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Mattel

Author of Uno

381+ Works 1,037 Members 13 Reviews

About the Author

Series

Works by Mattel

Uno (2010) 90 copies, 1 review
Apples to Apples (1999) 57 copies, 2 reviews
Phase 10 (1999) 41 copies, 1 review
Barbie and the Rockers: The Fan (1987) 17 copies, 1 review
Apples to Apples Junior (2002) 16 copies, 1 review
Barbie: Fabulous Fashion (2008) 10 copies
Barbie (2024) 10 copies
Uno Flip 9 copies
A Parade for Chatty Baby (1965) 6 copies
Barbie On Skates (1995) 6 copies
Disney Apples to Apples (2009) 4 copies
Barbie Style (Other) (2017) 4 copies
Balderdash 4 copies
uno games 4 copies
ONO 99 4 copies
Pictionary 3 copies, 1 review
Barbie, Tome 8 : Styliste (2017) 3 copies
Monster High Fearbook (2024) 3 copies
Blink 3 copies
bezzerwizzer 2 copies
Un Dia En La Ciudad (2003) 2 copies
Boom-O 2 copies
Barbie Paper Doll: Deluxe (1991) 2 copies
BARBIE MARIPOSA (2008) 2 copies
Barbie 04 - Fermière (2016) 2 copies
Thinkblot 2 copies
Snappy Dressers 2 copies
Bounce Off 2 copies
Batmobile 1 copy
Game: Skip.bo Card Game 1 copy, 1 review
Puglicious 1 copy
Game: Uno 1 copy
[No title] 1 copy
Football I 1 copy
Skip. Bo 1 copy
Chessmaster 8000 (2000) 1 copy
Wheeled Warriors (1985) 1 copy
Barbie Sticker Album (1999) 1 copy
UNO Flip! 1 copy
Uno Boom-O 1 copy
Uno Deluxe 1 copy
Uno Stack 1 copy
Números 1 copy
KerPlunk 1 copy
Sour Apples to Apples (2011) 1 copy
Uno H2O 1 copy
Hot Wheels 2003 Guide (2002) 1 copy
Uno Spin 1 copy
Moana - La novela (2013) 1 copy
Bold 1 copy
Thingamajig 1 copy
He-man : album de figuritas 1 copy, 1 review
Sketchagrams 1 copy
Hilarium 1 copy
Uno: Braille 1 copy
Dos 1 copy
Rebound 1 copy
Uno Classic 1 copy
Uno Dice 1 copy

Associated Works

Barbie in A Mermaid Tale 2 (Panorama Sticker Storybook) (2012) — Illustrator — 11 copies
Barbie in A Mermaid Tale (Panorama Sticker Storybook) (2010) — Illustrator — 4 copies

Tagged

2 Players (8) 2-10 players (11) 4 Players (6) Ages 7+ (9) Ages07+ (10) back covers (23) Barbie (43) Board Game (20) board games (26) card game (27) card games (9) cards (13) children (10) children's (12) coloring book (5) colors (7) dolls (14) DVD (8) family (8) fiction (7) game (51) games (56) math (6) McLeod Hub (8) numbers (9) off-size (7) paper dolls (28) party (6) ultb (6) undersize (6)

Common Knowledge

Canonical name
Mattel
Legal name
Mattel, Inc.
Gender
n/a
Nationality
USA
Associated Place (for map)
USA

Members

Reviews

15 reviews
Delia wins a contest to spend a weekend with Barbie and The Rockers, for her essay "What Music Means to Me." Delia is to try out for a place at the Los Angeles High School of Music, and has been practicing hard with her violin. When she sees the glamorous lifestyle of The Rockers, though, she decides she'll give up violin and learn to play guitar, so she can join the band. The Rockers show Delia that being in a rock band isn't all fun, though--it's a lot of hard work, too. So, Delia decides show more to keep practicing with her violin, and The Rockers promise her a seat at any of their concerts.

Barbie and The Rockers: The Fan, written by Teddy Slater and illustrated by Tom Tierney, features characters from the popular Barbie toys. My summary above makes the book sound like a pretty good book for kids, but it's got some problems, too.

First, the book (like the toys, I suppose) implies that the kind of 'glamorous' clothing worn by the band is something that Delia (and, by proxy, all girls) should be envious of, and that they should feel that ordinary clothing is inadequate. It says that Delia "was dazzled by the glittering clothes and couldn't help comparing them with her own skirt and sweater. She felt painfully plain--especially when Derek's eyes lit up at the sight of Diva modeling one of the outfits." But Delia is wearing a perfectly nice outfit. One might expect the book to give the lesson that it's not necessary to dress in flashy clothing, and that it's the person, not the clothes, that matters, but it doesn't. The message from the book is that Delia is right to be ashamed of her (relatively) simple clothing, and that if girls want to attract the eyes of someone like Derek, they must also dress in fancy clothing. Bad lesson.

As for the lesson that it's hard work being in a rock band: well, that's true, but that's all the lesson is. They just have Delia watch them spend a few hours trying to record an album, and she decides that it's too much work, and that's that. They mention that when Delia has a violin concert, they want tickets, because they're fans of her, too, but that just comes out of the blue. The book doesn't really push the message that Delia's hard work practicing with the violin is also valuable, or anything like that. The book just says that being in a rock band and wearing expensive clothing is way better than anything else, but you have to spend time recording music in order to do it. And... that's it.

Barbie and The Rockers: The Fan isn't wholly unsalvageable, but it misses plenty of opportunities for good lessons, and seems to teach very bad lessons. I can't recommend this one.

This review also appears on Barba Non DB.
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As its name implies, this is a version of Apples to Apples designed for kids, although the basic game still works well with adults, too. The version has card optimized for middle-school aged children (9 ). Also good for advanced grade-school aged children.
I'm going to keep it short and sweet in case you don't know the rules. One player is the judge. They will put out a green card with an adjective on it (Happy, Sad, Pretty, Smelly, etc.). Everyone but the judge will play a red card show more face-down that best fits this word. The judge will shuffle these cards up, take a look at them, and choose the winner. The winner wins the green card (basically a victory point) and becomes the next judge. All editions come with variation ideas, but that's the basics.

Compared to the original game, this edition features simplified words that even young children can understand and has no "suggestive" words that adults would be uncomfortable explaining to the kids.
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The Challenge: Be the First player to get rid of your stock pile. The Twist: You have to get rid of them in sequence.
Quick sketches, hilarious guesses!,2 levels of clues: Adult and Junior. There is no wrong way to be awesome

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Statistics

Works
381
Also by
2
Members
1,037
Popularity
#24,830
Rating
½ 3.7
Reviews
13
ISBNs
156
Languages
5

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