me think of someone vicious or sexually abusive, what have I missed?
“Warner actually bugged the woman’s house, after one of their breakups — and, years later, tormented her with the audio recordings he’d made of her having sex with another man.”
Is that not monster enough?
No, it isn’t. It’s the act of a contemptible and pathetic man, not a monster. Mao was a monster.
Yeah, monster means murderer
No, it isn’t. It’s the act of a contemptible and pathetic man, not a monster. Mao was a monster.
Yeah, monster means murderer
“Warner actually bugged the woman’s house, after one of their breakups — and, years later, tormented her with the audio recordings he’d made of her having sex with another man.”
Is that not monster enough?
The man seems to be a git (bugging someone’s home; awful) but a monster? That makes me think of someone vicious or sexually abusive, what have I missed?
He sounds like a sneaky, vindictive b*****d, but in what sense is he monstrous?
He sounds like a sneaky, vindictive b*****d, but in what sense is he monstrous?
I’m sorry, but Beanie Babies were a great product and marketing coup. Here was a product that allowed parents to bring joy to their kids for the occasional $5 purchase. Parents returning from a business trip could find a unique stuffed animal to show their kids they wete thinking of them. Cute, cuddly, and creative. The price-point made it easy to buy repeatedly and the creativity made it endlessly joyful for parents and kids. It was a great product. Why do people need to make any product or creator into a monster? So the guy had issues. Give it a break.
I’m sorry, but Beanie Babies were a great product and marketing coup. Here was a product that allowed parents to bring joy to their kids for the occasional $5 purchase. Parents returning from a business trip could find a unique stuffed animal to show their kids they wete thinking of them. Cute, cuddly, and creative. The price-point made it easy to buy repeatedly and the creativity made it endlessly joyful for parents and kids. It was a great product. Why do people need to make any product or creator into a monster? So the guy had issues. Give it a break.
Maybe this movie was also designed to provide a partial catharsis. Psychologically speaking, by pre-empting a real catharsis, you remove the guts of one that could actually cleanse the relationship. Hollywood figured this out a long time ago and thereby protects itself from the rage and anger that threatens the ruling class. “The kids” (ordinary people) won’t be able to figure this out any more than they were able to make the assessment that getting the latest Beanie baby was like being invited to sit in the cafeteria with the popular kids…only…not really.
It was a fun movie. I enjoyed it. But the fake #GirlBoss nonsense was extremely irritating.
I didn’t like any of the main characters, but the movie was entertaining and well made.
It was a fun movie. I enjoyed it. But the fake #GirlBoss nonsense was extremely irritating.
I didn’t like any of the main characters, but the movie was entertaining and well made.
Seems silly to hold anyone accountable. A friend thought he’d make a killing so spent over $1,000 on the ridiculous fabric things. Waited too long, i.e. people figured out it was just fabric sh&t, and lost all of it. So the blame’s on the creator? Ridiculous.