I can’t believe you actually responded to DarkSock as if he was speaking seriously.
I never said either of those things. Whether it’s politically correct or not, in 1960’s America superheroes were marketed towards boys and tea sets towards girls. I also didn’t say that I agreed with it, but it was what it was. I stand by my innocuous social observation.
This seems geared to the wrong demographic..
Never mind, “Made In England”.
It only took us one comment to “girls can’t like comics and boys can’t like tea”.
No, no, no…Girls shouldn’t like comics and boys shouldn’t like tea. Unless it’s iced tea. With bourbon in it. And hair.
Bullshit. Girls liking comics is half the reason The Avengers did so well.
And ain’t nobody gonna tell Cid Highwind that his goddamn tea isn’t manly.
I can’t believe that a society so crazy about letting their kids rule their lives doesn’t actually want the kids to do whatever makes them happy.
I can’t believe you actually responded to DarkSock as if he was speaking seriously.
I never said either of those things. Whether it’s politically correct or not, in 1960’s America superheroes were marketed towards boys and tea sets towards girls. I also didn’t say that I agreed with it, but it was what it was. I stand by my innocuous social observation.
Are you kidding? It could’ve been the one toy (set) that could bring a brother and sister together like never before. Sibling harmony in a batbox!
The Penguin would approve.
60’s TV series Batman – appealing to little girls of all gender? High camp? Really?
How many genders do little girls come in?
This is useless without a Batman tea bag.
I think Alfred had something to do with this.
I want this so hard. I just promised my niece a tea party, too.
I see it’s non-toxic. Poison Ivy was probably not hosting this tea party.
I WANT that tea set. I would use it. (Not for hot stuff, I suppose; it would probably melt.)
Mad Hatter could come over and mind-control my enemies, we’d have a ball.