Action figures, building bricks, stuffed cuddly animals- there's a whole world of toys that many of us have forgotten since we were children. Do you still have any toys from when you were a boy, Phil?
erm, a couple, but I gave them to my kids.
Well, nowadays, grown-ups playing with toys is more common than you might think. Recent estimates suggest that adults buying kids' toys for themselves account for between 30 and 40% of the entire toy market, so many that advertisers have come up with a term for them: kidults-adults who are interested in toys and games intended for children.
Between last October and December alone. American kidults spent over 1.5 billion dollars on toys for themselves. Among the most popular were plush toys, or plushes for short- toy dolls or animals made from cloth and filled with soft material. And like other recent trends, the toy trend is being driven by online shoppers and social media.
In this episode, we'll meet a children's toy maker and an online influencer who are both involved in the increasing tred of adults interested in kids' toys. We'll also learn some useful new vocabulary. And remembr- you'll find a transcript fo rthis episode, along with all the new words and phrases, on our website bbclearningenglish.com
But first I have a question fo ryou, Beth. Lego remains one of the most popular, and expensive children's todys. So, according to MSN News, what was the most expensive Lego set ever made? Was it:
a) the Lego Harry Potter Hogwarts School
b) the Lego Star Wars Millennium Falcon, or
c) the Lego Eiffel Tower?
I'm going to guess Hogwarts because I like Harry Potter.
OK, well, we'll find out the answer later in the programme. Lisa Lee is a toy maker based in Vancouver and the owener of Leather Monsters, a brand of leather plushies which she advertieses online. Here, Lisa tells BBC World Service programme Business Daily how she reconnected with her love of toys as an adult:
Once I kind of had a stable job with disposable income. I kind of rediscovered my love for soft toys, and I started buying them again because I've always loved collecting things, because, you know, they bring me happiness, they bring me joy. And I think also a big pillar of my channel and my content is reconnecting with my childhood, and healing that inner child, and I think the toys also play a part in that.
Lisa started collecting toys as an adult with a job and disposable income. Disposable income is the money you have left over after paying all your expenses. You can use it to buy whatever you like.
Soft, cuddly toys make Lisa happy and help her reconnect with her inner child- a term from psychology which describes the part of your adult personality that still fels and reacts like a child.
Besides the adults who sell kids' toys are the adults who buy them. Jay Clatfelter is an enthusiastic toy collector and influencer who makes YouTube videos under the name Geek Dad Life. Here's Jay talking about the link between Covid lockdowns and the rise in adult toy collecting to BBC Wordl Service's Business Daily:
And then what happened was a whole bunch of new collectors kind of jumped into toy collecting. And for those of that were into it before, we saw the prices- the secondary market prices- like, explode once the pandemic happened, because you had people that had time on their hands, maybe they had extra money because they're not spending it by going out, and now they're putting it into collecting toys.
During the pandemic, people had mtime on their hands- a indiom meaning to have a lot of free tiem and nothing to do with it. Many adults went online, hoping to find the todys they remembered from childhood.
As a result, a whole bunch- meaning a large number- of people started collecting toys, and slowly but surely demand increased and prices went up.
Yes, it seems that the feeling of rediscovering your childhood, reported by many adult toy collectors, comes at a price, whith the cost of collectable items, like Pokemon cards and Jellycat plushies, increasing dramatically during the pandemic.
And speaking of expensive toys, Phil, isn't time you reveal the answer to your question?
Ah, yes, I asked you, "What was the most expensive Lego set ever made?" You said it was the Lego Hogwarts School. Well, I'm afraid the answer is actually the Lego Star Wars Millennium Falcon, which had a UK retail price of $734.99, according to MSN news.
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